Monday, January 02, 2023
Sunday, January 01, 2023
On Demon Copperhead and other books in 2022
117 books read in 2022.
If you’re only going to read two books in 2023:
Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver
Tomorrow & Tomorrow & Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin
By turns, harrowing and humorous, Demon Copperhead, lays bare America’s shame. It is one of the finest and most powerful novels to emerge in years and establishes Kingsolver among the top rank of Amercan novelists.
I know more than most about the (computer) game industry. I’ve seen how the sausage is made. It is either a grandly creative effort by a team of individuals with a common vision or a cynical undertaking when old code is dressed up in new clothes — deja vu all over again.
Gabrielle Zevin’s Tomorrow & Tomorrow & Tomorrow sees the industry with clarity and affection. It’s a delightful book.
If you’re looking for new authors in 2023, here’s two:
Ruth Ware is a mystery writer. She says she learned to plot from Agatha Christie and that Daphne du Maurier’s books “are my go-to for how to writer character.” That’s an impressive pedigree which emerges in every page of these tautly written mysteries.
Brit Mick Herron has a bit of fun at John le Carre’s expense in his Slough House novels. His central character, Jackson Lamb, is a down-at-the-heels George Smiley. He is rude and crude, an unbathed alcoholic who retains all the skills of a master spy. In a delicious twist, Gary Oldman, who played Smiley in the movies, plays Jackson Lamb in the ApplePlus tv series, Slow Horses, which is based on Herron’s novels. The humor doesn’t interefere, in the least, with the fact that when all is read and done this is an engaging espionage series.
Authors I’m really high on, and think you should be too:
Becky Chambers: I finished her Wayfarer series in 2022. It is science ficiton at its best. Her Monk and Robot novellas (there are two) are harder to characterize. Sci fi because, well, there’s a robot, but there’s a deft touch of fantasy too. Chamber’s books are filled with empathy and joy that’s all too rare in books today. She makes me laugh. She makes me cry. And she gives hope for the future.
Jordan Harper: Harper’s The Last King of California was issued in Great Britain, but not America. I’m not sure why, but the diligent reader can track down a copy. It’s well worth the effort. The Last KIng of California reminds me a little of The Death of Sweet Mister by Daniel Woodrell, and that’s high praise. Harper has new book coming out early this year.
Two graphic publications that I really liked:
Monstress by Marjorie Liu & Sana Takeda collects the first 18 comic books from this epic fantasy published by Image Comics. The artwork is lush. The storytelling tight.
Ducks, Two Years in the Oil Sands, Kate Beaton. Ducks is NOT a graphic novel. It is a graphic memoir that demonstrates how the use of text and art can rise above text alone. Beaton experienced a gap year of sorts. In an effort to pay for college, she spent two years working at the oil sands of Fort McMurray, in Alberta, Canada. To say she did not have a good time is an understatement. Sexual harrassment and environmental despoilation are the overriding themes in this coming-of-age memoir.
A few thoughts on non-fiction:
I recommend Jon Meacham’s Abraham Lincoln and the American Struggle, Covered With Night by Nicole Eustace and Empire of the Summer Moon by S.C. Gwynne. Three impressive works of history that provide insight into the nation and people we are today.
Path Lit by Lightning, The Life of Jim Thorpe by David Maraniss is both a splendid biography of an American sports great and a heartbreaking history of the ill treatment of indigenous people.
My favorite non-fiction book from 2022 was Play All Night! Duane Allman and the Journey to Fillmore East by Bob Beatty. My takeaways: the band was always meant to be heard live, the band’s sound could never be fully captured in the studio, the album recorded live at the Fillmore East was the cornerstone of the band’s success and despite Duane Allman’s untimely death — only days after Fillmore East went gold — his vision for the band endured for decades.
Books I liked:
Termination Shock, Neal Stephenson
Winter Work, Dan Fesperman
French Braid, Anne Tyler
City on Fire, Don Winslow
Our Missing Hearts, Celeste Ng
Shrines of Gaiety, Kate Atkinson
Spear, Nicola Griffith
Fairy Tale, Stephen King
Heat 2, Michael Mann and Meg Gardiner
Books that didn’t quite work for me by authors I’ve liked in the past:
You Have a Friend in 10A, Maggie Shipstead
Lucy by the Sea, Elizabeth Strout
The Passenger, Cormac McCarthy
Anthem, Noah Hawley
The Marriage Portrait, Maggie O’Farrell
The Candy House, Jennifer Egan
Now, on to the list: