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30) Devils & Demons
- Whoo. I've been working on this book a long, long time. But it was worth it. The last couple stories (read tonight) were quite nice and although the book had its share of fallflats, as a whole, I quite enjoyed it. Of particular note are Robert Block's "Enoch" and Earl Godwin's "Daddy"--the latter is the first tale to be added to my collection of truly impactful short fiction (upon me) in many a long year. And one of only two since my mission ended a decade ago. ¶ I suppose one should be shocked to know that this book has spent most of the current millennium off and on my nightstand--no doubt the last bit of proof that I am a lost soul indeed--but why? I think the modern American spends too much time mollycoddling himself, pretending the world is beautiful and fair. Which, speaking again of the latter, it most certainly is not. Using fiction to examine the horrors that live in our minds and that are symptomatic of this life is helpful I think. Now. Who wants to go see The Host with me?
coming up on four years
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29) Talk Talk Talk: Decoding the Mysteries of Speech
- This book is a nice 101 in linguistics. It hits on a multitude of topics with just enough depth to feel you've really learned something--unless it's a topic you've already studied. Fortunately (actually, unfortunately), I have not studied much in the field and thus I was rarely frustrated by long strings of information I already knew. ¶ In addition to the book's many merits, it was also fascinating to read a book that was so unabashedly . . . Canadian. The book was researched and written by a Canadian radio personality and assumes a Canadian audience (ex: "If you had been born in Italy instead of Canada....") which made the book extra delightful to be, due to my irrational love of all things Canada. ¶ Recommended to people interested in creoles, Freudian slips, tip-of-the-tongues, Spoonerisms, Proto-Indo-European, Neanderthal larynxes, interrupting, strokes, wild children, Noam Chomsky, positron emission tomography, the Tower of Babel, Martian, Koko the gorilla, Wernicke's area, Margaret Thatcher, aphasias, speaking in tongues, and, of course, Canada. ¶ Unless you've already a master's degree in the field.
month and a half
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28) Einstein's Dreams
- I don't know what I was expecting. Something less beholden to the title? A more indepth look at Einstein's actual conclusions? Pizza? Don't know, but Einstein's Dreams was not what I was expecting. Which isn't to say I didn't enjoy it. The series of dreams reminded me at times of novel-length looks at single visions of time such as Timequake
fewer than twenty-four hours
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27) The Long Chalkboard: and Other Stories
- From the outside, this looks like a picture book for grownups, and I think that's an apt description. Flip it open, and it looks like a collection of New Yorker cartoons. Read it and it's a nice little collection of three entirely pleasant short stories--one about a giant chalkboard, one about a pair of feuding children's book writers, one about a talented maker of chili. ¶ The book is an excellent example of how words and pictures can play together and one of the most effortlessly mainstream examples of comics I've ever seen. ¶ Check your library.
about seven hours
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26) Babbitt
- Babbitt has had the bad luck of constantly getting misplaced and reshelved without invitation, which is part of the reason it has taken me so long to read. The other reason is this: it's not demanding. ¶ When Babbitt came out it was a big success and created a new archetype for America to recognize and immediately accept.... Or at least that's true according to the afterword in my copy. ¶ Anyway, good book. It's surprising that I can say that so readily about a book about a boring guy who does boring things, but it's true. It is. ¶ The book isn't much of a novel when you take it apart--it's really a 300-page character sketch. And watching Babbitt finding new ways to be unhappy...maybe I enjoyed it as much as I did because I spent well over a year reading it. ¶ Anyway, it's a classic, so you can get it cheap.
coming up on two years
PREVIOUSLY
25) Frank
24) The Complete Concrete
23) The Rumpelstiltskin Problem
22) Bridge to Terabithia
21) Batman: The Dark Knight Returns
20) A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius
19) Batman: Gothic
18) Wild at Heart
17) Stink: The Incredible Shrinking Kid
16) 50 Professional Scenes for Student Actors: A Collection of Short 2 Person Scenes
15) Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair
14) Frindle
13) Brain Wave
12) The Best American Comics 2006
11) Everything Is Illuminated
10) The Book of Mormon: Another Testament of Jesus Christ edited by Mormon and Moroni, finished February 7
9) Lisey's Story
8) The Maltese Falcon
7) Empire
6) Stargirl
5) Vile Bodies
4) Superman Adventures Vol. 1: Up, Up and Away!
3) A Walk in the Woods
2) Understanding Comics
1) Galápagos
I own Einstein's Dreams, but I haven't read it yet. I enjoyed the quirkiness of Timequake. I actually have an idea for a story based on changing time but I'm still working out what the rules are that the concept will have to sit within. It's fun to think about.
ReplyDelete.
ReplyDeleteIt is. And getting the rules straight can be tricky. Good luck!
Gosh, I need to read more.
ReplyDeleteAnd quit freaking reading blogs! Or emailing! GAH! Seeing your list of books here makes me hang my head in shame that I haven't read a good book in AGES! AND I used to work at a bookstore------in fact, 2 different ones!