29 October 2008

More Recommendations

Yay!  More recommendations have come in.  Caitlin has posted in the comments (thanks!); others have come back via e-mail.

My Dad suggested:
* Any books by Elizabeth George, Dennis Lehane or Dick Francis (mystery/crime)
* Agony at Easter: The 1916 Irish Uprising by Thomas Coffey
* Sarum: The Novel of England, London: The Novel, The Princes of Ireland: The Dublin Saga and The Rebels of Ireland: The Dublin Saga by Edward Rutherfurd
* 700 Sundays by Billy Crystal
* W.C. Fields by Himself: His Intended Autobiography by W.C. Fields
* Cagney by Cagney by James Cagney

Bernie suggested:
* And the Band Played On: Politics, People, and the AIDS Epidemic (1980-1985) by Randy Shilts
* The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test by Tom Wolfe
* A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway

Paula suggested:
* Stones from the River by Ursula Hegi
* The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd
* Water for Elephants: A Novel by Sara Gruen
* The Given Day by Dennis Lehane

Auntie Fran suggested:
* A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini
* Three Cups of Tea: One Man's Mission to Promote Peace... One School at a Time by Greg Mortenson and David Oliver Rein
* The Other Queen: A Novel by Philippa Gregory

Irena suggested:
* Shopgirl by Steve Martin
* To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
* Coraline by Neil Gaiman

Harry suggested:
* Hot, Flat and Crowded by Thomas L. Fredman
* Born Standing Up by Steve Martin
* Contents under Pressure by Edna Buchanan
* Never Let Them See You Cry by Edna Buchanan


So many to choose from!  I'll post more as they come in.  And while I mentioned that J and I have agreed to draw straws on who reads what, I plan to start right into PT's suggestion of Guns, Germs and Steel, as it's on my shelf already (borrowed-into-stolen from a former next-door neighbour, and I feel guilty every time I look at it because I still haven't read the damn thing).  I'll let you know how I go.


xoxo

28 October 2008

Recommendations

A few people have already submitted recommendations!  Tim posted his in the comments section for the first post; other people sent theirs along to me by e-mail.

Anthony suggested:
The Double: A Poem of St Petersburg by Fyodor Dostoyevsky (oy vey)
The Periodic Table by Primo Levi
Adolf Hitler: My Part in His Downfall by Spike Milligan
The Third Policeman by Flann O'Brien
Orlando by Virginia Woolf

PT suggested:
Anathem by Neal Stephenson
Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell
Factory Girl by Leslie Chang
Guns, Germs and Steel: A Short History of Everybody for the Last 13,000 Years by Jared Diamond
Maximum City: Bombay Lost and Found by Suketu Mehta

Cath suggested:
Marching Powder: A True Story of Friendship, Cocaine and South America's Strangest Jail by Thomas McFadden and Rusty Young
The Damage Done: Twelve Years of Hell in a Bangkok Prison by Warren Fellows
(Cath notes: 'All the books I read relate to life in a foreign prison or people who get busted for drug smuggling and then end up in a foreign hellholle.'  Make of this what you will.)

XOXO

First reviews


It's harder than I expected to write reviews of books, even - or maybe especially - ones I know well and love completely.  I've given Jac three books that I more or less know by heart, but I'm still struggling to come up with interesting things to say about them.  I'm just going to dive in and hope that what I write makes sense; fingers crossed that I'll get better at it over time.

Perfect Skin: Nick Earls is one of my favourite authors.  He's Australian, from Brisbane (well, actually born in Northern Ireland, but has lived in Brisbane since he was a kid), and I think what I love about him is that he writes like my friends talk, if that makes sense.  Better, obviously, because he has the luxury of multiple drafts, but it still feels very comfortable and familiar.  A stellar example from Perfect Skin:
I think you'd like it, Ashley, Oscar says.  It's very sociological.  Very influenced by the icons of our contemporary consumerist digital society.
Sounds good, Ash says, and convincingly too, though we all know that Oscar delved a little too deep into the adjective bucket to make complete sense.

See?  Brilliant.  I've read this book dozens of times, and that line still makes me laugh out loud every time.

Perfect Skin is the follow-up to Bachelor Kisses, but you don't need to have read that to read Perfect Skin - only the main character carries over, apart from a couple of small references here and there.  I preferred Bachelor Kisses for a long time, or thought I did anyway; as time passed, I found myself reaching for Perfect Skin more and more often.  I don't think it's Earls's best book (that would be The Thompson Gunner, which I also highly recommend), but it and Zigzag Street are my favourites.  They're the comfort food of literature, or maybe more like security blankets: when I feel crap, these are the books I pull off the shelf.  I carry them around, I read them in spare seconds, I fall asleep with them on the pillow next to me.  They've become more than just books.


The Fran Lebowitz Reader: My best friend Sarah gave me this book for my birthday several years ago, and it's so battered and exhausted now I'm always a bit afraid it's going to disintegrate in my hands.  It's a collection of articles and essays originally written for magazines, mostly back in the '70s.  Her writing hasn't aged a bit, though: she's dry as dirt, but so, so funny.  She's one of those rare geniuses who can write pieces full of one-liners that don't end up just sounding like transportation for those one-liners.
Generally speaking, I look upon [sports] as dangerous and tiring activities performed by people with whom I share nothing except the right to trial by jury.
The Reader is a compilation of two earlier collections, Metropolitan Life and Social Studies.  Unfortunately, Lebowitz hasn't actually written much.  Apart from the two books that were then republished together as the Reader, she has one kids' book... and that's it.  A damn shame, because she's been rightfully classed with Dorothy Parker and S.J. Perelman as one of the great modern American humourists.


A Room with a View: I came to the book after falling in love with the movie.  It was the first Merchant-Ivory production I saw, and it resonated with my teenaged flair for the dramatic.  (And the first person to say, '...teenaged?' is barred.)  The book is even better, and not just in that book-is-better-than-the-movie way.  Forster writes beautifully and with surprising restraint given the subject matter (young love in end-of-the-Victorian-era England and Italy), while at the same time being a total, total bitch.  It's that bitchiness - and the very considered ways in which he employs it - that elevates Room from a simple love story to a brilliant social satire:
'Come this way immediately,' commanded Cecil, who always felt that he must lead women, though he knew no whither, and protect them, though he knew not against what.
Take nothing away from the love story aspect, though: it's perfectly rendered.  It's honest and passionate without being overwrought, which is a hell of a trick.  And I would recommend the movie as well, if only to be reminded of what Helena Bonham-Carter looked like before she went crazy and married the 'Nightmare Before Christmas' guy.

XOXO

The gauntlet is thrown.


So that we're not sitting around waiting too long (and so that there's something up here for people to read), J and I have decided to give each other three books to start with.

And I'm kicking it off.  I've toyed with this for a while, but I've finally narrowed it down to:

* Perfect Skin by Nick Earls 
* The Fran Lebowitz Reader by Fran Lebowitz
* A Room with a View by E.M. Forster

There are a heap of others I'd like to foist upon her, of course, but this seems like a good start.  I'm going with light-ish stuff to start with for a bunch of reasons, key among which is that I want us to be able to get through these fairly quickly and onto your suggestions.  Assuming, that is, that we get suggestions from you, which I really hope we will.

Over to you, J.  Give me something to fill my time.  And in the meantime, I'll check back in shortly with my own brief reviews of these books.

XOXO