The End of the Year in Reading

As with the film lists, these aren’t meant to be a best-of, just books I enjoyed this year and that stuck with me in some way.


Fiction


Something Wicked This Way Comes: Ray Bradbury

Illustrated Man: Ray Bradbury


There is an exuberance and positivity in Bradbury that I admire, but rarely seem to find as much in myself—or at least it feels that way. Bradbury’s love of poetry comes out in his prose and these two titles may be my favorites of his, though I do like a lot of his work.


Secret Agent: Joseph Conrad


Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?: Philip K. Dick


This was the third time I had started this one and I was finally able to finish it. It made me want to go back and watch Blade Runner again and allowed me to appreciate both pieces for what they are. PKD is becoming one of my favorites.


Notes from the Underground: Fyodor Dostoyevsky

Sanctuary: William Faulkner

English Patient: Michael Ondaatje

V: Thomas Pynchon


Treasure Island: Robert Louis Stevenson


I hadn’t read this in decades and I was blown away by how much fun it was to read again.


War and Peace: Leo Tolstoy


Nonfiction


Illuminations: Essays and Reflections: Walter Benjamin


Stockhausen Serves Imperialism: Cornelius Cardew


This was my introduction to a musical figure I knew by name only. If anything, I enjoy Cardew’s passion and ideas (he may have been murdered because of them), even if I still like the avant-garde of Cage and Stockhausen. The book also introduced me to several other musical figures like Frederic Rzewski.


The Art of Fiction: John Gardner


Narrative Discourse: An Essay in Method: Gerard Genette


Dense read that attempts to dissect the complexities of written narrative. It’s a book that is fascinating and one could spend a lot of time working through everything Genette does here. Like labeling parts of speech in a sentence, Genette gives ways of labeling functions of narrative within prose.


Silver Screen Fiend: Patton Oswalt


Scandals of Classic Hollywood: Sex, Deviance, and Drama from the Golden Age of American Cinema: Anne Helen Petersen


As much as I love Kenneth Anger and Hollywood Babylon, this is a sobering look at many of the Hollywood myths and stories those of us interested in Classic Hollywood have heard for years. The analysis of the ideologies of the star and studio systems are fascinating, if disturbing at times. One of the more awful details here is the fact that studios were giving uppers and downers to child stars like Judy Garland in order for them to meet performance schedules. Disgusting. The book doesn’t revel in the details, but serves as more of a critical analysis.


Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance: Robert Pursig

The Social Contract: Jean-Jacques Rousseau

Me Talk Pretty One Day: David Sedaris

Going Clear: Scientology and the Prison of Belief: Lawrence Wright


Other


Apocrypha: KJV Text

The Lost Books of the Bible and the Forgotten Books of Eden

Rameau’s Nephew: Denis Diderot

D’Alambert’s Dream: Denis Diderot

The Case of the Flying Saucers: Manly P. Hall


Art / Comics


1450-1950: Bob Brown


One of the most inspiring works I’ve read this year. Wonderfully done.


River Dead of Minneapolis Scavenged by Teenagers: Mark Ehling


Ehling’s one of those guys you want to hate because he’s good at everything. And he’s a nice guy, too. The nerve of some people.


Monsters in the Movies: John Landis


Large coffee table book of movie monsters, stills, and poster art. Fantastic. Many of the films I’ve never heard of and I’ve been watching horror and monster movies since the age of four or five. It’s hard to compete with Landis though, who obviously has a deep love for these films and has lived almost his whole life in or near Hollywood.


In the Night Kitchen: Maurice Sendak

Mr. Wuffles: David Weisner


All-Star Superman: Morrison and Quitely

Hellboy Volume Ten: The Crooked Man and Others

The Humans, Volume One

Saga of the Swamp Thing Books Three and Four

Transformers vs. GI Joe Volume One

Vampirella Archives: Volume One

The Walking Dead Volumes One and Two


Poetry


Collected Poems: Theodore Roethke


Ashagalomancy: Abraham Smith


My favorite book of his so far. In theory, a book of creation myth poems, but so much more.


White Egrets: Derek Walcott


Drama


Ghosts: Henrik Ibsen

Rhinoceros: Eugene Ionesco


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Published on December 29, 2015 08:31
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