Last Book of 2008 Sunday, Feb 1 2009 

Susanna Clarke’s collection of stories, The Ladies of Grace Adieu, is a spin-off from her tour-de-force, Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell. I do like her light-hearted, almost archaic way of writing. The illustrations in this book are also marvellous, and I’m pleased that I’d gotten it from The Strand for US$5.

This, I believe, is really the last book I read in 2008. (Or did I finish it on New Year’s? I forget.)

100 books in the past year.

Favourite new finds: Fred Vargas and Peter Temple (both crime writers – one French and the other Australian)

Favourite book, which I should have read earlier: The Earthsea Quartet by Ursula LeGuin

Continued to love: Terry Pratchett

Realised anew the beauty of: Short stories

Got tired of: Haruki Murakami and Alexander McCall Smith

Quick Rundown: Last 5 Books of 2008 Saturday, Jan 3 2009 

The Rings of Saturn – To tell the truth, it was really difficult for me to focus on W.G. Sebald’s writing, even if he wrote beautifully.

Making Money – A disappointing sequel to Going Postal; Terry Pratchett is not at his best here.

Fool on the Hill – A clever, engaging story by Matt Ruff, with talking animals, dragons, sprites, and storytellers. I thought I would love it more. While it was good, it wasn’t moving.

The Last of Her Kind – Sigrid Nunez writes very well about the prison system, idealism, politics, race and women in the 60s-70s. Oh, by the way, this is fiction.

The Loyal Character Dancer – A crime novel set in China, with significant guest appearances from an attractive US marshall. I can’t help feeling that this is a bit of a cultural sell-out, though Qiu Xiaolong does make some interesting observations. I guess the “solutions” weren’t satisfying enough for me.

For Those who Read Sunday, Dec 14 2008 

(My library-book binge, continued from the previous entry.)

I hadn’t read Dorothy Sayers’s Lord Peter Views the Body before (I think – I am horribly amnesiac about books I’ve read, sometimes) and was therefore pleased to be able to check it out of the Central Library. As much of a fan as I am of Sayers and Wimsey, however, this collection of stories ultimately felt too light. I had to be objective and award it two instead of three stars on goodreads. (I don’t really like the rating system but it does help draw some crude distinctions – the most problematic rating is probably the three-star one, though.)

Minzhi has mentioned Francis Spufford’s The Child that Books Built a couple of times, so I checked it out together with Stephen King’s On Writing (!) – both rare non-fiction reads for me, but both books about reading (yes, even King’s).

Spufford’s work focused more on child psychology than I’d expected, though his sketch of a child’s journey towards “adult” literature was perceptive. True to Spufford’s hypothesis that children either “graduate” to Austen or diversify within a specific genre, my own transition to adult lit was marked by the reading of some Austen as well as copious “thrillers”, some horror novels of King’s genre, and Crichton’s visions of S&T gone awry.

King was easy to read, as usual, and his book is eminently sensible, e.g. he says, and I quote in inexact words, “To write, you must read. A lot.” Despite how people turn up their noses at his popularity, I actually rediscovered some of my interest in King’s novels, and respect for his brand of “page-turners” while reading On Writing. While he places himself in the same class as John Grisham and Amy Tan, I’d say that he’s probably superior to both (I never got into The Firm), and perhaps even to Dan Brown (I say unfairly, having never read a single Dan Brown). At least King writes honestly about middle America and formulates plots based on the everyday.

I’d heard about Marilynne Robinson’s Housekeeping for some time now and finally obtained the only accessible copy of it from Bukit Merah Library recently (snapping my thong sandals in the process, and having to borrow scotchtape from the counter to secure the thong so I could hobble out of there). Lovely, haunting writing, but it’s “work” – and having thought like that, I realise how far I’ve come from academia. I’ve to be in the mood to read Ulysses, and I’m not sure when that moment would come. But Housekeeping is slim and melancholy; portable art.

I lit upon a couple of Konigsburgs after, since Yvonne’s rave made me realise what I’d missed out on during my childhood. (And as an aside, how does one discover what the “must-reads” are when one is a child anyway? I read almost indiscriminately and mostly independently, though Mom brought some books home from her school library as well – Just-So stories and Amelia Bedelia.) Silent to the Bone is well-paced – so much so I finished it in one sitting. I loved Konigsburg’s depiction of friendship between Branwell, a boy who had been struck dumb after his half-sister had gone into a coma, and his best friend Connor. But more than that, I loved the friendship between Connor and his much older half-sister, Margaret.

I’ve mixed feelings about The View of Saturday. It’s about smart kids, quirky cultural diversity, and teaching – very good topics. However, I feel that there were some gaps in the backstory – how did Julian decide to invite Nadia and Noah to his tea-party? Why does everyone seem sort-of related between Epiphany, New York and Century Village, Florida? What happened to Ethan’s crush and why didn’t his love for the theatre figure in the only school production that cropped up in the narrative? Am I just being too adult about it all?

Between the two Konigsburgs was Lionel Shriver’s We Need to Talk about Kevin – yikes, ugh, yeesh. I thought I would love it when I started reading it, and still like it, but an epistolary novel told from the perspective of the mother of a high-school killer/shooter is no fun, especially when the mother is a rather unlikeable upper-middle-class self-hating American who buys rare animals to please her daughter and with the knowledge that she has a monster for a son. Oh, she had also chosen to have that daughter – a docile, pliant thing – in order that she could have an ally in her battle against her husband (who always took her son’s side) and her son – again, with full knowledge that she has a monster for a son.

I find it difficult to assess the merits of a novel woven into being by the voice of a single (unreliable) narrator, but I think Shriver does well having her protagonist dwell obsessively on the quietly bone-chilling behaviour of her son from the moment he was born till the day he shot 8 people dead at his school 3 days shy of turning 16. I thought at first that no one could be so monstrous as to have been brought into this world as a disenchanted adolescent, but that may be Eva Khatchadourian’s own imagining – especially since she’d never wanted to be a mother in the first place (I loved how she covered this part of the story). Also, the whole nature-vs-nurture question is presented quite cunningly here, filtered as it is through the voice of the narrator.

But the father is a real dupe, heartily clasping his evil son to his bosom and disbelieving the mother at every opportunity – so much so that I can’t believe how Eva continued to love him, bury her head under the sand, and allow him to remain deceived till the end.

Some people say that this book makes one think twice about having a child, and I would’ve agreed 50 pages into the book. Now that I’ve finished it, I’d say, think twice about having a child you don’t really want and would resent, and please get him some help if you suspect him of being a completely amoral misanthrope – it’s so odd how, in a culture where therapy is all the rage, Eva K never did think to send Kevin to a therapist though she’d always known he was wicked.

Books, books, books Friday, Dec 12 2008 

I’m devouring as many books as I possibly can before I move onto my new job in January, where I am quite sure that I won’t have as much time for reading (indeed, I think I will only read half as much, if I am even that lucky).

All this just to say that I’ve been reading rather than writing about what I’m reading, so here’s a summary of what I’ve been up to in other worlds for the past couple of weeks:-

- Colours Insulting to Nature by Cintra Wilson is entertaining, sometimes extremely funny (more at the beginning than at the end) and a morality tale wearing more than one layer of disguise. Liza Normal grows up with a celebrity obsession, cultivates her bad taste under the tutelage of her mother, whom she rather despises, and wreaks havoc in school with punk-rock hair and anti-prom stunts. Oh, and she periodically experiences reindeer-sightings which give her the strength to go on… and on…

- The Fortress of Solitude by Jonathan Lethem was disappointing – while the writing was at times lyrical, it was slow-going for much of its 500 pages and the story of a white boy growing up in Brooklyn got lost in the thickets of Lethem’s prose and the lack of development in the characters over time/as they grew into adulthood.

- I loved Pratchett’s Lords and Ladies and wish I’d read more of the Witches books before coming to this. Following this, I read Nation, his newest book (for young adults), which is more reflective in tone than his usual, but like most of his other books, still more absorbing than average. (Aside: I am really saddened by the (not-so-new-)news that Pratchett has Alzheimer’s.)

- I read David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas in snatches, on train rides, plane rides, during waits in the airport, and in Kuching. Its lurid pink cover belies the inventiveness and gripping nature of its contents – six slightly-interconnected stories breaking mid-way through the first six chapters, then looping in upon themselves to close the novel. Through it all romp a sickly, naive American lawyer on board a lawless ship bound for Australia; a bisexual composer satisfying his appetites at an aging maestro’s villa in Belgium; a pretty young reporter uncovering a large-scale white-collar crime; a publisher who finds himself inexplicably stuck in a retirement home; a timid redneck-tribesman who lives in suspicion and with guilt; and my favourite, a fast-food restaurant clone-worker who leads an unusual revolution. (I had actually forgotten one or two of the abovementioned stories, and picked up the thread by remembering how they worked in sequence.) Lovely, clever work.

- Then, a light young adult read – Butterfly Tattoo by Philip Pullman, whom I think is a bit hit-or-miss outside of his Dark Materials trilogy and of course, the wonderful Clockwork. Pullman has some semi-dark stories about the seamy side of England, where juvenile delinquency ferments quietly – and this is one of them. Pullman didn’t really capture the voice of the protagonist here well, though – the thoughts always seemed filtered through an adult voice and hence less convincing for the naivete they were supposed to represent.

- Richard Ford came to the Perkins Library at Duke once for a reading, which I attended. Not having read any of his books, I still found his reading voice compelling, and the American impressions he left me with from Independence Day have stayed with me – though apparently not enough for me to have started reading him before this! I started with The Sportswriter, which is promising but ultimately too reminiscent of Philip Roth’s more recent and succinct Everyman.

More to come in the next entry…

Mad Streak Tuesday, Nov 11 2008 

Some varied reading this past week, done at a fairly manic pace, as I discovered that this is double-up-your-reading period at the NLB.

Val McDermid’s Booked for Murder is subtitled “The fifth Lindsay Gordon mystery”, but I found this out only after settling down with it at The Arch on Seah St, waiting for Su-Lin and Cindy. I also found out, a little to my surprise, that the novel was as much about lesbian relationships as it was about detecting – perhaps even more about the former than the latter. The case wore a little thin right from the beginning, when it was divulged that the victim had died through a particularly dramatic method (exploding beer bottle) in the style of the murder described in her most recent, yet unpublished novel. There’s quite a bit of white-collar crime mixed in there, but this ain’t no Peter Temple. Disappointing overall, but I’ve heard good things about McDermid’s later novels, and will probably check out The Distant Echo soon.

Next was John Banville’s The Untouchable, which mainly comprised the plotless ramblings of a former Russian secret agent whose identity had been exposed by his native Britain in his dotage. The blurb was misleading, referring to “Cambridge spies” – I thought of boyish students being recruited by mysteriously dark figures while happily punting along. While there were dark figures, most of the protagonist’s youth was elided over. The protagonist’s homosexuality (discovered later in his life) also seemed incidental to the novel.

Still, the novel is rather like a pointillist drawing – admirable because of the artist’s demonstrated skill and patience.

At the same time (rather incongruously), I was reading Pratchett’s The Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents, which was pure genius, as Pratchett usually is. Not only do I now comprehend the full meaning behind Suyin’s blog URL, I now try to refrain from spinning my life into a story wherever possible (yeah… right). I also have a fresh appreciation of pictograms.

And finally, I’ve just finished my first Raymond Chandler – The Big Sleep. Philip Marlowe, Chandler’s famous private eye, is a sleek, tired Bond rounding up crazy naked women, hired thugs, and racketeers with one hand tied behind his back. Chandler’s writing reminds me of Edward Hopper.

The Murder Room Sunday, Nov 2 2008 

I’ve been reading P.D. James all out of order, I realised, as The Murder Room comes between Death in Holy Orders and The Lighthouse both of which I’ve read before.

I dislike Dalgliesh’s staff more with every novel – Kate Miskin has got so much baggage, and tries to prove so much as a woman on the force, that she comes off as a most unlikeable individual, while the other males tend to get the better of one another by making snide remarks about each other’s masculinity.

I did like The Murder Room though, mainly for the character of Tally Clutton, the housekeeper of the Dupayne Museum where the “murder room” is housed.  Tally’s contentment, her love for London, and her resolute independence from her daughter, are described in convincing detail.

Again, the solution is not much to speak of and I find Dalgliesh’s autumnal relationship rather redundant, but oh well…

Holiday Reading (Pre- and Post-) Monday, Oct 27 2008 

Time to do a run-down of the reading I’ve done for the past month (!) since I can’t use jetlag as an excuse anymore (it’s been almost 2 weeks since I got back from N. America!).

I finished two books quickly before I left so I could get them back to the library – P.D. James’s The Lighthouse and Willa Cather’s Shadows on the Rock. Both were fairly absorbing in their own ways. Cather reads like an adult Laura Ingalls Wilder; she makes me want to visit Quebec. James manages to evoke a dark atmosphere, as always, suitable for murder, complete with cliffs, crashing waves and old edifices.

In Canada, I made good progress with Alan Hollinghurst’s The Line of Beauty, which has an unsympathetic, narcissistic, self-centred yet intriguing and sensitive protagonist. Much of the novel’s weight seems to come from the budding consciousness of homosexuals in Margaret Thatcher’s Britain. (In a strange coincidence, I switched screens to this entry in the middle of drafting of this paragraph – I was checking out Jenny Davidson’s archives.)

I didn’t finish The Line of Beauty, in fact, till long after I got to the US (was it in New York City that I finally flipped to the last page on my air mattress before going to bed?) because I was too busy seeing people and fooding on my vacation. Even on the numerous plane rides I took, I mostly slept or zoned out.

But the first book I started on proper, during my trip, was Ursula LeGuin’s The Wind’s Twelve Quarters, a collection of her early works. CP lent this to me, since I had begged for it in view of my limited library book stash. There are some truly beautiful works in here, I think – “Semley’s Necklace” is one, and so is “Nine Lives”, the latter about nine clones who help two resolute individuals on a mission on a mystery planet. “The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas” is chilling, though I wish I hadn’t read the author’s note before the story, and found out that she had drawn the inspiration from a certain William James. Ursula LeGuin is truly a genius nonetheless, and I come away from some of her best works feeling privileged to have been in the presence of great Art.

Peter Temple’s The Iron Rose is fun, though I am starting to find his male protagonists repetitive – they always have some esoteric occupation, be it cabinet-making or welding, and they are always world-weary lady-killers!

Back in Singapore, I finish off two almost brand-new books I’ve bought from The Strand in New York City – the latter two installments of Paul Auster’s New York Trilogy – “Ghosts” and “The Locked Room” (I had read “City of Glass” before and always failed to find the full trilogy in the National Library) – and Haruki Murakami’s Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman. I was pretty disappointed by the latter (which I finished first) – a lot of the short stories read like ideas scribbled on napkins; they fizzled out quickly. “Ghosts”, which is about two detectives spying on each other and driving each other bonkers, is pretty good, but “The Locked Room” involves more (very Austerian) unexplained behaviour – leaving a beautiful wife for no particular reason; writing without wanting to publish; suddenly desiring to kill one’s childhood best friend. Still, The New York Trilogy is fascinating as a whole and I would like to reread “City of Glass”.

Finishing Anne Tyler’s Digging to America was an acknowledgment of the fact that I am now back and ready to settle down to my usual train-reading habits again. Digging to America is a rather slight effort by Tyler, whose Accidental Tourist and Breathing Lessons I remember liking very much. As the novel begins with an adoption scene – of two Korean babies by an American Caucasian family and an American Iranian family – you’d think that it would revolve around the struggles of these children as they grow up in Baltimore, Maryland, but Tyler is not quite as predictable as that, even if her novels focus on ordinary people. Instead, we witness, surprisingly, the Iranian grandmother’s romance with the American grandfather as the two families meet regularly for birthday and “arrival” parties. Still, although Maryam Yazdan and Dave Dickinson (Donaldson?) are extremely believable and likeable, their relationship takes place against the backdrop of some monochromatic displays of culture that ultimately feel rather flat.

Meh Sunday, Sep 21 2008 

Mostly bad reading lately, and I have mainly myself to blame.

I didn’t like P.D. James’s Original Sin, which is about a murder in a publishing house. I don’t know what it is about her solutions, but they usually seem incredible, and this one was more incredible than usual (given the remoteness of the motive and the less-than-spectacular technique). Also, while James portrays office politics pretty realistically, I find her descriptions of Daniel Aaron and Kate Miskin fairly out-of-place in this novel.

I was reading Gerard Donovan’s Schopenhauer’s Telescope concurrently, but it was so boring that I finished Original Sin long before I did Donovan’s novel. I had picked this up randomly in the library because the blurb looked interesting. The novel is about one man digging while another watches, and it somehow reminded me of that wonderful Iranian film I had watched with Yvonne, Men at Work, about a group of affluent male friends trying to budge a mysterious menhir-shaped rock from the edge of a cliff.

I found Schopenhauer’s Telescope too “experimental” to be enjoyable. I guess the dispassionate tone in which everything is narrated is part of the point, but I felt completely disengaged as a result.

Paul Theroux’s The Stranger at Palazzo D’Oro, a collection of short stories, started off being masturbatory again, but actually redeemed itself with a few creepy tales set in the woods and in Africa.

The Good and the Mediocre Sunday, Sep 7 2008 

The recent reading has either been pretty mediocre or extremely riveting.

Louise Erdrich’s The Beet Queen started out promising – I love stories about small American towns – but the family tragedies come so thick and fast that the reader is eventually desensitised. (A few examples: a mother abandoning her children; a brother who runs away; a man who spends his entire life being in love with another and not being able to talk about it; a daughter who wears short skirts and tells lies).

Jhumpa Lahiri’s The Namesake started out beautifully in Calcutta and started going wrong when the rather unlikeable protagonist, Gogol, came onto the scene. Somehow, his struggles as a second-generation American seem a little trite, especially when he starts living with his uber-yuppie New Yorker girlfriend and her wine-drinking parents.

After Lahiri came Kathrine Switzer’s memoir, Marathon Woman, which was awesome, despite the numerous typographical errors in the book. In a time when you could count the number of women running in a marathon on the fingers of one hand, Kathrine Switzer fought to show the world – and her closest friends – that women could run 26.2miles without harming their uterus, crying or fainting. (NB: I found this book title on a bookblog of a comparative lit grad student!)

P.D. James’s Death in Holy Orders was evocative, but as seems usual with her, the actual unravelling of the mystery fell rather flat. I couldn’t quite believe in the murderer – his motive for the murder did not match the form of the murder at all!

More Peter Temple followed – the next two books in the Jack Irish series, Black Tide and Dead Point. Black Tide was fantastic, a revelation. I didn’t quite understand the plot (also as is usual for me and Temple) but there were several gems hidden quite snugly away in the prose. Witness this:-

Immensely reassured, I closed my eyes and fell to doing breathing exercises recommended to me by a priest I had defended on pornography charges.

It was sourdough rye, dense, intense, exactly what a rich Harvard MBA would produce in his kitchen for relaxation.

Dead Point was less flashy/action-flick, more “a piece of Jack Irish’s life”. During a bleak Australian winter, Enzio the balding chef is summarily ejected from one of Irish’s favourite Melbourne institutions, a prime racehorse shot, the new football team that Irish’s “Youth Club” (comprising mainly toothless geriatrics) had chosen to support in place of the defunct Fitzroys on a losing streak. Irish meanders through it all missing his cabinet-making and ex-girlfriends, mucking up his best friend’s attempt to hook up with his half(?)-sister, and trying to make good on a case he hadn’t deserved getting paid for. Seedy suburban solicitors, watch out!

Lots of Learnin’ Saturday, Aug 23 2008 

I’ve been reading plenty lately – before Charming Billy, there was Agatha Christie’s memoirs on her husband’s archaelogical digs – rather dated in tone – Come Tell Me How You Live.

Paul Theroux’s Blinding Light wasn’t difficult to finish, but it was disappointing. It’s about a writer who finds his true writerly self on a drug tour in Ecuador – and he ends up writing what is basically erotica! Oh, and he goes blind, but that his blindness is even less interesting, if possible. I don’t really want to know what this novel says about Theroux and his ambitions as a writer…

Terry Pratchett’s The Truth deals with the press, photography, racism, and not enough with Vetinari, the most awesome non-despot ever.

Alice Munro’s Something I’ve Been Meaning to Tell You has quite a few short stories I haven’t read yet. Lovely, as usual.

I don’t think I read so much when I am teaching!

Next Page »