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Friday, January 8, 2010

A Glimpse at a Decade of Great Reads

When I initially thought of doing an arbitrary Best of List I thought it would be small and contained. Then I started going through my mind of what I had read during these years and the list grew quite unwieldy. I am never sure how to encapsulate a few texts as the best of anything, much less a year or a decade, had thought would put together a list of books and write interesting little blurbs on each one, the significance the text had on me, this was until I started to put the list together. And a strong suit is not cutting things off, especially a text read that caused impact. I have trimmed a bit; mostly current fiction has hit the floor (As I was both an undergrad and grad student during most of this time. My hours were consumed with reading books for class or from my own desire to pursue something further, very rarely did that include current fiction).

This then primarily had become a list of books that I have read from 2000 – 2009. The order is arbitrary. As is the criteria for picking them. Could I have cut some more? Sure—but did not want to.

Infinite Jest from David Foster Wallace
My greatest accomplishment in 2009 was reading this book. Since I have read I have not been able to escape the text or the force of David Foster Wallace. Remarkable.

Nature
and American Scholar from Ralph Waldo Emerson

Desert Solitaire from Ed Abbey
Abbey was the first author of what would be called “Green Literature” that I read, he shook my world.

The Practice of the Wild from Gary Snyder

On The Beautiful and Sublime from Immanuel Kant

Daisy Miller from Henry James
Not since F. Scott Fitzgerald was there an author I wanted to bury myself in the canon of. This novella in the spring of 2000 may have been the most meaningful text that I read in the decade.

Where I’m Calling From and Short Cuts from Raymond Carver

Moby Dick, Typee, and Benito Cerino from Herman Melville
Major author class at work. My first experience with Melville and it was daunting but amazing. Have since read Moby Dick (sadly for another class not at my own prompting) but I did read Typee without it being dictated to me by a syllabus.

Melville: A Biography from Laurie Robertson-Lorant

The Tempest from Shakespeare

The Hitch Hiking Game from Milan Kundera

Lolita
from Vladamir Nabakov
My first reading of this text was badly placed. I should have read prior to the class. The second, third, and fourth readings however have made up for my error in placing the text in a syllabus that was focused more on the adaptation of the text than the text itself.

Rear Window from Cornell Woolrich

Invisible Cities from Italo Calvino

Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison and What Is An Author? from Michel Foucault
Discipline and Punish was the text for me in Critical Theory.

Walden from Henry David Thoreau
Monumental in shaping how I conceive society/culture. Read every year since my first read in the spring of 2001. I was late to this text.

Invisible Man from Ralph Ellison

Fight Club from Chuck Palahnuik

End of Nature from Bill McKibben

The Twilight of American Culture from Morris Berman

Little Children from Tom Perrotta

Fargo and Big Lebowski screenplays by The Coen Brothers

The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy from Laurence Sterne
When first read, I had to double check to see when it was written. Then I thought how did they publish a book with a completely black page? Quite the read.

Ceremony from Leslie Marmon Silko

Possession and Angels and Insects from A.S. Byatt

Passing
from Nella Larsen

A Heart Breaking Work of Staggering Genius
from Dave Eggers

Absalom! Absalom! From William Faulkner
I had read As I Lay Dying a few years prior to Absalom! Absalom! and was prepared to dislike the book. Instead I was just drawn in by the structure of the text and Faulkner’s skill at an author to seduce me.

The Dead
from James Joyce

Woman Hollering Creek and Other Stories from Sandra Cisneros

Underworld from Don DeLillo

Pale Fire from Vladimir Nabakov

Crime and Punishment from Fyodor Dostoevsky

Mumbo Jumbo from Ishmael Reed

Harry Potter Series from J.K. Rowling
New Years weekend in 2002 I sat and read the first four books, barely slept so captivated by the story unfolding.

Leaves of Grass from Walt Whitman

On Beauty and Being Just
from Elaine Scarry

Before Sunrise and Before Sunset screenplays from Richard Linklater, Kim Krizan, Ethan Hawke, and Julie Delpy

Ill Nature from Joy Williams

Walking
and Faith In a Seed from Henry David Thoreau

Love Walked In from Marisa de los Santos

The Post Birthday World from Lionel Shriver

The Corrections from Jonathan Franzen

The Thirteenth Tale from Diane Setterfield

Birth of a Nation from Aaron McGruder, Reginald Hudlin, and Kyle Baker

The Frog King
from Adam Davies

I Love You, Beth Cooper from Larry Doyle
Rollicking reading ride that took me back to all those amazing ‘80’s movies I grew up on.

Lady Audley’s Secret from Mary Elizabeth Braddon

Dead Souls from Nikolai Gogol

Eugene Onegin: A Novel in Verse from Alexander Pushkin

Tender Is the Night from F. Scott Fitzgerald
Have only read this book twice but something about it, still working to pinpoint exactly what makes me think it is a superior text to The Great Gatsby (which I read every year).

Anna Karenina from Leo Tolstoy

Ophelia Joined the Group Maidens Don’t Float from Sarah Schmelling
Romping good read.

Almost Famous screenplay from Cameron Crowe

Wings of the Dove from Henry James
Contains one of my favorite passages in literature.

Swann’s Way from Marcel Proust

Father and Sons from Ivan Turgenev

Undoing Aesthetics from Wolfgang Welsch
Challenged and helped form my arguments on Aesthetics.

Loose Canons: Notes on Culture Wars from Henry Louis Gates

The Western Canon: The Books and Schools of the Ages and Map of Misreading from Harold Bloom

Culture
from Stephen Greenblatt

The Figure in the Carpet, The Beast In the Jungle, In the Cage, and The Lesson of the Master from Henry James

Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs: A Low Culture Manifesto from Chuck Klosterman

Psychotic Reactions and Carburetor Dung from Lester Bangs

Corrine, Or Italy from Germaine De Stael


I could go on….

2 comments:

  1. What an amazing list! Some I have read but most I will add to my list of things to read. In college, I took an entire class on Invisible Man and still, I learn something new every time I read it. In fact, I'm going to make it my first novel of 2010. Thanks for the inspiration!

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  2. TamaraCG

    Thank you. I am with you on "Invisible Man" have read more than once and each time I see something new, brilliant novel, the impact it had on me on that first reading, knocked me down. Jealous that you took a whole class on it, would have loved that!

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