I was a little surprised, last year, to be invited to contribute a piece to the above festschrift from Singapore-based alternative literature publisher Verbivoracious Press. They appear to specialise principally in the work of British writer Christine Brooke-Rose (1923-2012), many of whose books they have reprinted. The title of the above compilation, "The Syllabus," though, shows that they also aspire to represent a whole universe of experimental writing - what might be called (in Roger Horrocks' phrase) the Kingdom of Alt.
The book Mark Nicholls wanted me to write about was Miss Herbert (2007), by British novelist Adam Thirlwell. The reason this surprised me was that he based the request on the blogpost I'd written about it, a piece which strikes me (in retrospect) as rather unkind - though I certainly don't subscribe there to any of the more ad hominem attacks Thirlwell's book received in the more up-themselves reviews.
We quickly rejected the idea of compiling an essay from the blog itself, and instead I decided to take the licence he offered to compose a more "creative" piece taking off from Thirlwell's book (which rejoices in a number of titles in America and Britain, my favourite being the one on the spine of the paperback edition: Miss Herbert: A book of novels, romances, and their translators, containing ten languages, set on four continents, and accompanied by maps, portraits, squiggles and illustrations ...
Each contributor was limited to 500 words, and it must have been a devil of a job to assemble them all, since it was only last week that I was at last alerted to the appearance of the compilation:
A monument to our insatiable verbivoracity, The Syllabus is an act of humble genuflection before the authors responsible for those texts which have transported us to the peak of readerly nirvana and back. The texts featured, chosen in a rapturous frenzy by editors and contributors alike, represent a broad sweep of the most important exploratory fiction written in the last hundred years (and beyond). Featuring 100 texts from (fewer than) 100 contributors, The Syllabus is a form of religious creed, and should be read primarily as a holy manual from which the reader draws inspiration and hope, helping to shape their intellectual and moral life with greater awareness, and lead them towards those works that offer deep spiritual succour while surviving on a merciless and unkind planet. Readers of this festschrift should expect nothing less than an incontrovertible conversion from reader to insatiable verbivore in 225 pages.
“The Syllabus, as a third volume of Verbivoracious Festschrift, is a celebration of reading. It’s a great literary feast for the true readers, for all the verbivores around the world, a feast consisting of hundred delicious meals. I am honored to be a part of that unforgettable menu.” — Dubravka Ugrešić.
And what exactly is in it? Here's a list of the contents, arranged (as you can see) in chronological order:
-
Introduction or, The Art of Sillybustering
- Jonathan Swift — A Modest Proposal [1729]
-
Scott Beauchamp
- Laurence Sterne — The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy [1759]
-
Silvia Barlaam
- Xiao Hong (萧红) — The Field of Life and Death [1935]
-
Wee Teck Lim
- Louis-Ferdinand Céline — Death on the Installment Plan [1936]
-
Paul John Adams
- Rayner Heppenstall — The Blaze of Noon [1939]
-
Juliet Jacques
- James Joyce — Finnegans Wake [1939]
-
Fionnuala Nic Mheanmán
- Flann O’Brien — At Swim-Two-Birds [1939]
-
Edwin Turner
- Raymond Queneau — Exercises in Style [1947]
-
Geoff Wilt
- Boris Vian — Foam of the Daze [1947]
-
Tosh Berman
- Douglas Woolf — The Hypocritic Days [1955]
-
Ammiel Alcalay
- Henry Miller — Quiet Days in Clichy [1956]
-
G.N. Forester
- Muriel Spark — The Comforters [1957]
-
Kim Fay
- Alexander Trocchi — Cain’s Book [1960]
-
Gill Tasker
- Michel Butor — Mobile [1962]
-
John Trefry
- Robert Pinget — The Inquisitory [1962]
-
???
- B.S. Johnson — Omnibus [1964-1971]
-
Nicolas Tredell
- Raymond Queneau — The Blue Flowers [1965]
-
Inez Hedges
- Alan Burns — Celebrations [1967]
-
Joseph Andrew Darlington
- Guillermo Cabrera Infante — Three Trapped Tigers [1967]
-
Pablo Medina
- Macedonia Fernández — The Museum of Eterna’s Novel [1967]
-
Steve Penkevich
- Anna Kavan — Ice [1967]
-
Kristine Rabberman
- J.M.G Le Clézio — Terra Amata [1967]
-
Keith Moser
- Flann O’Brien — The Third Policeman [1967]
-
Alex Johnston
- Ishmael Reed — The Freelance Pallbearers [1967]
-
Joseph McGrath
- Christine Brooke-Rose — Between [1968]
-
Katarzyna Bartoszyńska
- Anthony Earnshaw & Eric Thacker — Musrum [1968]
-
Kenneth Cox
- Nicholas Mosley — Impossible Object [1968]
-
Shiva Rahbaran
- Vladimir Nabokov — Ada or Ardor [1969]
-
Rob Friel
- J.G. Ballard — The Atrocity Exhibition [1970]
-
Rick McGrath
- Pierre Guyotat — Eden Eden Eden [1970]
-
Peter Blundell
- Raymond Federman — Double or Nothing [1971]
-
Lance Olsen
- Hubert Selby Jnr. — The Room [1971]
-
Georgina Holland
- Stanley Crawford — Log of the S.S. the Mrs Unguentine [1972]
-
Stephen Sparks
- Tom Mallin — Erowina [1972]
-
Nate Dorr
- Ann Quin — Tripticks [1972]
-
Francis Booth
- Guy Davenport — Taitlin! [1974]
-
Eric Byrd
- Lawrence Durrell — The Avignon Quintet [1974-1985]
-
Nadine Mainard
- Chrisine Brooke-Rose — Thru [1975]
-
David Detrich
- Georges Perec — An Attempt at Exhausting a Place in Paris [1975]
-
Lauren Elkin
- Fernando del Paso — Palinuro of Mexico [1976]
-
Ignacio M. Sánchez Prado
- Coleman Dowell — Island People [1976]
-
Eugene H. Hayworth
- Raymond Federman — Take It or Leave It [1976]
-
Steve Katz
- Italo Calvino — If on a winter’s night a traveller [1979]
-
Silvia Barlaam
- Gilbert Sorrentino — Mulligan Stew [1979]
-
M.J. Nicholls
- Roald Dahl — The Twits [1980]
-
Harold Lad
- Donald Barthelme — Sixty Stories [1981]
-
Lee Klein
- Alexander Theroux — Darconville’s Cat [1981]
-
Steven Moore
- Camilo José Cela — Mrs. Caldwell Speaks to Her Son [1982]
-
Rosalyn Drexler
- D. Keith Mano — Take Five [1982]
-
Nathan Gaddis
- Thomas Bernhard — Woodcutters [1984]
-
Anonymous
- Christine Brooke-Rose — Amalgamemnon [1984]
-
Ellen G. Friedman
- Rikki Ducornet — The Stain [1984]
-
Michelle Ryan-Sautour
- Christoph Meckel — The Figure on the Boundary Line [1984]
-
Ben Winch
- Milorad Pavić — Dictionary of the Khazars (Male Edition) [1984]
-
Alec Nevala-Lee
- Milorad Pavić — Dictionary of the Khazars (Female Edition) [1984]
-
Silvia Barlaam
- Don Delillo — White Noise [1985]
-
Barbara Melville
- Gilbert Sorrentino — Pack of Lies Trilogy [1985-1989]
-
Dick Witherspoon
- Ronald Sukenick — In Form: Digressions on the Act of Fiction [1985]
-
Tom Willard
- Marcel Bénabou — Why I Have Not Written Any of My Books [1986]
-
A. Writer
- Michael Westlake — Imaginary Women [1987]
-
Michael Westlake
- Nicholson Baker — The Mezzanine [1988]
-
M.J. Nicholls
- Italo Calvino — Six Memos for the Next Millennium [1988]
-
Daniel Levin Becker
- David Markson — Wittgenstein’s Mistress [1988]
-
Christopher WunderLee
- Janice Galloway — The Trick is to Keep Breathing [1989]
-
Gillian Devine
- Jacques Roubaud — The Great Fire of London [1989]
-
Ian Monk
- Felipe Alfau — Chromos [1990]
-
Sam Moss
- Robert Alan Jamieson — A Day at the Office [1991]
-
Rodge Glass
- Alasdair Gray — Poor Things [1992]
-
Rodge Glass
- W.G. Sebald — The Emigrants [1992]
-
Peter Bebergal
- William Gaddis — A Frolic of His Own [1994]
-
Christopher WunderLee
- Jáchym Topol — City Sister Silver [1994]
-
Alex Zucker
- Martin Amis — The Information [1995]
-
Anthony Vacca
- William H. Gass — The Tunnel [1995]
-
H.L. Hix
- Gilbert Sorrentino — Red the Fiend [1995]
-
Jenny Offill
- Roberto Bolaño — Nazi Literature in the Americas [1996]
-
Adrian Carney
- Geoff Dyer — Out of Sheer Rage [1997]
-
Kathleen Heil
- Alasdair Brotchie & Harry Mathews (eds.) — Oulipo Compendium [1998]
-
Jason Graff
- Dubravka Ugrešić — The Museum of Unconditional Surrender [1998]
-
Jasmina Lukić
- Percival Everett — Glyph [1999]
-
Tom Conoboy
- Ali Smith — Other Stories and Other Stories [1999]
-
M.J. Nicholls
- Ignácio de Loloya Brandão — Anonymous Celebrity [2002]
-
Ricki Aklon
- Curtis White — Requiem [2002]
-
Trevor Dodge
- Lucy Ellmann — Dot in the Universe [2003]
-
Ali Millar
- Dubravka Ugrešić — Thank You for Not Reading [2003]
-
Ana Stanojevic
- Roberto Bolaño — 2666 [2004]
-
Alex Cox
- Meredith Brosnan — Mr. Dynamite [2004]
-
Jarleth L. Prendergast
- David Mitchell — Cloud Atlas [2004]
-
Stephen Mirabito
- Steve Katz — Antonello’s Lion [2005]
-
W.C. Bamberger
- Graham Rawle — Woman’s World [2005]
-
Michael Leong
- Gilbert Adair — The Evadne Mount Trilogy [2006-2009]
-
Manny Rayner
- Nicola Barker — Darkmans [2007]
-
Kinga Burger
- Lydia Davis — Varieties of Disturbance [2007]
-
Ali Millar
- Lydie Salvayre — Portrait of the Writer as a Domesticated Animal [2007]
-
Juliet Jacques
- Adam Thirwell — Miss Herbert [2007]
-
Jack Ross
- Urmuz — Collected Works [2007]
-
Eddie Watkins
- Marilyn Chin — Revenge of the Mooncake Vixen [2009]
-
Melanie Ho
- Gabriel Josipovici — Only Joking [2010]
-
Gianni Dane
- Steven Moore — The Novel: An Alternative History [2010-2013]
-
Nathan Gaddis
- Will Self — Walking to Hollywood [2010]
-
Richard Strachan
- Charles Newman — In Partial Disgrace [2013]
-
Eric Lundgren
The Influences of Others
-
The Editors
-
Igo Wodan
What, no Raymond Roussel, you say? No this person, no that? Instead of such carping, let's just celebrate all the weird and wonderful texts they have managed to include in their roll-call of 100+:
Texts:
A Modest Proposal — The Avignon Quintet — The Comforters — Finnegans Wake — In Partial Disgrace — Impossible Object — Wittgenstein’s Mistress — The Freelance Pallbearers — Foam of the Daze — Between — Darconville’s Cat — Thru — Terra Amata — Poor Things — Pack of Lies — Amalgamemnon — Anonymous Celebrity — The Stain — Palinuro of Mexico — Miss Herbert — Tristram Shandy — The Mezzanine — White Noise — Glyph — The Twits — Woodcutters — Erowina — Chromos — A Day at the Office — Darkmans — The Evadne Mount Trilogy — Mobile — An Attempt to Exhaust a Place in Paris — The Trick is to Keep Breathing — The Great Fire of London — Thank You For Not Reading — Exercises in Style — Why I Have Not Written Any of My Books — B.S. Johnson Omnibus — Six Memos for the Next Millennium — Sixty Stories — Requiem — Mrs Caldwell Speaks to Her Son — The Atrocity Exhibition — Walking to Hollywood — At Swim-Two-Birds — The Death of the Author — Dot in the Universe — Eco: On Literature — Dictionary of the Khazars — The Novel: An Alternate History — Varieties of Disturbance — Mr. Dynamite — The Blue Flowers — Portrait of the Artist as a Domesticated Animal — The Tunnel — Oulipo Compendium — In Form: Digressions in the Art of Fiction — Take it or Leave it — If on a winter’s night a traveller — The Information — Double or Nothing — The Hypocritic Days — Berg — 2666 — The Inquisitory — Woman’s World — Museum of Eterna’s Novel — The Blaze of Noon — Musrum — Island People — Take Five — Death on Credit — Three Trapped Tigers — Cain’s Book — Invisible Cities — Out of Sheer Rage — Log of the S.S. Mrs Unguentine — The Room — Revenge of the Moon Vixen — Mulligan Stew — Ice — Red the Fiend — Urmuz: Complete Works — Ada — Taitlin! — Celebrations — The Figure on the Boundary Line — City Silver Sister — Nazi Literature in the Americas — The Emigrants — Other Stories and Other Stories — The Third Policeman — Antonello’s Lion — Cloud Atlas — Imaginary Women — The Museum of Unconditional Surrender — Eden Eden Eden — Quiet Days in Clichy
Contributors:
Scott Beauchamp — Kim Fay — Igo Wodan — Fionnuala McManamon — Eric Lundgren — Shiva Rahbaran — Joseph McGrath — Tosh Berman — Katarzyna Bartoszyńska — David Detrich — Ellen Friedman — Steven Moore — Keith Moser — Rodge Glass — Michelle Ryan-Santour — Jack Ross — Silvia Barlaam — Tom Conoboy — Ignacio M. Sánchez Prado — M.J. Nicholls — Barbara Melville — Nate Dorr — Sam Moss — Kinga Burger — Manny Rayner — John Trefry — Lauren Elkin — Gillian Devine —Ian Monk — Peter Blundell — Ana Stanojevic — Geoff Wilt — Nicolas Tredell — Daniel Levin Becker — Lee Klein — Lance Olsen — Trevor Dodge — Rosalyn Drexler — Rick McGrath — Richard Strachan — Edwin Turner — Ali Millar — Alec Nevala-Lee — Nathan Gaddis — Alberta Rigid — Jarleth L. Prenderghast —Inez Hedges — Juliet Jacques — H.L. Hix — Jason Graff — Tom Willard — Steve Katz — Anthony Vacca — Ammiel Almacay — Lee Rourke — Alex Cox — Michael Leong — Eric Byrd — Steve Penkevich — Kenneth Cox — Gene Hayworth — Paul John Adams — Pablo Medina — Gill Tasker — Kathleen Heil — Georgina Holland — Stephen Sparks — Anonymous — Melanie Ho — Jenny Offill — Kristine Rabberman — Eddie Watkins — Rob Friel — Joseph Andrew Darlington — Alex Zucker — Ben Winch — Alex Johnston — W.C. Bamberger — Stephen Mirabito — Michael Westlake — Peter Bebergal — Jasmina Lukić — Nadine Mainard — G.N. Forester
Here are the publication details:
Release Date:
May 11th, 2015. ISBN: 9789810935931. 237pp.
Pricing Information:
Paperback: GBP9.99 + postage GBP2.00 within UK, US, AU, CAN, EU, ZA, NZ, IN and SG.
Available from:
all booksellers and usual online retailers, or the Verbivoracious website at sales@verbivoraciouspress.org
I've got a good mind to use it precisely as they suggest: as a syllabus for the new course in "Advanced Fiction" I'm planning (to commence at Massey Albany in 2017). Maybe that's a bit cheeky, but it'll certainly be listing it as a recommended text for the students.
Go on, then, test yourself. Just how many of the above books have you actually read? How many have you even heard of, for that matter? Not even Richard Taylor would score 100% on that one, I suspect. Scott Hamilton, perhaps?
That is a truly incredible list. I just wish I had more time to read . . . everything on this list. But I will try and go back and just pick one work at random.
ReplyDeleteI found that I'd read about a quarter of the books listed, and heard of about half.
ReplyDeleteIt just goes to show how much wacked-out material there is out there!
I have that book by Thirlwell. I added it to my collection as I was sorting those books out I had for sale to it. But I hadn't even looked at it, I'd forgotten your Blog post and my own comment on it. I did Wiki it and kept it along with a lot of other bizarre stuff...
ReplyDelete'...even Richard Taylor...' Lol.
ReplyDeleteHere are those I have and, indeed, mostly I haven't. In two (?)posts...
Jonathan Swift — A Modest Proposal [1729] [Have read]
Scott Beauchamp
Laurence Sterne — The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy [1759] [Have read]
Silvia Barlaam
Xiao Hong (萧红) — The Field of Life and Death [1935] [Don't know it]
Wee Teck Lim
Louis-Ferdinand Céline — Death on the Installment Plan [1936] [I'm reading another book by him]
Paul John Adams [No]
Rayner Heppenstall — The Blaze of Noon [1939] [No]
Juliet Jacques [No]
James Joyce — Finnegans Wake [1939] [In parts]
Fionnuala Nic Mheanmán
Flann O’Brien — At Swim-Two-Birds [1939][Yes! Good book!]
Edwin Turner
Raymond Queneau — Exercises in Style [1947][Yes! Fun to read!]
Geoff Wilt
Boris Vian — Foam of the Daze [1947] [No]
Tosh Berman
Douglas Woolf — The Hypocritic Days [1955] [No]
Ammiel Alcalay
Henry Miller — Quiet Days in Clichy [1956] [Have read other books by HM]
G.N. Forester [No]
Muriel Spark — The Comforters [1957]
[Read one book by Spark, not that one] Kim Fay
Alexander Trocchi — Cain’s Book [1960] [I've seen it somewhere]
Gill Tasker
Michel Butor — Mobile [1962] [No]
John Trefry
Robert Pinget — The Inquisitory [1962][No]
???
B.S. Johnson — Omnibus [1964-1971] [Read others by Johnson]
Nicolas Tredell
Raymond Queneau — The Blue Flowers [1965][No]
Inez Hedges
Alan Burns — Celebrations [1967]
Joseph Andrew Darlington
Guillermo Cabrera Infante — Three Trapped Tigers [1967]
Pablo Medina
Macedonia Fernández — The Museum of Eterna’s Novel [1967]
Steve Penkevich [No to all those above]
Anna Kavan — Ice [1967] [Yes!]
Kristine Rabberman
J.M.G Le Clézio — Terra Amata [1967]
Keith Moser
Flann O’Brien — The Third Policeman [1967]
Alex Johnston
Ishmael Reed — The Freelance Pallbearers [1967]
Joseph McGrath
Christine Brooke-Rose — Between [1968]
Katarzyna Bartoszyńska
Anthony Earnshaw & Eric Thacker — Musrum [1968]
Kenneth Cox
Nicholas Mosley — Impossible Object [1968]
Shiva Rahbaran [No to the above.]
Vladimir Nabokov — Ada or Ardor [1969] [I have read about 6 Nabokov's but not that]
Rob Friel [No]
J.G. Ballard — The Atrocity Exhibition [1970] [Got keen on Ballard via Jack Ross and Scott Hamilton]
Rick McGrath
Pierre Guyotat — Eden Eden Eden [1970]
Peter Blundell
Raymond Federman — Double or Nothing [1971] [Put I have another book by him]
Lance Olsen
Hubert Selby Jnr. — The Room [1971][Not this but 'Last Exit to Brooklyn']
Georgina Holland
Stanley Crawford — Log of the S.S. the Mrs Unguentine [1972]
Stephen Sparks
Tom Mallin — Erowina [1972]
Nate Dorr
Ann Quin — Tripticks [1972]
Francis Booth [None of the above group]
Guy Davenport — Taitlin! [1974] [Read his essays and some poems of]
Eric Byrd
Lawrence Durrell — The Avignon Quintet [1974-1985]
Nadine Mainard
Chrisine Brooke-Rose — Thru [1975]
David Detrich [None of these]
Georges Perec — An Attempt at Exhausting a Place in Paris [1975] {Have read other books by Perec]
Lauren Elkin
Fernando del Paso — Palinuro of Mexico [1976]
Ignacio M. Sánchez Prado
Coleman Dowell — Island People [1976]
Eugene H. Hayworth
Raymond Federman — Take It or Leave It [1976]No - the one I have is 'Two Fold Vibration]
Steve Katz
Italo Calvino — If on a winter’s night a traveller [1979] [Started it once, having read about 6 of his other books]
Silvia Barlaam [No]
ReplyDeleteGilbert Sorrentino — Mulligan Stew [1979] [Some of his poems]
M.J. Nicholls [No]
Roald Dahl — The Twits [1980] [Read other things by him]
Harold Lad [No]
Donald Barthelme — Sixty Stories [1981] [Yes!!]
Lee Klein
Alexander Theroux — Darconville’s Cat [1981]
Steven Moore [None of that group]
Camilo José Cela — Mrs. Caldwell Speaks to Her Son [1982] [No - but I have 2 others by him]
Rosalyn Drexler
D. Keith Mano — Take Five [1982]
Nathan Gaddis
Thomas Bernhard — Woodcutters [1984]
Anonymous
Christine Brooke-Rose — Amalgamemnon [1984]
Ellen G. Friedman
Rikki Ducornet — The Stain [1984]
Michelle Ryan-Sautour
Christoph Meckel — The Figure on the Boundary Line [1984]
Ben Winch [None of these]
Milorad Pavić — Dictionary of the Khazars (Male Edition) [1984] [Have, but unread]
Alec Nevala-Lee
Milorad Pavić — Dictionary of the Khazars (Female Edition) [1984] [Op cit]
Silvia Barlaam [No]
Don Delillo — White Noise [1985] [Yes. Good.]
Barbara Melville [No]
Gilbert Sorrentino — Pack of Lies [Op cit] Trilogy [1985-1989]
Dick Witherspoon
Ronald Sukenick — In Form: Digressions on the Act of Fiction [1985]
Tom Willard
Marcel Bénabou — Why I Have Not Written Any of My Books [1986]
A. Writer
Michael Westlake — Imaginary Women [1987]
Michael Westlake
Nicholson Baker — The Mezzanine [1988]
M.J. Nicholls [None of those]
Italo Calvino — Six Memos for the Next Millennium [1988] [Op cit, not this one]
Daniel Levin Becker
David Markson — Wittgenstein’s Mistress [1988]
Christopher WunderLee
Janice Galloway — The Trick is to Keep Breathing [1989]
Gillian Devine
Jacques Roubaud — The Great Fire of London [1989]
Ian Monk
Felipe Alfau — Chromos [1990]
Sam Moss
Robert Alan Jamieson — A Day at the Office [1991]
Rodge Glass
Alasdair Gray — Poor Things [1992] [Started a book by him not this though]
Rodge Glass
W.G. Sebald — The Emigrants [1992] [Yes! Keen on Sebald]
Peter Bebergal
William Gaddis — A Frolic of His Own [1994][Possess but unread]
Christopher WunderLee
ReplyDeleteJáchym Topol — City Sister Silver [1994]
Alex Zucker [None of these]
Martin Amis — The Information [1995] [Unread but I have a copy]
Anthony Vacca
William H. Gass — The Tunnel [1995]
H.L. Hix [None of these, only part of a critical book by Gass]
Gilbert Sorrentino — Red the Fiend [1995] [Op cit]
Jenny Offill
Roberto Bolaño — Nazi Literature in the Americas [1996]
Adrian Carney [None of]
Geoff Dyer — Out of Sheer Rage [1997] [No but I love his critical writings]
Kathleen Heil
Alasdair Brotchie & Harry Mathews (eds.) — Oulipo Compendium [1998]
Jason Graff
Dubravka Ugrešić — The Museum of Unconditional Surrender [1998]
Jasmina Lukić
Percival Everett — Glyph [1999]
Tom Conoboy [None of]
Ali Smith — Other Stories and Other Stories [1999] [Read a meditative book on lit by her, it was good but not this book]
M.J. Nicholls
Ignácio de Loloya Brandão — Anonymous Celebrity [2002]
Ricki Aklon
Curtis White — Requiem [2002]
Trevor Dodge
Lucy Ellmann — Dot in the Universe [2003]
Ali Millar
Dubravka Ugrešić — Thank You for Not Reading [2003]
Ana Stanojevic
Roberto Bolaño — 2666 [2004]
Alex Cox
Meredith Brosnan — Mr. Dynamite [2004]
Jarleth L. Prendergast [None of those]
David Mitchell — Cloud Atlas [2004][Have - unread]
Stephen Mirabito
Steve Katz — Antonello’s Lion [2005]
W.C. Bamberger
Graham Rawle — Woman’s World [2005]
Michael Leong
Gilbert Adair — The Evadne Mount Trilogy [2006-2009]
Manny Rayner
Nicola Barker — Darkmans [2007]
Kinga Burger [None of these]
Lydia Davis — Varieties of Disturbance [2007] [Not this but I have her collected stories found by chance in a library]
Ali Millar
Lydie Salvayre — Portrait of the Writer as a Domesticated Animal [2007] [None of these]
Juliet Jacques
Adam Thirwell — Miss Herbert [2007]
Jack Ross [Possess unread as discussed]
Urmuz — Collected Works [2007]
Eddie Watkins
Marilyn Chin — Revenge of the Mooncake Vixen [2009]
Melanie Ho
Gabriel Josipovici — Only Joking [2010] [Have only read parts of a critical book he wrote]
Gianni Dane
Steven Moore — The Novel: An Alternative History [2010-2013]
Nathan Gaddis
Will Self — Walking to Hollywood [2010]
Richard Strachan
Charles Newman — In Partial Disgrace [2013]
Eric Lundgren
The Influences of Others
Igo Wodan [None of these]
I like book lists though. I know it's silly but I love them, the sense of 'getting thru'...But recently I read a book about what and how to read in the age of anxiety and the internet etc and the (he was an academic and well read) had himself been unable to read as he had when he was younger. (With that total rapt attention.)He advised to avoid lists, and to read by whim. But he went for a kind of 'educated' or informed Whim. He admitted his own longing to read all those books but, paradoxically, in his case, it was using e books that got him reading as for some reason he was thus less distracted. But he wanted the readers he was addressing to read slowly and take notes, as well as to re-read books. Both for the sheer joy of it. He warned against reading for 'edification' etc
ReplyDeleteThis all came just in time for Ken's book as I slowed down, read it twice, and took notes. I now write more (pencil) notes on books. I have also read aloud a lot, if not the whole book, part of it. And by reading slowly I find I get more from a book although I read Brian Moore's 'The Robe' and that was a great read...
But if you want strange and Kingdom of Alt, get load of this: 'The Song of the Earth' by Nissenson. [See if those Verbiroscity People know of it, they may not] I pulled it for my collection. As you and Benjamin say about wine, well, one keeps things unread. Or as Richard Ford 'comments' through his (I think great) book 'The Sportswriter' [which Geoff Dyer likes] there is no need to know everything - about the world, literature, one's wife or girlfriend or partner, or anything. It is the drive to know, the striving, and the sheer enjoyment of reading. If it is a chore, chuck it all out. The same applies to writing. No need to worry about it, if you make it you make it, if not, well, that's the way it is. Have as good a life as you can.
I think that Roger exaggerates this 'how horrible the suburbs are' thing. I like him, he was my lecturer, but there is a danger of becoming too ivory tower, so, I like living in the suburbs. I've lived in them all my life and I love them. I am the Kingdom of Alt if I want to be.
In fact I am going to his book launch, ceteris paribus, tommorrow...