Wednesday, April 10, 2024

March 24 Reading

 This month I'm focusing on completing (hopefully) the Vander Meers' mammoth anthology The Weird, so likely it will be another month with a small total. 

  1. NYer 2/26/24. Pretty good story about Afghan community in Sacramento by Jamil Jan Kochai. 
  2. The Nation Feb. 24. The Desi community may be big enough to swing the election. 
  3. Empty Theater by Jac Jemc. More a speculative dual biography than anything else.
  4. NYer 3/4/24. "Eat" by Joy Harjo. 
  5. The Scandal of Father Brown. GKC. I don't have a great memory (ha ha) but these are not the best, nor are they the worst FB stories. I liked the last ("The Vampire of the Village") the best (
  6. The Weird by VanderMeer and VanderMeer. About 500 pages too long.
  7. Chesterton: Man and Mask by Garry Wills. Thorough survey of his career, best is stand-alone essay on Thursday.  Very little on Father Brown, but considers "The Fairy Tale of FB" to be the most significant (last one before conversion). 
  8. EQQM Nov/Dec 22. 
  9. NYer 10/3/22. Owner of EDM nightclub in Ibiza sez "The problem with this kind of music is you have to take drugs to listen to it."
  10. NYer 3/18/24.  Liberal arts curricula coopted by the right wing. 
  11. The Arab of the Future. Vol. 1.  Didn't like the visual style, found the pacing to be boring, and children torture a dog. Will not be continuing. 

Friday, March 1, 2024

Feb 24 Reading

Only a few actual books last month, and February may be the same.

  1. NYer 2/5/24. Rae Armantrout as finest living poet? 
  2. NYer  5/23/22. The entire budget of the South Dakota Symphony Orchestra is less than the salary of the conductor of the Chicago SO. 
  3. The Nation, Jan.24 Article on how early American families (Roosevelts etc) profited from opium trade. 
  4. Invincible v. 12: Hmm, I don't remember this so well...
  5. Invincible v. 11: Oh, that's why!
  6. Redwall by Brian Jacques. "Jess [the squirrel] observed there was difference between slaving under a tyrant and voluntary cooperation that arose from determination and good fellowhip."
  7. Best American Short Stories of the Century. (775 pages). Top="That Evenin' Sun," "Crazy Sunday" (FSF),  "That In Aleppo Once.." VN; The Farmer's Children (Bishop); "Where I'm Calling From"; "The Things Tehy Carried"; Mensetting (Alice Monroe); "Soon" (Pam Durban)
  8. Questioning Minds: The Letters of Guy Davenport & Hugh Kenner. There's a lot. Over time Davenport's letters emerged as more humane, HK seems brittle and a bit pretentious at times. 
  9. NYer 1/29/24 [Song dynasty poet Wei T'ai] said poetry 'should be precise about the thing and tericent about the feeling."

Tuesday, February 6, 2024

Jan 24 Reading

 My goal this year is one short story a day, but I'll only post the "book version" (anthology or collection). I'll continue to include New Yorker issues, simply because it helps with the backlog. Speaking of which,

  1. NYer 12/4//23. (Teju Cole short story). 
  2. NYer 11/13/23 (including a Clare Sestanovich ss, plus feature on Ridley Scott and review by Wood of House of Doors)
  3. Superman:Space Age by Russel and Allred. Clever use of one of the Infinite Earths, including a "retcon" to well, when it happened. 
  4. Fantastic Four by Ryan North: Whatever Happened to the Fantastic Four. Accentuates the Johnny (Jonny?) is the worst (or his least favorite) and Dr. Susan Storm-Richards the best (his favorite). Reed a verbose explainer and Ben a simple, kind man (as always). 
  5. Richard Stark's Parker: The Hunter. Lots of text. Lots of pages with no text. Not great as a comic.
  6. NYer 12/18/23. Gopnick on comedy: Marx Bros=optimism; Tati=pessimsim; Keaton=stoicism; Chaplin=humanism. Larger point: "Comedy has a range as large as human feeling"
  7. NYer 10/17/22. Strange David Gilbert story "Come Softly To Me" plus Lydia Millet review.
  8. Planet of Exile. Secretly the story of how a genetic mutation led to the exiled Far born being assimilated (though it's never said)
  9. NYer 1/8/24. Next three all finished while travelling
  10. NYer 9/19/22
  11. NYer 3/21/22. Running count 7!
  12. NYer 4/17/23. Emahoy, the musical genius Ethiopian nun. 
  13. NYer 10/2/23. Featuring "Bruises" by Graham Swift. Veteran pointed in right direction home. 
  14. NYer 3/13/23. "Terriers are deranged animals who could probably teach us a lot about how brains pointlessly track small movements and changes; these traits of theirs far exceed those needed to hunt small rustling prey." Rivka Galchen, "How I Became a Vet."
  15. NYer 12/25/23. Games and comics. Longish comic on Patricia Highsmith. 
  16. NYer 1/15/24. Smart double review of Frantz Fanon and Ian Fleming biographies. 
  17. NYer 10/24/22. Wendell Pierce as Wally Loman.
  18. Dinosaurs by Lydia Millet. Fave scene: "'you have a lovely house/'so do you." They agreed. They both had lovely houses. They had bought them with money."
  19. NYer 8/15/22. Anthony Lane's review of Bodies Bodies Bodies: in most whodunnits you don't particularly care about who dies, but "I found myself actively willing the extinction of every single character, if possible in conspicuous agony."
  20. NYer 10/10/22. Gotta go, my Mom jeans and Dad jeans are here.
  21. NYer 1/22/24. Final count-16!

Thursday, January 4, 2024

Dec 23 Reading

I'll have more time this month maybe?
  1. NYer 10/23/23. Need to catch up.
  2. NYer 11/6/2023. Remnick's Letter from Israel
  3. NYer 11/27/23. New font for bylines? How dare they! New Haven pizza? Intrigued!
  4. NYer 9/18/23. Emily Wilson (translator) is super annoying.
  5. Babel by R.F. Kuang. 3 complaints and 3 concessions. Complaints 1)scene constructions 2)flat characters 3)anachronistic dialogue Concessions 3)It's well researched2)It's polemic, so 1)the magic system is cool
  6. Lost Time by Jozek Czapski
  7. Fante Bukowski by Noah van Scriver
  8. How to Do Nothing: Resisting the Attention Economy.
  9. NYer 12/11/23. John Adams reviewing book on memorials in music, includes discussion of his 9/11 memorial ("On the Transmigration of Souls")
  10. How Proust Can Change Your Life: Not a Novel by Alain de Botton. The simple lesson is don't read great literature with your eyes, see the world with their eyes. 
  11. The Dark Design (Riverworld v. 3). I mentally steampunk it as I read along, changing batteries to wood-fired boilers etc.
  12. NYer 11/20/23. Sheila Heti wrote "According to Alice" with help of AI. It starts "My name is Alice and I was born from an egg that fell out of Mommy's butt."

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