Last year's thread:
what did you read in 2016?
― xyzzzz__, Friday, 22 December 2017 12:35 (seven years ago)
Read way less than last year - it can only get worse.
New voices I found were those of Claire-Louise Bennett, Pierre Michon, Antonio Di Benedetto and, for poetry, Alejandra Pizarnik.
Prose:
Miguel De Cervantes - Don QuixoteClaire-Louise Bennett - PondJoseph Roth - The Silent ProphetJean Rhys - QuartetBoris Pasternak - Last SummerAnita Brookner - A Start in LifeRamon Del Valle-Inclan - Tyrant BanderasAntonio Tabucchi - Declares PereiraNatsume Soseki - The GateJaroslav Hasek - The Red CommissarRaduan Nassar - Ancient TillageAgustin Fernandez Mallo - Nocilla ExperienceGerard Reve - The EveningsGershom Schoelem - Walter Benjamin: The Story of a FriendshipPeter Altenberg - Telegrams of the SoulJoseph Roth - Weights and MeasuresMalcolm Bowie - Proust Among the StarsRoberto Bolano - Last Evenings on EarthAgustin Fernandez Mallo - Nocilla Dream*Willam Empson - Argufying*Jorge Luis Borges - Total Library*Edward Timms - Karl Kraus: Apocalyptic SatiristRoberto Bolano - Skating RinkJM Coetzee - DisgraceDiana Athill - Make BelieveElizabeth Hardwick - Herman MelvilleThomas Pynchon - Mason & DixonJanet Malcolm - Reading ChekhovAnton Chehkov - LettersAntonio Di Benedetto - ZamaU.R. Ananthamurthy - SamskaraEnrique Vilas-Matas - Never Any End to ParisPierre Michon - Winter Mythologies and AbbotsNatsume Soseki - Light and DarknessStendhal - The Red and The BlackHelen Dewitt - Sexual Codes of the Europeans**Joan Didion - The White AlbumKate Briggs - This Little ArtHerman Melville - Bartleby**Joao Gilberto Noll - Atlantic HotelWolfgang Hilbig - Old Rendering PlantMuriel Spark - The Abbess of CreweKristen Roupenian - Cat Person**Muriel Spark - The Hothouse by the East River*Slowomir Mrozek - The ElephantMarguerite Duras - Yann Andrea SteinerSylvia Path - The Bell Jar
Poetry:
The Stray Dog Cabaret: A Book of Russian PoemsMarianne Moore - SelectedOsip Mandelstam - Moscow & Vorozneh NotebooksAlejandra Pizarnik - Extracting the Stone of MadnessSor Juana Ines de la Cruz - Poems, Protest and a DreamSeamus Heaney - New Selected Poems 1966-1987Allen Ginsberg - Howl, Kaddish and Other PoemsAime Cesaire - Return to my Native LandOlav Hauge - SelectedSylvia Path - Complete*
* Not finished** Short story
― xyzzzz__, Friday, 22 December 2017 12:42 (seven years ago)
Gerard Reve too, a Dutch novelist you can finally believe in!
I'll probaly finish the Empson and Borges next year - middle of the year was a bit much tbh.
― xyzzzz__, Friday, 22 December 2017 12:47 (seven years ago)
As ever I read far less than the ILB standard - although I read more this year than last, and there is some overlap in our lists! Appallingly anglocentric tho, but a good reading year, a lot of instant favesCervantes, Don QuixoteJohn Berryman, RecoveryJohn Darnielle, Universal HarvesterJohn Darnielle, Wolf in White VanMarlon James, A Brief History of Seven KillingsStephen King & Owen King, Sleeping BeautiesRobert McKammon, Swan SongRobert McKammon, Speaks The NightbirdPaul Morley, The Age of BowieGeorge Saunders, Lincoln In The BardoLawrence Kelter, Back To BrooklynMuriel Spark, The Prime of Miss Jean BrodieStephen King, CellDennis Wheatley, The Devil Rides OutLeonora Carrington, The Hearing TrumpetThe MabinogionChinue Achebe, The Arrow of GodLore Segal, LucinellaMark Frost, Twin Peaks: The Final DossierChris Rodley, Lynch on LynchHerman Melville, Bartleby, The ScrivenerTa-Nehisi Coates, Between the World and MeWilliam H Gass, Abstractions Arrive (Having Been There All The Time)Claudia Rankine, CitizenGabriel Tallant, My Absolute DarlingMaggie Nelson, The ArgonautsSamuel Beckett, MolloyToni Morrison, BelovedKnut Hamsun, HungerDenis Johnson, Train DreamsDenis Johnson, Jesus' SonColson Whitehead, The IntuitionistFord Madox Ford, Parade's EndFord Madox Ford, The Good SoldierMark Fisher, The Weird and the EerieDon't know what I'm gonna pick up over Xmas, I halfheartedly started book 1 of Min Kampy-Wamp but idk. I have a lot of attractively slim books calling to me
― sonnet by a wite kid, "On Æolian Grief" (wins), Friday, 22 December 2017 14:14 (seven years ago)
Gah I knew I would forget something: I also read Eimear McBride, A Girl is a Half-Formed Thing
― sonnet by a wite kid, "On Æolian Grief" (wins), Friday, 22 December 2017 14:16 (seven years ago)
My GoodReads list for 2017
The Big Short - Michael Lewis 3/5Wonderful, Wonderful Times - Elfriede Jelinek 4/5No Quarter: The Three Lives of Jimmy Page - Martin Power 3/5The Alteration - Kingsley Amis 4/5Jupiter's Legacy Vol 1 - Mark Millar and Frank Quitely 3/5The Jinx - Theophile Gautier 3/5The Ballad of Peckham Rye - Muriel Spark 4/5The Wanting Seed - Anthony Burgess 3/5Greybeard - Brian Aldiss 5/5The Invention of Morel - Adolfo Bioy Casares 4/5Downward to the Earth - Robert Silverberg 4/5The Girls of Slender Means - Muriel Spark 4/5Notes From the Underground: The Life of Lou Reed - Howard Sounes 1/5The End of Eternity - Isaac Asimov 2/5Maigret's Revolver - Georges Simenon 3/5Blake & Mortimer: The Francis Blake Affair - Jean Van Hamme and Ted Benoit 4/5Concretopia: A Journey Around the Rebuilding of Postwar Britain - John Grindrod 4/5Lucky Luke: The One-Armed Bandit - Bob de Groot and Morris 3/5Momento Mori - Muriel Spark 4/5Kill or Be Killed Vol 1 - Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips 4/5The World Inside - Robert Silverbeg 2/5Mickey's Craziest Adventures - Lewis Trondheim and Nicolas Keramidas 5/5The Dud Avocado - Elaine Dundy 4/5Therese Raquin - Emile Zola 5/5Breakfast at Tiffany's and other stories - Truman Capote 4/5Drunkard's Walk - Frederik Pohl 1/5Dr Johnson and Mr Savage - Richard Holmes 5/5The Surgeon of Crowthorne - Simon Winchester 3/5The Road to Little Dribbling - Bill Bryson 2/5Bad Monkey - Carl Hiaasen 4/5The Circle - Dave Eggers 3/5End of Watch - Stephen King 3/5The Road to Jonestown: Jim Jones and Peoples Temple - Jeff Guinn 3/5The Cinderella Killer - Simon Brett 3/5Heroes and Villains - Angela Carter 4/5The Wrong Side of Goodbye - Michael Connelly 3/5The Fog - James Herbert 3/5The Mixer - Michael Cox 3/5Pavane - Keith Roberts 4/5Shock and Awe: Glam Rock and its Legacy - Simon Reynolds 4/5The War for Late Night - Bill Carter 3/5The Bell - Iris Murdoch 4/5Fibber in the Heat - Miles Jupp 2/5The Power and the Glory - Graham Greene 4/5Great Granny Webster - Caroline Blackwood 5/5We Have Always Lived in the Castle - Shirley Jackson 4/5The Late Shift - Bill Carter 3/5Berlin Game - Len Deighton 4/5The Long Goodbye - Raymond Chandler 5/5Last Look - Charles Burns 3/5Kind Hearts and Coronets (BFI Film Classics) - Michael Newton 4/5Desperate Networks - Bill Carter 3/5Asterix in Corsica - Goscinny and Uderzo 3/5The Superior Foes of Spider-Man Omnibus - Nick Spencer, Steve Lieber et al - 3/5Nova - Samuel R Delany 4/5Asterix in Belgium - Goscinny and Uderzo 3/5Goldfinger - Ian Fleming 2/5Mind the Goof - Andre Franquin 3/5Doomsday Book - Connie Willis 2/5Never Mind - Edward St Aubyn 4/5Bad News - Edward St Aubyn 4/5Some Hope - Edward St Aubyn 4/5Mother's Milk - Edward St Aubyn 3/5At Last - Edward St Aubyn 2/5Misty Vol 1 - Pat Mills and John Armstrong; Malcolm Shaw and Brian Delaney 4/5Close to the Edge: The Story of Yes - Chris Welch 2/5Lincoln in the Bardo - George Saunders 4/5Asterix and the Chariot Race - Jean-Yves Ferri and Didier Conrad 2/5Women of Wonder - edited by Pamela Sargent 4/5
― Akdov Telmig (Ward Fowler), Friday, 22 December 2017 14:40 (seven years ago)
I have a bad habit of starting posts I don't finish, but I'd like to come back to posting on ILB more regularly in 2018. My list is in reverse chronological order, and I've starred texts that made an especially strong impression on me.
katsuhiro otomo / akira (v1)chloe caldwell / I'll tell you in personkathy acker / the childlike life of the black tarantulachris kraus / after kathy ackerkathy acker / blood and guts in high schoolkristin hersh / don't suck, don't die: giving up vic chesnuttjean genet / our lady of the flowers *arthur rimbaud (tr. john ashbery) / illuminations *n.k. jemisin / the fifth seasonkabi nagata / my lesbian experience with lonelinessjana benova / seeing people offalejandro jodorowsky and moebius / the incal antonio di benedetto / zama *mark frost / twin peaks : the final dossiermoyra davey / les goddesses/hemlock gardenchen chen / when I grow up I want to be a list of further possibilities *ari banias / anybodydorthe nors / karate chopjenny zhang / sour heartmark fisher / the weird and the eerielynne tillman / american genius: a comedyvictor lavalle / the ballad of black tom *agents of dreamlandmetropolarity / style of attack report *mark fisher / capitalist realism: is there no alternative? laszlo krasznahorkai / war & war *danez smith / don't call us dead *qiu miaojin / last words from montmartremoebius / the world of edenarobert glück / jack the modernistgunnhild øyehaug / knotssarah schulman / after deloresrobert glück / elments of a coffee servicedodie bellamy and kevin killian, eds. /writers who love too much: new narrative writing 1977-1997 *christina sharpe / in the wake: on blackness and beingnoelle stevenson / nimonadennis lim / david lynch: the man from another placejean genet / the balconyoctavia butler / bloodchild and other storiesmoyra davey / burn the diariesrenee gladman / calamitiessamuel delany / atlantis: three taleshugo ball / flight out of time: a dada diarytaylor mac / hirjess arndt / large animalsingeborg bachmann / the book of franza *ingeborg bachmann / elegy for fanny goldmannherve guibert / ghost imagemarian churchland, claire gibson, and sloane leong / from under mountainsjohn keene / counternarratives *chris kraus / where art belongsgarth greenwell / what belongs to youbrian blanchfield / proxies: essays near knowingthomas bernhard / gargoylesherve guibert / to the friend who did not save my lifeelizabeth smart / assumption of the rogues and rascalselizabeth smart / by grand central station i sat down and wept *ingeborg bachmann / three radio playschase joynt and michael hoolboom / you only live twice: letters on death, sex, and genderingeborg bachmann and paul celan / correspondenceqiu miaojin / notes of a crocodile *kai cheng thom / fierce femmes and notorious liars: a dangerous trans girl's confabulous memoirsyd staiti / the undying presentmark frost / secret history of twin peaksmike mccormack / forensic songsvivek shraya / even this page is whitetrish salah / lyric sexology, vol. 1knut hamsun / mysteriesanne truitt daybook: the journal of an artistjillian tamaki / boundless *solmaz sharif / lookhsnnah black / dark pool partytrish salah / wanting in arabic *sei shonagon (tr. ivan morris) / the pillow bookcookie mueller / how to get rid of pimplesjuliet qing wilson-yang / small beautydeborah lutz / the brontë cabinet: three lives in nine objectsbernadette mayer / midwinter day *silvina ocampo / thus were their faces: selected stories *chika sagawa (tr. sawako nakayasu) / collected poemsmarina tsvetayeva (tr. elaine feinstein) / bride of ice: new selected poemshèléne cixous and catherine clément / the newly born woman *shulamith firestone / airless spaceshèléne cixous / readings: the poetics of blanchot, joyce, kakfa, kleist, lispector, and tsvetayevamary gaitskill / somebody with a little hammerann quinn / tripticksfanny howe / the needle's eye: passing through youthleonora carrington / the complete stories of leonora carrington *spring ulmer / the age of virtual reproductionmary burger, robert glück, gail scott, and camille roy, eds. / biting the error: writers explore narrativechloe griffin / edgewise: a picture of cookie muellerhayao miyazaki / nausicaä of the valley of the wind *kate zambreno / o fallen angelfelix gonzalez-torres / felix gonzalez-torrest clutch fleischmann / syzygy, beautygiancarlo ambrosio / david wojnarowicz: a definitive history of five or six years on the lower east sideeula biss / notes from no man's land: american essaysingeborg bachmann / three paths to the lakesarah manguso / 300 argumentslynne tillman/ the compete madame realism and other storiesjames baldwin / the amen cornerjane bowles / out in the world: selected letterstomas transtromer (tr. patty crane) / bright scythe: selected poemshèléne cixous / three steps on the ladder of writing *ronald wimberly / prince of catsprnelope fitzgerald / the bookshop *lily hoang / a bestiary *john darnielle / universal harvesterkyle baker / why i hate saturnangela davis / are prisons obsolete? marcia aldrich, ed. / waveform: twenty-first century essays by womenkazim ali / bright felon: autobiography and citiesjames baldwin / tell me how long the train's been goneanne carson / floatjoshua bloom and waldo e. martin / black against empire: the history and politics of the black panther party *penelope fitzgerald / offshorejoshua bennett / the sobbing schoolthe trip to echo springalyssa green / golden calves (unpublished manuscript) *han kang / the vegetariandorthe nors / so much for that winterbrad gooch / smash cut: a memoir of howard & the 70s & the 80sjeff lemire / essex countydon mee choi / hardly wargabrielle bell / cecil and jordan in new yorkkurt hollander, ed. / low rent: a decade of prose and photographs from the portable lower east sideishion hutchinson / house of lords and commons: poemsdorothy parker / laments for the livinged brubaker / the fade out: act one
― one way street, Friday, 22 December 2017 14:45 (seven years ago)
Oh, I forgot to list authors in a couple of cases: Agents of Dreamland is by Caitlin Kiernan, and The Trip to Echo Spring is by Olivia Laing.
― one way street, Friday, 22 December 2017 14:53 (seven years ago)
less this yr than most also, resolving to read more in 2k18
Eugene o'neill - moon for the misbegotten, mourning becomes electra, iceman cometh, beyond the horizon, anna Christiejoyce carol oates - take me, take me with you; the fabulous beasts (poetry); we were the mulvaneys; them; soul at the white heat; heat david Susskind - a televised lifeMuriel spark - the prime of ms jean brodieRobert Anderson - I never sang for my fatherStanley alpert - the birthday partyKaren Russell - swamplandiaupdike - centaur; couplesjohn darnielle - universal harvesterClaudia roth Pierpont - roth unboundrafa nadal autobiojames blake autobiocal trillin - American storiesmark medoff - when you coming back, red ryderEleanor perry - blue pagestony talathimatte - private citizensnick bilton - American kingpinmonica hesse - American fireadam haslett - imagine me gonejoan barthel - death in canaanotessa moshfegh - Eileen; homesick for another worldjoseph losey biography
― johnny crunch, Friday, 22 December 2017 14:55 (seven years ago)
I also forgot a couple lolMartin Johnson, Robert Mcfarlane's OrphansAllen Carr, The Easy Way to Control Your Drinking 😂😂😂
― sonnet by a wite kid, "On Æolian Grief" (wins), Friday, 22 December 2017 14:56 (seven years ago)
Here's what I read this year. I've found I average about 15 books a year, so this was a very good reading year for me:
Zadie Smith, Swing Time (cont.)William Goldman, The Princess BrideElena Ferrante, The Story of the Lost Child (cont.)Jace Clayton, Uproot: Travels in 21st Century Music & Digital Culture (cont)John Darnielle, Universal HarvesterLesley Nneka Arimah, What It Means When a Man Falls from the SkyAli Smith, Public Library and Other StoriesGeorge Saunders, Lincoln in the BardoDavid Grann, Killers of the Flower MoonLaurent Binet, HHhHRachel Cusk, OutlineJeff VanderMeer, BorneRachel Cusk, TransitNathan Englander, Dinner at the Center of the EarthOrhan Pamuk, The Red-Haired WomanDave Hutchinson, AcadieBill Bruford: The AutobiographyJennifer Egan, Manhattan BeachClifford D. Simak, CityAli Smith, Autumn (reading now)
― change display name (Jordan), Friday, 22 December 2017 15:04 (seven years ago)
o i also did read the supahead bio
[img]https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/51fWXut2ppL._SX331_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg[img]
― johnny crunch, Friday, 22 December 2017 15:05 (seven years ago)
https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/51fWXut2ppL._SX331_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg
Best book I read this year was "The Savage Detectives"
other books:
three men in a boat - jerome k jeromeback from the brink - paul mcgrathbreakfast of champions - kurt vonnegutless than zero - bret easton elliskill all normies - angela nagleagainst nature - husymanshow to watch football - ruud gullitislam: a short history - karen armstrongboys will be boys - jeff perlmanhow music works - david byrnecapitalist realism - mark fishermin kamp 1 - knausgaardthe problems of philosophy - bertrand russell
― Well bissogled trotters (Michael B), Friday, 22 December 2017 15:25 (seven years ago)
I'll probably manage to fit one more in before New year's Day, but here's the list as of today:
Man Without Qualities Vol. 2, Robert Musil (nb: I read Vol. 1 in Dec. 2016)The Thirty Years War, C.V. WedgewoodOn Trails: An Exploration, Robert MoorMartin Marten, Brian DoyleThe Blue Flower, Penelope FitzgeraldThe Count of Monte Cristo (abridged), Alexandre DumasThe Big Burn, Timothy EganThe Only Question, Muriel SparkThe Coming of the French Revolution, Georges LefebvreOne of Ours, Willa Cather The Secret Voyage of Sir Francis Drake, Samuel BawlfMalgudi Days, R. K. NarayanJunky, William BurroughsSagas of Warrior Poets, (by many hands)Cyropaedia, Xenophon (Loeb Library translation) (a re-read)The Road to Little Dribbling, Bill BrysonDeep South, Paul TherouxAmulet, Roberto BolanoThe Post Office Girl, Stefan ZweigStamboul Train, Graham GreeneAngels on Toast, Dawn PowellThe Seven Storey Mountain, Thomas Merton (a re-read)Trask, Don BerryThe Undoing Project, Michael LewisThree Tales, Gustave FlaubertThe Public Image, Muriel SparkHuman Voices, Penelope Fitzgerald Seven Viking Romances, Translator: PalssonConcluding, Henry GreenA Short Account of the Destruction of the Indies, Bartolome de Las CasasThe Custom of the Country, Edith WhartonTo Build a Ship, Don BerryCat's Foot, Brian DoyleFishcakes and Courtesans, James Davidson (about ancient Athens)Dark Money, Jane MayerBrunelleschi's Dome, Ross KingAutobiography, Benvenuto Cellini (a re-read)A Way of Life, Like Any Other, Darcy O'Brien Ministry of Fear, Graham Greene Three Bedrooms in Manhattan, Georges SimenonMarco Polo: From Venice to Xanadu, Laurence BergreenLeave It to Psmith, P.G. WodehouseThe Last Samurai, Helen DeWittThe Greek Alexander Romance, translator: Richard StonemanWaiting for Aphrodite, Sue Hubbell (essays on invertebrate biology)Voltaire in Love, Nancy Mitford
― A is for (Aimless), Friday, 22 December 2017 17:09 (seven years ago)
alfred doblin - berlin alexanderplatzhugo ball - flight out of time: a dada diarytristan tzara - 7 dada manifestos & lampisteriesmarinetti - selected writingswyndham lewis - blasting and bombardieringwyndham lewis - journey into barbarywyndham lewis - the complete wild bodywyndham lewis/naomi mitchison - beyond this limitlaura riding - anarchism is not enoughnathalie saurrate - age of suspicionnathalie sarraute - portrait of a man unknownivy compton-burnett - a family and a fortuneivy compton-burnett - elders and bettersdenton welch - fragments of a life storyhenry green - blindnesshenry green - livinghenry green - party goinghenry green - lovinghenry green - nothinghenry green - dotingcyril connolly - the rock poollawrence durrell - the black bookrayner heppenstall - saturninerayner heppenstall - four absenteesjulian maclaren-ross - selected storiesedward dahlberg - the edward dahlberg readerpaul goodman - don juan: or, the continuum of the libidofelipe alfau - locos: a comedy of gestureswitold gombrowicz - ferdydurkerobert walser - jakob von guntenalfred kubin - the other sidegeza csath - the magician's gardenremy de gourmont - angels of perversityoctave mirbeau - the torture gardenblaise cendrars - moravagineapollinaire - the poet assassinatedaragon - paris peasantandre breton - nadjarene crevel - babylonithell colquhoun - goose of hermogenesleonora carrington - the debutante and other storiesleonora carrington - the house of fear: notes from down belowanna kavan - asylum pieceanna kavan - eagles nestrex warner - the aerodromerex warner - the professorjb priestley - blackout in gretleywyndham lewis - the vulgar streakwyndham lewis - the revenge for lovewyndham lewis - the apes of godwilliam gerhardie - futilitydavid garnett - lady into foxdavid garnett - a man in the zooangus wilson - the old men at the zoodoris lessing - briefing for a descent into hellpaul ableman - i hear voicesjohn clute - the disinheriting partyper wahloo - the lorrystig dagerman - the snakeandrey platonov - soul & other storiesandrei biely - the silver dovetf powys - mr weston's good winejc powys - wolf solentjc powys - after my fashiongeorge meredith - the egoistthomas love peacock - nightmare abbeythomas love peacock - crotchet castlethomas love peacock - headlong hallthomas love peacock - the misfortunes of elphinlaurence sterne - life & opinions of tristram shandy, gentleman
― no lime tangier, Friday, 22 December 2017 17:14 (seven years ago)
To everybody who wants to check out Gerard Reve's The Evenings: tonight's the night to start, as the book covers the last ten days of the year, one day per chapter.
― ArchCarrier, Friday, 22 December 2017 17:24 (seven years ago)
Wait John Clute wrote another book?
― Burru Men Meet Burryman ina Wicker Man (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 22 December 2017 17:28 (seven years ago)
Oh. It’s an old book, I see
― Burru Men Meet Burryman ina Wicker Man (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 22 December 2017 17:29 (seven years ago)
I like this cover.
https://littledutchbook.files.wordpress.com/2015/02/091021_251518_avonden.jpg
― jmm, Friday, 22 December 2017 17:34 (seven years ago)
Yeah, that's a beauty.
― ArchCarrier, Friday, 22 December 2017 17:36 (seven years ago)
interesting selection of wyndham lewis, nlt (and by 'interesting' i mean, certainly wouldn't be everyone's go to pieces). How did you find them? Apologies if you've already covered this on the ILB rolling threads, i must have missed it.
― Fizzles, Friday, 22 December 2017 17:41 (seven years ago)
also, er, i can never remember what i've read. i'm going to follow Ward's example of using goodreads more assiduously. as much as anything the marking is interesting! (I too liked Dr Johnson and Mr Savagae by Richard Holmes -he's good).
― Fizzles, Friday, 22 December 2017 17:43 (seven years ago)
The year's not over yet, but this is what I've read so far:
Fiction:Alexandre Dumas, The Count of Montecristo (unabridged, beeyatch!)Laura Ingalls Wilder, Little House in the Big WoodsThomas Olde Heuvelt, HEXJesús Carrasco, Out in the OpenHaruki Murakami, Norwegian WoodAldous Huxley, Brave New WorldNikos Kazantzakis, The Last Temptation of ChristSarah Gailey, River of TeethPer Olov Enquist, The Royal Physician's VisitErnest Hemingway, The Sun Also RisesAgatha Christie, Murder on the Orient ExpressDaniel Cole, RagdollMohsin Hamid, Exit WestTommy Wieringa, Joe SpeedboatChris Brookmyre, Want You GonePhilippe Claudel, Grey SoulsStephen King, The GunslingerStephen King, The Drawing of the ThreeJohn le Carré, A Legacy of SpiesGeert Krimpen, The CabbalistJennifer Egan, Manhattan BeachGerbrand Bakker, The TwinSayed Kashua, Second Person SingularMagda Szabó, The DoorSebastian Barry, Days Without EndEmmanuel Carrère, The Class Trip
Non-fiction:Richard Restak, Think SmartDmitry Orlov, Shrinking the TechnosphereLarry Korn, One-Straw Revolutionary: The Philosophy and Work of Masanobu FukuokaTim Ferriss, Tools of TitansBrad Dukes, Reflections: An Oral History of Twin PeaksAngela Duckworth, Grit: The Power of Passion and PerseveranceLeila Guerriero, A Simple Story: The Last MalamboJosh Waitzkin, The Art of Learning: A Journey in the Pursuit of ExcellenceLesley M.M. Blume, Everybody Behaves Badly: The True Story Behind Hemingway's Masterpiece 'The Sun Also Rises'Richard A. Clarke and R.P. Eddy, Warnings: Finding Cassandras to Stop CatastrophesTristan Gooley, How to Read WaterLizzy Goodman, Meet Me in the BathroomWil Derkse, The Rule of Benedict for BeginnersBruce Springsteen, Born to Run: The Autobiography of Bruce SpringsteenArnold Bennett, How to Live on 24 Hours a DayStefan Zweig, Montaigne
― ArchCarrier, Friday, 22 December 2017 18:13 (seven years ago)
xposts: last time i read any w. lewis was in my early twenties (apes, revenge, vulgar streak are rereads) but keep picking up his books when i see them, so catching up with that. there are some quite powerful visual descriptions in journey which are easier to take than some of his, er, opinions in same (think this work ties into snooty baronet in some way?). wild bodies was interesting as a template for future endeavours (art/life dichotomy)... the mitchison collab is a short post-life fantasy full of mythical refs with, from what i understand, the prose at times responding to lewis's illustrations. i don't know, think i was more receptive to his prose/pose earlier in my life (though still have the latter parts of the human age to read at some point).
― no lime tangier, Friday, 22 December 2017 18:35 (seven years ago)
yep, ok. journey into barbary as you say is definitely a real mixture of his superb visual capabilities and his strained and strenuous moral vision. p certain journey and snooty baronet were from the same period (periods are important with lewis i think, as with those others from that period - pound and eliot - maybe 'period' is just a way of handling moral-aesthetic unease). i like wild bodies v much, and hadn't heard of the n mitchison collab at all, which surprised me. latter parts of the human age are v different from the childermass but i think are v worth reading (i really like monstre gai).
― Fizzles, Friday, 22 December 2017 19:20 (seven years ago)
wrote a bit towards the end of this thing about Self-Condemned fwiw.
― Fizzles, Friday, 22 December 2017 19:36 (seven years ago)
ingeborg bachmann / the book of franza *ingeborg bachmann / elegy for fanny goldmann
I didn't know her unfinished works were published - will look into it. How did you find it, ows?
― xyzzzz__, Friday, 22 December 2017 19:41 (seven years ago)
weird year of reading; got a data plan (boo) in february, quit my 1.5 hour-long commute job in may, started a phd september. all of which left me reading less and less. read more short stories, and left more novels half-finished, than ever. best discoveries were donald antrim, william hope hodgson, otessa moshfegh
ted chiang - story of your lifeottessa moshfegh - mcglueottessa moshfegh - eileenottessa moshfegh - homesick for another worldmary beard - spqrpatricia lockwood - priestdaddyeric foner - a short history of reconstructionpaul beatty - selloutwilliam hope hodgson - house on the borderlandjeff vandermeer - annihilationraymond carver - cathedralgeorge saunders - civlwarland in bad declinegeorge saunders - tenth of decemberherman melville - moby dick (unfinished)thomas pynchon - crying of lot 49rick perlstein - before the storm
― flopson, Friday, 22 December 2017 23:20 (seven years ago)
They're well worth reading, xyzzzz__, although they are somewhat fragmentary and as a result feel like preparatory studies for Malina, which Bachmann intended as an overture to the Ways of Dying novels, and which continues the fragments' focus on the continuities between fascism and the patriarchal structures of postwar Austrian life. Peter Filkins's translation seems serviceable, although I can't really evaluate his editorial choices without having gone over the drafts in the German editions.xp
― one way street, Friday, 22 December 2017 23:32 (seven years ago)
I read Hunger either this Year Or last. Now have the next Hamsun waiting. Read Elijah Wald on delta blues and development of the style in escaping the delta.Didn't get around to reading the version of Crime and Punishment I bought at the start of the year. So hope to get into it this year. Hope tobget into Simon Schama on geopolitics.reading several things on punk in the UK at the moment. Not been keeping a list. Need to finish Tin Drum which wasn't great for stopping and starting on buses. But I got about half way through.will probably remember more later.
― Stevolende, Saturday, 23 December 2017 01:08 (seven years ago)
Read 20 or 30 books picked up quite s few more. Which just go on the to read pile and may be picked up over the next couple of years. May not.
Think I finally got into Goodbye to Berlin this yearafter getting it from FOPP a couple of years back. Need to read more isherwood.
got to work b through the backlog of things I picked up over the last few years.
― Stevolende, Saturday, 23 December 2017 01:32 (seven years ago)
Doesn't look like I read as much as I thought I did. In my defense, the Osterhammel was like 1000+ pages.
Wislawa Szymborska - MapD.H. Lawrence - D.H. Lawrence and ItalyMary Beard - SPQRRenata Adler - SpeedboatCarlo Collodi - The Adventures of PinocchioHonore de Balzac - The Human Comedy: Selected StoriesMiguel de Unamuno - Tragic Sense of Life*Max Scheler - RessentimentJ.L. Carr - A Month in the CountryRobert Graves - Goodbye to All ThatSteven Sherrill - The Minotaur Takes a Cigarette BreakJurgen Osterhammel - The Transformation of the WorldDave Hickey - Air GuitarJ.G. Farrell - TroublesJ.D. Vance - Hillbilly ElegyThomas Berger - Little Big ManSarah Bakewell - At the Existentialist Cafe
*re-read
― o. nate, Saturday, 23 December 2017 01:33 (seven years ago)
1. Jorge Luis Borges - Total Library* What and how is this so far??2. Fizzles has another blog3. Women of Wonder - edited by Pamela Sargent 4/5 Hi Ward, was this the same volume I read, The Contemporary Years? Great stuff, must get the previous.
Can't remember what I read in Jan-Feb, but March-Sept In Search of Lost Time, Penguin Deluxe. Lydia Davis's translation of Swann's Way is wonderful; ditto the whole series overall, but suspect would have been even better if cut by a third---I know I know, the increasingly eternally outsidery insider and vice-versa is learning to write,because everyone has a book of life inside---the best and worst of autofiction, and I mean to read much or all of it again.Kelly Willis, Get In Trouble: not cyber, but plenty punk science fiction, speculative (expolatory, opinionated), from a certain woman's POV (prob a childhood fan of EAW Magazine). Short stories, Jack. Rich Kienzle, Southwest Shuffle: Pioneers of Honky-Tonk, Western Swing, and Country Jazz They scuffled through the Depression, some went to war, some stayed on the radio (mostly live for quite a while), most eventually hit a wall in Nashville after the Hollywood harmonic convergence ran out of trend cred with the suits. Also could have used a copy editor along the way, but very readable and lots of twists, something like Four Lives In The Bebop Business, except three out of those four made it big later. Ernest Hemingway, Collected Stories: some too slick and/or snide, but quite a few work in unusual ways, more about this another time maybe. The aforementioned Women of Wonder: The Contemporary Years, Science Fiction by Women from the 1970s to the 1990s: "Bloodchild" does not eclipse most of the rest, which is saying a lot.Currently Hound Dog: The Lieber and Stoller Autobiography(with David Ritz): two Jewish kids from tricky East Coast circumstances make it to Hollywood and the world before they're out of their teens, kick it back and forth here.
― dow, Saturday, 23 December 2017 03:40 (seven years ago)
Meant to say, "Fizzles has another blog!" Enjoying it!
― dow, Saturday, 23 December 2017 03:42 (seven years ago)
That should have been RAW Magazine, sorry.
― dow, Saturday, 23 December 2017 03:44 (seven years ago)
Master & The Margarita, BulgakovMatilda, DahlThe Penguin History Of Russia: From Tsarism To The Twenty First Century, ServiceWays Of Seeing, BergerI Love Dick, Chris KraussWorking, Studs TerkelForbbiden Lovers:Hollywood's Greatest Female Stars Who Loved Women, Axel MadsenSueurs Froides, Boileau-NarcejacRebecca, Daphne Du MaurierAbraham's Valley, Augustina Bessa-LuísHrabal short story collectionMy Europe, Maria Filomena MónicaJean De Florette, Marcel PagnolProfessor Moriarty:The Hound Of The D'Ubervilles, Kim NewmanPapini short story collectionSense Of An Ending, Julian BarnesOsso, Rui ZinkSpooks: Science Tackles The Afterlife, Mary RoachManon des Sources, Marcel PagnolArtful, Ali SmithThat Ruy Belo Bossa Nova bookTeresa Veiga short story collectionThe Buried Giant, He Who Shall Not Be NamedGreenmantle, John BuchanHunger Makes Me A Modern Girl. Carrie BrownsteinDiary Of A Provincial Lady, E.M. Delafield
Have a flight today so hoping to finish off some more before the year's over.
― Daniel_Rf, Saturday, 23 December 2017 09:38 (seven years ago)
They're well worth reading, xyzzzz__, although they are somewhat fragmentary and as a result feel like preparatory studies for Malina, which Bachmann intended as an overture to the Ways of Dying novels, and which continues the fragments' focus on the continuities between fascism and the patriarchal structures of postwar Austrian life. Peter Filkins's translation seems serviceable, although I can't really evaluate his editorial choices without having gone over the drafts in the German editions.xp― one way street, Friday, 22 December 2017 23:32 (yesterday) Permalink
― one way street, Friday, 22 December 2017 23:32 (yesterday) Permalink
Thanks - I seem to remember you were critical of some of Peter Filkins' other translations of Bachmann but as you describe it this is very much my jam. I'll have a look at Three Radio Plays if I can as well.
1. Jorge Luis Borges - Total Library* What and how is this so far??
This collects all of Borges' non-fiction and I'd say that apart from Labyrinths this is the other one to get, but I only got through about a 1/3 before I put it down.
― xyzzzz__, Saturday, 23 December 2017 12:34 (seven years ago)
Thought this 'un was 2016! It occasions a lively exchange:
The Collected Stories of Elizabeth Bowen starts with one about a bachelor boarder, who pays extra for home-style comforts, which incl. very close attention by females across the breakfast table; the simple male mind thinks they all want to marry him (well maybe not the venerable Aunt Willoughby, maybe) and senses as much as he is able--in the familiar, always edgey morning drills---the shifting within the pecking order, the political significance of their comments and questions for him, comments and ripostes for each other among them. Just a few pages---he has to eat fast, leave for work---but already, in her late teens or early 20s, she's killing it.Maybe a little too imagery-happy in the one about the antsy young unmarried teacher who impulsively invites her wary hungry teen girl students to tea, but only at the beginning, which does crank things up for the spring fever spin.These could be the beginnings of good novels, ditto the one about the vicar and his disconcertingly aspiring benefactor, while "The Confidante" and "Requiescat" could be satisfying endings (could also see all of these as plays). This last is the most complex so far, as a man receives a letter requesting help with "some papers" from the recently widowed wife of someone who was apparently more than a friend. He dreads and feels compelled, by duty and rivalry, to go see her; she apologizes for demoting him---"I tried to play the game." He leads and leaves her to this, then responds in several ways, changing masks and letting them slip a little.
― dow, Wednesday, January 11, 2017 6:44 PM (yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink"
Oddly enough I bought the collected stories a few years ago, read all the stories you described here but no more, then sort of forgot about it except for reading a story I saw a reference to somewhere recently. I must go back to them!
― .robin., Wednesday, January 11, 2017 8:02 PM (eleven months ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Believe Eudora Welty liked every one of the stories. I know the WWII stories are the most famous, such as the ones from Ivy Gripped The Steps
― The Magnificent Galileo Seven (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, January 11, 2017 8:31 PM (eleven months ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
There was a version of the Collected Stories which led with an introduction by Angus Wilson. One with a green, kind of boring cover. Current version in the US with the nice painting lists the Angus Wilson intro in the TOC but it has in fact gone missing.
― The Magnificent Galileo Seven (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, January 11, 2017 8:38 PM (eleven months ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Mine has an Angus Wilson introduction (boring cover but its navy blue). Were you looking for it? I'm sure I could take some photos and upload it somewhere, its only a few pages long.
― .robin., Thursday, January 12, 2017 5:12 AM (eleven months ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Thanks, but I read it recently in a library copy so no need right now. Not sure exactly why its absence irks me. Maybe I am missing the brick and mortar bookstore where I bought his Anglo-Saxon Attitudes.
Also just remembering that somewhere I have the intro she wrote herself to Ivy Gripped the Steps and Other Stories.
― The Magnificent Galileo Seven (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, January 12, 2017 9:29 AM (eleven months ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
I'm reading the navy blue doorstop edition with Angus Wilson's intro, but you're not missing much without that. Makes a few good points I guess but he's very hats-off to what he beholds as her robust country heiress grace, Conservative but fair-minded (also claims she's better than Woolf etc). But she seems to be full of mischief from the get-go, initially in a way maybe fairly familiar to yer more sophisticated sort of magazine readers, but increasingly pushing against and around gender norms, as female characters, especially (but not only) test power factors and divine secret codicils in their heritage---along with the money and status, always useful, and you can't get away from any of the expectations and possibilities; even if you don't have much yourself, you're downwind of Someone who does. Also, you might be a good little wife secretly lost, re-entering the clutches of the Helper (as she says her friends on the Continent call her), for instance.Wonder what Woolf, Mansfield, Jane Bowles thought of her? Wonder what DH Lawrence thought, for that matter---prob mixed emotions: here's a "secret" sister, but an suavely uppity woman too.
― dow, Thursday, January 12, 2017 11:12 AM (eleven months ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
So far the stories are still pretty short, brief encounters, hit and run. See you soon.
― dow, Thursday, January 12, 2017
― dow, Sunday, 24 December 2017 16:24 (seven years ago)
ust finished Gavid Grossman's A Horse Walks Into A Bar: it's only 194 pages, but so dense, so action-packed a monologue that I only read for an hour each night at bedtime this past week, with no loss of momentum. The old comic, the expert at long-game set-ups is leading his audience and himself off the trail of zingers, off the rails too, but toward the inside-out hobo jungle of psychodrama, revelation, confession, testimony, what maybe the final bit---meanwhile the audience, incl. the narrator, becomes known by quite the range of reactions, in a rowdy Israeli pitstop one frickin' night: "You wanna clear your head, and this guy gives us Yom Kippur!" Others are like, "No, he's still giving us jokes too," even counting them, a bit shell-shocked, others are drawn into the serious cobweb moonlight, at least for a while. And yet the monologist (who has to react to all this, of course) doesn't try to explain *every* fucking thing, the author doesn't try to spoonfeed us: revelation leads to room for speculation.Even more interesting to read so soon after In Search of Lost Time.
― dow, Friday, September 22, 2017
― dow, Sunday, 24 December 2017 16:31 (seven years ago)
Been thinking about reading that /vmic
― Steely Rodin (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 24 December 2017 16:39 (seven years ago)
From Rolling Science Fiction Fantasy Speculative Fiction etc.
In the aforementioned Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy 2016 (Karen Joy Fowler, editor/John Joseph Adams, series ed.), I was struck by what I mentioned somewhere else as the "initial snappy patter shifting to different tones and levels", very hard to do, and it's a cosmic-but-plausible story about cancer, by Adam Johnson---countered by S.L. Huang's cancer story, where there's no out-of-body-experience, no revelation, no transcendence, just adaptation, getting through it and going on with life. Huang says it's autobiographical---shifted into near-future treatments, and the character only has cancer once, so far, unlike the author (both are now cured, or in remission). Also unlike this author, Johnson doesn't provide a comment on his story, but his female narrator has a seemingly Johnson-like husband---I hope his story is not based on his actual wife's experience; it does seem more imagined than Huang's account---in a way that seems almost foolish right after first reading Huang, but no, they're just---two ways of looking at it, writing about it. I think. Anyway, can't recall coming across such a juxtaposition in an anthology before.
― dow, Friday, March 3, 2017 12:24 PM (nine months ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Not that Johnson's story is Inspirational, it's about moving between past, present, future, commuting.
― dow, Friday, March 3, 2017 12:28 PM
― dow, Sunday, 24 December 2017 16:40 (seven years ago)
Leave us not forget to give it up for Richard Price, one more time:]Mention of Greenmantle as thriller richly evocative/pungent re time place worldview, reminds me of this, from ILE's Crime Fiction S,D:Thank yall for getting me to read Richard Price, finally! Lush Life is tremendous, the way he expertly steers us through the multi-dimensional convergence of class, race, age, gender, other, in Lower East Side Post-9/11 Giuliani York* (the Quality Of Life Squad greets us at the kick-off and reappears like a reverse ice cream truck: you better have what they want, cause they got quotas). The author dispenses a lot more acerbic compassion, a lot more justice, than his people are likely to find anywhere else.(*Wiki:"The experiences of Bratton and New York Deputy Police Commissioner Jack Maple were used as the inspiration of the television series The District." Never saw that, but this isn't a cop show thread; we got one of those?)
― dow, Sunday, November 12, 2017 10:49 AM (two weeks ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Well, it's whatever justice can be dispensed via said convergence, rather than sermonizing or gratuitous manipulation.
― dow, Sunday, November 12, 2017 10:53 AM (two weeks ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
The cop show thread is just called "police procedurals what are your faves" iirc
I loved clockers, want to read more price at some point
― The Suite Life of Jack and Wendy (wins)
― dow, Monday, November 27, 2017
― dow, Monday, 25 December 2017 02:23 (seven years ago)
Add Naomi Alderman's The Power to my list. Finished it yesterday.
― ArchCarrier, Monday, 25 December 2017 21:28 (seven years ago)
This year started brightly, I had four hours of commute each day and a job I could leave behind at the end of the day. That changed in May with (a) a new job and (b) Legend of Zelda, so I didn't read as much as I wanted to. Plus, I abandoned a lot of books which were too hard / too rich for my brain.
Read:Thomas Pynchon - Against the Day. This was a re-read and it felt significantly less ragged than the first time around. I don't think I'll read this again, though it hung together better, I can't see the pickings being any better on the third go round.JL Carr - A Month In The Country. Chosen for its brevity, it was a nice segue from Against the Day, made all the neater by "against the day" turning up as a phrase towards the end. Probably the best thing I read all year. Yusunari Kawabata - Snow Country / A Thousand Cranes - Glad I read these together, they felt complementary. Peter May - Lewis Man. Not good at all. This is the second Peter May book I have read. This one also features people falling silently to their deaths. The word "decaying" was used more than any other. The only positives were family connections: my brother in law's home village (Ludaig) got a mention, as did the SS Politician, which my Grandfather did salvage work on. Sheila Fitzpatrick - The Russian Revolution 1917-1932. This was brisk and clear. It was a second hand copy. A previous owner had diligently underlined every occurrence of "All power to the soviets!"Benedict Anderson - Imagined Communities. I enjoyed this and as usually happens, was persuaded by the arguments, which makes my ambitions for break up of the UK harder to hold on to. I'm moving onto Balkanisation along non-traditional nation-lines (People's Republic of my Back Garden etc). Joy Williams - The Visiting Privilege. Excellent. Starts off with glimpses of human situations, deteriorates / develops into consideration of Great Unknowables and ends with a car crash which led me intoJG Balllard - Crash. The Ballard I have enjoyed the least, too fevered, not chilly enough. It teetered on the brink of knitting its themes / concepts together and then didn't (or maybe it did too subtly for me). I enjoyed JGB letting rip in the acid trip at the end. Also, I learned the word binnacle, which is something.Dumas - The Count of Monte Cristo. Fat and slight. Lots of plot, loads of supposedly loving people giving each other histrionic ultimata, kind of wanted it all to come crashing down on Dantes at the end, tbh.
Abandoned (selected highlights):Patricia Highsmith - The Blunderer. Clarice Lispector - too intense for getting through without a break. I will finish this.Adorno - Minima Moralia. Clearly some leagues beyond my mind horizon. Adolfo Bioy Casares - The Invention of Morel. I will never finish this.
― calumerio, Wednesday, 27 December 2017 14:58 (seven years ago)
Dava Sobel - The Glass UniverseZadie Smith - Changing My Mind: Occasional EssaysZadie Smith - Swing TimeZadie Smith - The Autograph ManUlysses S. Grant - Personal Memoirs of Ulysses S. Grant Volumes 1 & 2Tana French - The LikenessDawn Powell - A Time To Be BornDawn Powell - Angels on ToastDawn Powell - Turn, Magic WheelJan Willem vänder Wetterling - Hard RainAndrew Lownie - Stalin’s Englishman: Guy Burgess, the Cold War, and the Cambridge Spy RingNathan Hill - The NixDavid Hepworth - Never A Dull Moment: 1971 The Year That Rock ExplodedElena Ferrante - My Brilliant FriendElena Ferrante - The Story of A New NameElena Ferrante - Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay BehindElena Ferrante - The Story of the Lost ChildNorman Podhoretz - Making ItMichael Ruhlman - GroceryMary Gaitskill - The MareMary Gaitskill - Somebody With A Little Hammer: EssaysPeter Mayle - A Year In ProvenceJeff Guinn - The Road To Jonestown: Jim Jones And Peoples TempleShiva Naipaul - Journey to Nowhere (reread)Shiva Naipaul - Beyond The Dragon’s Mouth: Stories & EssaysPhilip Roth - The Ghost WriterPhilip Roth - Zuckerman UnboundMichael Connelly - Chasing The DimeMichael Connelly - The Late ShowMichael Connelly - Two Kinds of TruthJo Nesbø - NemesisJo Nesbø - The Devil’s StarJo Nesbø - The ThirstStefan Ahnhem - Victim Without A FaceJohn Williams - StonerJ. Robert Lennon - Broken RiverDon Winslow - The ForceZeynep Tufecki - Twitter & TeargasRichard Boch - The Mudd Club (twice)Karin Fossum - The Drowned BoyKarin Fossum - Hell FireEmma Clines - The GirlsJohn le Carre - The Night ManagerHakan Ostlundh - The IntruderMalin Persson Giolito - Quick SandAdam Gopnik - At The Strangers’ Gate: Arrivals In New York (HATEread)Pauline Kael - I Lost It At The MoviesArne Dahl - MisteriosoJD Vance - Hillbilly Elegy Jussi Adler-Olsen - The Scarred WomanJennifer Egan - A Visit From The Goon SquadColson Whitehead - The Underground RailroadAdam Sisman - John le Carre: The BiographyJohan Theorin - The Darkest Room
almost finished: Dawn Powell - The Diaries 1931-65about to begin: Roberto Bolaño - The Savage Detectives
seasonal word-up y'all! cheers
― Amazing Random (m coleman), Thursday, 28 December 2017 15:14 (seven years ago)
Lots of comfort reading this year. Wonder why that was. Usually I breakup difficult stuff with easier reads, but this year was the other way around.
Many thanks to ILB for introducing me to Penelope Fitzgerald, my hot young find of 2017.
The Bookshop, Penelope FitzgeraldThe Ballad of Peckham Rye, Muriel SparkA Month In The Country, JL CarrPatience, Daniel ClowesGoldfinger, Ian FlemingThe Love Affairs of Nathaniel P., Adelle WaldmanJudaism: A Very Short Introduction, Norman SolomonThe Crossing, Michael ConnellyThe Beiderbecke Affair, Alan PlaterThank You, Jeeves, PG WodehouseCrooked House, Agatha ChristieKillers of the Flower Moon, David GrannSuperman: Phantom Zone, Steve GerberConclave, Robert HarrisA Little History Of The World, E.H. GombrichLive and Let Die, Ian FlemingSwag, Elmore LeonardWe Have Always Lived in the Castle, Shirley JacksonUbik, Philip K. DickFuneral in Berlin, Len DeightonIn Therapy, Susie OrbachStar Trek: New Frontier Books 1-4, Peter DavidThe Ghost Writer, Philip RothAngels Flight, Michael ConnellyDarkness Visible, William StyronThe Long Goodbye, Raymond ChandlerHoles, Louis SacharHuman Voices, Penelope FitzgeraldThings Fall Apart, Chinua AchebeCounselling for Toads, Robert De BoardHow to Write Groundhog Day, Danny RubinThe Adversary, Emmanuel CarrereLeave It to Psmith, PG WodehouseLord Edgware Dies, Agatha ChristieThe Sense of an Ending, Julian BarnesDiamonds Are Forever, Ian FlemingNorthern Lights, Philip PullmanThe Subtle Knife, Philip PullmanSmile, Raina TelgemeierThe Making of a Therapist, Louis CozolinoJames Bond: My Long And Etc., Len DeightonSisters, Raina TelgemeierFeet of Clay, Terry Pratchett
― Chuck_Tatum, Friday, 29 December 2017 02:53 (seven years ago)
The only books I quit this year were Middlemarch (which I loved but wasn't in the mood for) and the Brexit book All Out War, which was well-written, but I realised I'm still too angry to read about these dangerous arseholes in a book that portrays them as characterful eccentrics
― Chuck_Tatum, Friday, 29 December 2017 02:58 (seven years ago)
my favorites have asterisks. no re-reads this year.
fictionVoltaire - Candideanonymous - Sir Gawain and the Green KnightJeff VanderMeer - Annihilation*Jeff VanderMeer - AuthorityMark Frost - The Secret History of Twin Peaks (2016) -- boring writingSophie Kinsella - Finding Audrey (2016)GRRM - A Game of ThronesDenis Johnson - Jesus' SonStrugatsky bros. - Roadside Picnic (audiobook)*PKD - A Scanner Darkly (audiobook)*Kim Thúy - RuEmma Cline - The Girls (2016)*Gloria Ann Wesley - If This is Freedom
about 1/3rd of The Big Book of Science Fiction (eds. VanderMeers)around half of Love in the Time of Cholera (decent but a slow read)abandoned: Michael Robbins - Alien vs. Predator -- shit
uncollected shortsGilman - The Yellow WallpaperBob Shaw - Light of Other DaysChiang - The Merchant and the Alchemist's GateCoetzee - The Dog (2017)Roupenian - Cat Person (2017)
non-fictionMario Livio - Brilliant BlundersBeryl Markham - West with the Night (audiobook)Patton Oswalt - Silver Screen Fiend (audiobook)Kory Stamper - Word by Word (audiobook) (2017)*Errol Morris - Believing is SeeingJanet Maybee - Aftershock -- local interest, regarding Halifax Explosion
comicsVaughan and Whedon - Runaways V1-V8Vaughan - The Hood: Blood From StonesVaughan - We Stand on GuardTezuka - Black Jack V2Atwood - Angel Catbird V1 -- 1/10, awfulDitko et al. - Iron Man Masterworks V1Kirby et al. - Thor Masterworks V1Ellis - Transmetropolitan V1Claremont - X-Men: God Loves, Man KillsStarlin - Infinity Gauntlet #1-#6*Starlin - Thanos QuestStarlin - The Death of Captain MarvelJared Axelrod - The Battle of Blood & Inkvarious - Iron Man: Demon in a Bottle
― Einstein, Bazinga, Sitar (abanana), Friday, 29 December 2017 03:39 (seven years ago)
abandoned: Michael Robbins - Alien vs. Predator -- shit
yeah i fucking hate this guy. even the title of this book pisses me off.
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Friday, 29 December 2017 05:41 (seven years ago)
Surprised by so much dislike for Robbins’s poetry. I thought he was fun to read. Kind of a sleazier millennial Ashbery.
― o. nate, Friday, 29 December 2017 14:02 (seven years ago)
What I read in 2017.
― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 1 January 2018 13:12 (seven years ago)
I aimed to read 52 and I don't think I finished a single book. I probably bought 100 though.
― Robert Adam Gilmour, Monday, 1 January 2018 14:33 (seven years ago)
quick, unchallenging reads for the most part:
Harlan Ellison ® - Angry CandyJack Vance - Cugel's SagaStanislaw Lem - The InvincibleStanislaw Lem - Memoirs Found in a BathtubStanislaw Lem - The Futurological CongressSamuel Delany - Tales of NeveryonUrsula Le Guin - The Beginning PlacePenelope Lively - A Stitch In TimePenelope Lively - The House in Norham GardensPenelope Lively - The Wild Hunt of HagworthyJoan Robinson - When Marnie Was ThereMary Downing Hahn - Mister Death's Blue-Eyed GirlsUrsula Dubosarsky - The Golden DayRobert Marasco - Burnt OfferingsFritz Leiber - Our Lady of DarknessFritz Leiber - The Green MillenniumFritz Leiber - Night MonstersMargaret St. Clair - The Best of Margaret St. ClairAmanda Petrusich - Do Not Sell At Any Price
― jesus and figs and science and the foo fighters (unregistered), Monday, 1 January 2018 18:09 (seven years ago)
How was The Best of Margaret St. Clair? Always refreshingly different in old anthologies---when there were *maybe* six or seven female writers permitted to be semi-regulars in fantasy and science fiction mags---but I've never come across a whole book of hers. A Wiccan of the 50s, right? But attutude more subtle than such a tag implies.
― dow, Monday, 1 January 2018 19:16 (seven years ago)
xxp - I aimed to read 52 as well and managed to read 49.
― ArchCarrier, Tuesday, 2 January 2018 13:41 (seven years ago)
Books I read in 2017 that I can remember upon returning to work after a week off with a brain that not work so good no more:James Baldwin - Collected Essays (Library of America)Susan Wise Bauer - The History of the Ancient World: : From the Earliest Accounts to the Fall of RomeTaylor Branch - Parting the Waters: America in the King Years, 1954-63Taylor Branch - Pillar of Fire: America in the King Years, 1963-65Robert W. Chambers - The King in YellowJack Handey - What I'd Say to the Martians: And Other Veiled ThreatsWilliam Hope Hodgson - The House on the BorderlandSean Howe - Marvel Comics: The Untold StoryStephen King - RevivalSteven Mithen - After the Ice: A Global Human History, 20,000-5000 BCRick Perlstein - Before the Storm: Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American ConsensusJohn Semley - This is a Book About the Kids in the HallReed Tucker - Slugfest: Inside the Epic, 50-year Battle Between Marvel and DCIsabel Wilkerson - The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America's Great Migration
Books I started reading in 2017 and am still reading in 2018:Robert Bellah - Religion in Human Evolution: From the Paleolithic to the Axial AgeWm. Theodore de Bary, Wing-tsit Chan - Sources of Chinese Tradition: From Earliest Times to 1600Mircea Eliade - The History of Religious Ideas Vol. 1
― Bobby Buttrock (Old Lunch), Tuesday, 2 January 2018 14:20 (seven years ago)
Oh, I somehow missed that people were including comics in their lists. I'll just say that I also read approximately four times my body weight in comics and leave it at that.
― Bobby Buttrock (Old Lunch), Tuesday, 2 January 2018 14:30 (seven years ago)
only read 30 books last year, kinda slacked in the middle of the summer and never really hit a stride again. didn't have one big book like i did in 2016 (infinite jest), i'd like to do at least one this year but not sure which. have anna karenina sitting on my shelf but idk, haven't even read notes from the underground yet...
On Bowie — Rob Sheffield Listen, Liberal: Or, What Ever Happened to the Party of the People? — Thomas Frank The Master Plan: ISIS, al-Qaeda, and the Jihadi Strategy for Final Victory — Brian FishmanHomesick for Another World — Ottessa MoshfeghUniversal Harvester — John Darnielle Collected Poems & Stories — Mallory WhittenThe Broom of the System — David Foster Wallace American Pastoral — Philip RothFirestarter — Stephen KingGod Box — Mallory WhittenBlitzed: Drugs in Nazi Germany — Norman OhlerA Colony in a Nation — Chris Hayes literally show me a healthy person — Darcie Wilder It — Stephen King How the Hell Did This Happen?: The Election of 2016 — P.J. O’RourkeShattered: Inside Hillary Clinton’s Doomed Campaign — Jonathan Allen & Amie ParnesCujo — Stephen King The Handmaid’s Tale — Margaret AtwoodMeet Me in the Bathroom — Lizzy GoodmanPrivate Citizens — Tony TulathimutteTouch — Courtney Maum The Sarah Book — Scott McClanahanEileen — Ottessa MoshfeghKill All Normies — Angela Nagle Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative? — Mark FisherAll the Dirty Parts — Daniel HandlerNo Is Not Enough — Naomi Klein Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? — Philip K. Dick The Original Face — Guillaume Morissette Sticky Fingers: The Life and Times of Jann Wenner and Rolling Stone Magazine — Joe Hagan Hit So Hard — Patty Schemel
favorites were both books by Ottessa Moshfegh, It, Meet Me in the Bathroom, Universal Harvester, and Shattered.
― flappy bird, Tuesday, 2 January 2018 22:43 (seven years ago)
lol sorry im mixing up my dour russians
― flappy bird, Tuesday, 2 January 2018 22:44 (seven years ago)
oh American Pastoral was absolutely amazing but I read the majority of that on a trip in September 2016 but didn't finish until February
― flappy bird, Tuesday, 2 January 2018 22:45 (seven years ago)
think i'll try to read 365 short stories this year.
― Einstein, Bazinga, Sitar (abanana), Tuesday, 2 January 2018 23:38 (seven years ago)
gotta set yourself a microfiction rule
― j., Wednesday, 3 January 2018 01:03 (seven years ago)
yeah i was thinking that reading stuff from flash fiction: very short stories would not satisfy. my first rule is that anything in a collection of short stories not devoted to flash fiction counts.
― Einstein, Bazinga, Sitar (abanana), Wednesday, 3 January 2018 01:48 (seven years ago)
Maybe a Chekhov a day? Wouldn't keep the doctor away, since he wss one, but prob good for what ails you (if nothing ails you, even better I say)
― dow, Wednesday, 3 January 2018 02:37 (seven years ago)
won't keep the typos away, nothing will.
― dow, Wednesday, 3 January 2018 02:38 (seven years ago)
ooh i should do that too
― flappy bird, Wednesday, 3 January 2018 04:25 (seven years ago)
in a chaotic and confusing world, programmatic reading can remove the heavy burden of too much choice
― A is for (Aimless), Wednesday, 3 January 2018 04:28 (seven years ago)
Old Lunch, what is the Mircea Eliade like? I have enjoyed his fiction a lot.
― Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Saturday, 6 January 2018 00:03 (seven years ago)
Fairly dense but elucidating if (like me) you're relatively ignorant of where/how various religious ideas originated. Reading now about the variety of theological constructs from across Europe and India that sprang from the same proto-Indo-European origins. I had no idea.
― Bobby Buttrock (Old Lunch), Saturday, 6 January 2018 00:14 (seven years ago)
Took me a little while to write this lot up but:
Fyodor Dostoevsky – Crime & PunishmentMuriel Spark – The Prime of Miss Jean BrodieKevin MacNeil – The Brilliant and ForeverAngela Carter – The Magic ToyshopRay Celestin – The Axeman’s JazzPaul Beatty – The SelloutYaa Gyasi - HomegoingJohn Cheever – The Complete StoriesJoan Didion – Slouching Towards BethlehemJohn Dos Passos – USAMichaelangelo Matos - The Underground Is MassiveAnita Brookner – Hotel du LacGabriel Garcia Marquez – Love In The Time of CholeraElmore Leonard – Freaky DeakyEimear McBride – The Lesser BohemiansBarney Norris – Five Rivers Met On A Wooded PlaneSana Krasikov – The PatriotsJulian Barnes – The Noise of TimeRob Duncan – Psychedelia and Other ColoursAlan Sillitoe – Saturday Night and Sunday MorningGeorge Saunders – Lincoln In The BardoJohn Darnielle – Universal HarvesterNaomi Aldermann – The PowerZadie Smith – On BeautyDon DeLillo – Mao IIJohn Le Carre – Smiley’s PeopleDavid Stubbs – Future DaysMariana Enriquez – Things We Lost In The FireStephen King – The StandDanilo Kis – HourglassEmile Zola – La Bete HumaineTom Wolfe - Bonfire of the Vanities
Good year!
― Matt DC, Sunday, 21 January 2018 20:13 (seven years ago)
Some of you people are machines. The poster 'one way street' reading 129 books in 2017 is both awesome and insane. I think one year I read 52 books (one a week), but I was unemployed for half of the year. Now I barely average two books a month.
― Rod Steel (musicfanatic), Tuesday, 23 January 2018 17:44 (seven years ago)
A chunk of those 129 appear to be graphic novels, if that makes any difference.
― Matt DC, Tuesday, 23 January 2018 17:47 (seven years ago)
i only read 30 books last year & i feel like i was slacking
reading the Michael Wolff book now, v good fan fic
― flappy bird, Tuesday, 23 January 2018 17:48 (seven years ago)
No more than 40. That's counting honest books only. Would have been more but July was lost.
― alimosina, Tuesday, 23 January 2018 18:31 (seven years ago)
(This month looks to be unimpressive too.)
― alimosina, Tuesday, 23 January 2018 18:32 (seven years ago)
By participating these "What did you read" threads for the past five years or so, I now know I recently average about 45 books a year.
― A is for (Aimless), Tuesday, 23 January 2018 18:34 (seven years ago)
I read >cough< about 250 books, no way am I typing all those up
― Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Wednesday, 24 January 2018 00:51 (seven years ago)
How much time do you read per day, James?
― jmm, Wednesday, 24 January 2018 00:55 (seven years ago)
Maybe 3-4 hours if it's a work day (public transport, lunch break, insomnia)
― Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Wednesday, 24 January 2018 05:34 (seven years ago)
I believe I read much slower than the average person, which is depressing. There's no chance I'm reading a whole book in one sitting, no matter how light or easy it is.
― Rod Steel (musicfanatic), Saturday, 3 February 2018 00:46 (seven years ago)
I fear I might be incapable of reading as fast as the people I hope to catch up with.
― Robert Adam Gilmour, Saturday, 3 February 2018 01:02 (seven years ago)
I will read no more for ever
― Some Dusty in Here (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 3 February 2018 01:53 (seven years ago)
There's no chance I'm reading a whole book in one sitting, no matter how light or easy it is.
I seldom finish a book in one sitting. Its fine, this is not a competition.
― xyzzzz__, Saturday, 3 February 2018 12:50 (seven years ago)
read Hard to be a God this week, the translation was iffy and the conversion to ebook was shoddy but it's a fine piece of work
― drugs don't kill people, poppers do (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 3 February 2018 12:53 (seven years ago)
put it in your 2018 list :)
― xyzzzz__, Saturday, 3 February 2018 12:54 (seven years ago)
haha wasn't even checking thread titles :)
― drugs don't kill people, poppers do (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 3 February 2018 12:55 (seven years ago)
how tf can you finish a book in one sitting unless it's like <150 pages i read Universal Harvester in two sittings in one dayread Noah Cicero's new (excellent) poetry collection in two sittings over two days, but that's one I could've easily read in one sittingDarcie Wilder's book last year, I think that was three sittings?idk
what have y'all read in one sitting? genuinely curious. and impressed. my bum would go numb
― flappy bird, Saturday, 3 February 2018 22:43 (seven years ago)
This one, as orig. posted on an ILM Eagles thread, think it's A Good Day In Hell:
Also I picked up Felder's hefty Between Heaven and Hell in the library, and read the whole thing that afternoon, which never happens. Gist: his father comes off as a self-made, self-righteous, self-torturing workaholic and skinflint, and Don follows suit during his Eagles years, with infinitely more bucks and perks than blue collar Dad ever had, of course. Furthermore, Dr. Phil, he somewhat recreates his own defiant-dependent teen relationship with Dad, now played by Henley and Frey.When he finally gets his ass fired, after having papers served in the studio, he actually calls back, all crying---"Try to seek some higher ground in this, Fingers," Frey counsels, and the ex-Mrs. Felder fervently seconds.So he does, with this book of excellent anecdotes (also careful references to ongoing litigation), from early years in Florida---girlfriend accuses him of stepping out with blondes, who turn out to be pre-facial hair, though tressed-for-success Gregg and Duane)[;"Tommy" Petty is his guitar student; Stephen Stills is "the funniest kid I ever met," passing through town while running away from military school, back to his parents (though every kid I knew back then who was sent to military school, was sent for a good reason); Bernie Leadon is his local connection to the budding El Lay country rock scene.Also lots of good stuff about "The Gods," as everybody who worked with and for the Eagles called Henley and Frey; supposedly many of these--even the Gods themselves, individually---called Felder up to trade the latest atrocity stories.But I also get, in terms of more perhaps unintended reveals, that the Gods were trying to keep their associates' and their own assholes-with-money tendencies somewhat in line, at least for the sake of making even more money (by keeping up the musical standards, for instance). Nevertheless, Felder and I are somewhat respectful of, for instance, Joe Walsh's working out his frustrations on whole floors of hotels (and he lasted longer than any non-God in the line-up, I think, so maybe the mayhem helped).
― dow, Sunday, 4 February 2018 02:30 (seven years ago)
When he finally gets his ass fired, after having papers served in the studio, he actually calls back, all crying That is, Felder had papers served on Frey (for the first time).
― dow, Sunday, 4 February 2018 02:32 (seven years ago)