Stories: A Circle Is a Balloon and Compass Both, by Ben Greenman

I’ve read more short stories in the past few years than ever before (I mostly blame Elizabeth Crane for that. “Blame” being a good thing in this scenario), and still I thought these were really unusual.

But now that two months have gone by… I can’t pinpoint exactly why that was. I will say that they were all really truly individuals. I’m sure you’ve come across short story collections that as you read through them, the narrators and/or subjects tend to blur together (when they weren’t intended to, although there are collection that intend that) and it seems you’ve just read a novel with some bits that don’t seem to fit together. No question of that happening here. I think my favorite was “Oh Lord Why Not” where everyone has a hit pop song in them.

Pretty short collection though. Big print, small pages. Not a book that takes long to get through.

Fantasy: Tender Morsels, by Margo Lanagan

Soooooo good. I’ve recommended short stories by Lanagan to you before (here or here), and I believe this is her first novel. I will be eternally in Marrije‘s debt for introducing me to such a great author.

This is earthy, dark, bitter, spiky, sexy and tactile. It’s also sweet and loving and tender at times. The bad is often quite brutal, often in metaphor, and the good is quite poignant.

I was a little surprised it was classed as YA. Certainly the fairy tales of our/my youth flirted with just as much danger. But I don’t remember them being as powerful. Perhaps if I re-read them today, I would find myself gripping the book like an anchor and crying through chapters as I did here. But I doubt it.

So Good!!!

Fiction: The Trial, by Franz Kafka

This was our challenge book for December. So much fun!!! Dad had read it back in high school and been totally traumatized. Then at some point watched the Orson Welles film of it and found it equally traumatizing. But somehow, to both of us, this time around it was just soooo farcical. Might make a good companion for a book we read earlier in the year “The Good Soldier Svejk”.

The end is a bit of a shocker just because the narrator has, for the most part, taken things so lightly until then that you sort of expect it to just keep going on forever. It was a lot of fun to read.

Fiction: Deaf Sentence, by David Lodge

So good. So sad. With Lodge, as with Philip Roth, as he gets older, more infirm and perhaps crankier, so do his characters. I loved the diary-style writing. I loved the tone.

Really only one thing rang false to me and that was an extensive description of a pair of breasts (and how the narrator could tell they were natural) on page 5 (only the third page of actual text). I actually called my dad and asked if that paragraph stuck out like a sore thumb to him as well. AND IT DID. So it wasn’t just a girlreaction, yo.

It was interesting in reading this to think about how there never stops being a time in life when you can inadvertently make bad decisions, or make so-so decisions that cascade into much worse events. Something I think most of us assume will cease to happen as we age.
Really good, but I think I would read other Lodge before this one, if I were to try him for the first time. “Small World” and “Changing Places” are both really great.

In my library this is classified as somewhat academic function. Good companions would be “Straight Man” by Richard Russo or “Foolscap” by Michael Malone (or see the “academic foibles” list on this page).

Mystery: The Lover’s Knot, by Clare O’Donohue

This was OK / fine for light reading. But the attempt at misdirection seemed way too obvious to me and it drove me nuts the entire time I was reading it that the quilt on the cover of the book was a sampler and not a Lover’s Knot, one of the main metaphors. Dear publishing house: when you’re publishing a book for the crafty market, these types of things WILL be noticed. Idiots.

À la Nick Hornby, books in/books out for January.

Bought:

  • City of Bones, by Cassandra Clare
  • HeartSick, by Chelsea Cain
  • Tethered, by Amy MacKinnon
  • The One Marvelous Thing, by Rikki DuCornet
  • City of Ashes, by Cassandra Clare
  • Working for the Devil, by Lilith Saintcrow
  • Magic to the Bone, by Devon Monk
  • The Name of the Wind, by Patrick Rothfuss

Read:
  • City of Bones, by Cassandra Clare
  • The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows
  • Shakespeare Wrote for Money, by Nick Hornby
  • HeartSick, by Chelsea Cain
  • A Tale of Two Cities, by Charles Dickens (re-read)
  • Mainspring, by Jay Lake
  • Magic to the Bone, by Devon Monk
  • City of Ashes, by Cassandra Clare
  • Tethered, by Amy MacKinnon
  • The Partly Cloudy Patriot, by Sarah Vowell
  • Stories of Your Life and Others, by Ted Chiang

It was a good month for readin’. When I’m stressed out? I read.

Best of November

The best movie I saw in November was Milk and it was EXCELLENT. My No. 2 movie for the year. So good.

The best book I read in November was “The Way of Shadows” by Brent Weeks. It was a slow month reading-wise but I did really enjoy that book.

The best gig I went to in November was….some gig that I didn’t go to! First month all year with no shows. Am I slowing down? I’m certainly feeling old and decrepit but it may just be I wasn’t paying attention to what was coming up so I missed out on tickets I would have wanted. Who knows!

My favorite tunes in November were new albums from Jem, and The Killers, and Matt White, and Vancougar, and Ryan Adams, and Pink, and Kanye, and Winter’s Fall and…some others. I bought a ton of music over the month (click on the link and you’ll see!).

Random personal highlights: HuffenCooper Halloween party; “HOLY FUCK OBAMA WINS!” is what it says on my calendar for November 4. Certainly a day that will not be forgotten; did some serious shopping in the burbs with Sara; I hung out with my nephews for the first time in ages; beers at Guthrie’s with Lauren; bought some cool shit at the DIY show; I visited my “second (or third, really) home” in Milwaukee for Thanksgiving; and Michelle was in town for a day. There was a lot going on (hence the aforementioned lack of reading!).

Lowlights? Fallout at secondary browsing location continued. Missed seeing Francine Prose & Anne Carson speak, both of which I had tickets to but I’m too dumb to look ahead in my calendar when the month rolls forward. Was very tired.

Dad’s and My Reading Challenge for 2009 [Updated]

Alternating 19th century and/versus contemporary novels.

January: “Tale of Two Cities” by Charles Dickens

February: “The Broom of the System” by David Foster Wallace

March: “Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde” by Robert Louis Stevenson

April: “Then We Came to the End” by Joshua Ferris

May: “Dracula” by Bram Stoker [this is a re-read for me]

June: TBD/Contemporary “Motherless Brooklyn” by Jonathan Lethem

July: “Vanity Fair” by William Makepeace Thackeray

August: TBD/Contemporary “Netherland” by Joseph O’Neill

September: “A Pair of Blue Eyes” by Thomas Hardy

October: TBD/Contemporary “The White Darkness” by Geraldine McCaughrean

November: “Nostromo” by Joseph Conrad

December: TBD/Contemporary “Undiscovered Country” by Lin Enger

Best of October

The best movie I saw in October was a three-way tie between Zach and Miri Make a Porno, Let the Right One In, and Hunger, all of which I saw at the Chicago Film Festival. In regular movie releases, I also really liked The Duchess.

The best book I read in October was The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, by Stieg Larsson. I also really liked Conversations at Curlow Creek, by David Malouf, my favorite Aussie author.

The best gig I went to in October would be Fujiya & Miyagi. I didn’t write up any of the October shows so here’s the quick and dirty: Liam Finn, was completely unlike his album, super into experimental, extemporaneous, and jam band-type style if you can be a jam band when there are only two people on stage; Catie Curtis sang some really nice sweet songs, but also some goofy stuff that isn’t really my thing. And Fujiya & Miyagi was good, they sounded great, people were into it, the beats were hoppin’….but at some point all the songs start to sound the same. Felt like we heard an hour of one long song with a great beat.

My favorite tunes in October were the latest albums from Keane and Ray LaMontagne and my top two favorite songs were “Honey Let Me Sing You a Song” Matt Hires and the First Aid Kit cover of Fleet Foxes’ “Tiger Mountain Peasant Song”.

Random personal highlights: My dad came to visit and joined wholeheartedly in my 365 project and it was outstanding.

Lowlights? Fallout at secondary browsing location continued. My Morning Jacket concert cancelled and then I wound up blowing off a Joseph Arthur concert as I just didn’t have any energy that day. Also had a weird shiatsu massage that bruised/hurt my back so badly I could barely sit in a chair for two days afterward

À la Nick Hornby, books in/books out for December.

Bought:

  • Disquiet, by Julia Leigh
  • Among the Thugs, by Bill Buford
  • Shakespeare Wrote for Money, by Nick Hornby
  • Shadow’s Edge, by Brent Weeks
  • Throne of Jade, by Naomi Novik

Read:
  • The Lover’s Knot, by Clare O’Donohue
  • Deaf Sentence, by David Lodge
  • The Trial, by Kafka
  • Tender Morsels, by Margo Lanagan
  • A Circle is a Balloon and Compass Both: Stories about Human Love, by Ben Greenman (stories)
  • A Spy in the Family; An Erotic Comedy, by Alec Waugh
  • Black & White, by Dani Shapiro
  • If the River Was Whiskey, by T. Coraghessan Boyle (stories)
  • Silver Wings for Vicki, by Helen Wells
  • Disquiet, by Julia Leigh
  • The Scarecrow and His Servant, by Philip Pullman