Among my achievements this year: I finally finished the last book by one of my favorites, Alice Munro. That's always a bittersweet thing. Given what we now know about her, it's not such a bad thing to let her rest for a while. Put her on the heap of all the other writers whose work I've finished with, like Penelope Fitzgerald and Muriel Spark. Patrick White and Cormac McCarthy will soon follow. With each passing year, I appreciate more writers like Graham Greene and Philip K. Dick, who, with my habit of only reading one book per author per year, will keep me going for decades to come.
My little projects have kept me going. I succeeded once again in reading an equal number, more or less, of men and women writers. I read books by authors from Angola, Croatia, Guatemala, Iran, Kazakhstan, Lesotho, Libya, North Korea, Peru, Slovenia, Somalia, and Suriname, bringing my "Countries Read" list up to 114. One of my simple projects for this upcoming year is just to read, once a month, a book that's been on my shelf for a year or more.
As always, this year was full of grand surprises. My top ten contains only three authors I'd read before: Elena Ferrante, Tove Jansson, and one of my literary heroes, N. Scott Momaday. Among the others are writers I'm excited to really dig into, like Janet Frame and Rikki Ducornet. And with 122 books read this year, there are several books that didn't make the top ten, like Richard Brautigan's Trout Fishing in America and Italo Svevo's Zeno's Conscience, that I'll be thinking about for a long time. Without further ado, here's the best stuff I read this year.
Honorable Mention:
The Nenoquich by Henry Bean
Trout Fishing in America by Richard Brautigan
Mao II by Don DeLillo
The Blind Owl by Sedagh Hedayat
The Removed by Brandon Hobson
The Way of Florida by Russell Persson
Why Did I Ever by Mary Robison
Mating by Norman Rush
Zeno's Conscience by Italo Svevo
The Pelican Child by Joy Williams
Top Ten:
10. Men of Maize by Miguel Angel Asturias: There are twenty (!) footnotes on the first page of Men of Maize. That may be a good indicator of whether the "modernist epic of the Guatemalan Indians" is a challenge you'd like to take on or prefer to avoid. For me, I found it breathtaking--as successful as Ulysses in drawing a national conscience out of the stuff of myth and the vernacular register. Men of Maize, in fact, reads like a 20th century origin myth, about the emergence of the consciousness of a Guatemalan Indian class against elite planters. I was fascinated by the way Asturias manages to tell a modern story in a sequence of mythical time; characters in Men of Maize have dalliances with wizards and are transformed into animals; their stories immediately become legends, without intervening centuries. And I was amazed by the way that Asturias shifts seamlessly from a kind of homespun Don Quixote humor to the fantastical world of coyote-men and fairy wizards.
9. Dayswork by Chris Bachelder and Jennifer Habel: What is this book, exactly? A biography of Herman Melville? A memoir about a troubled marriage? An essay about life during covid? A fictional novel about one or more of these things? The strange un-pin-downability of Dayswork seems to honor its nature as a collaborative novel. Somehow, it turns the story of a woman writing a biography of Melville into a kind of rich, intense personal drama that weaves together the personal and the literary, the present and the past. There is a scene at the end of the book, after Bachelder and Habel have spent much of its length withholding key information about the marriage at its heart, where the narrator reads excerpts from Melville's letters to Hawthorne that is the most romantic--and even, perhaps, erotic--things I have ever read, despite adding nearly no original text. It's one of my favorite "scenes" of the year, and a great image of the strength of Dayswork, which understands how to create something entirely novel out of readymade parts.
8. Divorcer by Garielle Lutz: It's amazing to know, even after doing this blog for nineteen years, that there are still authors out there who can surprise me with the way they use words. On the level of words and sentences, nothing gave me as much delight this year as Garielle Lutz's Divorcer, a series of stories about coupling and uncoupling whose sentences also couple and uncouple, that is, come together and cohere before crashing out, throwing up novel coinages like secret revelations or evil surprises. The stories themselves blend together, each being a kind of divorce-story with the genders and sexualities swapped around--perhaps even, one might say, fluid. The stories of Divorcer capture well how human desire spills over the boundaries of gender and sex we try to trap it in, and despair, too. The characters are shy, isolated, shriveling ever-inward, teetering on and then falling into total collapse. The stories offer bummer after bummer, but still they might be the most fun I've had all year.
7. A Heart So White by Javier Marias: Marias' novel, about a United Nations translator unraveling his father's terrible secret, is an innovative riff on the detective novel, perhaps the spy novel. There really is a terrible secret--having to do with the death of the father's first wife--but it almost seems beside the point. Marias understands that the heart of a mystery is not the revelation but the act of investigation: wondering, speculating, searching. And so the novel offers up several mysteries to be investigated, wondered, speculated about, searched for, and most of them end up having no real payoff--which sounds frustrating, but which, in fact, makes the novel wonderfully unsettling. Who is the man in the next hotel room, and is he really going to kill his wife? Who's the secret admirer who keeps demanding lurid video tapes from the narrator's friend? How many paintings in the Prado are forged by the narrator's father? And if we know we're never going to get answers to these questions, how is it that they're still so engrossing> I ended up not being sure if A Heart So White is a parody of the genre or something else, but I found it gripping from beginning to end.
6. Lanark by Alasdair Gray: It's hard to call Lanark a novel--it's more like two novels, or maybe four novels, in one. One is a straightforwardly realistic novel of a young man struggling to make his way in mid-century Glasgow as a painter. The other is a science fiction novel about a man transported to a shadowy realm known as "Unthank" where people grow dragon scales and then explode, and time moves strangely, and one can travel by being swallowed by big holes in the ground. Are the two men the same? Is this world life after death, or something else? And why does it look and feel so much like industrial Glasgow? Lanark, by the author of book that became the movie Poor Things, was a suggestion someone gave me when I traveled to Scotland this summer, and it was a great one. I loved how it captured the spirit and history of Scotland in a novel way, and I found its shift between the real world and Unthank to be improbably effective. If I had to choose, I think I liked the realism a bit more--but the two halves of the book really don't work without each other, the world and the underworld, the figure and shadow.
5. The Days of Abandonment by Elena Ferrante: Boy, she makes it look easy, doesn't she? The Days of Abandonment covers so much of the same thematic ground as the Neapolitan novels, but in other ways it couldn't be more different. Gone is the Dickensian sweep of Naples or the passage of decades, instead there's just one woman, abandoned by her husband, locked in her apartment with her children and dog. A friend of mine really loathed this book, finding it brutal and nasty; those are the same reasons that I really loved it. Even moreso than the Neapolitan novels, The Days of Abandonment is about the cruelty that men visit upon women, and the novel smartly removes the husband to focus on the narrator's slow collapse in the apartment by herself, with a sick child and dying dog that are somehow like manifestations of her own infected spirit. And even then, the novel ends on a note of cautious hope unlike anything in Ferrante's black-hearted body of work.
4. Sun City by Tove Jansson: This is where I look at the list and start to say to myself, "Are you sure that's not the best book you've read this year? Or ever?" Tove Jansson's Sun City is like a book that's tailor-made for me: a tight satire about old people living in a Florida retirement community. It has a Tocqueville-like quality to it, a foreigner writing about America from the outside, and for being fifty years old, it really nails South Florida, a place we go at the end of our lives to forget there's any such thing as a history, either personal or national. The swamp and jungle lurk just outside the carefully cultivated lawns, the "movie" pirate ship, and the air conditioning, just as death lurks at the margin of the life that the novel's large (and terrifically funny) cast inhabit. Jansson smartly balances the old folks out with a pair of young dreamers, the Jesus Freak-hippie Joe who doesn't believe in the future of aging and death (because Christ is coming back post haste) and his beautiful girlfriend, the retirement home's wise housekeeper. But perhaps the best praise I can think of for Sun City is that it would fit in among the best work of another favorite of mine, Penelope Fitzgerald.
3. Owls Do Cry by Janet Frame: I can't stop repeating this fact: they were going to lobotomize Janet Frame until her first story collection was published, and then they decided maybe they shouldn't start ripping pieces out of her brain. Among other things, the remarkable Owls Do Cry turns that near-lobotomy into the novel's climax, in which Daphne, the long-hospitalized youngest daughter of a suburban New Zealand family, struggles to recognize her father. Though her thoughts appear to us disordered, Daphne sees things about her father that no one else--for example, her sister, caught in a narrow web of mid-century propriety--can see. What, we wonder, will be lost when Daphne goes under the knife, and what will be gained? Daphne's other three siblings are also viewpoint characters, and together they make Owls Do Cry a touching picture of life at the edges of polite society; the novel's most important meaningful setting is the garbage dump, which is the site of probably the most shocking and unexpected scene I read all year. And all this is told in a modernist, stream-of-consciousness style that rivals even the masters like Woolf and Joyce, I felt.
2. The Jade Cabinet by Rikki Ducornet: Every year I come across another writer or two who makes me say, "I have to read everything this person has written." Janet Frame is one; Rikki Ducornet is another. The Jade Cabinet is a cosmic phantasmagoria set in the 19th century of Lewis Carroll. (Funnily, I mentioned that Lanark author Alasdair Gray wrote the novel Poor Things; having only seen the movie, The Jade Cabinet reminded me much more of the fantastic-but-not-quite-steampunk image of the Victorian era that Poor Things embodies.) The narrator, Memory, writes about her sister Etheria, raped and abused by her industrialist husband, then disappeared. The husband, Tubbs, pursues her to Egypt and back, encountering the divine image in the pyramids and a sinister "hunger artist," among other strange and fantastical images. It's all very wild and freewheeling, and to describe it almost makes it sound like a grab-bag of uncontrolled moments and images, but Ducornet's skill is to tie the whole thing together in a way that makes it powerful and persuasive. In the end, it's one of my favorite things, a novel that ought to be much sillier than it is, and worthy of what I consider the highest praise: I've never read anything like it.
1. The Ancient Child by N. Scott Momaday: The great N. Scott Momaday died last year, and it's difficult to explain what was lost. If you know anything about him, it's House Made of Dawn, a masterwork that, maybe for the first time, saw Native American legend as a source and structure for modernist storytelling. I was afraid to read The Ancient Child, because I expected it to be a step down from that novel, which means a great deal to me, but what I found was a novel that is at least nearly its equal. The story is about Locke Setman, a Bay Area-artist who is compelled to return to the Kiowa family in Oklahoma he barely knows. Waiting there for him is Grey, a woman who slips in and out of time, and who has become the lover of Billy the Kid. I think it's this last detail that signifies to me just how far-reaching and universalist Momaday's writing is; it's something different than the kind of defensive bearhug of traditional stories that you sometimes see in modern Native American writing. It encompasses all of the West, the frontier, and all people. The legend that underpins the whole thing is the man who, transformed into a bear, scratched the lines into Devils Tower, and this becomes a powerful symbol of transformation, wildness, and the other--the kinds of things, perhaps, that an artist tries to access through their art. This was the book I loved most this year because it managed to be both wholly familiar and wholly new, better even than a simple encore.
Happy new year, everyone. See you on the first page.
