Monday, December 31, 2007
The 2007 Booklist
Continuing a time-honored tradition (begun way back a year ago), I hereby list my annual booklist, in order of completion (last year: 14 books), with little or no editorial comment:
1. The Pleasure of My Company. Steve Martin. Fiction.
2. Everyman. Philip Roth. Fiction (read on a flight to Berlin). (Weird. The link you see for Roth has a rare interview, with The Guardian, with a photographer from Berlin, oddly enough.)
3. Lisey's Story. Stephen King. Fiction.
4. The Mission Song. John LeCarre. Fiction. (a year ago I was privileged to pose a question to him on BBC Radio; can't find the link; maybe someday)
5. Grammar Lessons: Translating a Life in Spain. Michele Morano. Essays.
6. The Innocent. Ian McEwan. Fiction.
7. Stumbling on Happiness. Daniel Gilbert. Non-fiction (sociology/psychology).
8. The Woman Lit by Fireflies. Jim Harrison. Fiction.
9. fly away peter. David Malouf. Fiction.
10. Samaritan. Richard Price. Fiction.
11. This Clumsy Living. Bob Hicok. Poetry.
12. Some Can Whistle. Larry McMurtry. Fiction.
13. Um...Slips, Stumbles, and Verbal Blunders, and What They Mean. Michael Erard. Non-fiction.
14. Proust Was a Neuroscientist. Jonah Lehrer. Non-fiction essays.
15. Silk. Alessandro Baricco. Fiction.
I am three-quarters finished with Richard Ford's truly superb and already-memorable The Lay of the Land, but that can't go on this year's list unless I speed-read through about 150 pages in the next 3.5 hours (won't happen).
I do like books. Today, at lunchtime I saw that Murphy's Books was open, downtown Syracuse. It was a surprise because its owner (who is brother to our receptionist and brother to a friend of mine) is battling leukemia. He is liquidating the store's inventory. He is. . . His collection is excellent and literary. I bought nine books for nine dollars and change. A dollar a book, hard or soft. Can't beat that. Perhaps I'll list them some other time.
Endnote: My story -- the one I took a week off of blogging from to write -- was not selected by Glimmer Train Stories. Everyone I showed it to (including successful published authors) loved it. The main thing is, I loved it. And still do. I may self-publish. Hard to decide, seeing as my son gave me the writer's guide for 2008. We'll see.
I am glad the holiday frenzy is over.
Our tree stays up at least to Epiphany, January 6.
I am wearing my slippers and may be asleep well before midnight.
Happy New Year.
Pacem in Terris.
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3 comments:
I hope you are wearing more than just your slippers, PK. It gets chilly at night.
This is a really great list. I'm going to be adding some of these to my wish list. =o)
Of your list, I think I've only read the last one - it's a favourite of mine.
I guess one man's fate really is another man's fortune.
Puss
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