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July 13, 2008

July 2008

I know I've been terribly derelict, but I've been trying to finish not one but two books. I went to Mesa Refuge in Point Reyes, the most gorgeous writing retreat, and just powered through.

The Plague of Doves by Louise Erdrich

Louise Erdrich’s world is reliably lovely and strange.


The Ten Year Nap by Meg Wolitzer

It’s so incredibly delightful when a book just nails it, you know?


Olive Kitteridge
by elizabeth Strout

This book transported me. Completely.


Unaccustomed Earth by Jhumpa Lahiri

She writes such delightfully confident prose.


No One You Know by Michelle Richmond

This book will keep Michelle on the terrific trajectory her last book put her on.


Cost by Roxana Robinson

Oh God. I haven’t not been able to get this book out of my mind. What a terrifying object lesson.


The Road
by Cormac McCarthy

Why the hell didn’t I read this earlier? This book. God, this book.


The Wild Palms
by William Faulkner

How ridiculous is it that I forget every time how much I love Faulkner?


City of Refuge
by Tom Piazza

This book taught me so much about Katrina. It’s amazing how fiction manages to teach you something new, no matter how much news you read.


A Curious Earth
by Gerard Woodward

A lovely little novel.


Travels with Alice
by Calvin Trillin

I cried pretty much the whole time I read this, when I wasn’t laughing.


Time Will Darken It by William Maxwell

Perfect prose.


The Spare Room
by Helen Garner

Every once in a while a writer just comes out of nowhere. I mean, she’s been writing a long time, but she came out of nowhere to me.


Stealing Buddha’s Dinner
by Bich Minh Nguyen

Terrific memoir.


I Was Told There’d Be Cake
by Sloane Crosley

Funny little essays. Sweet.


Art & Ardor
by Cynthia Ozick

These essays are so brilliant I can’t believe it. Bogglingly brilliant.


I Feel Bad About My Neck
by Nora Ephron

Reread this for my nonfiction book. Always funny.


Consider the Lobster
by David Foster Wallace

This man is to footnotes what the raised glaze is to donuts. The best every.

Consequences by Penelope Lively

This book lost me in the end, although I liked it very much for a while.


An Equal Music
by Vikram Seth

I reread this for the music for my novel. Far more detailed than I could ever be.

The Best American Essays by David Foster Wallace

His essays are better than any of these.


Changing Places by David Lodge

Lord, I do love David Lodge.


The Great Man
by Kate Christensen

I liked this, but I wanted, I don’t know, something more.


Ruth by Elizabeth Gaskell

I love Gaskell, but in the end what she lacks is humor.


Nice Work by David Lodge
Good lord this man is the most incredible writer.


Growing Up by Russell Banks
Awfully sweet memoir.

Posted by ayelet at July 13, 2008 07:45 PM