Tuesday, January 07, 2025

Under the Volcano by Malcom Lowry

 


Friends of My Youth by Alice Munro

 

Despite her recent cancellation, Alice Munro is a genius. Going back and re-reading her now is stunning and numbing: her men are cruel and selfish, her women are passive and selfish, the northern landscape is bleak and cold, but other setting details are lavishly and lovingly rendered: interiors, trees, flowers, clothes, anything inanimate with color.

The Betrayers by David Bezmozgis

 

Ending up liking this quiet, calm novel about a Jewish Russian refusenik who served 13 years in a Soviet gulag after being betrayed by his Jewish friend and roommate. 

Refusenik visits Crimea and accidentally books a room in his betrayers house. 

Yid dreitzikh. A Jew gets by. 

Thursday, December 12, 2024

Life and Fate by Vasily Grossman


 

Wilt on High by Tom Sharpe

 

Returning to Sharpe after years off the job. This is a 1984 installment in his WILT series. It's good, but not as good as I remember his earlier books. Little smack of Joe Orton to it, though, which I like. A community college professor/administrator gets involved with a heroin ring.

Jerry Lee Lewis: His Own Story by Rick Bragg

 


Tuesday, November 26, 2024

The Sequel by Jean Hanff Korelitz

 

Good but not as good as THE PLOT. I sort of automatically read it.

Long Island Compromise by Taffy Brodesser-Akner

 

Very readable novel about some very ugly characters.

In the end though it was quite long and compounded by the large type edition from the library, i really enjoyed it. 

It seemed like a revelation to them, but really the revelation was only that someone took the time to sit and listen to them and appear to absorb their human condition instead of ignoring it. [120]

The last thing Carl saw on this Earth before he closed his eyes were the anguished faces of the people who had loved him most in the world - the people who fretted over him and live symbiotically with him and existed with him inside the unique syzygy that is a family.  the whole universe lines itself up to make a family, and the family takes it from there. [650]

Tuesday, November 12, 2024

The Vegetarian by Han Kang

 

Mystifying novel. There is power in Kang's prose - the story follows a young woman who gives up eating meat and ends up losing her mind - but the three part structure diffuses that power somehwat.

In the first part, she gives up meat and is denounced and abused by her husband and family.
In the second part, her brother in law features her in a video series after painting her body (and his own) with flower parts and having sex with her.
In the third part, her sister (whose husband seduced her in part two) visits her in a mental hospital where she is deteriorating.

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