Your Personal "Best Books Of 2012"...

Discussion in 'Books' started by Dr. Wankler, Jan 1, 2013.

  1. Dr. Wankler

    Dr. Wankler Member+

    May 2, 2001
    The Electric City
    Club:
    Chicago Fire
    ...whether they were published in 2012 or (most likely) not. I'll get more of mine up later. I just posted the opener after being called out by Ismitje.

    Best Novel: Georges Simenon, Dirty Snow
    Best Collection of Essays, Literary Division: Marilynne Robinson, When I Was a Child, I Read Books

    More later
     
  2. Dr. Wankler

    Dr. Wankler Member+

    May 2, 2001
    The Electric City
    Club:
    Chicago Fire
    In No Particular Order:

    Short Fiction: Daniil Khaarms: Today I Wrote Nothing: Collected Writings

    Best Volume of Poetry, Dead Guy Division: John Milton's Paradise Lost, which I read aloud to a couple of nearly blind nuns at a nearby retirement home. As Samuel Johnson said, no one ever wished it longer. That's especially true if you're reading it aloud

    Best Volume of Poetry, Still Breathing Division: Robert Bly Talking Into the Ear of a Donkey. I used to hate his work. His last few books are quite good. I went back to look at his earlier works, and not counting his translations, I still hate them.

    Philosophy: Gianni Vattimo: Farewell to Truth (Sorry, Mr. Kierkegaard)

    Religion/Spirituality: Charles Foster: The Sacred Journey

    Literary Journalism: Gay Talese: Fame and Obscurity: Portraits

    Dancing to Architecture: Alex Ross: The Rest is Noise: Listening to the 20th Century

    Autobiography: Satish Kumar: Path without Destination

    (Don't ask me to explain the distinction but) Memoir: Ed Sanders Fug You: An Informal History of the Peace Eye Bookstore, the ******** You Press, the Fugs, and Counterculture in the Lower East Side

    Biography: Nancy Schoenberger and Sam Kashner: A Talent for Genius: The Life and Times of Oscar Levant
     
  3. msilverstein47

    msilverstein47 Member+

    Jan 11, 1999
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    heard that "The Art of Fielding" is pretty good???
     
  4. Dr. Wankler

    Dr. Wankler Member+

    May 2, 2001
    The Electric City
    Club:
    Chicago Fire

    IIRC, it was my "best novel" last year.

    Edit... Not quite...

    Best Novel, first time reading: The Lazarus Projec by Alexander Hemon. Honorable mention to Chad Harbach for The Art of Fielding

    Best Novel: Rereading: The Song of the Lark by Willa Cather.


     
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  5. msilverstein47

    msilverstein47 Member+

    Jan 11, 1999
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    I'm now coming to you for all of my future reading recommendations, thanks Doctor.
    MAS
     
  6. Minnman

    Minnman Member+

    Feb 11, 2000
    Columbus, OH, USA
    Club:
    Columbus Crew
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    I don't read a lot of novels, but last year finally picked up Annie Proulx's The Shipping News, which I've had on my bookshelf for years. Absolutely loved it.

    Most of what I read doesn't fall into clean categorical divisions. Case in point, my 'best book' would be Robert Macfarlane, The Old Ways.

    I also very much enjoyed Adam Frank's The Constant Fire.
     
  7. Dr. Wankler

    Dr. Wankler Member+

    May 2, 2001
    The Electric City
    Club:
    Chicago Fire
    That McFarlane book is, according to Amazon.com, in the mail. Thanks for the recommendation.
     
  8. Minnman

    Minnman Member+

    Feb 11, 2000
    Columbus, OH, USA
    Club:
    Columbus Crew
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    I look forward to hearing what you think of it. It is, I now know, part of a 'loose trilogy', by which I think the trilogy part is pretty much unplanned. I just finished the first of the three, Mountains of the Mind, which is excellent, though it lacks the poetic prose and some of the depth of the final work. Then again, he wrote it in his mid-20s (ten years ago). The middle title, The Wild Places, is supposed to be excellent (as per a friend, whose opinions I value).

    I'd never heard of the guy until a few months ago. It's wonderful when you stumble upon a literary vein like this.
     
  9. JohnR

    JohnR Member+

    Jun 23, 2000
    Chicago, IL
    I've always thought Paradise Lost would make a wonderful big-budget film. Spectacular scenery, Hell and Eden and Heaven and the Chaos. Giant demons and other gruesome beasties, fearsome battles, angels, a nekkid hot chick, and oh yeah sex too. Plus the baddie of all baddies who makes the speeches of all speeches. [He doesn't get to say "Kirrrrrkkkkk!" but otherwise he has all of Khan's best lines, and then some.]

    What's not to like?

    Paradise Regained, on the other hand, pffft. If you read that out loud to the nuns, they'd perish of boredom.
     
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  10. Dr. Wankler

    Dr. Wankler Member+

    May 2, 2001
    The Electric City
    Club:
    Chicago Fire
    Well, they liked PR well enough, but if it had been twelve books rather than four short ones, each half the length of the ones in PL... Then, yeah, Milton and I would probably be investigated as a cause of death. They're really digging Wise Blood by Flannery O'Connor.

    As to a filmed version of PL... I'm surprised as hell no one has tried, esp. with what CGI makes possible. You'd have to pare down some of the speeches (Michael means well, but Milton lets him go on too long), but it could work.
     

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