I must make 1 post--I haven't missed a year since this began.
This
hardly has the termitic qualities of a branded space, but I still feel
each post must abide by the unspoken but obvious characteristics of its
predecessors. I watch many movies, but have increasingly little to say
about them. I now read frequently but find little of the particular
quality necessary for a good piece. What is there to express? Do I hold a
eulogy? When I read a physical book it's hard not to feel how
old-fashioned and out-of-date the experience is.. I used to have intense
experiences at the movies.. Now only one in a blue moon.
The next step is listing the books I read this year (and at the end of 2020) and force out a statement or two for each.
The reading schism was when I got my Kobo and started reading that. The first book on there was Alberto Moravia's Agustino
(e-copy), which is about a school boy, his hot mother, and their summer
adventures. It's a book which clearly has that immutable quality of
great literature that frustratingly can only be stumbled upon. Next I
read another Modiano: In the Cafe of Lost Youth (e-copy). It
didn't hit like the Occupation trilogy books, but it's still covered
with that melancholic feeling of the imagined Paris. Next I read Dublinesque
(e-copy), a story about an over-the-hill publisher who spirals away in
his obsession with Irish writers. It was similar to the weird Aira
coffee-shop essay books, but not quite as harsh, and more showy with its
references. Then finally anther Pynchon, The Crying of Lot 49
(e-copy), the experience of which I admit was a bit less than
satistying. Like, I should have reread each page at least twice to
understand a little more. The language still runs through well anyway. I
had the same experience reading a couple pages of Mason and Dixon. I
may be a few years of prerequisites away. Next I dipped into genre
fiction with Dune (e-copy). The political intrigue in the
beginning is really what stood out. Tablesetting, when drawn out, can be
a real pleasure. The appendix written by Liet "The Ecology of Dune" had
a wonderful anonymity. Next, another Modiano, Ring Roads
(e-copy). There are no cowards like Modiano's cowards. This dive into
genre fiction seems really silly as I think about this one. Next,
continuing A Song of Ice and Fire with A Storm of Swords
(paperback). Hard to talk about Martin, reading each chapter is just a
mild pleasure--a cup of tea. Next I trudged through Stephen King's The Stand
(paperback). It was a mistake to pick one of his longer ones. I was
bored for nearly all of this, but it's hard to hate something after
spending so many months with it. It was also nice to have a book fall
into increasingly severe disrepair as I went through it. Next A Feast For Crows (paperback), another Martin. Next Ball Four
(paperback), which, though a bad decision, still led to that
sought-after church-sermon boredom, which is always fruitful in the
grand scheme. Next I dipped into hard sci-fi with Neuromancer. These genre fiction books suck you in with the first 30 pages, then leave you wincing for the rest. Then Camus' The Fall (paperback), which I only enjoyed when in a twisted mood. Finally air again with Philip Roth's Goodbye Columbus and Five Short Stories (paperback). The romance I'd been looking for all along. Next a western from Zane Grey called 30,000 on the Hoof
(paperback). It's hard not to love something with regular meandering
physical description. It's a bit sad to read something chopped up so
badly though. Maybe I'll push through the longer version some day. No
more to list, unless I make an unexpected push in the next week.
12.28.2021
Week 52
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