Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Year in Reading 2013

I plowed through so many flipping books this year I don't see the point in ranking them all. I won't rank the ones I reread every year because I reread them because they are favorites and what is this list but a list of favorites and the twenty that I list here will be ones that I read for the first time and will reread again aside from longer reads like The Ambassadors, Freedom and Under the Volcano because those take the kind of commitments that I might not have as I encroach my years of grave sickness and destitution. I am reading more non-fiction and more women. Found my soulmate in Dawn Powell, who I write nothing like. Wish I could because she is a comic genius.

FICTION
  1. Memoirs of Hecate County by Edmund Wilson
    Subsequently saddened that it wasn't all true, but still I pretend. Surprise hit of 2013 from 1946.
  2. Naked Lunch by William S Burroughs
    An astounding achievement. Here's a story: I was housesitting over at Jeff's. Dogsitting really. Jeff had a dog and a snake. I had been asked to turn the snake's light off, it's a python really, off at night and back on in the morning. The morning I went to the python's room to turn off the light, she was not in her cage. My heart pounded when I looked down and saw the python darting between my legs. Reminded me of the time my brother frightened a snowflake eel from out under a rock and between my legs in the Cook Islands. Turns out it was the zipper tassel on my fanny pack swaying around and not Jeff's snake. I called Jeff who said the snake had its own balcony that is not visible from the front. Told timtam for it was she who had brought me the fanny pack as a gift from Vegas and she said what does the python transport itself into a balcony from another dimension? I just hung out pondering this, while working up an appetite for next door by reading Naked Lunch and its scenes of horribly detailed fantastic gay sex.
  3. Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov
    Probably VN's best.
  4. Under the Volcano by Malcolm Lowry
    Tequila-sodden. Electrifying prose that has the DT's. 
  5. Life on the Missisippi by Mark Twain
    Love Mr Twain. Sui generis thing of wonder.
  6. Masters of Atlantis by Charles Portis
    Read during a heartbreak and chuckled like a drunken doofus! High praise for the high priest of the folksy parlance.
  7. Ninety Two in the shade by Thomas McGuane
    Crushing 60s vibe, when the buzz well and truly died, coked-up to the gills, like Fear and Loathing.
  8. The Golden Spur by Dawn Powell
    Frothy like the Dud Avocado and my coffee when properly heated.
  9. Freedom by Franzen
    Rivals the best of Philip Roth.
  10. The Fun Parts by Sam Lipsyte
  11. Badtime in Civil Warland by George Saunders
    Deserves several thoughtful praises every second by those of the corporate world who have good sense.
  12. Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas by Hunter S Thompson
  13. Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain
    Underappreciated, I reckon. 
  14. The Violent Bear it Away by Flannery O' Connor
    With love, it's her bleakest.
  15. Personal Anthology by Jose Luis Borges
    More mystery and detective work that you could shake a stick at. Held together by the most enchanting, swinging prose.
  16. The Easter Parade by Richard Yates
    I think the artist Grimes may have taken her name from the sisters in Richard Yates because she's really good and that would be really cool. I liked The Easter Parade a lot and could stomach the devastation and emotional brutality of their tragedy better than a lot of my friends, who I reckon are way less sensitive than me.
  17. Patrick Melrose novels by Edward St Aubyn
    Awesomely bleak but not a patch on Yates remarkably.
  18. Speedboat by Renata Adler
    Weird and wonderfully experimental.
  19. Maggie by Stephen Crane
    Powerful appreciation for gutter-strewn sex workers. 
  20. A Way of Life Like Any Other
    I loved Darcy O Brien's funny, sad fictionalized memoir of Hollywood Babylon with Dad George O' brien star of Murnau's Sunrise.
Other lesser works include Men's Club by Leonard Michaels, a novel that's not a scratch on his short stories, Dalva by Jim Harrison, noble in its ambitions, but (Dalva) thinks too much like a man. Jim's The English Major is one of his best. A retired biology professor takes a former student (highly-sexualized, of course) on a road trip to rename state birds. Overrated was Cat's Cradle by Kurt Vonnegut, Jr particularly once the entertaining slapstick turned into a dystopian futureworld. Black Spring by Henry Miller was good, but unmemorable. I liked the poetry collection Play the piano... by Charles Bukowski an awful lot and thought The Second Coming by Walker Percy was good, but dogmatic in the way it beat you over the head with its faith. The Watch and In the Loyal Mountains by Rick Bass are good, but came off as second-rate Barry Hannah probably because Rick and Barry run in the same circles and have the same hobbies that introduce them to the same types of people even though Barry does a better job of pushing the berserker envelope. Sea Wolf by Jack London was kind of a slog for the same reason I didn't think too much of the Bob Redford sinking yacht movie and Malcolm by James Purdy was a good strange, eccentric, then disturbingly strange in not a good way, but then its ending was so poignant, I must revisit this weird fairy tale. The Ask by Sam Lipsyte prompted me to question the state of the comic novel and eager to revisit Portnoy's Complaint because Lipsyte's book was irritatingly ranty in ways that I never felt with the Roth book. His stories however are instant classics for me (The Fun Parts), using sarcasm as impressive high comedy, but probably don't overstay their welcome like the novels or the people who deploy sarcasm frequently do. A couple things make McGuane's most recent novel (his last?) Driving on the Rim by different from his other nine. For one, the author hasn't used first person since 1978's Panama — not everyone's favorite. In fact, critics gave him hell for Panama, a little unfairly, I reckon because I loved the sad, funny story about the price of fame starring a burnt-out case with a brain fried so dearly on cocaine that he can't remember his dog's name. Panama was loosely autobiographical, while the new one isn't. In fact, B. Pickett, is about as far from T. McGuane as H. Humbert is from V. Nabokov. The Heart of a Dog by Bulgakov is minor stuff. The Ambassadors by Henry James was super dense and mysterious. I liked it. The Absolutely True Story of a Part-time Indian by Sherman Alexie was a charming kid's book and gifted to me by a nifty Navajo. Letters to Yesenin by Jim Harrison are poems to a Russian poet who killed himself while thinking of killing himself and it is these poems that he writes to a long-dead poet that saves his life. Play it as it lays by Joan Didion is so spooky and creepy, it makes me happy to be east of the west. Expected to glean creative inspiration from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, or at least surprise. The absurdity and nonsense seemed old hat.


NON-FICTION
  1. Just Before Dark by Jim Harrison
    Essay collection full of beautiful prose and a searching hilarious mind who really cares what he thinks and eats.
  2. An Outside Chance by Thomas McGuane
    Essays from the greatest mind that I have ever had the pleasure of getting an email from.
  3. Desert Solitaire by Edward Abbey
    Nails the harsh essence of the Southwest in lean muscular prose and gives indirect advice on how to go about experiencing it.
  4. Lunches with Orson Welles and Henry Jaglom
    From one of the greatest minds to ever live in an age without an ability to email me. His candor and unfiltered style is why I enjoy Bret Easton Ellis's twitter.
  5. Fran Lebowitz Reader
    What a lady. Mostly superb satire.
  6. Killer by Nick Tosches
    Pulpy fever dream. 
  7. Every Love Story is a Ghost Story by DT Max
    Page-turner about David Foster Wallace that confirmed my suspicions that he is someone that I would have never enjoyed being around. 
  8. Nathanael West/ His Life and Art by Jay Martin
    Exhaustive biography of a unique and compassionate ironist






Monday, January 13, 2014

The Dud Avocado and Other Delights

Dud w/ piece of peppermint bark
  1. Desert Solitaire by Edward Abbey
  2. The English Major by Jim Harrison
  3. Men's Club by Leonard Michaels
  4. Freedom by Franzen
  5. Just Before Dark by Jim Harrison
  6. Masters of Atlantis by Charles Portis
  7. Absolutely True Story of a Part-time Indian by Sherman Alexie
  8. Tennis Handsome by Barry Hannah
  9. Naked Lunch by William S Burroughs
  10. Badtime in Civil Warland by George Saunders
  11. Dalva by Jim Harrison
  12. Letters to Yesenin by Jim Harrison
  13. Cat's Cradle by Kurt Vonnegut, Jr
  14. An Outside Chance by Thomas McGuane
  15. Henderson the Rain King by Saul Bellow
  16. Ninety Two in the shade by Thomas McGuane
  17. Under the Volcano by Malcolm Lowry
  18. Black Spring by Henry Miller
  19. Play the piano by Charles Bukowski
  20. The Second Coming by Walker Percy
  21. The Watch by Rick Bass
  22. In the Loyal Mountains by Rick Bass
  23. The Ambassadors by Henry James
  24. Sea Wolf by Jack London
  25. Maggie by Stephen Crane
  26. Killer by Nick Tosches
  27. Every Love Story is a Ghost Story by DT Max
  28. Malcolm by James Purdy
  29. The Ask by Sam Lipsyte
  30. A Handful of Dust by Evelyn Waugh
  31. Driving on the Rim by Thomas McGuane
  32. Lunches with Orson Welles and Henry Jaglom
  33. Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov
  34. The Heart of a Dog by Bulgakov
  35. Fran Lebowitz Reader
  36. Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll
  37. Norwood by Charles Portis
  38. Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas by Hunter S Thompson
  39. The Fun Parts by Sam Lipsyte
  40. The Easter Parade by Richard Yates
  41. Day of the Locust by Nathanael West
  42. Julip by Jim Harrison
  43. Nathanael West/ His Life and Art by Jay Martin
  44. Never Mind by Edward St Aubyn
  45. Bad Taste by Edward St Aubyn
  46. A Way of Life like Any Other by Darcy O'Brien
  47. Memoirs of Hecate County by Edmund Wilson
  48. Speedboat by Renata Adler
  49. Play it as it Lays by Joan Didion
  50. Life on the Missisippi by Mark Twain
  51. Personal Anthology by Jose Luis Borges
  52. Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain
  53. The Bushwhacked Piano by Thomas McGuane
  54. White People by Allan Gurganus
  55. The Dud Avocado by Elaine Dundy
  56. Giovanni's Room by James Baldwin
  57. My Uncle Dudley by Wright Morris
  58. The Violent Bear it Away by Flannery O' Connor
  59. The Golden Spur by Dawn Powell