Home :: Books :: Travel  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel

Women's Fiction
Trials of the Monkey : An Accidental Memoir

Trials of the Monkey : An Accidental Memoir

List Price: $14.00
Your Price: $10.50
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 3 >>

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: enjoyable recounting of a life and history
Review: I had this book for several years, given to me as a birthday present by my wife along with Will Self's Great Apes (which I've also reviewed on Amazon.com), before finally getting around to reading it. I should have picked it up earlier. What starts out as a story of Matthew Chapman, great great grandson of Charles Darwin, traveling to Dayton, Tennessee to observe the annual re-enactment of the Scopes Trial becomes something more, the "accidental memoir" of the title. Chapman recounts some highlights and lowlights from his life, including "f-ing" himself out of an education and falling into a career as a Hollywood director and screenwriter, his relationship with his alcoholic mother. In the present, he interacts with a variety of interesting people in Dayton, Tennessee, who bend and in some instances break his stereotypes of backwoods fundamentalist Christians. An example of the latter is his "favorite creationist," Bryan College creationist Kurt Wise, to whom Chapman devotes an entire chapter and part of another.

Several chapters give a vivid account of the Scopes Trial itself, and Chapman gives references at the end for more comprehensive details. While the book does center around Dayton and the Scopes trial, the re-enactment doesn't become the planned centerpiece of the book when Chapman arrives too late to see it. He ends up speaking with the director of the play, and meeting some young Christians who are further examples of stereotype breaking, as he finds them to be quite cosmopolitan.

In the end, Chapman doesn't end up too far from where he started from, but he indicates that he's willing to give up the term "atheist" for himself in favor of "agnostic," and that his experiences in Dayton gave him a better appreciation for the multiple spiritual views endorsed by his Brazilian wife, Denise Texeiria.

I found the book a quite enjoyable read, especially with my familiarity of creationism and the Scopes Trial. I recommend it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: READ THIS BOOK!
Review: I thought my troubling perceptions of the Bible Belt were the result of how I somehow became a liberal in the very conservative world of the USA's south. (I've always felt like the stork dropped me down the wrong chimney!) Chapman's observations are wry, witty, poignant, and 'right on'. It IS a little weird down here. Chapman is completely correct that people in the south are usually "nice as all get out". But it's also a place where people are always a little (or a lot) afraid to admit that they don't believe the Bible was inspired of God or that they support gay rights.

This is some fine, honest, frank writing. I highly recommend it.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Not quite what I expected, but engaging and educational
Review: I was interested in reading this book because I knew a person who went with a group to see the Scopes Trial reenactment in the mid-1990s, and I was pleasantly surprised to see Matthew Chapman mention them with a one sentence acknowledgement in his book (yes, a group of atheists from Atlanta, it has to be them!). I really enjoyed reading this account of a British person's perspective on the South and the Bible Belt. He's a self-admitted atheist who struggles with religion because of all the inconsistencies (which any honest person will admit that religion has a lot of), but the surprise is that he also admits to having a certain kind of admiration towards people of faith, because of the effect it has on believers that he never got. He's quite honest about his own past and unfortunately goes into too much detail about his sexual discoveries as a teenager, which I didn't think fit well with the main premise behind this book.

This book is kind of two books in one, and while I bought it for information on the Scopes Trial (which I did learn quite a bit more than the little I knew about it--since he goes into fascinating detail about the trial itself), I didn't expect it to be his biography/memoir also. He alternates every few chapters between these two story lines and I thought it was too much focused on his own back history, which wasn't really fascinating to me (sorry guy, but your sexual exploits aren't worth bragging about!). A lot of it was focused on his troubled relations with his alcoholic mother, with one long, drawn out chapter about her death and funeral. I didn't see what that had to do with the Scopes Monkey Trial, and my guess is that he figured that he was only going to get one published book and it would be his only opportunity to tell his life story, now that he captured our attention with the premise of the Scopes Trial. That's the reason why I subtract a star. If he had slimmed down his life story/memoir and focused more on the Scopes Trial, I would have enjoyed this book a lot more and given it five stars. As it is, it is interesting, and I suppose you can skip the chapters on his life story and still enjoy it tremendously. I absolutely agree with his main tenets of a personal religion/faith he feels a need to develop: 1) responsibility to self; 2) responsibility to family and friends; and 3) responsibility to the world at large. His critiques of religion and materialism are right on, but he seemed to hint at his own life being driven by society's ratrace (his daughter goes to a private school in NYC, he drives an SUV, and he claims that even though he makes over a million dollars a year writing screenplays, he's having financial difficulties...sounds like he's living beyond his means, if you ask me and anyone who makes that much money and still has debt problems isn't going to get my sympathy). By the way, I bought this book marked down in price at a discount bookstore, so I hope I'm not contributing to his "affluent lifestyle". Stay on the spiritual path, Chapman! And listen to your wife more. She sounds really cool.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Quirky, uneven, but fascinating memoir
Review: In this unusual "accidental memoir," screenwriter Matthew Chapman capitalizes on his genetic endowment as a great-great grandson of Charles Darwin by "revisiting" the 1925 Scopes trial in Dayton, Tennessee. The result is a loosely-woven and sometimes frustratingly fragmented book, but one that definitely is worth reading.

As suggested by the title, the book purports to be above all else a reflective review of the Scopes trial and the attendant social, scientific, and religious issues surrounding it. Here the results are uneven. He provides historical background on the principals involved and then fills a lot of pages with a recap of the trial gleaned directly from the court transcript. This makes for some interesting reading, but people already familiar with this historical episode will find little here that is novel.

He fleshes out his coverage of the Scopes trial by exploring the continuing Bible-thumping fundamentalism of contemporary rural Tennessee. Since he is an intelligent fellow with a sharp wit and an impressive endowment of "street smarts," Chapman presents some keen insights regarding the nature of, appeal of, and (mostly) shortcomings of Christian fundamentalism. His observations regarding the ironies of rampant social pathology amidst pretentions of born-again evangelism in the contemporary rural south are spot-on and effectively presented.

Overall, however, he clearly is no scholar and his obvious native intelligence is sometimes betrayed by lapses into intellectual laziness. In providing background for the trial, for example, he reviews the career of the star witness for the prosecution, "The Great Commoner," William Jennings Bryan. He points out that Bryan's "Cross of Gold" speech at the Democratic National Convention of 1896 was a masterful piece of oratory, but then declares, "I don't understand the economic principles behind the speech and probably it was hogwash." Ouch. The issue of the remonetization of silver as a means of increasing the money supply, loosening credit, counteracting the devastation deflation of the previous two decades, and raising agricultural prices is not particularly relevant today, but understanding its importance to farmers and other "common folk" over a century ago requires little more than a quick perusal of an American history book.

What renders this book particularly unusual (in both a good and a negative sense) is that it turns out to be far more than a re-examination of the Scopes trial from a personal perspective. Chapman actually alternates narration of his Tennessee experiences with deeper autobiographical reflection in which he reveals his troubled childhood and the tribulations of his depressive, alcoholic mother. His writing here is sensitive and definitely confessional; in the end, however, this aspect of his "memoir" is not adequately integrated with his material related to the Scopes trial. Despite the obvious double meaning of the title with regard to just what "monkey" might be on trial in this book, it almost appears that he has written two separate narratives that have been shuffled together like a deck of cards.

Along the way, Chapman reveals himself to have been one mean, sociopathic kid, and I hope that this literary confessional has had the desired cleansing effect for his troubled soul. However, I kept wishing that in discussing his early nastiness he might succeed better in recapturing his youthful mindset, thus providing some real insights into the "lived' nature of adolescent pathology. He confesses, often in excruciating detail, but provides few real insights in this regard.

Given that this is Chapman's first book, it's not surprising that what emerges is a real hodge-podge, a disorganized romp through time and space that in the end does not quite hang together. However, since he clearly is an interesting, witty, and insightful fellow, there is much entertainment and information to be gleaned from its pages, and I am very glad I read *Trials of the Monkey*.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Atheist Learns About Creationism First Hand
Review: Matthew Chapman's plan for _Trials of the Monkey: An Accidental Memoir_ (Picador), his first book, was to go to Tennessee, to the little town of Dayton, where the famous "Monkey Trial" was held in 1925. He would see the annual reenactment of the trial, and tell about his encounters with the locals. It would make a funny account of a Darwin descendant, an urbane Englishman, and an atheist, brushing up against rubes and hillbillies ("I want to find out if they still believe the world was made in six days, and is only 6,000 years old. It seems incredible that they might, but word has it that they do."). He left his high-pressure screenwriting environment in New York, and traveled by bus to Dayton to make an initial visit to the town, scoping it out before he returned to see the play itself. "That the town would re-enact this humiliation each year - presumably to pull down some cash - strikes me as hilarious, and I can't wait to see it." The urbane Englishman, experienced world traveler, and would-be reporter shows up for the play, only to find that he has inexcusably come a week late. He still has a book to write; he makes plain that although he makes terrific money as a screenwriter, he also spends terrific money, and there is potential for financial disaster if he cannot get his book out. Like plenty of resourceful writers before him, Chapman has used the accident of his disastrous timing to bring forth a fine volume of memoirs and attempts to wrestle with philosophical issues, which are nicely intercalated with the other two parts, a history of the Scopes trial and the account of the author's visit to Dayton. His book is a triumph snatched from disaster; the account of his upbringing, sexual awakening, and love for his difficult, acerbic, drunken mother is rich in sadness and laughter, and his use of the Scopes framework turns out to be fitting.

He is often the bemused anthropologist among the puzzling natives. "As a neurotic city-dweller from the North, I feared the overt violence of the redneck with a banjo in one hand and a pistol in the other." He drives "along a highway littered with yet more warnings of Christ's imminent return (it really is astonishing how obsessed they are by this)." But he learns a lesson: "Compounding the problem of maintaining a snide, superior tone, everyone's been so damned _nice_ to me. For seventy-five years people have been coming down here to mock, from Mencken to me, and all day long I've been running around asking questions and everyone's been 'just as nice as all get out,' which means as open and friendly as you could wish." His encounters with fundamentalists, including "creation scientists," are telling. Because of them, Chapman's atheism is cut back just a notch to agnosticism, the same agnosticism that was all the evidence would allow to his forebear Darwin. He cannot hold "any conviction in a matter so clearly unprovable either way," though he has new sympathy and understanding of those with faith. The change in view within a smart and funny narrator makes this book a readable, amusing, and pointed travelogue to strange territories, religious, geographic, and personal.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Hilarious, 95% satisfying
Review: One of the best books I have read all year, Chapman has written a compulsively readable, funny biography and travelogue that deals with fundamentalism, atheism, alcoholism, being a randy adolescent, Hollywood, etc. It is beautifully written. The only weakness is a less than satisfying ending. Chapman's life of self-indulgence is never quite made sense of. Despite his protests of needing meaning after the death of his mother, I suspect that he was ready to hit the bottle and the next gorgeous woman as soon as the last lines were pecked out on his lap top. I wasn't convinced that he arrived at a new sensitivity and need for values at the end of the book. But the old Matthew Chapman would have been just fine with me as the guy can be so entertaining in his decadence. Hats off to a very fine book!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Hilarious, 95% satisfying
Review: One of the best books I have read all year, Chapman has written a compulsively readable, funny biography and travelogue that deals with fundamentalism, atheism, alcoholism, being a randy adolescent, Hollywood, etc. It is beautifully written. The only weakness is a less than satisfying ending. Chapman's life of self-indulgence is never quite made sense of. Despite his protests of needing meaning after the death of his mother, I suspect that he was ready to hit the bottle and the next gorgeous woman as soon as the last lines were pecked out on his lap top. I wasn't convinced that he arrived at a new sensitivity and need for values at the end of the book. But the old Matthew Chapman would have been just fine with me as the guy can be so entertaining in his decadence. Hats off to a very fine book!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Best book i've read all year!
Review: Please tell me that Matthew Chapman will write a follow up to this wonderful piece of literature. At the same time, this book was funny, insightful, dark, philosophical, reflective, and intellectual. I want more!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wit with your Darwin
Review: Prepare to e-mail all your cleverest friends and recommend Trials of the Monkey, Matthew Chapman's wickedly funny, politically incorrect diatribe on religious superstition and other human follies.

The narrative is loosely organized around the yearly re-enactment of the Scopes trial in Dayton, Tennessee. In 1925, biology teacher John Scopes was tried for teaching evolution in the public classroom in defiance of Tennessee laws. Chapman has a piquant relationship to his subject: he is the great, great grandson of Charles Darwin, who pioneered evolutionary theory.

Chapman's ostensible mission in this book is to travel to Dayton and report on the re-enactment of the Scopes trial. But this purpose is virtually lost in his wickedly delightful portraits of the people he meets on his journey. Chapman, an Englishman living in New York who writes for the film industry, harbors some predictable stereotypes about the rural southeastern United States. Yet he profiles his victims in such intriguing detail and with such wit that reading his book is a lot like eating chocolate mousse: You know you shouldn't, but it's just so delicious.

The author doesn't spare himself the edge of his own razor-sharp insight. Alternating chapters are devoted to exposing the most sordid moments of his childhood. But what does Chapman's reckless adolescence have to do with the re-enactment of the Scopes trial? This is where you have to read with some subtlety, but the key lies, perhaps, in the following sentence: "When Darwin called his second book The Descent of Man instead of The Ascent of Man, he was thinking of his progeny."

Evolution doesn't always go forward, in other words. Just look at me, the author quips. Similarly, Dayton, Tennessee, which in 1925 gloried in debating evolution with full intellectual vigor, has subsequently subsided into religious complacency and complete denial of scientific discovery, Chapman indicates.

Witty, incisive and shockingly irreverent, Chapman's talents have been largely buried in a pile of unproduced Hollywood scripts. Though he has made millions on his writing, he is virtually unknown to the reading world. With luck, Trials of the Monkey will be the first step in reversing that misfortune.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This Charming Man
Review: Surprisingly funny, bleak, evocative, madenning, and ultimately uplifting, the story of Mr. Chapman's personal evolution is a total delight. Like the best of writers, he possesses keen powers of observation and, unlike most people, he is fearless enough to turn those powers on himself.

Blending his contemporary adventure with a heartfelt examination of the nature of faith and a historical portrait of a landmark trial, the book becomes, chapter by chapter, strange, wonderful, and more and more engrossing. I couldn't put it down.


<< 1 2 3 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates