David Foster Wallace |
Buzz and Zach Bissinger "Father's Day" |
BOOKS READ IN 2012:
*= recommended
My list of vavorties is at the very end:
For the Indescribable, Brilliant, Maddening, Funny, Class By Itself Fategory:
Infinite Jest David Foster Wallace
This was my year for James Baldwin and David Foster Wallce. The latter a favorite of superb poet, teacher ad radio guest Kevin Griffith. He assigns Infinte Jest to his college classes. I hope those left standing get a A.
Slaughterhouse Five Kurt Vonnegut
The Sense of an Ending Julian Barnes
Saint Louis Armstrong Beach Brenda Cooper
*Drama John Lithgow
Secret of Eden Chris Bohjalian
Phillip and Elizabeth Gyles Brandreth
*10,000 Saints Eleanor Henderson
The Confession John Grisham
The Associate John Grisham
Broken Irish Edward J. Delaney
Spencer Tracy James Curtis
*11/22/63 Stephen King
The Third Queen Carolly Erickson
The Obamas Jody Kantor
*Open City Tejo Cole
The Song Before it is Sung Justin Cartwright
Life Itself Roger Ebert
The Central Park 5 Susan Burns
*Watergate Thomas Mallon
Tom Jones Henry Fielding
The Darlings Cristina Alger
Elizabeth the Queen Sally Bedell Smith
*The Pale King David Foster Wallace
Wallis Simpson, "That Woman" |
*Hope or Tragedy Shalom Auslander
A Room of One's Own Virgina Woolf
Betrayal: Whitey Bulger and the FBI Agent Who Fought to Bring Him Down Robert Fitzpatrick
Radio My Way Ron Della Chiesa
*By Blood Ellen Ullman
The Serial Killer Whisperer Pete Early
Shockaholic Carrie Fisher
*Among the Missing Dan Chaon
Nicky and Alix Virgina Randing
Enchantments Kathryn Harrison
Car Henry Crews
Outside Valentine Liza Ward
The Hawk is Dying Henry Crews
*Defending Jacob William Landay
My Years with Mrs. Kennedy Clint Hill
Mr. Broadway Gerald Schoenfeld
The Titanic Mystery Jack Steel
A break. I had a few advnetures on air with All Sides Weekend/Books. First were interviews with Martin Duberman, John Schwartz Matthew Pearl and Dennis Lehane.
Then there was the day I mouthed off (imagine!) and said that Moby Dick was overrated claptrap. Boring. How much blubber can you stand? Well, didn't the phones start ringing. A caller ID-ed herself as a college professor and ripped me the proverbial new one. She made me promise to read :"the greatest book of all". I said okay. The God of Small Things. Snore.
*Look Homeward Angel Thomas Woolfe
*The Lady of the Forests Dan Guterson
*The Variations John Donatich
Mike Wallace Peter Rader
After Camelot J. Randy Taborirelli
1000 Small Cuts Simon Lelic
The Winter King: Henry VII Thomas Penn
*Bring Up the Bodies Hilary Mantel
My Extraordinary Ordinary Life Cissy Spacek
Top of the Rock Warren Littlefield
*Dropped Names Frank Langella
*Father's Day Buzz Bissinger
The Red Book Deborah Copagen Kogan
The Child Who Simon Lelic
*The New Republic Lionel Shriver
Victoria and Albert: A Magnificent Obsession Helen Rappaport
*In One Person John Irving
Sister Queens: Catherine of Aragon and Juana La Loca Julia Fox
*Dickens Claire Tomalin
His Illegal Self Peter Carey
*Calico Joe John Grisham
*The Good Father Noah Hawley
Jack Kennedy: Elusive Hero Chris Matthews
*Giovanni's Room James Baldwin
The Muses are Heard Truman Capote
At Last Edward St. Aubryn
The Queen's Lover P.D. Gray
My Cross to Bear Geg Allman
A Gay and Melancholy Sound Merle Miller
The Receptionist Janet Groth
A Good Man Mark Shriver
Butterfly and the Typewriter, bio of John Kennedy Toole Corey McLaughlin
*The Red House Mark Haddon
The Voice Thomas Quasthoff
James Baldwin |
Mary Ann in Autumn Armistead Maupin
The Sandcastle Girls Chris Bohjalian
*The Sign: The Shroud of Turin and the Mystery of the Resurrection Thomas De Wesselow
The Pope's Assassin Luois Rocha
*Home Toni Morrison
*Bleak House Charles Dickens
Jack 1939 Francine Matthews
Leaving Home Anne Edwards
The Queen Mother Lady Colin Campbell
*Mission to Paris Allan Furst
The Facility Simon Lelic
12 Patents: Life and Death at Bellevue Hospital Erich Mannheimer, M.D.
What Comes Next? John Katzenbach
*For Whom the Bell Tolls Ernest Hemingway
Prague Cemetery Umberto Eco
*Sharp David Fitzpatrick
Abdication Juliet Nicholson
Presumed Guilty Jose Baez
*Yellow Birds Kevin Powers
Yellow Birds is my "best of " for 2012.
That's How I Roll Andrew Vaachs
Death in Italy: Amanda Knox John Folian
Junot Diaz |
Shooting Victoria Paul Thomas Murphy
Joseph Anton Salman Rushdie
Joseph Anton, Rushide's story of his years of hiding an exile. Didn't like it. It was self indulgent and selfish. His indignation grew wearying. His willingness to put wives and children in harm's way alarming.
"Live By Night Dennis Lehane
Moby Dick Herman Melville
The Technologists Matthew Pearl
*Mortality Christopher Hitchens
*Winter of the World Ken Follett
The Dream of the Celts Mario Vargas Llosa
*The Real Toscanini Cesare Civetta
"When We Were the Kennedys Monica Wood
*Telegraph Avenue Michael Chabon
Inventing Elsa Maxwell Sam Staggs
*Elsewhere Richard Russo
The Other Thomas Tryon
The God of Small Things Arundhati Roy
Jospeh Schwartz with his father, John, Oddly Normal |
*Howard Zinn, A Life on the Left Martin Duberman
*The Marriage Plot Jeffrey Eugenides
Every Love Story is a Ghost Story: A Biography of David Foster Wallace D.T. Max
The Last Kind Words Tom Piccirilli
The Prodigal Son Colleen McCullough
The Patrick Melrose Novels Edward St. Aubryn
Why I Left Godman Sachs Greg Smith
The Digger's Game George V. Higgins
*Infinite Jest David Foster Wallace
Still with me? I hope so. From the above list, these were my favorites for 2012. I don't include Dickens, Melville, Hemingway or Wolfe since they don't need my help.
Bring up the Bodies--Hilary Mantel written up everywhere, won every award. I'm not surprised. Elegant language telling a horrible story. The downfall of Anne Boleyn via Henry VIII's 'master secretary' Thomas Cromwell.
Father's Day a memoir by sportswriter Buzz Bissinger, about his relationship with his mentally challenged son. You'll fall in love with Zack, and this sweet loving book, which never makes such a relationship sound easy.
The Sign: The Shroud of Turin and the Mystery of Resurrection by Thomas De Wesselow.
As riveting as the best murder mystery, carbon dating be damned.,
Yellow Birds Kevin Powers. Astonishingly, a first novel from a Vet. A solider promises to guard a younger buddy's life, and fails. Superb.
This is How You Lose Her Junot Diaz a new collection of stories with authentic sounding street-Argo and its own brand of family values.
Oddly Normal John Schwartz This book begins with a suicide attempt by the author's young son. Therapy and healing reveal young Joseph is gay. My parents would have had two strokes a piece and dragged me to confession. John Schwartz and his wife, Jeanne Mixon love all of their children and the book glides lovingly-and amusingly! and very movingly!-to a happy ending. The last few pages are a book Joseph wrote about school. Read it. You'll never recover. And you don't want to.
When We Were the Kennedys Monica Wood A large Isrish-Catholic family growing up in rural Maine in the 1950s and 60s. Everyone is at the mercy of the local paper mill. You are THERE. Warm, funny and unsentimental.