Michael Caine played Charley Fortnum and Richard Gere played Dr. Eduardo Plarr in the 1982 movie version of The Honorary Consul by Graham Greene |
The Honorary Consul (1973)
by Graham Greene
Graham Greene Book Reviews - 1001 Books 2006 Edition
England Made Me (1935)
Brighton Rock (1938) *
The Power and the Glory (1940) *
The Heart of the Matter (1948)
The Third Man (1949)
The End of the Affair (1951) *
The Quiet American (1955) *
Honorary Counsel (1973) *
* = core title in 1001 Books list
The Honorary Consul was a late-career highlight for Graham Greene, who many thought was done after a very quiet 1960's. When you consider that he wrote classics like The Power and The Glory and The Third Man in the 1940's, it's hard not to marvel at his continued vitality over the decades. To summarize an entire life time of work, Greene is at the top of the chart in the categories of "Catholic novelists" and "Spy novelists." Obviously, both are but crude summaries of infinitely complicated ideas worked out over a career of popular and critically well received work, but Greene was a little before his time in terms of the spy novel part of his career- more a fore-father then someone, say, like Ian Fleming, who raked it in.
On the other hand, his experience as an English convert to Catholicism has proved durable, and I would argue it is those books, and the books that overlap Catholicism and espionage, that are his enduring contribution to the canon. I think that the 1001 Books staff would agree, seeing as one of the few Greene books to be cut between 2006 and 2008 is The Third Man, about as classic a work of spy fiction as you can imagine.
The Honorary Consul combines Catholicism and espionage in a way that both expands the author's ideas in both dimensions while proving familiar to anyone who has ever read any of his prior books. It's a kind of technique you might be tempted to call "meta fictional" or post-modern, were those the kinds of things that were ever said about Graham Greene.
Much of the pleasure in Graham Greene comes from the scenery- hear a remote Argentinian border town near the border of Paraguay, abutting the vast steppe-desert-forest of the Chaco. The English community there is small to non existent, consisting of Charley Fortnum, the Honorary Consul of the title, a man who squeaks by on his mate plantation and the ability to import (and quickly resell) a luxury car every two years. The narrator, Dr. Eduardo Plarr, is a half English/half Spanish immigrant from Buenos Aires. The mechanics of the plot are set in motion when Fortnum, who often serves as a tour guide for visiting dignitaries, is kidnapped instead of the visiting American Ambassador.
Plarr is called upon by the kidnappers, political rebels from Paraguay, to provide attention to Fortnum, and everything spirals mildly out of control from there. It's the kind of plot the reader expects from Graham Greene, but not too familiar.
The Lost Honour of Katharina Blum (1974)
by Heinrich Böll
Heinrich Böll won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1972, so The Lost Honour of Katharina Blum came when the author was at the top of his game, so to speak. Böll had impeccable anti-Nazi credentials, and in this way he was the right type of writer to help recover the German literary tradition from Nazism. Like Billiards at Half-Past Nine, Böll's first title to make it into the 1001 Books List, The Lost Honour of Katharina Blum combines personal narrative with technical innovation and timely social issues.
Here, Katharina Blum is a self-employed domestic from a troubled family, living in a small town in Western Germany. She spends the night with a criminal being followed by the police, she helps him escape, and the police make her a subject of their investigation. Then the newspapers get involved, and it is the conflict between the freedom of the press and it's impact on Ms. Blum that lies at the heart of this short novel/novella.
For an American reader, the idea of a critique of the freedom of press almost sounds radical. Germany, where pro-Nazi speech has been illegal since the end of World War II, is a much different society in that regard. Böll's Katharina Blum is an existential heroine in the mode of French novels from the 1950's. This combination of a trenchant critique of freedom of the press and a generally sympathetic attitude towards 70's leftist radicals in Germany may make modern readers uncomfortable. On the other hand, you could say these attitudes of the German left from the 1970's are in vogue again, so maybe Katherina is due for a revival.
Dusklands (1974)
by J.M. Coetzee
There is a good argument that J.M. Coetzee is the single author who best represents the spirit of the original 2006 edition of 1001 Books to Read Before You Die. First, there are the total number of novels that he placed in the first edition: 10. Second, there are the total number of novels that he lost in the initial 2008 revised edition: 5. Thus, whatever impact the editors were going for in 2006 involved putting 10 Coetzee titles on their list, and two years later they decided that half his books weren't good enough to keep. This is a ratio that is roughly in line with other authors who had four or more titles on the first list- they usually lose about half of them in the 2008 edition.
Third, there are his characteristics as a writer- biographical and stylistic. He writes in English, but he's not from England (South Africa), he employs techniques that can be easily characterized as "post-modern" but his novels are never experimental. Finally, he wrote in the last part of the twentieth century. The 1001 Books list is strongly biased towards the 20th century, and the middle and end of that century in particular. Just looking at the statistic generated by this blog- I'm at 546 titles. Add about 50 titles for books that I'd already read and some pre-18th century titles I skipped- that gets it to 600. Dusklands was published in 1974. That means from roughly 1970 to the publication date of 2006, forty percent of the 1001 Books you need to read before you die were published.
I'm positive there were some pragmatic reasons to cram so many titles from the near-past and actual present onto the list. You want books that people can actually buy, you wants books that people have heard of and are interested in reading. Books from the recent past and present are more interesting to the general reader than older books. I understand why, but I suspect my own thousand novel list would reduce the number of contemporary works of fiction by about 100 to include some non-novels and works from the major religions. I'm not religious, but it seems to me that books from the major world religions like the Old Testament, the New Testament, the Koran, etc. should be included. They also left poetry entirely out of the project- which seems insane. Also, no Shakespeare. And then I'd add in more books from the 19th century golden age of the novel.
Dusklands was Coetzee's first published novel, and it's actually more like a pair of novellas which share a thematic link. The first part deals with an American scientist working on a project about the Vietnam war for the government. He goes nuts and stabs his infant son, winds up in an insane asylum.
The second part, far more compelling, is a fictionalization of a "Heart of Darkness" style trek into the African veldt by a purported ancestor of Coetzee- at least they share the same name. The second half, called The Narrative of Jacobus Coetzee is recognizably a post-modern historical novel(la). Coetzee is presented as a real historical figure, to the point of including a post-script with his contemporaneous declaration of the geographical discoveries of his expedition. After staking out his claim as an early Dutch settler of the African interior, the Narrative takes place as Coetzee sets out to the north in search of elephants.
Along the way, he encounters native tribesman- who still live independent lives, unsubjugated by western powers- and falls ill. During his long convalescence, all his possessions are stolen, and when he recovers, his "slaves" abandon him to remain with the native village. During his harrowing return home, his only remaining loyal servant dies fording a seasonal river, and he returns home alone.
A year later, he returns with some soldiers and exacts his revenge. That's the whole of the narrative, and it resembles The Heart of Darkness in more ways than one, but it's different, being written by an actual African in a way that has an actual connection with the people. I'm not sure that Dusklands would have made the list if it had not been Coetzee's first published novel. Specifically, the combination of the two disparate narratives seems more like the coupling of two separately written novellas then any grand plan.
Personally, I'm very interested in narratives about colonialism and I think that is a common concern for anyone who reads literature. It's impossible to put aside the 2003 Nobel Prize for Literature, the two separate Booker wins, and the fact that he is one of a handful of serious authors who you can find in any airport book shop. Finally, Dusklands is under 130 pages from start to finish, so the time commitment is minimal.
J.M. Coetzee is an excellent example of a canonical author who is still active. He actually has a book coming out next month, The Schooldays of Jesus. The release of a new work by a living artist who has already obtained canonical status is the most significant event in the entire cultural industrial complex. The reason these events are so important is because of the small number of living artists who have obtained canonical status while they are still active.
For an author with a place in the canon, it is entirely fair to ask whether the new work is the best book the author has written, or better than his canonical works. Any criticism of the existence of a specific canon ignores the fact that an artist obtaining canonical status for a specific work is the single best thing they can do for their career. The canon is the blessed intersection between art and commerce and the question of which works for canonical artists is of high importance.
High Rise got a movie version this year. It was poorly received by critics and audience |
Published 8/14/16
High Rise (1974)
by J.G. Ballard
High Rise is one of several J.G. Ballard titles to rise to "classic" status. Ballard is best known for his dystopian sci fi and obsession with the intersection of consumer society, sex and death. High Rise is one of a couple of classic distillations of this obsession that Ballard published in the mid 1970's- the other is Crash. Ballard may have been the author who suffered the most between the initial edition of 1001 Books and the 2007 revision. He starts out with seven titles in 2006, and by 2008 he is down to two titles: Empire of the Sun and Crash.
Honestly, I was a little surprised that High Rise made it in the first place. Not that I didn't enjoy reading High Rise- I've decided that Ballard is one of my favorite authors of this time period- but there is something a little too high concept about the plot of High Rise: What happens when the inhabitants of a brand new high rise turn against one another? It's also fair to observe that the particular critique of modern life that Ballard is advancing in High Rise: A concern with the isolation of individuals in block tower flats, isn't the same kind of hot button issue today (or in 2008) that it was in the early 1970's, when urban decay was very much the order of the day.
There's also the fact that any human being familiar with the crack epidemic and its impact on huge public housing developments in the United States in the recent past will be only mildly shocked by the depredations that the white, upper class, inhabitants of this High Rise visit upon one another. Call it fiction being outpaced by reality.
(1974) by John Le Carré
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy is Le Carré's fictionalization of the Kim Philby and the Cambridge Five spy ring: Upper class Brits who were caught spying for the Soviets in the early 1960's. Le Carré famously blamed Philby for betraying his identity to the Soviets and being directly responsible for his termination from the English intelligence service in 1964.
Tinker is regarded as an enduring classic of the spy-espionage genre. Le Carré is an excellent example of a writer who has emerged from a popular genre to obtain a level of critical acclaim commensurate with the second tier of novelists- those who combine popular and critical success but have failed to win one of the major literary prizes for "serious" literature: A Nobel Prize, a National Book Award, the Booker Prize.
Perhaps the most remarkable aspect of Le Carré's career is it's length. He is still publishing new novels, and he has a very viable brand in popular culture. Witness The Night Manager- based on a more recent novel- being in talk for Emmy nominations. The key to longevity for Le Carré is that he was never exclusively concerned with the Cold War, rather, the Cold War was simply the setting for a set of themes having to do with morality and ethics in the modern world.
The moral ambiguity central to most of his books is largely absent in Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy in favor of a more conventional bad guy who-dun-it scenario. Still, it's clear from the continued vitality of his work that he transcended his time and place. You could say that the world has grown to be more like the world Le Carre portrayed forty years later than it was when his books were published.
The idea that the good guys and the bad guys are morally equivalent is more tenable after then it was during the Cold War. Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy is the first of his series of three Karla novels- named after the Soviet spy master who, it is clear, the author admires. Karla makes an actual appearance in Tinker only briefly- held in captivity in India during a low point in his relationship with his own country. Smiley, the protagonist and some-times narrator of Tinker, is shown to be quite the lesser man than Karla in their brief encounter- admitted by Smiley.
Published 8/20/16
Ragtime (1975)
by E.L Doctorow
I quite enjoyed Ragtime, Doctorow's 1975 work of historical fiction. Set largely in New York in the years prior to World War I, Doctorow blends a large cast of fictional and non-fictional characters in refreshing and novel fashion. You've got J.P. Morgan, Harry Houdini, Evelyn Nesbit (America's first "It Girl." Each of these historical figures have a sub-plot where they are treated in an irreverent fashion, blending factual history with a work of fiction.
The major plot concerns a wealthy family living outside of New York. They are referred to only by their family names, Father, Mother, Younger Brother. The narrator at times appears to be a young son of the family, other times Doctorow adopts the third person. The plot takes some time to develop, what with all the existential musings by Houdini and J.P. Morgan's obsession with the Egyptian pyramids and immortality.
Mother finds an abandoned African American infant in their spacious yard. She saves the child and agrees to shelter the child's mother, an African American servant with no family. Coalhouse Walker, the child's father, eventually finds his way to the family, where he slowly courts the mother of his child. All appears to be headed towards a happy resolution for the young couple, when Walker's Model T Ford is vandalized by some local firefighters, resentful at the figure of an African American motorist using their roads.
Coalhouse becomes obsessed with obtaining justice for his vehicle, and when his fiancé suffers an untimely death, he goes off the rails and launches a terrorist campaign against the men who have wronged him. Doctorow covers an amazing amount of territory in roughly 300 pages. It's a lesson in succinctness that might have been better observed by his successors.
Published 8/16/16
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
(1974) by John Le Carré
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy is Le Carré's fictionalization of the Kim Philby and the Cambridge Five spy ring: Upper class Brits who were caught spying for the Soviets in the early 1960's. Le Carré famously blamed Philby for betraying his identity to the Soviets and being directly responsible for his termination from the English intelligence service in 1964.
Tinker is regarded as an enduring classic of the spy-espionage genre. Le Carré is an excellent example of a writer who has emerged from a popular genre to obtain a level of critical acclaim commensurate with the second tier of novelists- those who combine popular and critical success but have failed to win one of the major literary prizes for "serious" literature: A Nobel Prize, a National Book Award, the Booker Prize.
Perhaps the most remarkable aspect of Le Carré's career is it's length. He is still publishing new novels, and he has a very viable brand in popular culture. Witness The Night Manager- based on a more recent novel- being in talk for Emmy nominations. The key to longevity for Le Carré is that he was never exclusively concerned with the Cold War, rather, the Cold War was simply the setting for a set of themes having to do with morality and ethics in the modern world.
The moral ambiguity central to most of his books is largely absent in Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy in favor of a more conventional bad guy who-dun-it scenario. Still, it's clear from the continued vitality of his work that he transcended his time and place. You could say that the world has grown to be more like the world Le Carre portrayed forty years later than it was when his books were published.
The idea that the good guys and the bad guys are morally equivalent is more tenable after then it was during the Cold War. Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy is the first of his series of three Karla novels- named after the Soviet spy master who, it is clear, the author admires. Karla makes an actual appearance in Tinker only briefly- held in captivity in India during a low point in his relationship with his own country. Smiley, the protagonist and some-times narrator of Tinker, is shown to be quite the lesser man than Karla in their brief encounter- admitted by Smiley.
The Castle of Crossed Destinies (1974)
by Italo Calvino
Italo Calvino had multiple phases in his career as a novelist. His early work, represented by The Path to the Nest of Spiders, clearly echoes the fiction of Ernest Hemingway and the nascent Italian neo-realist movement. In the mid 1960's, Calvino hooked up with Raymond Queneau and the Oulipo movement: A group of writers concerned with experimental "restricted writing" techniques, where the authors had to adhere to one or more rules ("Don't use any "e's" in your book" is an example.)
The Castle of Crossed Destinies features of a group of travelers who are all at an inn, which may be a deserted castle. For unexplained reasons none of them can talk, and they are forced to rely on a pack of tarot cards to tell their respective stories. The narrator sits at the table with the other guests, and the text takes the form of small illustrations of the cards being displayed by the inn guests, with the interpretations of the cards being the main body of text.
After hearing the stories from the other guests, the narrator tells his own story, and then there is a portion where Calvino shows all the cards simultaneously and explains an incredibly complicated schematic where all the cards were being shown at the same time, not one at a time as the stories occur in the first portion of the book. It's a lot to grok in one hundred and thirteen pages. I could have used a supplementary text to explain in more detail. Understanding The Castle of Crossed Destinies in the context of the artificial restrictions of Oulipo makes sense, since it is a novel where none of the characters can talk.
Did Saul Bellow ever look young? |
Humboldt's Gift (1975)
by Saul Bellow
Humboldt's Gift is the last of Bellow's seven titles on the first 1001 Books list from 2006. It won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 1976, and was a component of Bellow being awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1975. It is fictionalized roman a clef about Bellow(Charles Citrine in the book) and his mentor, famous poet-intellectual Delmore Schwartz(Von Humboldt Fleischer.) Although written in the first person with Citrine as narrator, Humboldt's Gift skips back and forward through time. It covers, in no specific order, Citrine's present as a washed-up though wealthy writer and public intellectual, beset on all sides by difficulties financial and emotional, Citrine's past, including the development of his relationship with Von Humboldt Fleischer and the experiences of Fleischer, focusing mostly on his descent into madness and penury.
It is an intoxicating mix. No wonder it was received with such adulation, and coming at the end of a string of critically and financially successful novels. Humboldt's Gift has mostly been analyzed as a commentary on the tug of war between art and commerce, but in my reading I thought he had alot of say about celebrity culture, nascent in 1975, but fully established today. Citrine, in the book, is a wealthy intellectual who is surviving on past achievements. His obsession with sexual gratification and status symbols mirrors the obsessions of the last half century of celebrity culture.
Like the films of the Coen brothers, also functions as an off-the-cuff history lesson about the intellectual culture of the United States between the Great Depression and the early 1970's. Humboldt/Schwartz is a classic forgotten intellectual hero, and most of the novel dealing directly with his experience focuses on the impact of an artist who has outlived his usefulness to the larger culture.
Published 9/30/16
The Siege of Krishnapur (1973)
by J.G. Farrell
The Siege of Krishnapur is the second of the three books in his Empire trilogy. The first book, Troubles, focused on Ireland during the Irish War of Independence between 1919 and 1922. Farrell, of Anglo-Irish ancestry, was writing fairly close to home in Troubles. For The Siege of Krishnapur, Farrell shifts the stage to mid 19th century India under British control. Although fictional, Krisnapur is based on real life incidents like the siege of Lucknow and Kanpur.
Readers of Troubles will see similarities between Major Brendan Archer, the primary protagonist of Troubles and Fleury, the poetical young man at the center of Krishnapur. Both seem put-out by the historic events swirling around them, starting indifferent to their own fate and gradually developing what might be called a "historical consciousness." The analog of Edward Spencer, the owner of the Majestic Hotel in Troubles is "The Collector," the chief administrator for the Krishnapur governmental department under Siege, and the man in charge after the General expires at the end of the first act.
Fans of colonial fiction and imperialism will enjoy Krishnapur as much as critics and audiences enjoyed it when it was published in 1973. It won the Booker Award, meaning that both Troubles and Krishnapur would eventually be Booker winners. It's fair to observe that the subject matter is distant for your average American college graduate. Unless you have a very specific interest in mid 19th century English colonialism, many of the references are likely to fly overhead. I found myself often punching references into google as I read. That testifies to the impressive level of detail in a book written in the 1970's about events half a world away in the mid 19th century. In fact, a reader who didn't know better might think that Krishnapur was written much closer in time to actual events than it actually was.
This is a theme of classics of mid to late 20th century fiction: The ability to "time-travel" back to prior periods of literature and evoke them decades into the future. Krishnapur and Troubles share this with early works of meta-fiction like Gravity's Rainbow, but that book was written in 1973 about World War II, and this book was written in the same year about 1845.
One of the line illustrations contained inside Breakfast of Champions by Kurt Vonnegut. |
Breakfast of Champions (1973)
by Kurt Vonnegut
Kurt Vonnegut placed four titles on the first 1001 Books list, Breakfast of Champions, published in 1973, is chronologically the last of those books, and it also one of the two titles that got cut in the first revision. I am not a huge fan of Kurt Vonnegut at the best of times. I would argue that Vonnegut has not aged well, and nowhere is this more apparent in Breakfast of Champions, which takes his penchant for doodles and repetition to a logical extreme by including actual doodles in the text as well as dozens of paragraphs that end with "and so it goes."
Breakfast of Champions is also an incredibly inter-textual book, full of characters from his other books, particularly Kilgore Trout, the stand in for Vonnegut who appears talismanicaly in many of Vonnegut's other works. Here, he is a main character. Trout is a prolific, little known author of science fiction books who conceals great truths in his pulpy plots. He is spectacularly unread in all of Vonnegut's books, but here he finds a great fan, who is unfortunately inspired by Trout's book-within-a-book plot to go on a violent rampage.
And so it goes, as Vonnegut would say. It's impossible to miss the decline in average length of the titles between decades. 18th century, many of the books are over 500 pages. In the 19th century, books were often published in three volume sets, with a total length of 3 to 500 pages. In the 20th century, the 300 page novel is standard until the mid century, but by the late 1960's and 1970's, the average length of a title on the 1001 Books list is closer to 200 pages.
Published 10/15/16
Crash (1973)
by J.G. Ballard
Poised at the intersection of Freudian death wish theory, technology and sex, J.G. Ballard's Crash is an enduring classic of the 20th century canon of transgression. An obsession with arousal derived from a staged disaster is called "symphorophilia," although the term "car crash fetish" is probably closer to what a modern reader would call the obsessions of Vaughan and "James Ballard," the 40 year old narrator, who shares a name with the author but works in television and film as a producer of some sort.
Elias Koteas as Vaughan in the David Cronenberg movie version of Crash by J.G. Ballard. |
Ballard does not stint on the mechanical automobile side of the equation. It is clear that the author was intimately familiar with the technical description of automobile accidents in all their gory detail. Ballard was not the first author to link sex, technology and death. In fact, some of the sexually perverse details of Crash notably remember the writing of the Marquis de Sade in his pre-Freudian 120 Days of Sodom. In that book, the vile aristocrats adopt a very mechanistic approach to defiling their victims, with an emphasize on exploring multiple permutations. This obsession is echoed in a scene where narrator Ballard has sex with auto accident victim Gabrielle, placing his member sequentially in each wound on her body.
De Sade is also echoed in the elaborate plotting between Vaughan and his deranged co-conspirator Seagrave, a stunt driver with a specialty in portraying female drivers. Over and over again, Vaughan and Seagrave recount minute details regarding the real life automobile deaths of actresses like Jayne Mansfield, which they then re-stage for live audiences. J.G. Ballard was a huge victim in the first revision of the 1001 Books project, losing five of his original seven titles. Of those seven only this book and Empire of the Sun remain. That is a pity I think- Ballard is the first among the authors who get slashed between the first two editions who I would take a stand for.
Sula (1973)
by Toni Morrison
I'd gladly read all of Toni Morrison's titles in sequence at this point. The introduction of the two Morrison novels I've read so far have both contained prefaces written by the author after she won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1993. Both prefaces emphasize that her books were not commercially nor critically successful upon publication in the mid 1970's. The very fact that she had a job in academia (professor emeritus at Princeton University) testifies to the fact that her early novels were not commercially viable. Of course, the Nobel Prize for Literature changes all that. In 1993, everyone went back and reread Morrison' oeuvre. That's a process of recollection which continue today.
Like Bluest Eye, Sula is waaaayyyyy darker than what you might expect if you have only a casual knowledge of Toni Morrison. Like Bluest Eye, Sula is about African American women living in southern Ohio. They live segregated lives but escape the worst humiliations of southern racism. Morrison's strong female characters eschew conventional morality out of a combination of choice and necessity. In Sula, Morrison's multi-generational matriarchy has decidedly gothic touches, and at moments the behavior can seem positively Faulknerian. To detail the incidents involved would spoil what little surprise is to be squeezed from the 170 pages of Sula, but the over-all merit of reading about the lives of economically disadvantaged African American women after three hundred years of English men and women overwhelms any picayune criticisms about a lack of length.
The Fan Man is a semi-classic of the butt end of 1960's hippie culture in New York City. |
The Fan Man (1974)
by William Kotzwinkle
Perhaps because of the Kurt Vonnegut penned introduction to the edition of The Fan Man that I read, I became fixated on the idea that Kotzwinkle was somehow the "real life" inspiration for Kurt Vonnegut's fictional pulp philosopher Kilgore Trout. That theory has no merit, but there is no doubt that Kotzwinkles ouevre which ranges from sci-fi genre work to the experimental bent of this book, is reminiscent of the plots described by Vonnegut on behalf of Kilgore Trout.
Horse Badtories is the narrator, a down at the heels hippie/hoarder artist. He lives in a series of "pads," paid for by bad checks, where he accumulates garbage and tries to seduce under age girls (15 year old girls). He also speaks in hippie jargon, liberally peppering his speech wit the ubiquitous "man." To compare a work of 20th century experimental prose to Joyce and Beckett is simply to state that the work is experimental. The idea of writing a book about a crazy perambulating low life in stream of consciousness format was perfected by James Joyce in Ulysses a half century before Kotzwinkle wrote The Fan Man.
The value in The Fan Man is in the depiction of the butt-end of 1960's hippie culture, not the stream of consciousness narrative technique. It's also worth observing yet another quintessentially "60's" work of fiction that was written mid way through the 1970's.
Haus Wittgenstein, the real life inspiration for the house in Correction. |
Correction (1975)
by Thomas Bernhard
Austrian author Thomas Bernhard placed seven books on the first edition of the 1001 Books list. Correction, published in German in 1975 and in English translation four years later, is the first of those seven books. Correction takes place in the aftermath of the suicide of its protagonist, Roithamer, after he has completed an expensive conical house which he designed for his sister, who dies out of mix of shock and shame when she sees the completed house for the first time. After her funeral, he kills himself. The narrator is a friend from his home village, who is tasked with Roithamer's voluminous writings about his family and obsession over building a conical house for his sister.
The obvious points of comparison are Beckett- the entire 270 page book takes the form of TWO 135 page paragraphs. Roithamer and the story of the conical house is loosely based on the real story of Ludwig Wittgenstein and his Haus Wittgenstein, built for his sister. Roithamer bears other resemblances to the real life Wittgenstein, particularly his wealthy background and studies in England.
The paragraph-less format means Correction is a book that requires concentration. Actually putting it down is difficult, because there is no natural break, with the exception of the break between the two paragraphs.
Erica Jong's narrator in Fear of Flying very much resembled herself in terms of her physical description and life history, a point made very clear by the author herself in her post script to the 20th anniversary edition of the book. |
Fear of Flying (1973)
by Erica Jong
This crucial document in the history of second-wave feminism was also a million copy bestseller. I remember seeing it on the bookshelves of the homes of my childhood friends parents in the San Francisco Bay Area in the late 1980's and early 1990's. If only I had known then how racy it was, I surely would have read it in high school. I think there is also a strong case to be made that Fear of Flying was the first novel that can accurately be described as "chick-lit." It is clear, if only from the obsessive literary referencing of the author-esque narrator, Isadora Zelda White Stollerman Wing, that author Jong was well familiar with the entire history of books written by men and women about female sexuality. D.H. Lawrence and Doris Lessing serve as reference points of particular gravity. Lawrence is reference a half dozen times by the characters in the book, and Isadora Wing actually uses a bulky complicated notebook to organize her in-book writing materials, a la Lessing in The Golden Notebook.
Jong's use of a breezy, magazines copy influenced narrative voice is what distinguishes her from other literary pioneers of female sexuality. Considering the sizable percentage of contemporary books and movies that are either chick-lit or chick-lit derived, it's worth considering Jong's accomplishment of fusing her very literary concern with the depiction of contemporary female sexuality with the narrative voice of a proto-Carrie Bradshaw or Bridgette Jones. I'm not trying to diminish anyone by making that comparison, only to say that the later would be unthinkable without the former, particularly the healthy sale of the former. I imagine the presence of Fear of Flying on the best seller list's in the mid 1970's must have set off an earthquake in New York and London publishing firms.
Buchenwald, the largest concentration camp established inside Germany, was different from Auschwitz, which was an extermination camp. |
Fatelessness (1975)
by Imre Kertesz
Imre Keretsz was a Hungarian-Jewish author who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2002. Fatelessness is his Holocaust memoir, and truly if it could ever be said that there is a book that shows the "lighter" side of the Holocaust experience, it is Fatelessness. Kertesz was 14, working in a munitions factory in occupied Hungary when he was pulled off a bus along with every other Jew on the bus, and unceremoniously sent to Auschwitz to be sorted. The consequences of sorting were drastic, with those deemed unfit sent to the gas chamber and crematorium.
Kertesz captures the confusion of the victims well. He believed that he was simply being taken to another job site and it isn't until that he is actually given a prisoner's outfit that he realizes what is happening to him. "Fortunately" Kertesz was sent to Buchenwald, a true concentration camp, vs. Auschwitz, which was an extermination camp. After hisarrival he suffers an injury and receives decent medical care from the mostly French medical staff, and is promptly liberated by American soldiers.
Overall, Kertesz seems bemused rather than horrified by the whole experience. Some of this is no doubt attributed to his dry wit, but he does show that even in the middle of the darkest experience humanity can contemplate, there were many moments that allowed humans to be decent to one another on a personal level.
Salman Rushdie's 1975 "science fiction" first novel Grimus found neither a critical nor popular audience when it was published initially, rather, recognition came after the critical success of 1981's Midnight's Children. |
by Salman Rushdie
Salman Rushdie's second novel, Midnight's Children, won the Booker Prize and catapulted Rushdie to international fame. Grimus was Rushdie's first novel, and it was published as "science fiction" and roundly ignored AND when not ignored, ridiculed. Rushdie's combination of source material ranging from 11th century Sufi poems to cutting edge academic French post-structuralist literary theory to the bildungsroman is well in evidence, but a novel that is difficult to understand even with full knowledge of Rushdie's subsequent work must have been especially baffling to the genre/literary critical audience in 1975, let alone a popular audience.
It is difficult to really give the flavor of Grimus in a plot description. Basically, there is a young Native American hermaphrodite who gains immortality. He travels the world for 777 years, before he becomes bored and ends up going into a parallel dimension where there is an island for disaffected immortals, presided over by a mysterious presence known as Grimus. None of this is stated in anything resembling a traditional narrative format.
Within the narrative Rushdie encloses some sophisticated discussions about the nature of the Rousseau-ean led enlightenment in the 18th century. Grimus is also a proper place to look for glimmerings of the "post-colonial" view point. Again, it's easy to see how one might miss the genius that is enfolded within the "science fiction" label. As science fiction or fantasy, Grimus is very much not either.
Published 10/28/16
Dead Babies (1975)
by Martin Amis
As deeply, deeply, deeply tired as I am of the English Novel, I can not help but notice the similarity between the scabrous modern characters of Martin Amis, that late 20th century English novelist par excellance, and my own particular character traits. That the characters in Dead Babies are so obviously terrible is enough to give me pause and perhaps detract a trifle from the pleasure of the material, but it is hard to avoid the roots of my own world-view in Amis' own weltanschaaung.
"Scabrous" that's one word you can use to describe the characters in Dead Babies. "Dated" would certainly describe the loose plot, about a half dozen wealthy-ish young English and Americans who are gathered in a country house of a weekend of booze, drugs and debauchery. Almost every single one of them is truly hateful. Fans of the wicked 80's fiction of Brett East Ellis and Jay McInerney will be happy to find those two authors literary antecedent, and fans of Eveyln Waugh will be happy to find his successor.
Dead Babies got dropped from the revised edition of the 1001 Books list, and it is easy to understand that decision. Dead Babies is at its most effective when it provokes nausea in the reader. That is perhaps a recipe for notoriety, but not for longevity.
East German author represents both female German writers and East German writers on the 1001 Books list. |
Patterns of Childhood (1975)
by Christa Wolf
I believe Christa Wolf fills the slot for "German language author active in the 1970's" within the 1001 Books list. Patterns of Childhood is her bildungsroman about life in Hitler's Germany, first in the Polish area of Eastern Germany, later as a refugee in the West. Wolf folds multiple narrative devices to enrich the depth of analysis a pre-teen/teen girl can bring to Hitler's Germany. First, she uses a trip back to her now Polish childhood home as framing device, allowing her to describe the meat of the childhood narrative using an unusual 2nd person narrative for those flashbacks.
Second, she incorporates facts from her adult researching life under the Third Reich to establish specific propositions and dates within the childhood narrative. Finally, she includes musings about the structure of the narrative by her, the author of the book. The child/narrator does not have the same name as the author, and the narrator voice never specifically says "I am Christa Wolf" or gives any specific information about her adult life.
Here, all these techniques enliven the narrative and provide depth to the reading experience. Which is good, because at 420 pages of translated German, Patterns of Childhood does not exactly jump off the shelf as a "fun read." Wolf's childhood experience was roughly the same as that as Gunter Grass, from a different area of Polish Germany, although there is little in Patterns of Childhood that would mark her as a specifically East German author.
Still from the 1977 movie version of The Left-Handed Woman , also written by Handke. |
The Left-Handed Woman (1975)
by Peter Handke
The Left-Handed Woman is hardly a novella, let alone a novel. At 70 pages, with large spaced between lines and equally ample margins, The Left-Handed Woman reads like a New Yorker short story, which, according to the jacket copy, it actually is. Confusingly, Handke himself made the movie version, which is "better known" as far as the English language audience for German literature is concerned. Like The Goalkeepers Anxiety of the Penalty Kick, The Left-Handed Woman is a 70's German take on the 1950's era French exisentialist novel. Who are we? Why are we here? What are we doing with our lives?
In The Left-Handed Woman, this classic plight is acted out by the narrator, a youngish haus frau named Marianne, who abruptly orders the husband and father of her children out of their apartment after she experiences a revelation that her husband, Bruno, will leave her "some day." Having been through my own personal experience with a woman whose behavior closely mirrored Marianne in this novel, I can say that Handke accurately describes the sudden change of mind that suddenly descends upon utterly normal type people. One minute you are in a happy marriage, the next you desperately need to escape. That is a way that people behave in our world.
Published 11/11/16
Ratner's Star (1976)
by Don Delillo
The 1001 Books project is well into the present of literature. Most of the authors on the list after this point in time are still publishing. Don Delillo occupies a rank just below the rank of Nobel Prize for Literature: He's well regarded by both audiences and critics, he's won national level book awards, at least one of his books is a staple of 20th century lit classes in colleges nationwide (White Noise). The only thing Delillo is missing besides a major international award is a successful movie adaptation of one of his works.
Delillo's place within the 1001 Books project is far from clear. He had eight titles in the first edition of the 1001 Books list. He lost four of those in the 2008 revision but gained a new listing, then he lost that new listing not two years later, leaving him with three remaining titles. I would observe that Delillo hasn't had a hit since Underworld in 1997- he's published five other novels since then, so it's not from lack of effort.
Ratner's Star is a famously difficult book, and it most closely resembles Grimus by Salman Rushdie- which was published in 1975. Both novels take the framework of genre fiction- science fiction and fantasy, and then ornament that structure with similar accroutements: A firm grasp on the "linguistic" turn in 20th century thought a la Wittgenstein and Beckett, a separate debt to Beckett for his exploration of language in the form of the novel and a playful idea that serious fiction can also be "fun" and/or "funny.'
I say this because both Grimus and Ratner's Star are described as "comic" despite being wholly unfunny. That is a characteristic of Beckett himself, but very much in evidence in the work of his followers as the "post-modern" period of the novel begins to arrive in the mid 1970's. Ratner's Star revolves around a teenage mathematical prodigy who is whisked away to work on a mysterious radio transmission from a distant star. His job is to decipher the meaning of the message.
Like the work of his contemporary Thomas Pynchon, Delillo studs Ratner's Star with numerous, elaborate discussions of higher mathematical theory, astronomy and geometry. These bodies of technical knowledge, analogous to the way Pynchon uses rocket technology in Gravity's Rainbow, are a distinctive characteristic of "serious" American fiction in the mid to late 20th century, and it is a development unique to American writers. These is nothing of such a technical obsession in the work of the modernists. If anything, they are anti-technology.
Now I'm not actually recommending Ratner's Star to anyone as a fun read. It literally is a combination of Beckett style linguistic dueling and complicated higher math and geometry. The characters all have funny names. It is, in a word, interesting but tedious, and at 420 pages, it is not a short book.
The Autumn of the Patriarch (1975)
by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
The Autumn of the Patriarch is probably Marquez's third most famous title behind One Hundred Years of Solitude and Love in the Time of Cholera. The Autumn of the Patriarch is more challenging than either of the two other books. It is more of a "prose-poem" then a novel. The sentences are long and opaque, the plot thin to non-existent. What it does contain is atmosphere, loads of it. The atmosphere oozes from the walls of the decreipt Presidential palace, the location of the even-more decrepit Patriarch in question who is, "in reality" a dictator of an unnamed Latin American backwater, but who bears a marked resemblance of several of the uniformed"Caudillo's" (strong-men) of Latin American politics in the post World War II 20th century.
In that sense, The Autumn of the Patriarch is a minor-key in the ballad of literature about 20th century dictatorships, ranging from the experience of German's under Hitler, the victims of Hitler, the experience of Russians under totalitarian Communism, the experience of the Chinese under Mao and assorted other victims of power-mad single-person state governments. What makes it worth while is the attempt, with however much poetic license, to get inside the head of the perpetrator, rather than his victims. Nothing is pointed enough to constitute a specific criticism of a specific person, rather The Autumn of the Patriarch is an attempt to make the reader feel the stench of corruption engendered by a totalitarian regime
It is an irony of 20th century history that regimes that are imposed with the specific idea of instilling discipline, purity and respect for authority so frequently obtain the opposite result, as citizens passively resist edicts they've had no part in formulating. I was surprised at times by the gross-ness of the imagery. It seems like few people have actually made it all the way through to the end, because there are scenes of De Sadian depravity towards the middle-end that really blow your hair back.
Published 11/30/16
W or The Memory of Childhood (1975)
by George Perec
The Oulipo movement, a loose association of (mostly) French writers and academics who were the vanguard for experimental French fiction in the mid 20th century, is largely unknown outside of the academic specialty audience in English. The major formal innovation of the Oulipo writers was to impose constraints on their fiction writing. That is an approach which has found disciples outside of fiction, you can think of the Dogme movement spear headed by Lars Von Trier (mid career Harmony Korine was an adherent) and the career of American artist Matthew Barney, who literally built his career on a performance art series called "Drawing Restraint" where he physically restrained himself in different ways and then struggled for the Audience.
It's natural to think that experimental fiction written in French would lose "something in the translation," since it is written to be difficult to understand in the original French. From this perspective, W or The Memory of Childhood is an accesible entry point for readers exploring the works of Perec and the Oulipo school. It is both a straight forward narrative written from the perspective of the author, who is a Jewish child in Nazi occupied France, and an equally easy to understand parable about a fictional island nation off the coast of Chile, where everyone is engaged in an endless athletic struggle.
The details of the fictional athletics obsessed society are part Thomas More's Utopia, part Gulliver's Travels and part 1984/Brave New World, and of course, directly inspired by Nazi Germany and would I presume are the Author's dim memories of the so-called Nazi Olympics. I'm not sure if, by 1975, Perec was still operating under the voluntary restraints of the Oulipo movement.
By comparison, Things: A Story of the 60's, is obvious the product of conscious restraint, with first-name only protagonists who lack any sort of inner life. Although the stylistic restrictions are absent, there is still an obsession with rule in order, manifesting in the detailed descriptions of the horrific rituals of the fictional athletics-obsessed society of the parable half of the book.
There's also an interesting overlap with another 1001 Books title, V by Thomas Pynchon. In V, Pynchon writes a plot that hops back and forth, combining at a point, the V of the title (who is also a mysterious character in the book.) In the version of W or The Memory of Childhood that I read, the author includes a foreward where he explains that the proper English translation of the title is, "Double V" not the English letter W, and this is because the inclusion of two parallel but related stories. 2 V's, in other words.
This approach is also echoed by the common film grammar of creating narrative tension in action sequences by moving between two separate locations without making clear the temporal relationship of the two sequences.
Published 12/13/16
The Dead Father (1975)
by Donald Barthelme
The Dead Father is the only one of the three novels by Donald Barthelme to survive the initial cull and replacement of titles between versions of the book. Frequently described as "surreal" and "post-modern," I would describe The Dead Father as turgid academic post-modernism, the same words used by a French critic who is quoted on the author's Wikipedia page. I didn't invent that description, but I subscribe to it. The front cover says it was one of the five best books of the year according to the New York Times, and the back cover compares Barthelme favorably to other early post-modernists like Thomas Pynchon and John Barth, both of whom are far superior to Barthelme.
To call The Dead Father a "novel" is more a tribute to it's length, over 200 pages in the pocket paperback edition I read, then any novel-like characteristics. Critics call his style "digressive" but you could also, just as easily, say that the book makes no damn sense. The Dead Father is supposedly a parody of high modernist writers like Joyce and T.S. Eliot, and I suppose I get that, but it's not a parody in the sense that is any way, shape, or form comic, let alone funny. I mean, it might be comic in the sense of the Greek theater sense of the word comedy as being the only type of drama besides drama or history, but it's not funny.
In fact, if I met someone and they claimed that The Dead Father was funny, I would pull up a copy of it on line and make them show me what is funny about The Dead Father. It is undeniable that there were some very "Emperor's New Clothes" in post-modern criticism and literature. The Dead Father may represent the earliest work where this turn into turgid academic post-modernism is crystallized, and therefore, it is also understandable why someone who happened to fashion a career in the academy during this time period might argue that The Dead Father is a classic work of literature. That, apparently, is the position of the editors of 1001 Books, but personally, I don't get it.
Published 12/14/16
Amateurs (1976)
by Donald Barthelme
Amateurs is maybe one of five books I've read as part of the 1001 Books project that doesn't have it's own Wikipedia page. I'd wager there aren't more than 10 books on the entire list that don't have their own page. I get it though, I have no idea what to say about Amateurs besides:
1. It is a book of short stories by Donald Barthelme, many of which were published in prestigious mass-market literary magazines.
2. The pocket paper back edition I read has a quote from Time magazine calling him a genius.
3. Not a single one of the stories made any sense.
Barthelme is closer to surrealism and dadism then he is to post-modernism. It just so happens that he was writing at the dawn of the post modern era in literature, so the tack stuck. But really he is just updating the cultural reference points for a set of narrative strategies (or anti-strategies) that were close to half a century old by 1976. Really, what we call post-modern in literature is a simply reaction to the realist novel, and realism as a literary ideology. That attack against realism in literature, which we call post-modernism, is part of a larger cultural attack against reason and the enlightenment which was spear headed by French and German philosophers before and after World War II.
At the same time, many writers on the experimental fringes of fiction were deeply influenced by the heavy logic of other philosophers like Wittgenstein and Alfred Whitehead, a movement separate from the critique of the enlightenment sponsored by the left leaning theorists in Europe. In his fiction, Barthelme seems to embrace both the process oriented, Wittgenstein/Whitehead influenced practice of spinning out every logical iteration of a sentence or phrase- something clearly visible in the earliest prose fiction of Beckett as well as the surrealist/dadaist practices of the Europeans.
So, I suppose, if you were reading this book in 1976, and you were aware of various nascent philosophical post-modernism in France, you would find Barthelme novel, but that is no excuse for hailing the man as a genius, let alone including three of his books in the first edition of the 1001 Books list.
Published 7/22/17
Gravity's Rainbow
by Thomas Pynchon
I would argue that Gravity's Rainbow is the second best novel of the 20th century (Ulysses by James Joyce). No author has more directly influenced by cultural development than Pynchon, from roughly college, when I read Gravity's Rainbow for the first time, to today. The reading I did for this post was, I think, the third time I've read Gravity's Rainbow, but it was the first time I bought a "reading copy" and sat there with a pen in hand, making notes page-by-page, so that I could delve deeper into the mysteries presented.
What I was discovered was more linkages between Pynchon's books, details of the intricacies of the plotting that had previously escaped my notice, and observations about Pynchon's influences. Starting with the last first, I was very much struck by the similarities between large swathes of Gravity's Rainbow and the writing of William Burroughs circa Naked Lunch. A critical character in Gravity's Rainbow is Doctor Weissman/Captain Blicero, a German army officer with a fondness for BDSM and gay sex. The chapters involving Blicero and his proclivities seem like they were almost imported from the Burroughsian fantasies of Naked Lunch. These heavy s&m sequences, which I basically didn't even remember reading about the first two times through, are likely the reason that Pynchon hasn't won the Nobel Prize for Literature- too dirty for the Nobel committee!
Blicero, as it turns out, spent his formative years in the German Southwest, where he served in the aftermath of the Herrero massacre- itself a reoccurring theme in the work of Thomas Pynchon. It is in the character of Blicero-Weissman that Pynchon really connects the idea of the exercise of power upon the body to his shaggy-dog rocket man plot. One aspect that becomes very clear is that for Thomas Pynchon, the idea of "plot" has a double meaning- the first is the typically literary meaning, the plot of the novel. It is the second aspect- that Gravity' Rainbow works out if you look at it in the sense of an x/y axis, where one plots points of data onto a map or graph.
This theme is woven throughout many of the sub-plots of Gravity's Rainbow, and embodied by the closest thing this book has to a central character, Tyrone Slothrop, who has an uncanny ability to predict an imminent rocket attack via an erection. The unraveling of this atttribute- with Slothrop seeking his own answers and a variety of world power trailing in his wake, is the main plot point, and the easiest way to describe the plot of Gravity's Rainbow. The title itself actually refers to the geometric space under the parabola of a rocket's trajectory, if I have that right- Gravity's Rainbow literally refers to the space one would describe under the arc of a rainbow. Thus, geometry, and geometric space, the plotting of points on an x and y axis, and the sciences they have been inspired seem to be THE central theme of this book.
The linkages between books are obvious, with reoccurring, tailismanic characters and shared narratives- the German extinction of the Herrero people in German Southwest Africa in the early 20th century being central to any attempt at a pan-Pynchon narrative of 20th century history.
I could go on.
Published 7/17/18
A Question of Power (1973)
Bessie Head
Bessie Head is the most well known novelist from the southern African country of Botswana. Her back story is incredible, born in 1938, the result of what they then call a "union" between a wealthy white South African woman and a black African. Head's mother was quickly and decisively sent to a mental institution and she may or may not have been insane as well. It's unclear what actually happened to Head's mother. Head came of age in South Africa where she briefly married an African political activist and got on the bad side of the South African government. She left, permanently, for Botswana and A Question of Power is a work of biographical fiction about a mixed-race woman living in super-African Botswana, while struggling with the burden of mental illness.
The description of Elizabeth, the protagonist/Head character's repeated descent into the throes of mental illness is astonishing. It's hard to make an accurate diagnosis- Botswana, at the time of A Question of Power has one western trained psychiatrist, who sees the institutionalized Elizabeth early on in the book, once, and dismisses her as "difficult." Elizabeth is outsider in multiple senses: She's half white, which is essentially unheard of in Botswana. She is educated, though Botswana in the 1960's and 70's was not the place for rarified discourse, especially for women. Head's Elizabeth is a woman without family, without anyone, living, essentially at the end of the Earth. A Question of Power is an extraordinary achievement in that regard- almost impossible to imagine it being written, let alone published, though I suppose simply receiving something by a Botswanan author writing in English would be enough to get a review for publication.
The fact that Head wrote this book while she herself struggled with similar mental health issues is enough to make the most cynical reader just stop and consider. I think the way the literature from the post-colonial global south has developed, the conflict between western-intellectual psychology and non-western cultures either already has taken or will take center stage. A Question of Power, written in 1973 in a trail-blazer.
Interview with the Vampire (1976)
by Anne Rice
Largely credited with spurring the most recent revival of interest in vampire culture, Interview with the Vampire is going on a half-century of being the single most read book about vampires that isn't Dracula by Bram Stoker. The 1897 publication date of obscures an even older lineage for the vampire in western literature: In 1819 Lord Byron wrote a so-called "fragment" of a novel featuring the first Vampire in western literature. Thus, by the time Dracula was published, people had been talking Vampires for close to a century.
Tracing a literary pedigree for the vampire in western literature beyond Byron is a fools errand, surely the origination of the vampire character by the pre-eminent English poet and literary celebrity of his era is enough. Rice certainly deserves credit for pulling the Vampire into the age of tape recorders, gay love and locales like New Orleans. Her "new world" vampire, epitomized by the conflicted young planter cum vampire, Louis, is urbane and sophisticated, and most importantly, torn about the morally dubious prospect of constantly needing to murder innocent children in order to survive.
This represents an innovation on the Count Dracula/Nosferatu motif of the vampire as aged Eastern European nobility, brought to the west by boat for reasons which often remain unexplored. The conflicted vampire is a vampire who retains the moral sensibility of an ethical human being. If you've read the entire "Vampire Chronicles" you are aware that the first volume is a tame jumping off point for a mythology that rapidly grew to include Egyptian Gods and all manner of supernatural competitors. In Interview, you've only got the vampire Lestat, Louis, the girl child vampire, Claudia (memorably played by Kirsten Dunst opposite Brad Pitt's Louis.
I'm certain I read Interview before the 1994 film, meaning I read it in high school. I was never a goth, but I was goth adjacent and spent a year or so chasing various goth type girls in college before I found a long term girlfriend (who herself was goth adjacent.) Revisiting the audiobook version today, I was struck by just how bad Rice can be as a writer, making the incredible world-wide success of Interview a tribute to her grasp of the appeal of a vampire to a popular audience circa 1975.
Interview with a Vampire has been so overwhelmingly influential that it now can almost seem derivative if you aren't mindful of it's progenitor status. For example, True Blood, the recently popular HBO TV show, is so influenced by the aesthetic of Interview that it almost seems like a riff, in retrospect.
Published 5/31/18
Cutter and Bone(1976)
by Newton Thornburg
The editor who wrote the caption for this book for the 1001 Books to Read Before You Die called it a "lost classic," and considering how long it took me to track down a copy to read- an LA library ebook of a belated 2015 reprint- I'd be inclined to agree that is both lost and a classic of crime fiction. Amazingly, there is an equally obscure movie version called Cutter's Way, which stars- wait for it- Jeff Bridges as "Bone" who is, if I'm not mistaken, a major reference point for his character "the Dude" in the Big Lebowski. I have to watch the movie, which is available to stream on Amazon.com
Like all late 20th century noir/detective genre stories which rise to the level of literature, the plot is secondary to the scene and character development. Here, the Cutter and Bone duo are a corporate rat race drop out(Cutter, John Heard in the movie), currently making his way as a sometime gigolo among the casual vacation goers of Santa Barbara, and Bone(Bridges), a paraplegic amputee and Vietnam war veteran, living off his disability check. They are both living in a one room shack with Mo, who has a baby, and is herself on the run from life in a wealthy suburb and a college education. The three of them spend their time drinking, smoking and taking pills, and none of them seem particularly inclined to deal with anything.
Coming home from a bar one night, Cutter sees someone awkwardly dumping a large package into a trashcan. He wakes up the next morning to read that a local 17 year old is murdered. Despite his avowals to authorities that he didn't see anything, Cutter blurts out "it's him" the following day reading a story about a Midwestern millionaire in town for a business conference. Bone then launches a dubious extortion scheme, which eventually leads the duo and the victim's older sister, and a virginal UCSB student named "Monk," on a cross county adventure ending in Arkansas, the home of said suspect and Midwestern millionaire.
Published 12/2/18
Gravity's Rainbow (unabridged audiobook)(2014)
by Thomas Pynchon
Read by George Guidall
Penguin Audio
Book Review: Gravity's Rainbow (1973)by Thomas Pynchon (Reviewed 2017)
Audiobooks have been overshadowed in the past five years by the Podcast, but there is no reason to think that the Audiobook shouldn't see a kind of explosion in audience size as more and more people migrate to the world of unlimited online data. At a very basic level, an Audiobook is much smaller than a real book, less expensive (or should be) and just as available, if not more available, from your local library for free. Not every book gets the Audiobook treatment, and the industry essentially developed after 1970, in an iteration known as "books on tape." This evolved to books on CD, and what was originally limited to genre books and award winners has extended down to debut works of literary fiction, non fiction, current affairs and of course, genre fiction.
Like many new art-forms, the declasse nature of it's origins have led to a delay in acceptance and acknowledgment that an Audiobook is anything other then cheating on a regular book, but if you've actually spent any time listening to Audiobooks, you know this is untrue. The fact is, and this particularly true for longer books, you can get a lot more out of the Audiobook equivalent of a 500 page or more title. Trying to read a 5, 6, 7 hundred page book is a chore, requiring the reader to set aside blocks of time in a place where it is convenient to bust out an enormous book.
Thus, for a long work of literary fiction, the existence of an Audiobook version expands to potential audience dramatically, even among people, like me, for example, who actually do read long works of literary fiction. Many people do not, and it seems to me that Gravity's Rainbow as a 40 hour Audiobook is a much easier pitch than the 800 page paperback. The Audiobook of Gravity's Rainbow is the third time that I've made my way into what Robert Newman, in his 1987 book, Understanding Thomas Pynchon called, "the epitome of the male labyrinth novel."
Newman also compares Gravity's Rainbow to Ulysses- a reference I made in my 2017 reading for the 1001 Books project. As I said in 2017, and Newman said in 1987, if Ulysses is the greatest novel of the twentieth century, then Gravity's Rainbow is a strong number two. Newman identifies 11 major themes:
(1) the heroic quest for knowledge for self-growth and for the salvation of the quester's societyI would add a 12th theme, which is the duplicitous nature of international capitalism.
(2) the ambiguity of such knowledge in an uncertain world
(3) the meaning of freedom
(4) the paradox of mutability being the only stable concept in life
(5) the betrayals that occur between generations
(6) the consequences of repression
(7) the uses and misues of language
(8) the dangers of solipsism
(9) the perversions generated by man's misuse of nature
(10) the connections between the natural and supernatural worlds
and (11) the consequences of ignoring those lessons. - Newman 95-96
Pynchon develops these themes through close to 450 characters. I found the Audiobook preferable to the text in many different ways, and while the text, for a book like this is indispensable, the Audiobook stands on it's own as an important achievement. For example, Pynchon frequently makes use of songs, rhymes (he loves a good limerick), slang and argot, and reader George Guidall is able to give voice to these moments without the reader needing to puzzle it out.
40 hours appears to be an absolute limit for Audiobook length- Cryptomonicon by Neal Stephenson is 40 hours. War and Peace by Tolstoy is 40 hours. If you've ever read a long book, you can listen to a long Audiobook. As described as above, it is simply a more manageable commitment, never more now then one can listen to it on an App on a smartphone.
Published 3/24/19
Child of God (1973)
by Cormac McCarthy
Critically reviled when it was published in 1973, Child of God is an excellent example of a failure that presages later artistic success. Lester Ballard is the serial-killer protagonist of Child of God, living alone in Sevier County (pronounced severe county) in the 1960's. He is very similar to the Gene Harrogate character in Suttree (1979). The theme of a monstrously isolated outsider clashing with society is repeated in many of his books, but Lester Ballard is the most extreme example, and all of Child of God is about him. In other books- Suttree for example, the Ballard-like character only plays a supporting role.
I checked out the Audiobook version from the library- I think I mentioned before that McCarthy makes good material for an Audiobook, one of those authors where being able to hear the voices of the character really helps. I can't do an Appalachian accent in my head for a four hundred page book, let alone keep track of different variations on the theme. For readers who love McCarthy's later, more succesful books, Child of God is a must because you can really see how he developed between then and his more recent now.
It is also incredibly violent and depraved, and there is frequent unapologetic use of the n word- though not as much as in Suttree, almost putting him beyond the pale of current literary fiction conventions.
Published 10/26/19
Woman at Point Zero (1975)
by Nawal El Saadawi
Replaces: The Newton Letter by John Banville
Any thorough reader of the Western literary canon will notice a paucity of works translated from Arabic, let alone works published in English where the writers are the children of immigrants to the West. Only one writer in Arabic has won the Nobel Prize in Literature (Naguib Mahfouz- 1988). Mahfouz is absent from the 1001 Books list- I found some Audiobooks in the Libby Library app but just can't generate the energy to tackle him.
Woman at Point Zero is a feminist era book that blends fiction and non-fiction- with the text purportedly based on a real interview El Saadawi conducted with a female prisoner awaiting execution for murder. Nawal El Saadawi is interesting in her own right, a female doctor and public intellectual who clashed with the- also secular- dictatorship of Anwar Sadat, eventually being stripped of her public status and even sent to prison. Obviously, prostitution is an issue in Egyptian society but it isn't really out there, Egypt being a pretty conservative, repressive place, even during the secular 70's.
It's an easy choice to replace The Newton Letter by the excellent but overrepresented Irish author John Banville. The diversity bonus from a book written in Arabic, by a secular, Egyptian author, about a member of the urban underclass- that's like quadruble diversity bonus points- the mere fact that it has been translated into English is enough to warrant a canonical inclusion.
Published 11/4/19
Kiss of the Spider Woman (1976)
by Manuel Puig
Replaces: Fools of Fortune by William Trevor
This book is better known in the English speaking world for it's Academy Award winning movie version (1985) and the subsequent musical (1993), but the book stands out as a pathbreaker in Argentina, both for its frank depiction of the life of prisoners under the Peronist dictatorship and for its treatment of LGBTQA themes, a rarity for that time and place. Such was the controversy that Kiss of the Spider Woman was actually published in English translation before the Spanish language version came out, and it was several years before the Argentinian authorities allowed it to be officially published inside the country.
The story is straight forward, but the execution is not. Two people are in prison in Argentina, one, Valentin, is a political prisoner of great interest to the authorities, the other, Molina is a transgender woman (biologically a man) imprisoned for "corruption of a minor." The prison authorities want to use Molina to get information out of Valentin. Molina is eager to take advantage of the benefits of such a arrangement but becomes predictably conflicted when it comes to actually divulging any information and betraying Valentin.
The plot is interrupted or supplemented by several lengthy recapitulations of "films" told by Molina to Valentin, some based on real films, others invented, in an attempt to while away the endless hours. The style of the book is stream of consciousness, and it is left to the reader to deduce who is speaking, and indeed, what is actually happening.
Puig's gain as an add to the 2008 edition of the 1001 Books list is another loss for Ireland, since Puig's book replaces Fools of Fortune by William Trevor. Of course, Puig is another win for Spanish language literature.
Published 11/13/19
Blaming (1976)
by Elizabeth Taylor
Replaces: The Diary of Jane Somers by Doris Lessing
No, it's not that Elizabeth Taylor, rather it is English author. Blaming was published after her death. Like Barbara Pym, another overlooked English author who was omitted from the original 1001 Books but added to the first edition, Taylor writes what you might call "domestic fiction": fiction about ordinary people living ordinary lives, with no meta-fictional fuckery, unusual viewpoints or exotic locations. In Blaming, Amy, a 60's empty nest housewife is suddenly widowed when her painter husband dies unexpectedly during a Mediterranean cruise. Amy is befriended by Martha, an awkward American novelist, and they continue a halting friendship upon Amy's return to London, where she tries to figure out what to do with her life.
The characters are unlikeable in a manner that reminded me of the Larry David school of interpersonal relationships: Friends are a bother, people are terrible. Despite being the wife of a succesful painter, Amy is about as unartistic as you can get, she doesn't seem to read or have any unusual opinions. She doesn't like caring for her grandkids, and cringes at almost any social interaction. I can see why Taylor might be the type of author to see her career rescuitatted in the decades after her death, a woman writer, writing quiet, domestic, fiction, it is the precisely the type of literature overlooked in the literary critical/popular marketplace of the mid to late 20th century.
The book(s) it replaces on the 1001 Books list is the collection, The Diary of Jane Somers, originally published by Lessing under that pseudonym Jane Somers. Lessing was decades away from her 2007 Nobel Prize, but still, it is a strange, if not uncommon stunt for an established author to pull. Lessing was incredibly prolific, with forays into science fiction (the Canopus in Argus series, five books) and her wild quasi-fictional biography the Children of Violence series, which has its own dystopian science fiction entry, five books. She's also got close to twenty separate volumes of short stories and even four books grouped as "Cat Tales" about Cats, I presume.
So, it's hard to mourn the loss of The Diary of Jane Somers from any canonical list of 20th century literature. I think it's probably not even her third of fourth best book, all told. Taylor doesn't do anything to increase diversity except in the introduction of a petit bourgeois/non family based "office worker" milieu, basically unrepresented in the serious precincts of literary fiction.
Published 11/19/19
Year of the Hare (1975)
by Arto Paasilinna
Replaces: Concrete by Thomas Bernhard
This extremely popular (in Finland) picaresque novel didn't get an English translation until 1995- also an Audiobook- but it was a welcome departure from the parade of woeful existentialist protagonists who have featured prominently in most of the additions to the first revision of the 1001 Books list. I get it, if you include diverse viewpoints you are going to end up getting voices that sound similar to the voices that already exist inside the canon- with a different viewpoint but similar structure.
Kaarlo Vatanen is a ennui stricken Finnish journalist, who, after injuring a hair while driving to a small Finnish town on assignment, spontaneously decides to abandon his life and embarks on a series of adventures with said hare. He gets drunk, gets into fights, works as a firefighter, sells salvaged German armaments from World War II, gets engaged even though he is married, goes on two separate bear hunts and ends up getting arrested inside the Soviet Union. Year of the Hare was a fun Audiobook- seemingly the first addition to the 1001 Books list that has an Audiobook version available. Year of the Hare replaces yet another title by Austrian author Thomas Bernhard- I feel like three of the last four books I've read from the revised 1001 Books list replaced Bernhard books.
Published 12/3/19
Cataract (1976)
by Mykhaylo Osadchy
Replaces: Yes by Thomas Bernhard
This Soviet era prisoner memoir by Mykhaylo Osadchy, a Ukrainian poet is hard to figure as an addition to the 2008 edition of the 1001 Books list except as a diversity pick- Ukraine and all the other ex-Soviet Republics being sorely absent from the original 1001 Books list. Of all the nations subject to the 20th century Soviet embrace, only Czechoslovakia and Poland had any success getting the attention of Western readers of literary fiction. In recent years, that's changed- Svetlana Alexievch, the Belarussian Nobel Prize winner in 2015, and Olga Tokarczuk, the co-winner this year, have introduced two potential representatives that are Ukraine adjacent.
Honestly, with those two writers in mind, it is hard to make a case for Cataract, which is pretty much your standard Soviet era prison memoir. The minor twist is that Osadchy is from a post-World War II generation that was actually raised to believe the promises of the Soviet Union, and much of Cataract has the tenor of late 20th century American teen who goes off to an elite college and learns that capitalism is bad, man. Only here, Osadchy gets a two year prison sentence. If you know anything about the Soviet prison memoir you know that two years is basically a slap on the wrist.
Cataract replaces yet another Thomas Bernhard title- I feel like that is maybe four of the last five 2008 additions to the 1001 Books list- that they've replaced Bernhard titles.
Published 12/3/19
Cataract (1976)
by Mykhaylo Osadchy
Replaces: Yes by Thomas Bernhard
This Soviet era prisoner memoir by Mykhaylo Osadchy, a Ukrainian poet is hard to figure as an addition to the 2008 edition of the 1001 Books list except as a diversity pick- Ukraine and all the other ex-Soviet Republics being sorely absent from the original 1001 Books list. Of all the nations subject to the 20th century Soviet embrace, only Czechoslovakia and Poland had any success getting the attention of Western readers of literary fiction. In recent years, that's changed- Svetlana Alexievch, the Belarussian Nobel Prize winner in 2015, and Olga Tokarczuk, the co-winner this year, have introduced two potential representatives that are Ukraine adjacent.
Honestly, with those two writers in mind, it is hard to make a case for Cataract, which is pretty much your standard Soviet era prison memoir. The minor twist is that Osadchy is from a post-World War II generation that was actually raised to believe the promises of the Soviet Union, and much of Cataract has the tenor of late 20th century American teen who goes off to an elite college and learns that capitalism is bad, man. Only here, Osadchy gets a two year prison sentence. If you know anything about the Soviet prison memoir you know that two years is basically a slap on the wrist.
Cataract replaces yet another Thomas Bernhard title- I feel like that is maybe four of the last five 2008 additions to the 1001 Books list- that they've replaced Bernhard titles.
Published 1/8/20
The Dispossessed (1974)
by Ursula Le Guin
Replaces: City Primeval by Elmore Leonard
I can think of three series of literary/science fiction involving authors who projected an anarchist/socialist/communist society into an intergalactic milieu- I heard of all three of them via the 1001 Books project, probably reflecting the fact that American readers of genre fiction aren't huge on left leaning works of literary/science fiction. The Dispossessed is part of American author Le Guin's Hainish Cycle, which takes places in a galaxy where a small number of planets- including a future earth (called "Terra") were colonized by the original humans- the Hainish- who then promptly disappeared for several hundred thousand years before popping back into the picture and reaching out to their various progeny.
The cycle doesn't take place in chronological order- The Dispossessed was published sixth in sequence, but its events are the first in chronological sequence. The protagonist- not the narrator- The Dispossessed is written in the third person- is a physicist names Shevek living on a planet that embraces a dispersed anarcho-communism. This planet is a moon of another planet, Urras, which resembles a conventional, better managed Earth, with capitalists and state-communists, and an upper and lower class. Half the chapters are flashbacks showing Shevek's life before he leaves his planet and travels to Urras- the first person from his planet to do so.
Because it is first chronologically, The Dispossessed is a good entry point for readers looking to delve into the nine volume Hainish cycle. I've always associated Le Guin with her very popular young reader titles- A Wrinkle in Time is a canon-level classic, I would expect that the editors of the 1001 Book project would have picked that book, not something from the Hainish Cycle, but there you go.
Published 1/22/20
The Alteration (1976)
by Kingsley Amis
The Alteration is a fun alternate-history tale with a genuine literary pedigree, set in a world where the Reformation was avoided after Martin Luther accepted the Papacy. In alternate 1976, the whole Christian world is Catholic, with the exception of a rumpish independent New England under its own religion affiliated government. The enemy is "the Caliph" or "the Turk," a full strength plus Ottoman Empire that maintains a modern military.
Alternate 1976 is a variation on the steam-punk motif, in the world of The Alteration, science remains suspect, electricity is banned, and fast transportation relies on (non-electrical) diesel power. There is, for example, a train that runs between London and Rome in six hours. The mode of government in this world is totalitarian-lite and there are echoes of Nazism (Jews are in hiding, have to wear yellow stars) and a straight forward projection of an Inquisition era church projected onto the modern era.
The story is about a 10 year old boy who has the sweetest voice in all of England. Visitors from Rome arrive to suggest that he be "altered" i.e. castrated, so that his pre-pubescent voice is kept pristine. Mind you, it is 1976 in this book. Hubert Anvil, the angelic singer, is too young to know what he will be missing, but he's old enough to know that there are pluses and minuses and that he should be concerned.
He goes on the run, enlisting the help of some would-be kidnappers and the embassy of the New Englanders, before everything resolves in an ambiguous fashion. Seems like a good basis for a prestige tv version!!!
Original hard back cover for Concrete Island (1974) by J.G. Ballard |
Cover of the New York Review of Books Classics edition of The Glory of the Empire by Jean d'Ormesson |
Published 9/22/20
The Glory of the Empire (1974)
by Jean d'Ormesson
The Glory of the Empire sounds like a Borgesian short story brought to life: A French author writes an entire history of an Empire that never existed. The Onessa Empire exists somewhere around the Black Sea- the nearest historical analogue seems to be the Byzantine Empire or an Empire founded by one of the Greek colonies on the coast of present-day Turkey. The lead characters include Alexis, an Alexander the Great type of polymath who founds the the original Empire and Basil the Great, the canny political operator who extends Onessa's domain from Europe to the coast of Korea via an unexpected alliance with a Genghis Khan type barbarian ruler.
In truth though, The Glory of the Empire sounds like more fun that it actually is, probably because the history that d'Ormesson is aping is the 19th century style "great man" kind of history. It's possible that this is the exact point he is making: Our practice of elevating so-called "great men" is fiction whether the men in question existed or not.
SOMETIMES a novel is so complex it’s simple. Take D. G. Compton’s The Continuous Katherine Mortenhoe. The novel chronicles the dystopian adventures of a woman told she has four weeks to live, and builds an intricately imagined and believable near future not so different from our own, complete with wildly popular reality shows that feed the appetite of a “pain-starved public,” even as death from anything other than old age has been virtually eliminated. The story is told in chapters that alternate between narration from Katherine’s point of view and the first-person account of Roddie, the host of one such Human Destiny program. At its heart, however, Compton’s book is about two essential predicaments of the human condition: mortality and love. Harkening back to social realist novels by the likes of Theodore Dreiser, Compton’s structure methodically but brilliantly exposes Katherine to different strata of society as she reckons with her diagnosis and Roddie reckons with the man his job has made him.
Honestly, I had trouble following The Continuous Katherine Mortonhoe, and I'm sure readers of early 1970's British science fiction were equally vexed. A true first person narration is difficult enough to follow when the universe depicted is based on a "reality" of the past, when you introduce speculative elements, the absence of an "all knowing" narrator to explain things to the reader makes understanding doubly complicated. It also makes such a book more "literary," and I'm beginning to see that as a trend in the speculative fiction category of New York Review of Books Classics titles.
For example there is Moderan (2018) by David R. Bunch, which is similarly difficult to piece together because of the use of a first person narrator in a post-apocalyptic world. It's a cautionary tale for authors seeking to blend speculative fiction with literary fiction, too simple, you lose one audience, too complicated and you lose both.
1 comment:
Our favourite novel we have read recently is the raw and noir fact based spy thriller Beyond Enkription by Bill Fairclough. Whether you are a le Carré connoisseur, a Deighton devotee, a Fleming fanatic, a Herron hireling or even a Macintyre marauder you should like it. It's not a perfected to perfection le Carré creation full of delicate diction and sophisticated syntax but it is so distinctively different that it's a must read for espionage cognoscenti. It's the first factual stand-alone spy novel in The Burlington Files series. In real life Bill Fairclough aka Edward Burlington was inter alia an MI6 agent codename JJ and one of Pemberton’s People in MI6.
Odds on you’ll read it twice if you’ve already devoured Tinker Tailor, Funeral in Berlin, Slow Horses or The Spy and The Traitor. Best start looking it up and getting to know the author via the equally unusual and captivating website called TheBurlingtonFiles. Just ask George Smiley, Harry Palmer, Jackson Lamb or even Oleg Gordievsky what they thought of Bill Fairclough aka Edward Burlington, the protagonist in The Burlington Files.
Mind you, Oleg might refuse to comment. In real life he knew MI6’s Colonel Alan Brooke Pemberton CVO MBE aka Colonel Alan McKenzie (Mac) in The Burlington Files. In real life Alan was MI6’s hapless handler who had to try and control the maverick Fairclough who coincidentally had quite a lot in common with Greville Wynne and has even been called “a posh Harry Palmer”. Pemberton’s People in MI6 even included Roy Astley Richards OBE (Winston Churchill’s bodyguard) and an eccentric British Brigadier (Peter 'Scrubber' Stewart-Richardson) who was once refused permission to join the Afghan Mujahideen.
Bill Fairclough and John le Carré (aka David Cornwell) knew of each other but only long after Cornwell’s MI6 career ended thanks to Kim Philby (who was a cousin of Field Marshal Montgomery). Coincidentally, the novelist Graham Greene used to work in MI6 reporting to Philby and Bill Fairclough actually stayed in Hôtel Oloffson during a covert op in Haiti (explained in Beyond Enkription) which was at the heart of Graham Greene’s spy novel The Comedians. Funny it’s such a small world!
Whether you’re a le Carré connoisseur, a Deighton disciple, a Fleming fanatic, a Herron hireling or a Macintyre marauder, odds on once you are immersed in it you’ll read this titanic production twice. You can find out more about Pemberton’s People in an article dated 31 October 2022 on The Burlington Files website. For more detailed reviews visit the Reviews page on TheBurlingtonFiles website or see other independent reviews on your local Amazon website and check out Bill Fairclough's background on the web.
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