Essays: “Housekeeping vs. the Dirt” by Nick Hornby

Hornby’s second “anthology” of his monthly book review essays in The Believer (the first was “The Polysyllabic Spree” which I commented on briefly back in 2005).

While I don’t always agree with his reviews, or I might not be interested in a particular book that he’s reading, I usually enjoy the tone of these write ups. The random associations that come about between books you didn’t expect to resonate with each other; the twists and turns that lead you off in a random direction, far from your original plans; and the pure joy when a book hits you in just the perfect moment for you and that book to collide.

Thanks to his comments, adding to my possibly to be read list (as opposed to the actual to be read pile of things already purchased or borrowed):

  • “Every Secret Thing” Laura Lippman (fiction)
  • “Blood Done Sign My Name” Timothy B. Tyson (memoir)
  • “Oh the Glory of It All” Sean Wilsey (memoir)
  • “What Good Are the Arts?” John Carey (nonfiction)
  • “Death and the Penguin” Andrey Kurkov (fiction)
  • Joshua Ferris “Then We Came to the End” (fiction) (this one’s been reviewed all over in the past year, but this is the first review to make me think Hmmmmm)

DadReaction: Away from Her

I was really disappointed. It was so light; an after-school special look at the issues. Actual Alzheimers is so much worse, and the manipulations of the story distanced the problem: you could be a saint and your partner could still get Alzheimers. They don’t just fall in love with other people, but still regard their partners/families/etc. kindly: they will actually start to be abusive toward the people who used to be their entire lives; not just kindly “oh who are you” / a much more violent response.

Julie Christie really stole the show, but it seemed like maybe the writer was really going for the man’s story? And while there are times when it works when you shuffle time via editing (“Memento”), it’s another manipulation: it’s really easy to make the audience feel an intensity that isn’t really there.

I was also really irritated when he complained that she was wearing someone else’s sweater and the hospital administrator said “well, she looks nice in it.” We deal with nursing homes administrators all the time and I can tell you, NO nursing home administrator would ever say that, particularly not one in a high-toned place like that. They are so careful and go to great lengths to make sure people’s stuff doesn’t get confused, partly because of the pain it causes the relatives, and also just b/c of the miscellaneous theft that goes on. They sew on labels, they’re constantly policing that stuff.

Little details like that really blew the film for me.

[I liked this better than my Dad did; but I too felt that the plot manipulations were heavy-handed and obvious (and not either necessary or particularly additive to the storyline).]

Dad’s and My Reading Challenge for 2008 [Updated]

Alternating short stories & Eastern European novels.

January: “The Oxford Book of English Short Stories” edited by A.S. Byatt

February: “The Good Soldier Svejk” by Jaroslav Hasek

March: Complete Short Stories, David Malouf

April: “The Death of Virgil” by Hermann Brach

May: Collected Short Stories, Isaac Baschevis Singer

June: “War with the Newts” by Karel Capek

July: Stories TBD“The New Granta Book of the American Short Story” edited by Richard Ford

August: “The Man Without Qualities, Vol 1” by Robert Musil

September: Stories TBD“Dead Boys: Stories” by Richard Lange

October: “The Man Without Qualities, Vol 2” by Robert Musil

November: Stories TBD“The Oxford Book of Short Stories” edited by V.S. Pritchett

December: “The Trial” by Kafka