Printer-friendly copy Email this topic to a friend
Lobby Pass The Popcorn Pass The Popcorn Archives topic #56445

Subject: "booksz!" This topic is locked.
Previous topic | Next topic
rob
Charter member
23210 posts
Sat May-19-07 12:29 AM

Click to send email to this author Click to send private message to this authorClick to view this author's profileClick to add this author to your buddy list
50. "booksz!"
In response to In response to 0


  

          

i got to cosign on Cloud Atlas, the Known World, and War is a Force that Gives us Meaning. and Foucault's Pendulum and Midnight's Children...and almost anything from Baldwin. some of my favorite books ever.

new recs?

+Nonfiction+

"The Greater Common Good" - Arundhati Roy (1999): about the resistance to dam-building in the Narmada Valley. It sort of bridges the gap between her essay/speech collections available from South End (of which I would really recommend "War Talk" and parts of "An Ordinary Person's Guide to Imperialism"...they're much more brilliant in spots but necessarily scattered) and the narrative of "The God of Small Things". It's short (50-60 pages), and a terribly relevant commentary on democracy and public works. I really enjoy reading Roy's shorter stuff in between books to help me contextualize things. I'm reading Bolano's "The Savage Detectives" right now...and some of her thoughts on economics and social spheres in neoliberal cities are helping me get my grips on Mexico D.F. (Has anyone read Paz's books on India?)

"Augustine: A New Biography" - James O'Donnel (2005): I just love his approach to writing and thinking about history. He seems much less concerned with getting entangled in the scholarship surrounding Augustine and the period and more concerned with telling a story. He's able to avoid getting mired in notions of "the end of the roman empire" or "the early church" or "the dark ages" and help us put things in perspective.

"We Say No" - Eduardo Galeano (1992): News pieces and essays from 60s, 70s, 80s...about/from (mostly) all over S. America. it's friggin brilliant. Some of the articles are about encounters with iconic figures like Pele, Che, and Pu Yi. My favorites were "God and the Devil in the Favelas of Rio de Janeiro" and "Ten Frequent Lies or Mistakes."

"Pedagogy of the Oppressed" - Paolo Friere : buh. at the very least there's a lot to *discuss*


+Poetry+ (I'm going to assume people know to read Rillke and Saul Williams here)

"The Artist's Daughter" - Kimiko Hahn (2004) - Hahn toys with?experimentswith?embraces?employs? things like diary fragments and emails along with more conventional poetry . In her other works she uses more traditional Japanese forms (kinda) too. There's something there about *identity*, but the bottom line for me is it's damned good poems. This is sort of a hinge/cornerstone piece for me...with themes carrying over from "Mosquito and Ant" (which i think most critics like better) and on to "The Narrow Road to the Interior." bits of medical trivia, murder mystery, etymology, mother-daughter relationships, relationships with men..."Reckless Sonnets" are the highlights to me....I'd quote...hmmm...this is just hard to explain. The part of me that likes the movie "Secretary" might like this, but there's also much more substance than that too.

"The Woman Who Died in her Sleep" - Linda Gregerson (1996) - I'm just going to cut and paste "An Arbor"

1.

The world’s a world of trouble, your mother must
have told you
that. Poison leaks into the basements

and tedium into the schools. The oak
is going the way
of the elm in the upper Midwest — my cousin

earns a living by taking the dead ones
down.
And Jason’s alive yet, the fair-

haired child, his metal crib next
to my daughter’s.
Jason is nearly one year old but last

saw light five months ago and won’t
see light again.


2.

Leaf against leaf without malice
or forethought,
the manifold species of murmuring

harm. No harm intended, there never is.
The new
inadequate software gets the reference librarian

fired. The maintenance crew turns off power one
weekend
and Monday the lab is a morgue: fifty-four

rabbits and seventeen months of research.
Ignorance loves
as ignorance does and always

holds high office.


3.

Jason had the misfortune to suffer misfortune
the third
of July. July’s the month of hospital ro-

tations; on holiday weekends the venerable
stay home.
So when Jason lay blue and inert on the table

and couldn’t be made to breathe for three-and-a-
quarter hours,
the staff were too green to let him go.

The household gods have abandoned us to the gods
of juris-
prudence and suburban sprawl. The curve

of new tarmac, the municipal pool,
the sky at work
on the pock-marked river, fatuous sky,

the park where idling cars, mere yards
from the slide
and the swingset, deal beautiful oblivion in nickel

bags: the admitting room and its stately drive,
possessed
of the town’s best view.


4.

And what’s to become of the three-year-old brother?
When Jason was found
face down near the dogdish — it takes

just a cupful of water to drown —
his brother stood still
in the corner and said he was hungry

and said that it wasn’t his fault.
No fault.
The fault’s in nature, who will

without system or explanation
make permanent
havoc of little mistakes. A natural

mistake, the transient ill will we define
as the normal
and trust to be inconsequent,

by nature’s own abundance soon absorbed.


5.

Oak wilt, it’s called, the new disease.
Like any such
contagion — hypocrisy in the conference room,

flattery in the halls — it works its mischief mostly
unremarked.
The men on the links haven’t noticed

yet. Their form is good. They’re par.
The woman who’s
prospered from hating ideas loves causes

instead. A little shade, a little firewood.
I know
a stand of oak on which my father’s

earthly joy depends. We’re slow
to cut our losses.





I'm not even going to bother with fiction right now. that's too hard.

  

Printer-friendly copy


Another dumb book post [View all] , janey, Fri May-12-06 05:36 PM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
thanks...
May 13th 2006
1
You might like Middlesex, by Jeffrey Eugenides
May 15th 2006
10
      Middlesex is amazing and i loved The Virgin Suicides
May 19th 2007
51
A question about Paul Farmer that I never bothered to research
May 13th 2006
2
He's married....
May 15th 2006
3
      Exactly
May 15th 2006
5
           well and plus he was practically homeless while growing up
May 15th 2006
6
                I don't know if you know how ridiculous that last statement is
May 16th 2006
14
                     Are you a doc?
May 16th 2006
15
                          He's closely aligned with Brigham & Women's in Boston
May 16th 2006
16
                          Third year med student
May 16th 2006
21
                               I think that;s what we're saying
May 16th 2006
23
                                    Thanks
May 16th 2006
24
                                    Well, I will say if you are interested in trying to provide universal he...
May 17th 2006
25
                                         Yeah I guess there's a dual reason
May 17th 2006
26
                                              I just started reading
May 30th 2006
27
                                                   You've convinced me, thanks for reminding me
May 31st 2006
37
                                                        I LOVE that Anne Fadiman book
May 31st 2006
39
                                                             Thanks, janey
May 31st 2006
40
                                    *ears perk up*
May 20th 2007
53
i'm FINALLY starting Secret History
May 15th 2006
4
I named my imaginary baby Henry
May 15th 2006
7
i just read one of the funniest lines i've ever read in any book
May 15th 2006
11
      Oh yeah, most definitely
May 15th 2006
12
I just started it, and am thoroughly enjoying it
May 30th 2006
31
      okay, and I've told you before
May 31st 2006
32
           you hadn't told me specifically
May 31st 2006
33
                you MUST do it sequentially
May 31st 2006
34
I just started the Glover
May 15th 2006
8
I just took it really slowly
May 15th 2006
9
      I'm already reading paragraphs over 3 times
May 15th 2006
13
my list...
May 16th 2006
17
Gilead came this -----><----- close to making my list
May 16th 2006
18
      a powers post?
May 16th 2006
19
           by the way, re: Gilead
May 16th 2006
20
                RE: by the way, re: Gilead
May 16th 2006
22
RE: Another dumb book post
May 30th 2006
28
Yesterday, a friend of mine returned the copy I loaned him
May 30th 2006
29
      well I adored them both
May 30th 2006
30
I've already read two books this week
May 31st 2006
35
I just finished...
May 31st 2006
36
Check post #37 for some "medically" themed fiction and non-fiction
May 31st 2006
38
another word on The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down
Jun 15th 2006
42
      I believe that's reading for an International Health class
Jun 15th 2006
43
           no -- should I?
Jun 15th 2006
44
                I'm not sure yet
Jun 16th 2006
45
                     I finished The Spirit Catches You this morning.
Jun 16th 2006
46
some of my favorites
Jun 01st 2006
41
^
May 18th 2007
47
I just checked out The Road and Little Children from the library
May 18th 2007
48
Roughly halfway thru The Road, and I'm ready to slit my wrists.
May 31st 2007
57
3/4 of the way through Lolita
May 18th 2007
49
RE: Another dumb book post
May 20th 2007
52
just finished Cloud Atlas, gotta talk about it (spoilers!)
May 31st 2007
54
Mitchell's books ranked & very briefly described:
May 31st 2007
56
I finished "A Fighter's Heart" by Sam Sheridan last month
May 31st 2007
55

Lobby Pass The Popcorn Pass The Popcorn Archives topic #56445 Previous topic | Next topic
Powered by DCForum+ Version 1.25
Copyright © DCScripts.com