Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Monday, October 28, 2024

Life Without Anything But Life

From Elena Ferrante’s 2012 novel The Story of a New Name, English translation by Ann Goldstein. This is the second novel in the Neapolitan Novels. See my review of the first novel here.

“Have you ever been to the theater?”

“A few times.”

“Did you like it?”

“It was all right.”

“I’ve never been, but I’ve seen it on television.”

“It’s not the same thing.”

“I know, but better than nothing.”

And at that point she took out of her bag the book I had given her, the volume of Beckett’s plays, and showed it to him.

“Have you read this?”

Nino took the book, examined it, admitted uneasily, “No.”

“So there is something you haven’t read.”

“Yes.”

“You should read it.”

Lila began to talk to us about the book. To my surprise she was very deliberate, she talked the way she used to, choosing the words so as to make us see people and things, and also the emotion she gave them, portraying them anew keeping them there, present, alive. She said that we didn’t have to wait for nuclear war, in the book it was as if it had already happened. She told us at length about a woman named Winnie who at a certain point announced, another happy day, and she herself declaimed the phrase, becoming so upset that, in uttering it, her voice trembled slightly: another happy day, words that were insupportable, because nothing, nothing, she explained, in Winnie’s life, nothing in her gestures, nothing in her head, was happy, not that day or the preceding days. But, she added, the biggest impression had been made on her by a Dan Rooney. Dan Rooney, she said, is blind but he’s not bitter about it, because he believes that life is better without sight, and in fact he wonders whether, if one became deaf and mute, life would not be still more life, life without anything but life.

“Why did you like it?” Nino asked.

“I don’t know yet if I liked it.”

“But it made you curious.”

“It made me think. What does it mean that life is more life without sight, without hearing, even without words?”

“Maybe it’s just a gimmick.”

“No, what gimmick. There’s a thing here that suggests a thousand others, it’s not a gimmick.”

 

I loved this scene. 

There is so much to say here. The idea about life being more life with less senses is very interesting by itself, let alone how it relates to the characters in the story.

Samuel Beckett is a powerful allusion. I'll admit I've never read or watched any of Beckett, but I'm interested now because of Ferrante.

The dialogue is direct and focuses on the point. It allows the main ideas to stand out. It allows a curious and or well read reader to explore the connections being made with Beckett.

The book, a metaphor, becomes a desired object. Ironically, the book was originally given because it wasn't desired. The undesirable becomes desired. So many layers and connections here.

In Happy Days (the play refereed to in the scene above), the character Winnie is unhappy and struggling to keep up positive perspective. In the play, Winnie is buried in sand.

The characters in the scene above are on the beach. They've been spending their summer on the beach. Who is getting buried in the sand? Who is struggling to hide their unhappiness? Who might learn that life is more life with less senses?

Thursday, October 24, 2024

Books which have influenced me most

I was searching MR for biographies and or nonfiction books on Shakespeare, I found this post. I'll follow my gut too.

These are not my favorite or the best books I've read although four of the books are among my all time favorite books. 

These are in order of when I read them. You can see which ones have had more influence by the fact that I've written about them on my blog.

  1. It's Not About the Bike- one of the first books I read. I reread multiple times, even in 2024 more here and here. it gave me a false belief about the world that had a big influence on me.
  2. Jarhead : A Marine's Chronicle of the Gulf War and Other Battle- helped me overcome some of my young and dumb masculinity.
  3. Into the Wild- huge impact on me. I wanted to be like McCandless. I say a lot more here as to why I did and do love this book.
  4. Tuesday with Morrie- huge impact on me wanting to be a good and better person. Love for all. I wrote more about it here and here too.
  5. Siddhartha- I've this book every year, since I first read it. Huge influence. Why I reread over and over here. A sample of how much I read, think, and write about Siddhartha is here.
  6. War and Peace- proved I had the ability to read and understand real books. Read more here.
  7. Gilgamesh- Timeless story that really captures what people like to call human nature.
  8. The Man Who Wasn't There: Investigations into the Strange New Science of the Self- gave a broader understanding of the human mind.
  9. - got me very interested in economics.
  10. Big Business- along with economics, makes a strong argument for big business. Really changed the way I see and blame problems on businesses.

Tuesday, October 8, 2024

My Brillant Friend

The NYT Book Review created a list of the best 100 books of the 21st Century so far. My brilliant Friend by Elena Ferrante was voted the number book.

I've heard people discuss Ferrante. I knew she had a strong following. I knew there was speculation and conspiracies about her identity. I wasn't completely in the dark, but I had never read anything of hers.

I finished My brilliant Friend today.

Wow!

I've only read six of the books on the list of 100, but My Brilliant Friend has instantly jumped to my top 5-10 books all time. I'm already looking forward to rereading it in the future.

Ferrante is Italian and the setting of the story is post World War II Italy, Naples more specifically. This is an unfamiliar time and place in history for me. Having a grandmother born to Italian migrants, makes this unfamiliar time and place seem familiar. In general, there are many universal themes at play.

Ann Goldstein is the English translator, and I've heard her translation magnifies the story. I can't comment, but I'll pass on the info.

The narrator and voice are excellent.

I went back to the opening chapters after finishing, and the opening popped. The craftsmanship is beautiful. The opening of the story is sharp and concise, yet so much is being told. The frame is set up extremely well.

It's coming of age, but extremely mature. The narrator is telling the story in hindsight as a mature woman, giving wisdom and an intellectualism to the child voices.

Within the wisdom is action, violence, assault. It's not cheap; it's authentic to the story, time, and place.

The drama and relationship dynamics are brilliant.

For readers who know me, this will carry more weight, but I tempted to say the story is flawless!

Right now, it is difficult to comprehend why everyone isn't reading and talking about this book. I feel like Kenton Grua talking about dories. He said (I'm paraphrasing):

Everyone should ride one at least once, but you can't. You can't because once you do, you won't be able to do anything else.
This sentiment comes to mind. I want to say more. I want to discuss the book, but I also don't want to take anything away from someone's reading of the book. So this is my pitch. Go read the book.

Luckily for me, My Brilliant Friend is book one of four in the Neapolitan Novels.

Friday, September 27, 2024

The Enemy Within by Glenn Loury

I binged Late Admissions: Confessions of a Black Conservative by Glenn C. Loury. It's a page turned. The first years of his life are at a much slower pace, but by the time he is a teenager the story really takes off.

I regularly listen to Glenn Loury's podcast The Glenn Show, so I'll admit to having a bias for him and his ideas.

With that said, I think the book is great regardless of someone being a fan of Loury. It's a piece of literature. Loury uses literary devices to craft the story. Early events of his life are foreshadows of later events. Everything comes back together almost as if literary fiction (maybe it is more fiction than memoir). It is a very well written and structured book.

There is a common theme of "the enemy within," which Loury originally wanted to title the book. You should read or listen to the book, so I will not say more besides that the ideas has multiple layers.

Loury opens the book with a meta-analysis of his goal using game theory. He then, of course, comes back to it at the the end of the book. This makes for an interesting read and relationship. It will affect how I read memoirs and biographies going forward too, trying to gauge how well and deliberate an author is using such tactics. Loury is very aware; he says as much in the opening. He is very deliberate in each word, phrase, sentence, etc. He is very aware of how each element might affect readers. He creates a suspicious with his readers to earn their trust. I'm not sure if this will be successful, but it sure makes everything a lot more interesting. This is a book I look forward to rereading in the future. What does he really want? Why is he really writing this book? I'll look closer into those ideas next time I read it.

Glenn Loury, the character in the book, makes mistake after mistake. It's a little painful reading. How and why can he keep doing this? It's surprising how far and bad it gets for Glenn. It really makes the reader question his character. How and why?

He gives an answer. It may or may not be the most honest answer. It's impossible to know, especially after detailing his use of game theory in writing the book. Loury tells all to gain our trust, but something is missing for my tastes. I wanted to get more Loury diving deeper within. Maybe only a confession of being a complete narcissist or something to that degree would suffice. He seems too self-centered and narcissistic. He admits it, but it isn't explored it enough to make me think he has changed. He's older and he certainly has changed. But I guess more of that change is biological than his personality. This would be consistent with modern pyschology. But a deeper, significant growth that a readers want, isn't there. I can't buy it. He briefly comes back to what I'm calling "it" in the end, but my suspicion is that Loury knows and is hiding how narcissistic he still is.

Loury defends and supports his idea each week on his podcast, so the book isn't to spread his ideas. Maybe the book is really intended to his family. But still, I think they might see through it too. All this makes me unsure if this book is or isn't written in good faith.

This level of criticism could be applied to all memoirs and or writing in general, and I'll probably apply it, as I mentioned, going forward, maybe even give myself an inward examination.

Still, the story and life is well worth reading.

Saturday, September 21, 2024

The Running Fiction Challenge

Introduction

I may have discovered a market failure in running fiction, see previous post here. I think running memoirs, histories, and biographers are reasonably represented, but running fiction is either underrepresented in publishing or under appreciated by readers, maybe both. I'm curious how others would respond to those claims.

What Makes Fiction Running Fiction

This is obviously up for debate. If anyone feels strongly about a book that should or shouldn't be on the list, I'm open to changing the list. I'm a reader who loves running, or a runner who loves reading. Other than that, I don't have any authority over what makes or doesn't make a piece of fiction in the genre running fiction.

The Challenge

Pay some respect to running fiction. Buy, loan, or download the most popular running fiction novels below. Read enough of the story to decide if you like it. Share a review on twitter, goodreads, amazon, or reddit so other readers can sample more running fiction. And of course discuss the books here on this post.

For twitter users use #runningfiction

Most Popular Running Fiction

The following books are the most rated running fiction on goodreads.com, as of 6 July 2024. Goodreads readers can vote here for the best running fiction. The books are in order by total ratings. I've added more specific genres and brief spoiler free descriptions of each novel.

  1. *Forrest Gump by Winston Groom - historical running fiction. The novel isn't specifically focused on running throughout, but many chapters feature Forrest's physical running as important aspects of the narrative. (68,999 ratings)

  2. The Running Dream by Wendelin Van Draanen - young adult running fiction*. The story chronicles a high school 400m runner's physical and emotional journey of recovery and how running remains a central part of her life. (30,771 ratings)*

  3. Once a Runner by John L. Parker Jr. - running fiction*. The novel is regarded as one of the most iconic novels about running. Its entire narrative is centered around the sport, both literally and metaphorically. Centering around the life of a competitive runner who vividly captures the intensity of training, the experience of racing, and the subculture of competitive running. (15,114 ratings)*

  4. *The End of the World Running Club by Adrian J. Walker - dystopian running fiction*. Running plays a significant role metaphorically. While it’s not strictly a "running novel" in the sense of being about the sport of running, running becomes an element of the story’s structure and themes. (14,848 ratings)*

  5. Running the Rift by Naomi Benaron - historical running fiction*. A novel that centers around running, both as a literal sport and as a metaphor for survival, identity, and hope. The novel is set in Rwanda during the years leading up to and during the Rwandan Genocide of 1994. (7,104 ratings)*

  6. The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Runner by Alan Sillitoe - running fiction. Once again, running is a central role, both literally and metaphorically. The story explores themes of personal rebellion, social class, and individuality, with running serving as a powerful symbol for the protagonist’s inner life and resistance against societal expectations. (6,686 ratings)

* Novel might be demoted due to not being enough about running 

Honorable Ineligible Mentions

My Reviews

I'll be review each of the novels here on my blog. I'd love any and all feedback. Leave a comment. Here are reviews I've done so far:

Wednesday, August 21, 2024

2024 Five Star Rereads (update)

Update on a previous post. I want to reread all my favorite books. My friend AJ joined me. We were on a roll and then fell off. I recently started again. See here for my mid way response to It's Not About the Bike.

5 Stars to Reread 2024
  • Half a Yellow Sun
  • Waiting for the Barbarians
  • Zen in the Martial Arts
  • Dispatches
  • Song of Solomon

5 Stars Reread Results

Here are my five star rereads that kept their five stars:

The following are still really good, but not five stars after rereading:

Here are the nowhere near five stars:

So far, my original five star ratings are shooting nine for thirteen (~69%), with 12/13 being at least really good, not bad.

Sunday, July 7, 2024

Ep 21 Books Mentioned

I recently interviewed (listen here) the hosts of Running Book Reviews with Alan and Liz, a podcast that reviews running books. Of course, we mentioned a lot of books. Here are the books in order as they were mentioned.

Non Running Books

Running Fiction

Nonfiction, non training, Running

Nonfiction, Training, Running Books

Non Running Nonfiction

  • Come as You Are: The Surprising New Science that Will Transform Your Sex Life by Emily Nagoski
  • The Slow Moon Climbs: The Science, History, and Meaning of Menopause by Susan P. Mattern