“Do
not read, as children do, to amuse yourself, or like the ambitious, for the
purpose of instruction. No, read in order to live.”
--Gustave
Flaubert
Bookworm sighting |
Years ago, I’d read somewhere that
Art Garfunkel kept a record of every book he’d read since the 1960s, a list now
going on nearly forty-five years. Though I thought that was a grand idea, it
didn’t spur my own compilation lists until just recently. How to explain the
lull in executing what seems like a very interesting snapshot of one’s reading
habits in a given time? Is there an air of pretentiousness in broadcasting
one’s bookishness, especially as the modern individual is expected to lead a
kinetic existence? The act of reading, especially the slow perusal of books
composed out of pulp, is lately regarded as a luxury. Bibliophilia is a
casualty of our contemporary zeitgeist, in which timeliness, rather than
timelessness, matters most.
But
the truth is people have been saying for years, “Reading! Who has the time
anymore?” Well, that depends on priorities. This dude might be a product of
Southern California and all its guaranteed sunshine, but I never took to
surfing. Or rollerblading. Or golf. I haven’t followed professional or
collegiate sports since High School, which is about the same time I gave up on
video games forever. I haven’t owned a television set for twelve years. When I
have any free time, I read. It is one of the things I do well and I do take
some pride in being “well-read.”
A
bookworm is not much different from a foodie: an element of snobbery persists
in both passions. They have a high
regard for a certain quality of product and thus can be a somewhat disappointed
when others don’t share the same levels of expectation. They know what they
like— their palates are so developed in well-earned prejudices that when
something doesn’t feel right, they know right away what is wrong and why it’s
not worth their attention. We do not have so much a democratic society as we do a
leisure one, which is where democratic choice is most self-evident. To play
with a tired aphorism for our purposes: you are what you read.
And
like many who truly love the practice of certain rituals, I worry about the
future of reading. It’s not so much the proliferation of e-Books (I am yet to
read one but this might change that once I pick up an iPad2 later next year) as
it is the pattern of publishing houses being picked up by media
conglomerates more concerned with profits than prose. I am not one of those
literacy enthusiasts who believe the act of reading warrants praise. What
matters more is what you read. Publishing has gone the route of the Hollywood
blockbuster, hyping certain phenomenons (50 Shades of Grey), B-grade
genre superstars (James Patterson), faux-spirituality (anything by Paulo Coelho),
self-help books (The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People) and ghostwritten memoirs (Sarah Palin), at the
expense of Midlist literature, both today’s and yesteryear’s. I can understand
that reading Harry Potter gives someone a sense of fitting in with popular
culture. But many of these readers, who might only get through a few books a
year (if that) see reading as a way to pass the time rather than an action
worthwhile for its own sake.
It’s arguable that
mass literacy should have led us to a social utopia—nearly everything
beautiful, hopeful, and poetic in life has been imagined and transcribed by
geniuses, artists, and prophets. Yet we are still mired in political, economic,
and social mediocrity. You can
blame the pedagogues or you can blame the politicians but really, we must take
some blame for watching the Kardashian sisters rather than reading The
Brothers Karamazov.
Though counterintuitive by today's championing of utilitarianism, it does a person well to
challenge himself with books that have no ostensible impact on his life.
There are no useless facts; rather, from reading develops the accumulation of
human interestingness. This is an intangible quality, not always there but
which flourishes in the right company.
The author giving his eyes a rest from Dostoyevsky (circa 2006) |
The following list is what I read
this year. It reads chronologically. Some notes and observations follow below.
- Greasy Lake by TC Boyle
- Conquest: Cortes, Montezuma, and the Fall of Old Mexico by Hugh Thomas
- After Dark by Haruki Murakami
- Unfinished Conquest: The Guatemalan Tragedy by Victor Perera
- Collapse by Jared Diamond
- A Fraction of the Whole by Steve Toltz
- The Long Goodbye by Raymond Chandler
- The Big Sleep by Raymond Chandler
- Jazz by Toni Morrison
- Tough Toys for Tough Tough Boys by Will Self
- Dreaming War by Gore Vidal
- Of Human Bondage by Somersest Maugham
- A House for Mr. Biswas by V.S. Naipul
- Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe
- Mary by Vladimir Nabhokov
- Dangling Man by Saul Bellow
- What Uncle Sam Really Wants by Noam Chomsky
- Secrets, Lies & Democracy by Noam Chomsky
- The Science of the Everyday by Jay Ingam
- Mating by Norman Rush
- The Magnificent Ambersons by Booth Tarkington
- Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys
- Popular Hits of the Showa Era by Ryu Murakami
- We the Animals by Justin Torres
- Over the Edge of the World: Magellan’s Terrifying Circumnavigation of the Globe by Lawrence Bergreen
- Darkness
at Noon by
Arthur Koestler
- Desperate Characters by Paula Fox
- Zuleika Dobson by Max Beerborn
- Privileged Son: Otis Chandler and the Rise and Fall of the LA Times Dynasty by Dennis McDougal
- River of Doubt: Theodore Roosevelt’s Darkest Journey by Candice Millard
- The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood
- America Aflame: How the Civil War Created a Nation by David R. Goldfield
- A High Wind in Jamaica by Richard Hughes
- Undaunted Courage: Meriwether Lewis, Thomas Jefferson, and the Opening of the American West by Stephen Ambrose
- The Dharma Bums by Jack Kerouac
- People Who Eat Darkness by Richard Lloyd Parry
- The Sorrow of War by Bao Ninh
- Dispatches by Michael Herr
- The Quiet American by Graham Greene
- The Girl in the Picture by Denise Chong
- American Psycho by Bret Easton Ellis
- Whites by Norman Rush
Forty-two books might sound like an
awful lot but it averages out to a book read every 8.5 days, which doesn’t
sound too rushed. Twenty-seven of the books were fiction, three of which were
story collections. I am on a quixotic quest to read The Modern Library’s Top 100 Novels of the Twentieth Century (I’ve read about sixty-five of them) and
this year read seven (and, no, American Psycho was not on the list— a side note, all three books I abandoned reading
after fifty pages of frustration were from the said collection, including Henry
James’s The Ambassadors, Joseph
Conrad’s Lord Jim and Henry
Green’s Loving). Two of the books were loans from friends, five from
the library. The rest I own.
My favorite
reading experiences in fiction were Chandler’s Marlowe shamus noir, Ryu Murakami’s Popular
Hits of the Showa Era, Rush’s Mating, Tarkington’s The Magnificent Ambersons, Fox’s Desperate Characters, and Ninh’s The Sorrow of War.
Through Haruki’s Murakami’s After Dark, Toltz’s A Fraction of the Whole, and Naipul’s A House for Mr. Biswas, I suffered various moments of mediocrity, boredom
and very bad prose. Torres’s We the Animals was so precious and niched (gay Puerto
Rican-American) it felt nearly like a satire of calculated and maudlin MFA
writing (too many young writers are trying to be Toni Morrison but there is
some ethereal quality to Morrison that cannot be apprehended, only
imitated). Kerouac’s The
Dharma Bums and Greene’s A Quiet
American were the only rereads.
I have a thing for historical accounts of the lives and adventures of explorers. It was a pleasure then to read in depth on Cortes
and Montezuma, Lewis & Clark, Ferdinand Magellan, and Teddy Roosevelt’s charting of Brazil's mysterious Rio da Duvida (River
of Doubt). But the best nonfiction I read was David Goldfield’s America
Aflame, a fifty-year history of America
before, during, and after the Civil War. The sweep, the prose, the presentation
lent a well-known history some newfound urgency. Equally pleasurable was Dennis
McDougal’s Privileged Son, a
biography of the Chandler dynasty, the familial empire that controlled the Los
Angeles Times for more than a hundred years
and whose story is a metaphor for the city of Los Angeles itself.
The
first book to read in the coming year will be JG Ballard’s High Rise…