March 2024
I realised half way through the month that I'd posted February's reads over in the other book thread so here's a
link to that for anyone following here but not there.
Book 16: Paul Auster - Moon Palace
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Third in my Auster chronological readthrough. Gotta say, I struggled with this one and I'm starting to wonder whether I'm just growing out of Auster's writing or if due to reading more varied stuff, I'm finding voices that I just prefer. The thing is, this is a reread and I'm absolutely certain I loved it 25 years ago, to the point that I know I've recommended it to several other people. It just didn't do much for me this time. I have this thing with coincidences in stories that can sometimes be a little charming and other times downright dumb and almost lazy, and this felt like it's bordering on the latter as person after person and event after event collided to illustrate an incredibly small world. The writing is lovely and there were elements of the great work I remember but, overall I don't think I recommend this at this point in my life.
Book 17: Kathy Acker - Blood and Guts in High School
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Meh. Again, I suspect my younger self would have made more of this but right now, it did next to nothing for me. Always transgressive, frequently pornographic, violent and both. This story told through prose, poetry, pictures, Farsi to English language lessons, diagrams, maps, plays (including stage directions), it's a wild collage of storytelling but for me, it was just hard, hard work with very little payoff.
Book 18: F. Scott Fitzgerald - Tender is the Night
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Now this was a great book. A fairly simple story of the breakdown in a marriage filled with complex characters living out their life of American wealth between the wars on the European riviera. Fitzgerald's writing is so incredibly rich, often dense to the the point of forcing you to reread any given line or paragraph to squeeze the massive amount of meaning or context he's adding to an event or character. Really, really excellent read.
Book 19: Monica Ali - Brick Lane
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Another belter about marital troubles, this time in a contemporary East End of London. Arranged by her father, Nazneen is transported from her home in Bangladesh to a Tower Hamlets housing estate where she struggles to understand her place in the world outside of being a wife. After getting involved with sewing at home to make extra money, (her husband is educated so allows her to work), she becomes embroiled in a relationship with a young man who delivers her garments, initially following his political teachings and eventually in a passionate affair. It's something I'll never be truly able to understand but, the book does an excellent job of showing the differences of East and West cultures and how despite best efforts, the two frequently collide with explosive results.
Book 20: J.M. Coetzee - Waiting For the Barbarians
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First Coetzee for me and what an amazing way to start. Such a good tale of a nameless Empire in a nameless land. A magistrate of 20 years leads a peaceful relationship between the residents of the settlement and the indigenous people in the area. This is brought to an abrupt halt when the Empire sends members of their elite Third Bureau to oversee matters following rumours that the 'Barbarians' plan to wage a war against the settlers. Love, passion, politics, colonialism, loyalty and treason all play their part in this astoundingly written story.