I think I'm doing slightly better, only waiting until two-thirds of the month is complete before posting the previous month's reads. I read 52 books, of which 6 were re-reads, 17 were at least partially by women, 8 were in Spanish, 2 in Italian, 1 in French, 8 were collections, 2 were anthologies, 5 were debut collections or novels, and 27 were released in the US for the first time in 2011. I leave it up to you to figure out which is which. And yes, I'm still currently on pace to read more than 500 books for the second time in three years.
386 Olympe Bhêly-Quénum, Le Chant du Lac (French; brilliant, quasi-weird tale of the clash between Western-educated modernists and the more superstitious Vodoun-worshipping locals who believe evil spirits inhabit a lake.)
387 Kate Beaton, Hark! A Vagrant (graphic novel; f'n awesome, as she skewers history and 19th century Romantic novels in a way that made me chuckle quite a few times)
388 Ross E. Lockhart (ed.), The Book of Cthulhu (might have more to say in the future on this reprint anthology of Lovecraft-influenced weird fictions)
389 Erin Morgenstern, The Night Circus (might review this later, but it is one of the best 2011 debut novels that I've read, albeit slightly below The Tiger's Wife)
390 Vladimir Nabokov, King, Queen, Knave (one of his lesser works, but still quite good)
391 Olympe Bhêly-Quénum, Snares Without End (one of his earlier works; very good)
392 Thomas Ligotti, The Nightmare Factory: Volume 1 (re-read; graphic novel; good adaptation of four stories from the 1996 collection)
393 Kameron Hurley, God's War (above-average debut that left me wanting to read more)
394 Thomas Ligotti, The Nightmare Factory: Volume II (re-read; graphic novel; see above)
395 Caitlin Sweet, The Pattern Scars (excellent writing, yet I didn't like the subject matter as much as I did for her first two novels)
396 Helen Oyeyemi, Mr. Fox (I have a review of this appearing in a future issue of Bull Spec)
397 Kameron Hurley, Infidel (excellent sequel to a strong debut)
398 Thomas Ligotti, The Nightmare Factory (outstanding omnibus collection of his first few collections)
399 Thomas Ligotti, Teatro Grottesco (I prefer this over The Nightmare Factory, which should say plenty for some)
400 Dino Buzzati, L'opera completa di Bosch (Italian; before Eco wrote his art books, Buzzati wrote this late 1960s piece to accompany reproductions of Bosch's works. Effective, although I prefer the images)
401 Leopoldo Lugones, Cuentos fatales (Spanish; very good collection of some of Lugones' later stories)
402 Elena Poniatowska, Querido Diego, te abraza Quiela (Spanish; very good epistolary novel showing through absence of responses a lover's rejection of his clinging ex)
403 Leopoldo Lugones, Cuentos completos (Spanish; inaccurate title, but good stories nonetheless)
404 Evaristo Carriego, Misas Herejes (Spanish; poetry; easy to understand how some of his work influenced Borges as a poet)
405 Leopoldo Lugones, Las fuerzas extrañas (early collection of his, contains "El escuerzo," which I translated for the next read)
406 Ann and Jeff VanderMeer (eds.), ODD? (my opinion is biased by having the aforementioned translation in it, but I loved the other stories at least as much as the one I translated)
407 Moacyr Scliar, Kafka's Leopards (brilliant)
408 Julian Barnes, The Sense of an Ending (flawed 2011 Booker Prize-winning novel)
409 Stewart O'Nan, Songs for the Missing (poignant without ever ringing false, a very difficult task to accomplish in a novel)
410 Julie Otsuka, The Buddha in the Attic (already reviewed)
411 Umberto Eco, Il Cimitero di Praga (re-read; Italian; already reviewed)
412 Umberto Eco, El cementerio de Praga (re-read; Spanish; already reviewed)
413 Leonid Andreyev, The Crushed Flower and Other Stories (good collection)
414 Jesmyn Ward, Salvage the Bones (already reviewed)
415 Andrew Krivak, The Sojourn (already reviewed)
416 Edith Pearlman, Binocular Vision (already reviewed)
417 Deborah Baker, The Convert (already reviewed)
418 Colson Whitehead, Zone One (might review in near future; enjoyed it)
419 Stewart O'Nan, Wish You Were Here (good)
420 Stewart O'Nan, Emily, One (very good sequel to the above title)
421 Graham Joyce, The Silent Land (already reviewed)
422 Lauren Beaukes, Zoo City (already reviewed)
423 Karen Lord, Redemption in Indigo (re-read; already reviewed)
424 Thanhha Lai, Inside Out and Back Again (already reviewed)
425 Guy Gavriel Kay, Under Heaven (already reviewed)
426 Gary D. Schmidt, Okay for Now (already reviewed)
427 Albert Marrin, Flesh & Blood So Cheap: The Triangle Fire and Its Legacy (already reviewed)
428 Lauren Redniss, Radioactive: Marie and Pierre Curie: A Tale of Love and Fallout (already reviewed)
429 Bruce Smith, Devotions (already reviewed)
430 John Warner, The Funny Man (very good; might review at length later)
431 Donald Ray Pollock, Knockemstiff (Pollock's debut collection from 2008 is a tour de force)
432 Amit Majmudar, Partitions (very good)
433 Teresa Milbrodt, Bearded Women (already reviewed)
434 Sigizmund Krzhizhanovsky, Memories of the Future (very good Stalin-era collection)
435 Stephen Greenblatt, The Swerve: How the World Became Modern (already reviewed)
436 Daniel Sada, Casi nunca (Spanish; very good)
437 Roberto Arlt, El criador de gorilas (Spanish; very good collection that deserves to be translated into English)
386 Olympe Bhêly-Quénum, Le Chant du Lac (French; brilliant, quasi-weird tale of the clash between Western-educated modernists and the more superstitious Vodoun-worshipping locals who believe evil spirits inhabit a lake.)
387 Kate Beaton, Hark! A Vagrant (graphic novel; f'n awesome, as she skewers history and 19th century Romantic novels in a way that made me chuckle quite a few times)
388 Ross E. Lockhart (ed.), The Book of Cthulhu (might have more to say in the future on this reprint anthology of Lovecraft-influenced weird fictions)
389 Erin Morgenstern, The Night Circus (might review this later, but it is one of the best 2011 debut novels that I've read, albeit slightly below The Tiger's Wife)
390 Vladimir Nabokov, King, Queen, Knave (one of his lesser works, but still quite good)
391 Olympe Bhêly-Quénum, Snares Without End (one of his earlier works; very good)
392 Thomas Ligotti, The Nightmare Factory: Volume 1 (re-read; graphic novel; good adaptation of four stories from the 1996 collection)
393 Kameron Hurley, God's War (above-average debut that left me wanting to read more)
394 Thomas Ligotti, The Nightmare Factory: Volume II (re-read; graphic novel; see above)
395 Caitlin Sweet, The Pattern Scars (excellent writing, yet I didn't like the subject matter as much as I did for her first two novels)
396 Helen Oyeyemi, Mr. Fox (I have a review of this appearing in a future issue of Bull Spec)
397 Kameron Hurley, Infidel (excellent sequel to a strong debut)
398 Thomas Ligotti, The Nightmare Factory (outstanding omnibus collection of his first few collections)
399 Thomas Ligotti, Teatro Grottesco (I prefer this over The Nightmare Factory, which should say plenty for some)
400 Dino Buzzati, L'opera completa di Bosch (Italian; before Eco wrote his art books, Buzzati wrote this late 1960s piece to accompany reproductions of Bosch's works. Effective, although I prefer the images)
401 Leopoldo Lugones, Cuentos fatales (Spanish; very good collection of some of Lugones' later stories)
402 Elena Poniatowska, Querido Diego, te abraza Quiela (Spanish; very good epistolary novel showing through absence of responses a lover's rejection of his clinging ex)
403 Leopoldo Lugones, Cuentos completos (Spanish; inaccurate title, but good stories nonetheless)
404 Evaristo Carriego, Misas Herejes (Spanish; poetry; easy to understand how some of his work influenced Borges as a poet)
405 Leopoldo Lugones, Las fuerzas extrañas (early collection of his, contains "El escuerzo," which I translated for the next read)
406 Ann and Jeff VanderMeer (eds.), ODD? (my opinion is biased by having the aforementioned translation in it, but I loved the other stories at least as much as the one I translated)
407 Moacyr Scliar, Kafka's Leopards (brilliant)
408 Julian Barnes, The Sense of an Ending (flawed 2011 Booker Prize-winning novel)
409 Stewart O'Nan, Songs for the Missing (poignant without ever ringing false, a very difficult task to accomplish in a novel)
410 Julie Otsuka, The Buddha in the Attic (already reviewed)
411 Umberto Eco, Il Cimitero di Praga (re-read; Italian; already reviewed)
412 Umberto Eco, El cementerio de Praga (re-read; Spanish; already reviewed)
413 Leonid Andreyev, The Crushed Flower and Other Stories (good collection)
414 Jesmyn Ward, Salvage the Bones (already reviewed)
415 Andrew Krivak, The Sojourn (already reviewed)
416 Edith Pearlman, Binocular Vision (already reviewed)
417 Deborah Baker, The Convert (already reviewed)
418 Colson Whitehead, Zone One (might review in near future; enjoyed it)
419 Stewart O'Nan, Wish You Were Here (good)
420 Stewart O'Nan, Emily, One (very good sequel to the above title)
421 Graham Joyce, The Silent Land (already reviewed)
422 Lauren Beaukes, Zoo City (already reviewed)
423 Karen Lord, Redemption in Indigo (re-read; already reviewed)
424 Thanhha Lai, Inside Out and Back Again (already reviewed)
425 Guy Gavriel Kay, Under Heaven (already reviewed)
426 Gary D. Schmidt, Okay for Now (already reviewed)
427 Albert Marrin, Flesh & Blood So Cheap: The Triangle Fire and Its Legacy (already reviewed)
428 Lauren Redniss, Radioactive: Marie and Pierre Curie: A Tale of Love and Fallout (already reviewed)
429 Bruce Smith, Devotions (already reviewed)
430 John Warner, The Funny Man (very good; might review at length later)
431 Donald Ray Pollock, Knockemstiff (Pollock's debut collection from 2008 is a tour de force)
432 Amit Majmudar, Partitions (very good)
433 Teresa Milbrodt, Bearded Women (already reviewed)
434 Sigizmund Krzhizhanovsky, Memories of the Future (very good Stalin-era collection)
435 Stephen Greenblatt, The Swerve: How the World Became Modern (already reviewed)
436 Daniel Sada, Casi nunca (Spanish; very good)
437 Roberto Arlt, El criador de gorilas (Spanish; very good collection that deserves to be translated into English)
4 comments:
Question: maybe you could help me. I'm looking for a story by Julio Cortazar, and I can't remember whether I read it in Spanish or English (meaning it might not be translated). Anyway, all I remember from the story is a vivid one-two page description of a woman's ghost traumatically passing into the afterlife/some post-death state. Does this ring a bell at all?
Kai in NYC
It's been a few years since I've read Cortázar's short fiction (all in Spanish), so I don't recall the specific story. Might re-read it in the near future, though.
Feel the same about The Tiger's Wife/The Night Circus. The Night Circus had a few issues, mostly surrounding the relationship, but nothing major. Still, wasn't quite as good as The Tiger's Wife.
Agree with Songs for the Missing, too.
Wonderstruck was an amazing book. Rose and Ben’s stories overlap and mix, making it very interesting. When you read it you will be enticed by the pictures that tell Rose’s story, looking at the detail closely, searching for who she is. In Ben’s story you will feel as if you’re living his story with him because it is described in perfect words. This book is now definitely one of my favorites. I absolutely loved this book! I would recommend it to anyone who is looking to escape in a book one day or just looking for a good read.
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