Around the World discussion
closed topics
>
What will be your first book?

I am trying to think of books that are along a different sort of line.
What about absurdist futurist dystopia? Yes, dystopia, but so ridiculous that it isn't depressing as much as completely baffling? Try Memoirs Found in a Bathtub for Poland/Ukraine.
You might also consider travel writing. Down the Nile: Alone in a Fisherman's Skiff would work for Egypt, for instance.
I am also staying away from war and holocaust as much as possible. The exception I'm making consciously is to read a few books from the Balkan conflicts, because so many good ones have been written recently by people in those countries.

http://www.goodreads.com/review/list/...


Louise, I definitely agree with what you are saying, but consider Sweden, which is of course large in area but small in population. It is terribly well known for its crime novels. So very many have been translated. Maybe it is the publishers that want to make sure they have a large market?! They want a book that is sure to bring in a large profit. Haven't you noticed that few people dare to give a "holocaust book" a low rating - almost as though this would be showing a lack of empathy for those who have suffered. Some holocaust books ARE better than others. Judging a book is not judgement of a given historical event. I do think that horrible events move people, and for this reason they gather an audience. A book has to grab out attention.
But heck, we all need to laugh! Maybe it is harder for publishers to spot what will make lots of us laugh. Isn't humor harder to pin down?! What makes me laugh maybe wont make you laugh.
Your question is interesting.

I am in the US. It is not available here, but you can order it from The Book Depository.com, in th UK for $10.26 with free shipping. "
Interesting, thanks!



As Sweden is our neighbour, a LOT of their fiction is translated into Danish, and there is a lot of comic/light stuff as well - authors like Karin Brunk Holmqvist and Jonas Jonasson. But they haven't been translated into English.
Maybe publishers consider humor to be more region based?
Thanks for the suggestions :-) I found a book of Nigerian folk tales in one of my piles, maybe I'll read that for the challenge.
@Chrissie, I actually have Three Bags Full - the premised just sounded fantastic. And after reading A Wild Sheep Chase I have a thing for literary sheep :-)

I think this site may interest you: http://wordswithoutborders.org/. It ipresents translated books that are not that well known. I found The Homecoming Party there. It takes place in Italy in a small village where the people are predominantly Albanian. I state in my review that "you walk away from the book happy b/c you have met some really kind, nice, compassionate and yet perfectly NORMAL people. The story is soothing. You spend all of your time chuckling." I probably have some quotes in the review. if you are curious to test the prose style.
Learning to Bow: Inside the Heart of Japan is a humorous book, and if we are talking humorous books, don't forget The Lives and Times of Archy and Mehitabel. In fact there they say that humor has a "short shelf-life"! It seems studies have been done. Hmm, is that the explanation for why there are so few really funny books. Of course, it all comes down to money....... How could we think otherwise.


Sex Life of the Cannibals is one of the funniest books I've ever read.


One other book for Poland that I read not long ago was The Zookeeper's Wife which I'm afraid is a WWII book and would not fall into the light and funny category -- but it WAS interesting and did share some of the history of Poland during that period. I will definitely have to check out some of these lighter/funnier books that were suggested in this thread. I am clearly in a misery memoir funk!

You're not the only one, Barry. D))

Me too! I'll probably start it over Christmas, I figured that it should be ok since I'll be on a break and will actually have some time for reading... Once January hits, I'll be hopelessly behind again...



"A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian" - what a fantastic title for a book!


I'm sure there are plenty of people on here (and I am probably one of them) who won't manage to read 52 books - see it as just a goal to work towards.

Thanks Judy, I just reserved Agaat, so I'll get started with that one when I get it. I enjoy reading everyone's suggestions, hope to have read some great 'around the world' titles by this time next year.

I second what everyone else said. I'm one of the few crazies who is right now aiming for the full 52, but now I'm applying for a job, and it will change everything if I get it. My goals will drop incredibly if I take a job in academia, so it is good to know that I will have lots of company in not doing the full 52 if that happens.

Good luck with your job hunt, from someone who works in academia and loves every minute!

Jenny, thanks! I was in academia for 10 years and loved it, but left to marry my college sweetheart (20 years after we dated the first time) and to start a family. Private practice seemed more flexible for that. I gave up tenure, the whole package when I left GA. Now there is a possible job for him in a college town, and there is an open position that might work for me. I'm REALLY itching to be back in teaching. BUT boy do I know how much less leisure reading I did when I had a serious teaching load!

*despite being set in contemporary London/mythical Lagos, and written by a British-Nigerian author.


I started my first book today. It's the audiobook The Blood of Flowers. The problem is that I finished the audiobook I was listening to on my way to work this morning. I have 2 more days of driving back and forth and will go into withdrawals if I don't have a book to listen to. There's no point in starting anything else because then it would be mid January before I could start.
By Jan 1st, I will be about 2-1/2 hours into it.


How was it, Melissa?

How was it, Melissa?"
I liked it. It was funny- the cats cracked me up. There were one or two lesbian make-out scenes that the conservatives probably wouldn't like, but they didn't really bother me.


I'm reading Doctor Zhivago when properly, Russian-ly, hammered after the New Year's party at my parents'. Nyah.

I'm reading Doctor Zhivago when properly, Russian-ly, hammered after the New Year's party at my parents'. N..."
Genia is taking the reading and drinking by country very seriously. Will you do the same for all countries, Genia?

I'm reading Doctor Zhivago when properly, Russian-ly, hammered after the New Year's party at my parents'. N..."
:) That's the way to immerse yourself in the writing!
Books mentioned in this topic
Cocktail Hour Under the Tree of Forgetfulness (other topics)Anonymous Celebrity (other topics)
Mulata (other topics)
Agaat (other topics)
Kristin Lavransdatter (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Veronica Scott (other topics)Anne Brontë (other topics)
True Chrissie, but as I was browsing through African titles there was soo much civil war, genocide, repression, terror etc. I agree books don't have to be depressing when dealing with issues like the holocaust, butI just got to wondering, where are the Terry Pratchetts, Jasper Fforde's etc of translated literature? Is it because the "serious issues" books are deemed more worthy of translation?