#51 – The Republic of Love, by Carol Shields

My first experience with Canadian literature was with a Carol Shields novel. I was in the seventh or eighth grade, I can’t exactly remember which, and I had just gotten into the habit of listening to talk radio on the CBC before going to bed (don’t ask; I was a strange child), and the program that aired just as I was nodding off was one in which selections from a Canadian novel were read every night over the course of several days or weeks. That novel was The Stone Diaries. My parents bought me a copy on our next trip to “the city” (Winnipeg), and I was off. To this day it remains tied for the much coveted title of “Favourite Novel” (the other contender is A.S. Byatt’s The Biographer’s Tale). Despite becoming enamoured with her work at such an early age, The Republic of Love is only the third… Continue Reading

#50 – Invitation to a Beheading, by Vladimir Nabokov

I’m trying to remember if this is my fifteenth or sixteenth Navokov, but at any rate, it’s the weakest, although that on its own doesn’t say much. The weakest Nabokov is still stronger than the best work many other authors produce. Invitation to a Beheading was translated from the Russian (and quite ably, I must say) by Dmitri Nabokov, the author’s son. It reads very much like Nabokov’s later English-language novels. Invitation to a Beheading follows Cincinnatus C. as he spends three weeks on death row at a dream-like prison in an equally dream-like country. His crime is “gnostical turpitude,” a concept that is never fully explained, but based on the little information made available in the novel, has something to do with his being “opaque” at the level of his soul. What this actually means, I have no idea, but it frightens the other characters in the novel, who… Continue Reading

End of Year List-O-Rama

It’s approaching the end of 2007, and like 2006 and 2005 before it (and I would assume going quite a bit farther back than that), lists of the “best” books of the year have been cropping up all over the place. Generally speaking, I’m a list person. I like to see what other folks enjoy and how they organize and reflect on those things; the season of lists is a perfect opportunity for that. It’s also a perfect opportunity for bloggers (you know who you are) to get up in arms about the fact that nobody reads books from small publishers, that nobody reads enough women writers, enough writers of colour, enough writers who write in languages other than English, blah blah blah. It’s been suggested that the writers and editors who compile these lists for major newspapers are always thinking of the bottom line, and therefore want to promote… Continue Reading

All Our Best To Terry

It took me quite a while, and much pushing from my friends who know about such things, to become a fan of Terry Pratchett’s (except, of course, for Good Omens, because really, who doesn’t love that?), but this was the year that I finally came around. So it saddens me to learn that he has been diagnosed with a rare form of Alzheimer’s. The CBC reports: “I would have liked to keep this one quiet for a little while, but because of upcoming conventions and, of course, the need to keep my publishers informed, it seems to me unfair to withhold the news,” Pratchett wrote in a message titled “An Embuggerance.” “We are taking it fairly philosophically down here and possibly with a mild optimism,” he wrote. There are of course things that can be done to slow the progress of the disease, and I wish Pratchett and his family… Continue Reading

#49 – On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, by Ian Fleming

So two Bond novels in a row. I don’t know if I’m spoiling myself, or setting myself up for a disappointment, because I’m now going to reach the end of my “guilty pleasure” series that much sooner. Ah well. Too late now, either way. I’ve been told by various folk that until the recent production of Casino Royale, this was the Bond novel that made it to film with the least radical changes, and that seems like it could still be a pretty fair assessment. On Her Majesty’s Secret Service was a slightly atypical Bond adventure, in the sense that he was genuinely undercover, right down to the fake name, and so there are a number of different challenges in this book; it’s interesting to note that Bond may shy away from false identities simply because it is too difficult to play out convincingly, even with major preparation. The other… Continue Reading

The Canadian Book Challenge

I recently learned about The Canadian Book Challenge, which is essentially book-blogger John Mutford challenging his readers to get through thirteen Canadian books between now (well, starting October 4th) and Canada Day 2008 (that’s July 1st). All those who meet the challenge will have their name thrown into a draw for a very Canadian prize package. I don’t imagine I’ll have much trouble getting to thirteen, especially with nearly seven months between now and the deadline. Each entry will be labeled as part of the challenge.

#48 – The Spy Who Loved Me, by Ian Fleming

What has kept the Bond franchise from falling apart entirely, in terms of the films, are two things. First, the casting of Daniel Craig, who comes across as dangerous and slightly brutal, in addition to charismatic. Second, it is a return to the source material, and not just the content, but the spirit as well. Fleming’s novels are simple, tough, and entertaining. What kept them fresh (what still keeps them fresh, for me at least) is the inclusion of new perspectives on the Bond character. Some previous books spent some time dealing with how Bond behaves at home, what it’s like when he spends extended periods at the office, and how he prepares for and deals with a life of danger, rather than just, like the films, showing fast-paced glimpses of the danger itself. Such things keep him human. The Spy Who Loved Me offers yet another perspective, that of… Continue Reading

#47 – The Cheese Monkeys, by Chip Kidd

It’s strange, starting to read a novel by someone made famous for their visual skills. You hope, frankly, that they aren’t downright illiterate, being published simply because they have a name rather than because they have any talent with words. Thank God that Chip Kidd can write. Okay, so he makes some rookie mistakes. The pacing The Cheese Monkeys is way too fast, and the ending is a bit of a cop-out (I’m given to understand that this is partly based on his own experiences, but still, give us some closure). The only reason the book clocks in at 274 pages is because Kidd has given the text some insanely large margins (I must admit, the book is pretty cool to look at, fits comfortably in the hand, etc.; if nothing else, Kidd is an amazing designer). I would imagine that in word count it’s barely more than a novella.… Continue Reading

#46 – Jitterbug Perfume, by Tom Robbins

This was a fun little book, and though it’s actually wildly different, in many ways I was reminded of Christopher Moore’s Lamb, my first book of the year. Robbins leans less towards the reverence than Moore, but also doesn’t go quite as readily for the cheap laugh, either. What we have in Jitterbug Perfume is an unfinished quest, three or four rather strange romances (all, in some way resolved with a certain level of satisfaction) and an unusual mediation on the relation between biochemistry and longevity. Oh yes, and beets. I feel better about eating beets, having read this. I can’t really tell you that I was expecting this novel to be quite so grand (although it felt quite small), but after having seen the film adaptation of Robbins’ Even Cowgirls Get The Blues it would have been wrong of me to go in with any real expectations at all.… Continue Reading

#45 – The Man in the High Castle, by Philip K. Dick

As I said earlier this year, every Philip K. Dick novel is like your first Philip K. Dick novel. And this one was no exception. The premise of the novel, “what would the world look like had Japan and the Nazis won WW2?” is a strange one to imagine from my vantage point this far from the war (my father, though older than average for fathers of twenty-eight year olds, is still not old enough to remember the war). The Allied victory seems inevitable, and we forget that there were times when it was very much in doubt. So how does it play out? The Japanese of Dick’s fictional late 1960s turn out to be very much like the Japanese of today (or rather, like our Western view of the Japanese people), and offer a reasonable, although not entirely likable to my eyes, way of living and dealing with the… Continue Reading