Books that won't take you this long to read. |
Yes , yes, I know I have been quiet on
the blog front. Picture me blowing a raspberry.
Over
the last month or so I have been covering for Yvette Judge, who showed great faith in allowing me to stand in for her, on the Radio ( Dubai Eye 103.8).
The EAFOL has a little gem of a slot on Mark Lloyd
and Stef Burgon's show The Ticket
in a segment called Bookmark. Mark and Stef have very kindly allowed me to rabbit on about books in a most self-indulgent way and have managed to not go glassy eyed in the process. A testament to their professionalism!
Have a listen:
Part One The Ticket Bookmark Thursday 6th August
Part Two The Ticket Bookmark Thursday 6th August
Have a listen:
Part One The Ticket Bookmark Thursday 6th August
Part Two The Ticket Bookmark Thursday 6th August
I have had the most fun finding books to read and audio books and podcasts to listen to. The down side is that I feel so guilty (what is it with guilt?) when I suggest a book that I have not actually read. Which is completely silly for two reasons:
Firstly, I am sure that I am the human
equivalent of the regal tang Dory in Finding Nemo. I can barely remember
the names of my own children, never mind the book I am currently reading, ergo , there
is no hope of my remembering much about a book I read (and desperately loved) ten
years ago. I love my children but that does not stop me from looking blankly at
my sons while I try to remember the name of the one I am looking at. Sorry
darling off spring but let’s face it, this is not news to you. Or is it? Oh my
god I feel another guilt trip coming on.
Secondly, by doing all this research I
am helping whoever listened to the show choose a book or podcast to joyously (or respectfully as the case may
be) dive into. I am whittling down the vast array of confusing book choices out
there. I am spending hours and hours and hours ( martyrized sigh required at this point) digging into the dark
recesses of my mind, badgering my friends (most of whom read more than I do) and trawling
the internet in a stalker like fashion for books to suggest. I am doing
this selflessly for the greater good. You could say I am a combination of St Jerome, St Anthony and St Frances de Sale. I mention these
venerable Catholic Saints as I think that maybe I have missed my calling and
need to convert. Honestly all this guilt and angst is going to waste. But I
digress, as I do.
St Jerome - Patron saint of Librarians |
St Anthony - Patron Saint of Lost things ( and found things?) |
St Frances de Sale - Patron saint of Writers and Journalists |
But
peeps , back to the books. Here are the books I am recommending. There are
countless other lists and you need look no further than my go to bible Pinterest for everything the
universe has to offer from a million recipes with processed cheese (why?) to
book lists to deeply reflective wise sayings from everyone from Aristotle to Carl Sagan to Ziggy.
Here it is: A list of books you can read in a day:
The
diving Bell and the Butterfly:
A memoir of life in death by Jean-Dominique Bauby translated by Jeremy
Leggatt.
Dominique Bauby was the editor in chief
of French Elle. He was well known for his wit, passion and style. He had a
stroke in his early 40's which left him with locked in syndrome. He could only
blink his left eye. His speech therapist developed a system whereby he could
communicate by blinking. Using this method, over two months, he dictated this
book blink by blink, word by word.
An incredibly physically challenging endeavor that shows amazing spirit, grit and determination. He writes about his life , his family, his friends, what he imagines and feels. He dips from his life in the hospital to his memories and his dreams. Dedicated to his two small children. Jean-Dominique Bauby sadly died two days after the French publication of the memoir.
An incredibly physically challenging endeavor that shows amazing spirit, grit and determination. He writes about his life , his family, his friends, what he imagines and feels. He dips from his life in the hospital to his memories and his dreams. Dedicated to his two small children. Jean-Dominique Bauby sadly died two days after the French publication of the memoir.
She is the queen of self-deprecating
humor. She is always funny even when she is being sad. Movie fans will be
familiar with her script's for Sleepless in Seattle, Silkwood, when Harry Met
Sally, You've got mail, Julie & Julia, and her and her sister’s ( Delia) insightful
play "Love, Loss and What I Wore". There are several collections
of her work all of which are delightful dip in books. But this book is a short
novel about divorce. It is funny. The audio book is read by Meryl Streep.
"Rachel , our heroine discovers
that her husband, Mark, is in love with another woman. In between trying to win
Mark back and loudly wishing him dead, Ephron's irrepressible heroine offers
some of her favorite recipes. Heartburn is a sinfully delicious novel,
as soul-satisfying as mashed potatoes and as airy as a perfect soufflé."
Hanif Kureshi- Intimacy "You don't stop loving
someone just because you hate them.”
155 pages this slim volume of yellow
has been the cause of many happy arguments. There seems to be a dividing line
between men and women on opinions of the book. I love it for this reason.
It is a well crafted easy, clever read. I start seething, almost immediately, at the protagonist
Jay as he navigates the idea of leaving his wife (of 10 years) and their
two young sons.
I suggest this as a dinner party
discussion. Invite your guests to read the book beforehand, agree not to
discuss the book until you all meet for dinner over good food and yummy wine. A
lively evening is guaranteed.
If you don't read any other book on this list, please read this one. It will stay with you forever. It is terrible and dark and essential reading.
You
can buy it or you can download it from the Gutenberg project
Here
is an entirely pilfered review of the book:
Few works have entertained, excited and
troubled minds as much. Radio, theatre, film and television adaptations, the
most famous being Apocalypse Now. TS Eliot’s The Hollow Men It infused Ronan
Bennett’s The Catastrophist and haunts both John le Carré’s The Constant
Gardener and The Mission Song. VS Naipaul and Graham Greene were swept up by
it, as were Nick Davies in writing Dark Heart along with Sven Lindquist’s
Exterminate All the Brutes, Michaela Wrong’s In the Footsteps of Mr Kurtz, and
Tim Butcher’s Blood River.
What is it about Heart of Darkness that
has this horrid hold on our consciousness?
Conrad’s novella takes place one night
on a boat by the Thames, a mesmerizing tale of one man’s search for another.
Published in 1899, it sprang from his experience in the Congo nine years
before. What became Heart of Darkness begins then, with Conrad noting the
rapacious, violent nature of ivory-trading and colonialism. In July 1890 he
spent day after day looking at decomposing bodies, skeletons tied to posts, men
shot: he wrote, when a 13-year-old boy came in with a gun wound to his head,
that he would be “glad to see the end of this stupid tramp”. The “tramp” went
on, and Conrad watched men die, dreams end and, as his Congo journey came to
its close, he noted in a letter: “I have lived long enough to realize that life
is full of grief's and sorrows which no one can escape.” Afterwards, he was
spent: there was a cost – weakened physical health and an exhausted mental
state that would bubble up into breakdown 20 years later but which, a decade
after, strangely became a defining work of our literature.
Conrad’s narrator Charles Marlow tells
some old friends how he went looking for Kurtz, a trader who has lost his
values, murderously corrupted by his power over his subjects. Kurtz is lost to
himself, as well as the girl he is betrothed to. He is lost to society and
becomes the still point in an earning world where money and power are all.
Marlow seeks Kurtz out and finds that all is corroded and corrosive. The journey
ends with Kurtz’s death, and Marlow escapes the immediate aftermath to come
home and visit Kurtz’s fiancée. When she asks what Kurtz’s last words were,
Marlow tells a white lie, saying Kurtz spoke her name before he died. The words
he actually uttered were his expression of what life is, what meaning is, and
are four of the more potent ever written in English: “The horror! The horror!”
Leo
Tolstoy - The Death of Ivan Ilyich
The Ocean at the End of the Lane by
Neil Gaiman
If you enjoy Terry Pratchett or Jasper
Fforde you will love Neil Gaiman. Well known for Anasi Boys, American Gods,
Neverwhere, and Stardust ( made into a move with Michelle Pfiefer, Robert
DeNero, Claire Danes, Sienna Miller and Charlie Cox)
Fantasy fiction at its best. "Dark
creatures from beyond the world are on the loose, and it will take everything
our narrator has just to stay alive: there is primal horror here, and menace
unleashed - within his family and from the forces that have gathered to destroy
it.
His only defense is three women, on a
farm at the end of the lane. The youngest of them claims that her duck pond is
an ocean. The oldest can remember the Big Bang."
This is also available on kindle and
audiobook form with Neil Gaiman reading. I would be tempted to listen to
this one.
The
Art of War by Sun Tzu
The Art of War, one of the oldest and
most successful books on military strategy in the world. It has also been
applied to business and managerial strategies. The translation, by Lionel Giles
is considered one of the best available. Essentially it holds to three ideas.
1. Know yourself.
2. Know your enemy.
3. Only fight when you can win.
"Do this, and you will win
competitions, elections, games. Anything that involves conflict. Even wars.
Sun Tzu's elegant language lays bare the principles of warfare, illustrating his lessons with examples from Ancient China. It is a thought-provoking, colorful and valuable book."
Sun Tzu's elegant language lays bare the principles of warfare, illustrating his lessons with examples from Ancient China. It is a thought-provoking, colorful and valuable book."
Available on kindle, and audio book but
again I don't recommend the audio version. It is very dry. Unless that is what
you like.
The
Great Gatsby by F Scott Fitzgerald
This is considered the best book of his
career although initially it was received with mixed reviews. It is
an exquisitely crafted tale of America in the 1920s the Jazz age. This story is
a recounting of events of a short period of time when the narrator Nick Caraway
rents a small house on Long Island next door to the mysterious Jay Gatsby and a
story unfolds about Gatsby ,his love for the flightily beautiful Daisy Buchanan
and the bright light and dark side of the time.
This
is available
also on Audio Book, and Kindle, I think
this one should be read. The audio book that is available has a female reader
which I don't like as the narrator of the written book is a man, and the other
audio I found was more of a dramatization. Just read it! There
are so many movie versions available so treat yourself to the read.
Of course, I found many, more but I
think that is enough from me for one day. Do let me know if I missed a book you
consider utterly falls into the “I cannot be allowed to live another moment if
the said novella is not included in this list”. I will add it and probably
read it.
I
have also created a display shelf at The Old Library in Dubai with a few dozen
books that you can read in an indulgent day. Get down there and choose a book
while the display is still up.
3 comments:
Thanks to you, my bucket list is growing. Can you put up some links to buy audio books, and download podcasts?
Hi Sai, I will add a page to the blog with links for you.
Goodd read
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