The Tanenhaus Brownie Watch will return again soon, but in the meantime, Litkicks is on the case.
Month / December 2005
RIP Richard Pryor
Vollmann’s Favorite Books
Here is a list of the best books that Vollmann has ever read (as reported in “Something to Die For,” The Review of Contemporary Fiction, Summer 1993, Vol 13, Issue 2, p. 25):
Tadeusz Konwicki, A Dreambook for Our Time
Lady Murasaki, The Tale of Genji
Cormac McCarthy, All the Pretty Horses
Lautreamont, Maldoror
Vasily Grossman, Life and Fate
Tolstoy, War and Peace
Yasunari Kawabata, Snow Country
Hemingway, Islands in the Stream
The Poetic Edda
The tales of Chekhov
The tales of Hawthorne
Njal’s Saga
Sigrid Unset, Kristin Lavransdatter
Melville, The Piazza Tales
London, Martin Eden
Julio Cortazar, Hopscotch
The poems of Emily Dickinson
Faulkner, Pylon and The Sound and the Fury
Homer, the Odyssey and the Iliad
Nikos Kazantzakis, The Odyssey: A Modern Sequel
Heidegger, Being and Time
Poe, The Narrative of A. Gordon Pym
Pushkin, Eugene Onegin
Kobo Abe, The Woman in the Dunes
Blake, Songs of Experience and Experience
Gyorgi Konrad, The Loser
Issac B. Singer, The Family Moskas
Bruno Schultz, The Street of Crocodiles
Malraux, Anti-Memoirs
The poems of Lorca
The poems of Mandelstam
Ovid’s Metamorphoses
The tales of D.H. Lawrence
T.E. Lawrence, Seven Pillars of Wisdom
Ivan Ilich, Tools for Conviviality
Mishima, the Sea of Fertility tetraology
Kimon Nicolaides, The Natural Way to Draw
The poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins
Jane Smiley, The Greenlanders
Vollmann then writes:
Doubtless some people will want to complain about the women, blacks, reds, whites, blues and greens I left out, but I don’t really give a damn.
The beauty in these books would flourish more widely if the following social changes were made:
1. Abolish television, because it has no reverence for time.
2. Abolish the automobile, because it has no reverence for space.
3. Make citizenship contingent on literacy in every sense. Thus, politicians who do not write every word of their speeches should be thrown out of office in disgrace. Writers who require editors to make their books “good” should be depublished.
4. Teach reverence for all beauty, including that of the word.
Return of the Reluctant — Top Ten Fiction Titles for 2005
In alphabetical order:
Garner by Kirstin Allio: One of the most beautifully written books of the year (thank you, Dan Wickett, for cluing me in), jamming an incredible amount of human insight and intricate prose into its 232 pages. Not a single word has been wasted here. This is a novel to be savored and reread.
Veronica by Mary Gaitskill: It took me a while to get to it, but, like Carrie, I went apeshit over Veronica and am thus somewhat laconic in my response.
The Ha-Ha by Dave King: I read this book entirely by accident earlier in the year and was surprised that most litbloggers and end-of-the-year listmakers had neglected to include it. What makes this novel so remarkable is that King takes a high-concept melodramatic story concept (well, let’s be honest here: a Lifetime TV movie premise) and turns it into a meaningful tale of existential survival.
The Bright Forever by Lee Martin: Another book that was unfairly overlooked, Lee Martin’s intricate novel throws twists, interconnectedness, and multiple perspectives into its tale of a girl who has disappeared in a small town, eventually found murdered. Sure, there are some tonal similarities to Russell Bank’s The Sweet Hereafter. But when writing is this good, who really cares?
Oh Pure and Radiant Heart by Lydia Millet: It is an extremely difficult thing to take an idea that is both gimmicky and a potentially didactic nightmare (Oppenheimer, Szilard and Fermi come to the 21st century to lead a campaign against nuclear weapons) and turn it into a meaningful novel, but Millet has written a very touching and remarkably nuanced book that juxtaposes the duplicities of governmental policy against the hard fought battles to think deeply about world issues and attempt reform in the face of indifference.
The People of Paper by Salvador Plascencia: This book ends up on the list for its sincere experimentalism, its quiet metaphors (the limes, for one) and its sheer beauty in form. OPTR and TM talked this up earlier in the year. And you can see from their convos why Plascencia’s debut novel cuts the mustard.
Tricked by Alex Robinson: While a good deal of attention was devoted to David B’s Epileptic and the like, I was very surprised to see Alex Robinson’s wildly ambitious followup to Box Office Poison pretty much ignored. (Perhaps this was a distribution or publicity problem on Top Shelf’s end.) With Tricked, Robinson expands beyond his twentysomething focus (as well as his artwork) to take on six disparate people who are eventually united by a terrible tragedy.
The Brief and Frightening Reign of Phil by George Saunders: This time around, Saunders seems to be channeling the spirit of Edwin A. Abbott. This short book is both an utterly hilarious parable (as one would expect from Saunders) and quite prescient in light of current events.
On Beauty by Zadie Smith: Far from a mere Forster homage, Smith’s third novel ties in the academic world, class, race and gender and turns out one of those rare books that is both entertaining and literary.
Europe Central by William T. Vollmann: While I am definitely on record as a hard-core Vollmannite, this book makes the list because of Vollmann’s fantastic blossoming as a novelist. Some critics condemned The Royal Family for being long and repetitive, but with Europe Central, Vollmann’s attention to detail has dramatically improved, without sacrificing his usual wide expanse (this time, covering nearly every known figure and event in Russia and Germany around World War II).
Only Your Most Rooted Critics Need Apply
At least one Consider the Lobster reviewer has gone outright insane.