January has been an interesting reading month. I hadn't initially planned on doing this, but around the middle of the month, I realized that I hadn't completed any books written in English, so I decided that I would make January an English-free reading month. I managed to read 32 books, with 12 of them being re-reads. I read/re-read 8 of the Premio Alfaguara winners and reviewed 5 of them. I read 4 poetry collections, 3 of them for the first time. I am off to a good start to my goals in both the 50 books each in 4 languages and reading 35% women, being at or just a fraction of a percent behind the pace. There is a disproportionate number of "heavy hitters" on this list, with the majority having won major awards in their home countries and/or being international bestsellers. If only I had the time to write formal reviews of all 32, as these are certainly works worth considering at length...
1 Manuel Vicent, Son de Mar (re-read; Spanish; Premio Alfaguara winner; already reviewed)
2 Clara Sánchez, Últimas noticias del paraíso (re-read; Spanish; Premio Alfaguara winner; already reviewed)
3 Sophia de Mello Breyner Andresen, Mar (Portuguese; poetry; excellent)
4 Gonçalo M. Tavares, Jerúsalem (Portuguese; excellent)
5 Marguerite Duras, Dix heures et demie du soir en été (French; very good)
6 Maryse Condé, Traversée de la Mangrove (French; excellent)
7 Elsa Morante, La Storia (Italian; excellent)
8 Michele Mari, Tutto il ferro della Torre Eiffel (Italian; excellent)
9 Gonçalo M. Tavares, Jerusalén (re-read; Spanish translation; excellent)
10 Alfonso Grosso, Florido Mayo (Spanish; Premio Alfaguara winner; already reviewed)
11 Daniel Sueiro, Corte de corteza (Spanish; Premio Alfaguara winner; already reviewed)
12 José Saramago, Todos os Nomes (Portuguese; excellent)
13 José Saramago, Todos los nombres (re-read; Spanish translation; excellent)
14 Jacques Prévert, Paroles (French; poetry; poems ranged from very good to outstanding)
15 Ferenc Molnár, I ragazzi della via Pal (re-read; Italian translation; very good)
16 Clarice Lispector, Felicidade Clandestina (Portuguese; short story collection; very good)
17 Gloria Fuertes, Obras incompletas (Spanish; poetry; very good)
18 Goran Petrović, Опсада Цркве Св. Спаса (re-read; Serbian; excellent)
19 Goran Petrović, Le Siège de L'Église Saint-Sauveur (re-read; French translation; excellent)
20 Goran Petrović, El cerco de la iglesia de la Santa Salvación (Spanish translation; excellent)
21 Luís Berenguer, Leña Verde (Spanish; Premio Alfaguara winner; already reviewed)
22 Carlos Droguett, Todas esas muertes (Spanish; Premio Alfaguara winner; review forthcoming)
23 Manuel Vicent, Pascua y naranjas (Spanish; Premio Alfaguara winner; review forthcoming)
24 Silvina Ocampo and Adolfo Bioy Casares, Los que aman, odian (re-read; Spanish; very good)
25 Gabriel García Márquez, La hojarasca (re-read; Spanish; review forthcoming)
26 Gabriel García Márquez, El coronel no tiene quien le escriba (re-read; Spanish; review forthcoming)
27 Héctor Vásquez Azpiri, Fauna (Spanish; Premio Alfaguara winner; already reviewed)
28 Maria Benedetta Cerro, La Congiura degli Opposti (re-read; Italian; poetry; very good)
29 Colette, La Vagabonde (French; very good)
30 Edoardo Nesi, Storia della mia gente (Italian; Premio Strega winner; good)
31 Melania G. Mazzucco, Vita (Italian; Premio Strega winner; very good)
32 Bruno Schultz, L'epoca geniale (re-read; Italian translation; short fiction collection; very good)
2014 Goals to Date:
Spanish: 15/50 (ahead of pace by 11)
Portuguese: 4/50 (roughly on pace)
French: 5/50 (slightly ahead of pace)
Italian: 7/50 (ahead of pace by 3)
Women writers: 11/32 (34.3%; slightly below 35% goal)
Premio Alfaguara winners reviewed (counting previous years): 7/24
Goals Not Yet Begun:
World Cup of Literature - will begin posts in late spring/early summer
World War I fiction - will begin posts in late spring
Thomas Wolfe (4 novels) - will begin in March or April
Gabriel García Márquez re-reads/reviews - read 2 books, but won't start writing reviews until the weekend
1 Manuel Vicent, Son de Mar (re-read; Spanish; Premio Alfaguara winner; already reviewed)
2 Clara Sánchez, Últimas noticias del paraíso (re-read; Spanish; Premio Alfaguara winner; already reviewed)
3 Sophia de Mello Breyner Andresen, Mar (Portuguese; poetry; excellent)
4 Gonçalo M. Tavares, Jerúsalem (Portuguese; excellent)
5 Marguerite Duras, Dix heures et demie du soir en été (French; very good)
6 Maryse Condé, Traversée de la Mangrove (French; excellent)
7 Elsa Morante, La Storia (Italian; excellent)
8 Michele Mari, Tutto il ferro della Torre Eiffel (Italian; excellent)
9 Gonçalo M. Tavares, Jerusalén (re-read; Spanish translation; excellent)
10 Alfonso Grosso, Florido Mayo (Spanish; Premio Alfaguara winner; already reviewed)
11 Daniel Sueiro, Corte de corteza (Spanish; Premio Alfaguara winner; already reviewed)
12 José Saramago, Todos os Nomes (Portuguese; excellent)
13 José Saramago, Todos los nombres (re-read; Spanish translation; excellent)
14 Jacques Prévert, Paroles (French; poetry; poems ranged from very good to outstanding)
15 Ferenc Molnár, I ragazzi della via Pal (re-read; Italian translation; very good)
16 Clarice Lispector, Felicidade Clandestina (Portuguese; short story collection; very good)
17 Gloria Fuertes, Obras incompletas (Spanish; poetry; very good)
18 Goran Petrović, Опсада Цркве Св. Спаса (re-read; Serbian; excellent)
19 Goran Petrović, Le Siège de L'Église Saint-Sauveur (re-read; French translation; excellent)
20 Goran Petrović, El cerco de la iglesia de la Santa Salvación (Spanish translation; excellent)
21 Luís Berenguer, Leña Verde (Spanish; Premio Alfaguara winner; already reviewed)
22 Carlos Droguett, Todas esas muertes (Spanish; Premio Alfaguara winner; review forthcoming)
23 Manuel Vicent, Pascua y naranjas (Spanish; Premio Alfaguara winner; review forthcoming)
24 Silvina Ocampo and Adolfo Bioy Casares, Los que aman, odian (re-read; Spanish; very good)
25 Gabriel García Márquez, La hojarasca (re-read; Spanish; review forthcoming)
26 Gabriel García Márquez, El coronel no tiene quien le escriba (re-read; Spanish; review forthcoming)
27 Héctor Vásquez Azpiri, Fauna (Spanish; Premio Alfaguara winner; already reviewed)
28 Maria Benedetta Cerro, La Congiura degli Opposti (re-read; Italian; poetry; very good)
29 Colette, La Vagabonde (French; very good)
30 Edoardo Nesi, Storia della mia gente (Italian; Premio Strega winner; good)
31 Melania G. Mazzucco, Vita (Italian; Premio Strega winner; very good)
32 Bruno Schultz, L'epoca geniale (re-read; Italian translation; short fiction collection; very good)
2014 Goals to Date:
Spanish: 15/50 (ahead of pace by 11)
Portuguese: 4/50 (roughly on pace)
French: 5/50 (slightly ahead of pace)
Italian: 7/50 (ahead of pace by 3)
Women writers: 11/32 (34.3%; slightly below 35% goal)
Premio Alfaguara winners reviewed (counting previous years): 7/24
Goals Not Yet Begun:
World Cup of Literature - will begin posts in late spring/early summer
World War I fiction - will begin posts in late spring
Thomas Wolfe (4 novels) - will begin in March or April
Gabriel García Márquez re-reads/reviews - read 2 books, but won't start writing reviews until the weekend
2 comments:
I'm glad you liked Michele Mari.
Some other Italian recommendations I left out the last time:
Paolo Volponi - especially Corporale and Le Mosche del Capitale, though I'm not sure of the current availability
and
Dolores Prato - Giù la piazza non c'è nessuno
outstanding novel which unfortunately is not available in ebook format as yet
and
Filippo Tuena - Ultimo Parallelo which has been recently reissued both in paper and electronic formats.
Thanks for those recs, as I most certainly will track them down in the near future (and yes, I depend upon e-book format a lot, because it is much cheaper for me). It'll be a while before I feel confident enough to do excerpt translations, but sometime in the future (probably not 2014), I would like to review the Mari at length.
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