lookingland: (stamp)
lookingland ([personal profile] lookingland) wrote2007-01-14 08:15 am
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da heck wit' it, i's gonna carpet bomb lj wit' posts t'day ~

weekends are so quiet around here. last weekend i didn't even bother posting.

this weekend i feel like posting up a storm.

so, last night i was laying in bed thinking about my top ten favorite contemporary (post-1960, let's say) novels. novels that i think are absolutely flawless in terms of form and characterization. i qualify this because i'm talking about my own personal aesthetic, which tends to emphasize style and structure over plot (a novel can have a mind-numbingly simple plot and still be positively brilliant, but if the characters or the structure fail to hold it up, even the best-plotted novel will disintegrate).

so these are novels that do something more than just tell a story. novels that master the art of reversal, the nuance of personality, the fine art of narrative voice, and the tenuous balancing act between storytelling and word painting. these are books on which every level i found totally, enduringly satisfying (no kvetching whatsoever in review of their literaryness). in every case, these are books that have influenced my writing and taught me things about the craft.

in no particular order, they are:
Coming through Slaughter by michael ondaatje
a a writer, this book was life-changing for me in a very dramatic way.

The Collected Works of Billy the Kid by michael ondaatje
i couldn't pick between ondaatje's books. hands-down two of the best pieces of writing in the last twenty years.

Watership Down by richard adams
talking rabbits. c'mon. 'nuff said.

Silk by alessandro baricco
perfect example of the "simple story, complex telling" quality i was talking about. i grumbled through this book because i was so annoyed at the main character. one of the most perfect literary endings ever.

A Prayer for the Dying by stewart o'nan
anyone ever interested in knowing what you can do with a second-person narrative, this is the book for you. to date, the scariest thing i've read since The Shining (and that's saying a lot!)

Wheat that Springeth Green by j.f. powers
the least fancy of all the entries, but this book has a charm like no other. last book that totally choked me up and had me laughing all at once. you might have to be Catholic and have a firm grip on 60s-70s culture to "get" this one.

Nat Turner by william styron
prolly the most complex of the bunch. i rarely recommend it because it reads like 19th century fiction, but i think that's part of what's so brilliant about it.

Snow by maxence fermine
a book about haiku in a haiku-like style. and it's about snow. what's not to love?

Cycle of the Werewolf by stephen king
my favorite king novel (novella). this is where his writing shows what it can really do.

Einstein's Dreams by alan lightman
this book is almost more of a meditation than a novel, but oh the thinks you can think!
and because i couldn't just pick ten, these are my also-rans:
Lying Awake by mark salzman
it's just a beautiful book. simple. elegant.

A Clockwork Orange by anthony burgess
burgess does with narrative voice here what i could never hope to achieve in a lifetime.

The Barrytown Trilogy by roddy doyle
doyle is just one of the most solid, consistent writers i've ever come across. his work seems fluffy, but resonates.

Love and other Demons by gabriel garcia marquez
probably the last book i cried over while reading. to this day i don't recall how it ends because it was just too traumatic for me. so obviously it belongs here.

Montmorency by eleanor updale
i couldn't decide whether i like this or its sequel better. it's the only series i have ever been rabid for. technically this is a children's book, but it reads like adult fiction.

A Soldier's Book by joanna higgins
surprise! there's only one civil war novel on my list and it's in the also-rans. higgins does with andersonville what a lot of writers fail to do with it: she tells a story about the men inside the stockade instead of the stockade itself. i'm amused that the one piece of civil war fiction i have here happens to be written by a woman (the only woman on my list)

Fata Morgana by william kotzwinkle
this is a strange book with all manner of surprises. one of the few mysteries i'll read again.

The Whitechapel Horrors by edward b. hanna
the other only mystery i would read again. in all my years of being a Jack the Ripper fanatic, this is the only book i have ever forgiven for being "wrong" (snicker). it's just that well-written.

Mariette in Ecstasy by ron hanson
i hesitated adding this one because to this day i am perplexed by what it all means. but then, that's the point of the book, so i guess it succeeds at its goal. somehow, even being utterly perplexing, the book is very satisfying. and the writing is phenomenal.


i'll have to come back and do my top ten picks for the classics.

in the meantime, what are your favorite contemporary novels?

: D

[identity profile] siltjade.livejournal.com 2007-01-14 03:28 pm (UTC)(link)
The New York Trilogy by Paul Auster

This book leaves you with more questions than when you started, and I love that. A Postmodern book which truly embraces the notions of Postmodernity and weaves them beautifully through three disjointed, yet connected tales. I am yet to find a more intricately written work. I am in awe of how this book works.

England, England by Julian Barnes

A company makes a theme park of England on an island just off the coast of England. Eventually, it becomes more England than the real England. That's where the fun begins :-) As fun of a plot as this book has, the writing matches it well. There are times when I'm just thinking "oh come on, don't do it that way," but then it ends up being the way it had to be, because of the somewhat absurdity of the book to begin with. Anyone familiar with the philosophy of Jean Beaudrillard will get a kick out of this book.

Go Ask Alice by anonymous

Holy crap this book just reaches out at you, grabs you by the horns, and pulls until you have no idea where you are. A beautiful (somehow that's the right word) look at the destructive power of drugs in a young girl's life. For anyone who has dealt with issues such as these in their own life or in the life of someone they knew/know, this will be an incredible emotional ride.

And then there's also Vonnegut to throw in there; I haven't read much of his, but I like all I have read. And really, there's no young adult lit. I'll turn down. But I think these three are my favorites.

--Brian

[identity profile] lookingland.livejournal.com 2007-01-14 03:46 pm (UTC)(link)
i read Go Ask Alice a bajillion years ago and it's stuck with me ~

The New York Trilogy piques my interest (and reminds me that i left irvine welsh off my list!).

thanks for your recommendations ~ maybe i'll pick one for the [livejournal.com profile] 50bookchallenge this year!

: D