| 
Title | 
Author | 
Review | 
| 
How to be Good | 
Nick Hornby | 
A fluffy quick-moving tale of an
  adulterous wife who gets her wish -- a transformed husband who looses all his
  bitterness and becomes the extreme embodiment of Good: loving, understanding,
  gaggingly empathetic, reaching out to the poor, giving away their worldy
  posessions, and more. | 
| 
Into Thin Air | 
Jon Krakauer | 
Famous in the late 90s, this book
  tells a personal account of a survivor who returned from the Summit on of one
  of the deadliest days on Everest.  A
  humbling reminder of how human life is fragile and existence, despite the
  best technology, depends on luck, good judgment and the cooperation of mother
  nature. | 
| 
IQ84 | 
Haruki Murakami | 
A three-book saga of childhood
  acquaintances who fell in love, grew up pining for one another, and finally
  found each other in another world with two moons where magical powers exist. | 
| 
Never Let Me Go | 
Kazuo Ishiguro | 
A haunting tale of clones rasied
  to be organ donors and the minimal lives they lead. | 
| 
Winter's Bone | 
Daniel Woodrell | 
An epic tale in Ozarks dialect of
  stubborn survival in a savage poverty-governed world of blood-law.  I read this after returning from Cambodia
  and it reminded me that "third world problems" exist in every country,
  even America.  I am a few generations
  away from super strong blood-law.  But
  I understand it at a visceral level. 
  Both my father's people and my mother's people have their pride and
  their inherent rules (and their high numbers of siblings and cousins).  Blood law is a strong force. | 
| 
Solar | 
Ian McEwan | 
A hilarious tale of a
  non-sympathetic protaganist: Brilliant. Dellusional.  Nobel Prize Winner. Philanderer. Lack of
  discipline. Fat. Guilty Situational Laughter inspirer. Exceedingly functional
  alcoholic.  Gloriously entertaining to
  watch the minimal plot as it unfolds, and yet, it ends, as you know it must,
  in tragedy.   | 
December 23, 2012
2012: Books 6-11
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
2 comments:
I've read 4 of these books. I have to say that I had a very hard time with Solar. The main character is so unlikeable, but also, as I have observed from my years in academia, easy to find. (Maybe not all of those characteristics in one person, but definitely in a few.)
Huh. Interesting that you've read 4 of these books. I generally find that my reading desires are all over the place and rarely shared by other people in all areas. I agree, the main character of Solar was horrid as a whole, and yet, his bits were so familiar in every day life.
Post a Comment