July was a bounce-back month for me. Finished with BAF4 materials and had a bit of time to read/re-read all of Jorge Luis Borges' writings that I own, all but one of which (a collection of all his poetry) were under 300 pages. Read a few books for the SFF Masterworks reviewing project (later today or tomorrow, I'll be reviewing over there J.G. Ballard's The Drowned World, Kate Wilhelm's Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang, and maybe Robert Silverberg's Dying Inside). Finished up reading/re-reading 60 books total for July. And here they are, with perhaps a few words on books that will not be reviewed or have not been reviewed prior to now:
199 Cordwainer Smith, The Rediscovery of Man (reviewed on SFF Masterworks)
200 E.R. Eddison, Mistress of Mistresses (reviewed on SFF Masterworks)
201 Jonathan Carroll, Voice of Our Shadow (reviewed on SFF Masterworks)
202 Ian McDonald, The Dervish House (already reviewed here)
203 Jorge Luis Borges, Discusión (re-read; Spanish; already reviewed)
204 Mia Couto, Every Man is a Race - very good short story collection set in Africa
205 Jorge Luis Borges, Historia universal de la infamia (re-read; Spanish; already reviewed)
206 Nnedi Okorafor, Who Fears Death (already reviewed here)
207 Jeff VanderMeer, The Third Bear (reviewed two short stories, outstanding collection)
208 Jorge Luis Borges, Historia de la eternidad (re-read; Spanish; already reviewed)
209 Jorge Luis Borges and Adolfo Bioy Casares, Seis problemas para don Isidro Parodi (re-read; Spanish; already reviewed)
210 Jorge Luis Borges, Ficciones (re-read; Spanish; already reviewed)
211 Jorge Luis Borges and Adolfo Bioy Casares, Dos fantásticas memorables/Un modelo para la muerte (re-read; Spanish; already reviewed)
212 Happy Smiley and Friends, Happiness at the End of the World - I meant to do a full review before now but got delayed, so here is a paragraph summation of this short collection of stories written by Singaporean SF fans and writing students:
Happiness at the End of the World is a short collection of stories that contain takes on SF motifs such as the effects of technology on people's lives, first encounters with alien civilizations, and the like. Most of the stories read well; a few were a bit ragged and were harder to follow. Although there was nothing groundbreaking in either style or story conventions, these stories were pleasant to read. It was a good, decent collection from writers who doubtless will continue to improve as they gain more experience in the craft of constructing stories.
213 Harper Lee, To Kill a Mockingbird (re-read; already reviewed)
214 Fletcher Pratt, The Well of the Unicorn (reviewed for SFF Masterworks)
215 Bret Easton Ellis, Less Than Zero (re-read; one of my favorite Ellis books)
216 Bret Easton Ellis, Imperial Bedrooms (just-released sequel to Less Than Zero. Meant to write a review, but got bogged down. Worthy follow-up to Less Than Zero, this time about 25 years later. Not for everyone, though, but I did enjoy it greatly. Perhaps a longer review around the end of the year)
217 Jorge Luis Borges, El Aleph (re-read; Spanish; already reviewed)
218 Jorge Luis Borges and María Esther Vásquez, Literaturas germánicas medievales (Spanish; already reviewed)
219 Steven Erikson, Toll the Hounds (re-read; second commentary on this planned for the next 1-2 weeks)
220 Nikolai Gogol, The Diary of a Madman and Other Stories (commented on two stories; entire collection is superb)
221 Jorge Luis Borges, Otras Inquisciones (re-read; Spanish; already reviewed)
222 Jorge Luis Borges, El 'Martín Fierro' (re-read; Spanish; already reviewed)
223 Jorge Luis Borges, Leopoldo Lugones (Spanish; already reviewed)
224 Jorge Luis Borges, El hacedor (re-read; Spanish; already reviewed)
225 J.G. Ballard, The Drowned World (review forthcoming on SFF Masterworks)
226 Lewis Grizzard, Southern by the Grace of God (reprint of humorous newspaper articles. Grizzard was a favorite columnist of mine until his death in the mid-1990s)
227 Kate Wilhelm, Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang (review forthcoming on SFF Masterworks)
228 Horace Walpole, The Castle of Otranto (18th century work is one of the earliest Gothic novels. Entertaining)
229 Jorge Luis Borges and Esther Zemborain, Introducción a la literatura norteamericana (Spanish; already reviewed)
230 Amelia Beamer, The Loving Dead (review forthcoming)
231 Jorge Luis Borges and María Esther Vásquez, Introducción a la literatura inglesa (Spanish; already reviewed)
232 China Miéville, Kraken (review forthcoming; great use of squirrel in fiction)
233 Jorge Luis Borges, Elogio de la sombra (re-read; Spanish; already reviewed)
234 Jorge Luis Borges, El libro de los seres imposibles (re-read; Spanish; already reviewed)
235 Jorge Luis Borges, El informe de Brodie (re-read; Spanish; already reviewed)
236 J.G. Ballard, Crash (powerful, fascinating, like watching porn and a crash at the same time for the sorts of guilty feelings invoked)
237 Robert Silverberg, Dying Inside (review forthcoming on SFF Masterworks)
238 Samuel Delany, Dhalgren (reviewed on SFF Masterworks)
239 Mikhail Bulgakov, The Master and Margarita (re-read; outstanding satire)
240 Jorge Luis Borges, The Book of Imaginary Beings (already reviewed the Spanish edition)
241 Poul Anderson, Tau Zero (review forthcoming in 1-2 weeks on this blog)
242 Jorge Luis Borges, Prólogos con un prólogo de prólogos (Spanish; already reviewed)
243 Jorge Luis Borges, El libro de arena (re-read; Spanish; already reviewed)
244 Jorge Luis Borges, Libro de sueños (Spanish; already reviewed)
245 David Soares, O Evangelho do Enforcado (Portuguese; already reviewed)
246 Jorge Luis Borges and Alicia Jurado, Qué es el budismo (re-read; Spanish; already reviewed)
247 Carlos Gardini, Tríptico de Trinidad (Spanish; review here in next 1-3 days)
248 Jorge Luis Borges, Obra poética (re-read; Spanish; already reviewed)
249 Goran Petrović, Ситничарница "Код срећне руке" (Serbian; review forthcoming)
250 Goran Petrović, La mano de la buena fortuna (Spanish; review forthcoming)
251 Jorge Luis Borges, Siete Noches (re-read; Spanish; already reviewed)
252 Jorge Luis Borges, Nueve ensayos dantescos (Spanish; already reviewed)
253 Jorge Luis Borges, La memoria de Shakespeare (re-read; Spanish; already reviewed)
254 Jorge Luis Borges, Atlas (Spanish; already reviewed)
255 Jorge Luis Borges, Prólogos de La Biblioteca de Babel (Spanish; already reviewed)
256 Jorge Luis Borges, Biblioteca Personal (re-read; Spanish; already reviewed)
257 Jorge Luis Borges, Silvana Ocampo, and Adolfo Bioy Casares (eds.), The Book of Fantasy (re-read; already reviewed)
258 André Gide, L'immoraliste (French; very good, disturbing story about a man's moral crisis and what he does about it. Will want to re-read it more as my French improves, as while I got the gist of the story, there were some nuances that I'm sure I missed, as I sensed rather than experienced directly a very powerful read here)
In Progress:
David Lindsay, A Voyage to Arcturus (re-read; review forthcoming on SFF Masterworks)
Steven Erikson, Dust of Dreams (re-read; second commentary forthcoming in next 1-2 weeks)
Future Plans:
I will be reading/reviewing close to two dozen works by Serbian authors during the month of August and perhaps into early September. Some of these will be read only in English, others only in Spanish, some in a combination of those two languages and Serbian. Probably will be a review every 1-3 days, starting tomorrow or Tuesday. Probably will also resume the Malazan re-read project commentaries once I finish the remaining stories. Might be a bit shorter, since some of the books were read in June and July.
Identities with Gaps
1 day ago
4 comments:
It was a most excellent month for you, sir!! I stand in awe of you and your reading accomplishments - may we all become perfect readers, in the best tradition of Borges, of whom you were the perfect reviewer these past few weeks. Thank you very much!
I started The Castle of Otranto but found it too hectic and crazy. My brother read it for a whole class on Gothic literature, for which I envy him.
That's a helluva list you have there. I'm not sure what my monthly average is but I'd say it's around five full-length novels.
Reading Easton Ellis makes my ass pucker.
If there is anything I enjoy reading about less than the problems of rich people, it's the problems of immoral rich people.
Which, naturally, is a gross simplification of Ellis' work, but damn. Can't stand that dude's work.
I do not wish to believe that you actually read 50 books in one month. I can't. If I believe that, I have to kill myself out of a sense of inferiority. I don't wanna kill myself, Larry ;_;
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