Heavens! Look at the Time: What Are You Reading During This Summer of 2017?

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Just finished Chris Kraus' Torpor which I warmly recommend. I preferred it quite a bit to I Love Dick (which I also liked) and found it both very funny and moving.

Switched gears and started Robert Brenner's Economics of Global Turbulence which advanced a "secular stagnation" view of the last 25-30 years before it gained more widespread recognition (via Larry Summers). Interesting analysis, he marshals a lot of data and offers a compelling comparative view of the boom and "slow declines" of Japan/Germany/the US.

I'm also about to pick up Vila Matas' Bartleby and Co. I may also squeeze in a couple of shorter novels (and maybe the Savage Detectives, too!) before I re-read Swann's Way.

Federico Boswarlos, Thursday, 13 July 2017 18:16 (six years ago) link

some good stuff on the horizon

http://www.themillions.com/2017/07/anticipated-great-second-half-2017-book-preview.html

johnny crunch, Thursday, 13 July 2017 18:26 (six years ago) link

I read Outline by Rachel Cusk and enjoyed it. The reviews talk a lot about how the narrator is a cipher, but it seems pretty clear that it's just a good mechanism to connect the short stories and monologues of the people she meets. Will probably read the sequel soon.

change display name (Jordan), Thursday, 13 July 2017 19:41 (six years ago) link

I've been reading The Minotaur Takes a Cigarette Break by Steven Sherrill. Definitely worth the hype. Not done yet, but I'll go out on a limb and say my favorite contemporary novel since Miranda July's The First Bad Man.

o. nate, Friday, 14 July 2017 00:20 (six years ago) link

Ishmael Reed: Mumbo Jumbo -- very good, though I'm not sure I got more out of the whole 250p than I got from the general effect of the first 50p

Akimitsu Takagi: The Informer -- sort of noirish Japanese novel from 1965, good on friction of liberated post-WW2 Japanese youngsters against those just 5 years older who have WW2 memories and are more repressed, etc

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Friday, 14 July 2017 00:25 (six years ago) link

Yr. description of the Takagi reminds me of Oshima's 1960 Cruel Story of Youth, recently on TCM. I enjoyed Mumbo Jumbo too, and still need to check his early The Freelance Pallbearers and Yellowback Radio Broke-Down. Ditto my favorite contemporary novel since Miranda July's The First Bad Man!

dow, Friday, 14 July 2017 15:15 (six years ago) link

I read excerpts (a chapter?) from Mumbo Jumbo for a class once, and it was pretty great. Need to check out the whole thing one of these days.

some sad trombone Twilight Zone shit (cryptosicko), Friday, 14 July 2017 15:17 (six years ago) link

Cruel Story of Youth looks really good. I have this box of Nikkatsu Noir movies I really should watch the rest of.

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Saturday, 15 July 2017 00:10 (six years ago) link

reread the english surrealist painter ithell colquhoun's short novel goose of hermogenes (her only piece of fiction as far as i'm aware?) which employs a number of your typical gothic tropes within a framework based on the alchemical process. shares a similar somnambulistic quality & atmosphere of all-pervading menace with some of anna kavan's work.

now starting on leonora carrington's short stories :-D

no lime tangier, Saturday, 15 July 2017 02:38 (six years ago) link

Yr. description of the Takagi reminds me of Oshima's 1960 Cruel Story of Youth, recently on TCM.

Don't wanna come across as overly sensitive but did the cover of the Masters Of Cinema blu-ray of this have to be a dude straight slapping a woman? Makes me go "actually, maybe not..." every time I pick it up.

I have this box of Nikkatsu Noir movies I really should watch the rest of.

I remember liking A Colt Is My Passport best. The Suzuki one was actually the least interesting!

Sorry for movie talk on the book thread. I'm two thirds through Jean De Florette - it's my jam, a satirical look at the deep French countryside. Particularly enjoyed the description of the socialist mayor who, along with the village's other four atheists, makes a big show out of having his aperitif at the village bar facing the church during Sunday mass.

Daniel_Rf, Saturday, 15 July 2017 13:50 (six years ago) link

I am going away for a week for work and I think I am taking:

Emily St John Mandel, STATION ELEVEN

Jorge Luis Borges, LABYRINTHS

the pinefox, Saturday, 15 July 2017 18:11 (six years ago) link

Hermann Hesse: Knulp -- can honestly not tell if this book is good or bad, but I seem to be continuing reading it

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Wednesday, 19 July 2017 01:09 (six years ago) link

reading Breaking Point by C.J. Box and it's even better than the C.J. Box book I just read. And that one was really good. Evil E.P.A. agents! Boooooooo!

also one of the grossest things i've read in a while was a scene - i'm gonna tell you the scene because you will never read this book - where this guy is stumbling through the forest with his hands tied and its night and he's dying of dehydration and he stumbles upon what he thinks is a small stream and starts drinking from it and it turns out its the inside of a huge mule deer carcass and he had been drinking rotten blood. EWWWWW!!! stephen king must have read that and smacked his forehead and said why didn't I think of that!?

scott seward, Wednesday, 19 July 2017 19:04 (six years ago) link

I finished the Merton book about a week ago and had several thoughts about it to share here. Then I went camping, read 3/4 of another book and have lost the thread of what I would have written about Merton, other than to note that his book did fit well with the officially anti-Communist sentiments of the Church that was a Big Deal in the USA at the time. That probably gave it a bit of a push in its popularity.

The other book, of which I have read about 85%, is a historical novel by Don Berry, a local Oregonian author. It was published in 1960 and is called Trask. The title character was a fur trapper and the other characters are nearly all native Americans. It is set in 1848 on the north Oregon coast, which is very thinly settled by whites, mostly traders and a few ex-trappers like Trask. The natives outnumber them considerably. The California gold rush has not yet loosed its tidal wave of change.

For a book written about native Americans in an era when simple-minded TV westerns had been riding high for almost a decade, it is carefully researched and quite respectful. Like almost any historical novel, it is highly colored, plays up the drama and romance at the expense of realism, and the author is careful to give the reader both heroes and villains. These are not flaws in the novel so much as requirements of the genre. It's a pretty good story so far and it does the basic job of bringing the time and place alive. I'd recommend it to anyone interested in the subject.

A is for (Aimless), Sunday, 23 July 2017 00:23 (six years ago) link

Peter Parker's Isherwood bio.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 23 July 2017 00:29 (six years ago) link

anna kavan: eagle's nest

no lime tangier, Sunday, 23 July 2017 01:28 (six years ago) link

Time for some Summer genre reading: The Hound of the D'Urbervilles by Kim Newman.

Daniel_Rf, Sunday, 23 July 2017 12:36 (six years ago) link

just started reading John Crowley's Little, Big. it's kind of a bumpy read not helped by the fact the text on the page is so tiny

Shat Parp (dog latin), Sunday, 23 July 2017 12:41 (six years ago) link

Georges Simenon: Maigret's Memoirs -- which rather startlingly breaks the series formula by having the book written by Maigret in the first person, complaining about all the mistakes, continuity glitches and simplifications of police process by Simenon in all the other books

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Monday, 24 July 2017 05:36 (six years ago) link

I didn't read Borges after all - have instead spent whole week reading Charles Townshend's EASTER 1916. Riveting.

the pinefox, Monday, 24 July 2017 07:46 (six years ago) link

Finished The Minotaur Takes a Cigarette Break. Once you look past the weird conceit played deadpan, it's not so secretly a sympathetic social-realist novel about the downwardly-mobile American male, Southern edition. Highly recommended.

Started The Transformation of the World by Jurgen Osterhammel. Should keep me busy for a while.

o. nate, Tuesday, 25 July 2017 02:04 (six years ago) link

Great run this summer. The first two books are detective novels set ca. 1972 Lao, in the Alexander McCall Smith tradition but with sharper humor, more supernatural elements, and heaps of cynicism. The author is a fascinating fellow.

The Coroner's Lunch (Dr. Siri Paiboun, #1), Thirty-Three Teeth (Dr. Siri Paiboun, #2) by (Colin Coterell),
Baba Dunja's Last Love (Alina Brodsky)
Lincoln at the Bardo (Georfe Saunders)
The Sympathesizer (Viet Thanh Nguyen)
Uncle Scrooge Vol. 5 and 6: The Richest Duck in the World and Universal Solvant, (Don Rosa)
KRAZY: George Herriman, a Life in Black and (Michael Tisserand)

remy bean, Tuesday, 25 July 2017 02:17 (six years ago) link

Just starting Michael Lewis's The Undoing Project. I needed a non-fiction break, preferably some vaguely popular-science-y stuff, pitched at a middlebrow level. This one looks interesting and Lewis's other books have never let me down, yet.

A is for (Aimless), Tuesday, 25 July 2017 03:50 (six years ago) link

i bought the herriman bio a few months ago but haven't given it a shot yet. it got pretty solid reviews i think.

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Tuesday, 25 July 2017 04:41 (six years ago) link

i'm working through The Big Book of Science Fiction, edited by the VanderMeers. it has lots of translated stories that aren't well known, but unfortunately most of them aren't great. love the h.g. wells story at the start -- i need to read more of his short works.

Einstein, Kazanga, Sitar (abanana), Wednesday, 26 July 2017 01:49 (six years ago) link

The whole health care debacle has made me finish Robert Caro's Means of Ascent after having left it for about a year, and now I've just begun Master of the Senate.

Also, I'm reading Jay Leyda's Kino, on Soviet Cinema, and Maxim Gorky's Mother, because I'm going to write a bit about Mark Donskoy later, who made a lot of films related to Gorky.

Frederik B, Wednesday, 26 July 2017 16:44 (six years ago) link

I'm 180 pages into the Michael Lewis book and so far it reads like a high-quality, book-length People magazine article. The scientific content could be inscribed on a paper napkin.

A is for (Aimless), Wednesday, 26 July 2017 17:08 (six years ago) link

The Big Book of SF is very uneven, and incl. some too familiar---trying to balance it for noobs and old hands---but though I'm the latter, there are many I'd never heard of---didn't know WEB DuBoise wrote fiction, much less SF--and his vision goes well with the excellent Wells catastrophic panorama. Some better translations later on.
Aimless, have you read Oakley Hall's Westerns?

dow, Wednesday, 26 July 2017 18:42 (six years ago) link

W.E.B. Du Bois, that should be (respect).

dow, Wednesday, 26 July 2017 18:44 (six years ago) link

Fleur Jaeggy: I am the Brother of XX -- depressing little stories
Svetlana Alexievich: Boys in Zinc -- depressing reportage of the USSR's invasion of Afghanistan

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Thursday, 27 July 2017 01:02 (six years ago) link

Is Boys in Zinc an old book? There's a spoonfed hybrid track of the same name and I'm curious which came first?

koogs, Thursday, 27 July 2017 02:12 (six years ago) link

Originally published very late 1980s or early 1990s (as 'Zincy Boys'), and translated into English in 1993; this is a new translation from this year

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Thursday, 27 July 2017 06:13 (six years ago) link

rex warner: the aerodrome (crumbling wwii era penguin which is probably going to fall to pieces by the time i'm finished)

no lime tangier, Thursday, 27 July 2017 06:38 (six years ago) link

Reading a Francoise Sagan novel (Sunlight on Cold Water) which is pretty hilarious in its 60s Frenchness. Gilles is an unfeasibly handsome journalist who has an apartment on the Left Bank where he lives with his girlfriend Eloise, a model for a fashion house. But he's filled with an unnameable ennui, and he's lost interest in life and even in sex with his girlfriend. He gets some pills from his doctor then goes off to see a former girlfriend, who is much older at 48, but luckily is still "physically superb". Unfortunately she's just off to see her 19 year old toy boy so is not up for sex, but she says she'll "send Veronique round". Veronique is "superb looking and one of the most versatile women I know. That'll take your mind off things". But Gilles, still suffering from his anomie, doesn't feel like sex with Veronique so he goes off to a jazz club where he gets into a fight with a colleague. Later, he goes to the country, where he beds a married woman, also physically superb. But still filled with anomie etc etc, he can't get it up. All this and I'm only on page 44!

Zelda Zonk, Thursday, 27 July 2017 06:58 (six years ago) link

Liked The Aerodrome. it keeps slipping out of print and then being rediscovered. Current UK edition has a weird lenticular cover thing going on.

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Thursday, 27 July 2017 11:33 (six years ago) link

Slow summer, so far:

Thomas Pynchon - Mason & Dixon
Janet Malcolm - Reading Chekhov
Allen Ginsberg - Howl, Kaddish and Other Poems
Aime Cesaire - Return to my Native Land

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 30 July 2017 18:38 (six years ago) link

Reading The Long Goodbye, which is even better than I was expecting, Roth's The Ghost Writer (as recommended on ILB), Tana French's Secret Place, and my usual summer treat to myself, a bunch of Star Trek novels - this year Peter David's New Frontier series.

Chuck_Tatum, Sunday, 30 July 2017 18:47 (six years ago) link

I am glad to say the scientific content of The Undoing Project did pick up its pace in the latter part of the book, although as a long time observer of humans and their behavior, it is unclear to me why the work of these Nobel Laureates was deemed so startling. Their insights seem bland enough to me, but I guess what set them apart was their ability to design tests and gather data to substantiate what should have been fairly obvious to begin with.

A is for (Aimless), Sunday, 30 July 2017 19:06 (six years ago) link

I haven't read The Undoing Project, but if you're interested in more of the scientific content, you might like Kahneman's book Thinking Fast and Slow. On one level I agree that it shouldn't be surprising to anyone that humans are frequently irrational, however, in this book he goes into more depth on specific, repeatable, testable ways that people are prone to errors of logic and estimation. I thought it was fairly interesting, though not necessarily mind-blowing.

o. nate, Monday, 31 July 2017 01:00 (six years ago) link

re the aerodrome, beneath the allegory of a quasi-fascist/technocratic takeover found the plot (& prose) oddly old fashioned like it could have been lifted straight from a nineteenth century sensation novel of familial intrigue ala wilkie collins. also read his earlier novel the professor, again about an attempted fascist coup d'état this time in an unnamed central european country. not very successful mix of farce & earnest warning about the precarious state of liberal democracy.

now reading blackout in gretley, a breezy jb priestley espionage thriller set in a grim northern industrial town.

no lime tangier, Monday, 31 July 2017 07:52 (six years ago) link

i read the aerodrome a few months ago too. otm that it felt extremely old-fashioned, weirdly committed to an extremely neat and squared-away family-drama structure that in the end reduced to soap opera. but i found myself recommending it (w tiresome caveats) to more or less everybody i talk to; i've already given away my (weird lenticular) copy. rare to see fascism's subpolitical emotional/sexual appeal so well captured without having to go to a fascist.

difficult listening hour, Monday, 31 July 2017 08:17 (six years ago) link

I finished A Lover's Discourse last night. I can plausibly claim to be still reading Moby-Dick and Alison Weir's The Wars of the Roses. Sometime soon I'm likely to open Dublin Murder Squad 3 and/or Neapolitan Novels 2

softie (silby), Monday, 31 July 2017 15:53 (six years ago) link

"rare to see fascism's subpolitical emotional/sexual appeal so well captured without having to go to a fascist"

what is a work by a fascist that does this? I want to read such a thing.

droit au butt (Euler), Tuesday, 1 August 2017 09:25 (six years ago) link

Marinetti's manifestos!

Federico Boswarlos, Tuesday, 1 August 2017 16:09 (six years ago) link

You could also probably detect a latent fascism in more canonical conservative and reactionary writers who were contemporaneous with different kinds of fascism and whose works' emotional/sexual resonance can be said to express its appeal.

Federico Boswarlos, Tuesday, 1 August 2017 16:17 (six years ago) link

Read and enjoyed Bartleby and Co. and bought a copy of The Savage Detectives which is glaring at me from one of my shelves, so hopefully I will get around to it soon. I do enjoy how allusive Bolano and Vila Matas are as they've definitely exposed me to lots of Latin American novelists and poets whose work I don't think I would have necessarily otherwise found.

In addition to these, I'm also still reading Brenner's The Economics of Global Turbulence and I also began Edward Said's Culture and Imperialism, as well, which I posted about on its own thread.

Federico Boswarlos, Tuesday, 1 August 2017 16:51 (six years ago) link

(speaking of fascists) rereading wyndham lewis's the vulgar streak: not one of his better works of fiction but i do remember it had some interesting things to say about class & the construction of self.

that priestley thriller was quite good and i liked that it had an explicitly leftist slant to it (seem to recall he was quite popular in the soviet bloc?) also probably the only one of his novels to inspire a nuggets era garage track

no lime tangier, Tuesday, 1 August 2017 20:22 (six years ago) link

Great track, no lime, I'm listening again now---"the universe is permeated with the odor of kerosene" is the best opening line I've found in a while, and the song lives up to it.
DH Lawrence was something of a pagan folk metal fascist, wasn't he? Wouldn't have approved of Mussolini making the trains run on time.

dow, Tuesday, 1 August 2017 21:20 (six years ago) link

what is a work by a fascist that does this? I want to read such a thing.

I don't know if he was a fascist but Robert Heinlein's Starship Troopers is often accused of glorifying fascism.

o. nate, Wednesday, 2 August 2017 00:26 (six years ago) link

he was pretty much on the border where libertarians and fascists meet by the end

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Wednesday, 2 August 2017 02:24 (six years ago) link

Andre Aciman, Call Me by Your Name

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Friday, 22 September 2017 16:22 (six years ago) link

I'm reading Aciman's latest, Enigma Variations. It's worth checking out if you like Call Me By Your Name. This one starts in Italy and moves to New York City, and follows one male character through a number of romances (with men and women) that feel like little Rohmer stories with a Proustian interest in lingering more on how a relationship might turn out than the actualities. I like his writing, but I wouldn't want to hang out with his characters for long.

jmm, Friday, 22 September 2017 16:38 (six years ago) link

xpost Jeez, that looks good: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/25/books/review/DErasmo.t.html?mcubz=0 Think you mentioned getting The Gallery? What did you think of that? Still need to check it out.

dow, Friday, 22 September 2017 16:51 (six years ago) link

Query to the Doctor, but any other responses to The Gallery are welcome.

dow, Friday, 22 September 2017 16:53 (six years ago) link

Andre Aciman, Call Me by Your Name

What'd you think? I adored it.

the general theme of STUFF (cryptosicko), Friday, 22 September 2017 17:03 (six years ago) link

Jeez, that looks good

yeah, it is, I've read it twice now and love it. The movie version looks good also.

jmm, Friday, 22 September 2017 17:04 (six years ago) link

i'm only 40 pp in

lots of interior monologue, which is intriguing as it's an imminent awards-friendly movie

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Friday, 22 September 2017 17:05 (six years ago) link

read The Gallery a couple years ago, excellent

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Friday, 22 September 2017 17:07 (six years ago) link

I'm going to Iceland next month. I've only read a bit of Sjon - what should I read? Fancy a bit of fiction, and something social history/anthropological/travel-related if such a thing exists.

The shard-borne beetle with his drowsy hums (Chinaski), Friday, 22 September 2017 17:30 (six years ago) link

Andre Aciman, Call Me by Your Name

What'd you think? I adored it.

― the general theme of STUFF (cryptosicko), F

I'm reading it too; I'm halfway done. The narrator's monomania distracts me.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 22 September 2017 17:31 (six years ago) link

I can say definitively that Armie Hammer is alarmingly well cast as Oliver: the hauteur, looks, frigidity.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 22 September 2017 17:38 (six years ago) link

The narrator's monomania distracts me.

Do you remember 17-year-olds?

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Friday, 22 September 2017 18:33 (six years ago) link

iirc. lord sotosyn teaches students who are slightly older than17, but not by much.

A is for (Aimless), Friday, 22 September 2017 18:42 (six years ago) link

Aciman writes 28-year-olds exactly the same way.

jmm, Friday, 22 September 2017 18:42 (six years ago) link

I don't read my student's monologues, Morbsy.

I'm enjoying it. Apparently the film kept the peach scene.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 22 September 2017 18:47 (six years ago) link

I really meant do you remember yerself at 17. ;)

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Friday, 22 September 2017 18:55 (six years ago) link

xpost

If that's the case, between this and Toni Erdmann, we have an interesting little cinematic trend going on here.

the general theme of STUFF (cryptosicko), Friday, 22 September 2017 20:49 (six years ago) link

I've been reading Dennis Lim's elegant and insightful David Lynch: The Man from Another Place, Christina Sharpe's In the Wake, a series of essays on antiblackness that examines the wake, the ship, the hold, and the weather as figures for the Middle Passage and the structures of white supremacy, and Dodie Bellamy and Kevin Killian's capacious anthology of writing from the New Narrative movement, Writers Who Love Too Much, which works both as an overview of the major US and Canadian experimental prose writers of the 1980s and early '90s and as a welcome redress to the obscurity of many of the less prolific writers from New Narrative circles, something like a Bay Area counterpart to Brandon Stosuy's Down is Down, But So is Up.

one way street, Friday, 22 September 2017 21:19 (six years ago) link

*("an overview of most of the US and Canadian experimental prose writers of the '80s and early '90s whom I actively find interesting, apart from Delany, Wallace, Wojnarowicz, and Anne Carson" might be more accurate, though)

one way street, Friday, 22 September 2017 21:24 (six years ago) link

Chinaski I was very pleased I'd read some sagas when I went, Njal's is a good one, I really like Laxdaela and Gisli's also. "Independent People" by Halldor Laxness is a must IMO.

More Nordic bizniss inc all the Icelandic bits that come to my mind here on the bus here: Scando Lit: search

Including all the above, sorry.

Tim, Friday, 22 September 2017 23:18 (six years ago) link

Cheers, Tim - that's fantastic.

The shard-borne beetle with his drowsy hums (Chinaski), Saturday, 23 September 2017 11:52 (six years ago) link

Was thinking I might be approaching my fill of fiction (for a while), when Ashbery died and some surprisingly (given prev. lazy skimming/stoned staring of yore) engaging, refeshing JA poems appeared on Twitter---which of his books should I get? (Maybe not Three Poems for now, that's the one I was staring at back in the 70s.)

dow, Saturday, 23 September 2017 19:33 (six years ago) link

Start with Houseboat Days.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 23 September 2017 20:09 (six years ago) link

Yeah, Houseboat Days, Self-Portrait in a Convex Mirror, Rivers and Mountains, and The Double Dream of Spring are probably the most compelling books to start with.

one way street, Saturday, 23 September 2017 20:27 (six years ago) link

Will get, thanks! Now I'm wondering about Frank O'Hara.

dow, Saturday, 23 September 2017 20:39 (six years ago) link

Start with Lunch Poems!

one way street, Saturday, 23 September 2017 20:51 (six years ago) link

A Wave too. He repeats himself something fierce, though, so his collections tend to bore me after a while -- as I learned this week when I checked Can You Hear, Bird? out of the library. You can start anywhere!

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 23 September 2017 21:18 (six years ago) link


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