December 2014: My month in books

I’ve been thinking of doing a Nick Hornby style review of what I’ve been reading for a while. I started one for all of 2014 then realized it was just a long tedious list and that I’d forgotten about lots of the books along the way. Instead, I’m going to do a monthly one. That’s one of my New Year’s resolutions.

Read

Bitch: In Praise of Difficult Women by Elizabeth Wurtzel

The Redbreast (Harry Hole, #3) by Jo Nesbo

The Dovekeepers by Alice Hoffman

Last Day in Vietnam by Will Eisner

Dogs and Water by Anders Nilsen

Nobrow 9: It’s Oh So Quiet by Alex Spiro

Minor Miracles by Will Eisner

Alice Munro’s Best: A Selection of Stories by Alice Munro

The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner

Showa 1939-1944: A History of Japan by Shigeru Mizuki

Unfinished

Cool Gray City of Love: 49 Views of San Francisco by Gary Kamiya

Lost in Mongolia: Rafting the World’s Last Unchallenged River by Colin Angus

The Sea Wolf by Jack London

Ulysses by James Joyce

War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy

I have once again failed to read Ulysses. It was my New Year’s resolution last year and I’m making it a resolution for 2015 too. Six years running. Maybe next year is the year. I started War and Peace while I was in Russia. The guidebook joked about it so I started it. I’m about three per cent of the way through. I remain optimistic that it won’t take me six years to read.

The other three unfinished books I just ran out of time for but I think they’ll be done by February. Fingers crossed. I like all of them though I try not to read The Sea Wolf on the Seabus.

My thoughts on Bitch in all it’s tremendous Ritalin addled horribleness have already been expressed at length. I will repeat that I hated this book and only finished it because I had to. Read one of her other books if you feel like trying Wurtzel out.

Jo Nesbo is an amazing writer whom I adore. I named my bike after one of his characters. I’m not going to tell you which. The Redbreast (Harry Hole, #3) finally came up as a hold from the library so I read my way through it. Even though he killed off a character I liked he was still up to his usual cleverness that keeps me coming back even though he is rude and kills off characters I like.

I bought The Dovekeepers by Alice Hoffman because I was dumb and left my ereader at home on a day off I was planning on ploughing through the horribleness that is Bitch. Instead, I had to go out and buy a book. After chatting with an employee at a local bookstore about how annoying it is that Neil Gaiman is constantly publishing brilliant work that one can never keep up with I decided to buy The Dovekeepers. One should read at least one Alice Hoffman book a year. It was the type of book that leaves you looking like you’re going to cry or beg someone for a hug in public places.

There are a few Will Eisner books I still haven’t read and I’m trying to work on that. That’s how I ended up with Last Day in Vietnam and Minor Miracles. They were good. Eisner was up to his old tricks in both. I should try harder to be more like Will Eisner and to push #wwwed.

I’ve previously read Rage of Poseidon by Anders Nilsen and it was really good. In one of my lacking self-control moments at the graphic novel section of the Burnaby Public Library I grabbed Dogs and Water. It was weird at times but good. If you’re into graphic novels he’s worth looking for.

I also picked up Nobrow 9: It’s Oh So Quiet by Alex Spiro because it looked cool. It was not cool. It was weird and horrible and a waste of paper. Live and learn.

After Alice Munro won the Nobel Price (all Canadians feel a warm glow and pride) I decided it was time to read her. I placed a hold on Alice Munro’s Best: A Selection of Stories at the library and since everyone else had come to the same conclusion as me I waited a long time before receiving a long and somewhat depressing volume that I had three weeks to read. I did not succeed. Fortunately my parents owned Alice Munro’s Best so I didn’t have to repeat the treacherous cycle. Her stories are good but not the type of thing you want to read more than one or two of at a time. It didn’t make it out to Vancouver with me so I made sure to finish it while home for the holidays.

Since The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner is a Rory Gilmore Reading Challenge Book Club selection I’ll write a separate post dedicated to it after discussing it with my sister.

I read the first edition of Showa back when I was living in Calgary and loved it. It’s taking them an annoyingly long time to translate them preventing me from just sitting down and reading them all in a row — I’m looking at you Drawn & Quarterly. Instead I had to wait and track it down at the friendly neighbourhood library in Metrotown. I actually spotted it back in October and never got around to reading it until now. Vol. 3 is out so I’ll have to track that down.

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Grey eyes

I grew up watching Practical Magic with my sister. I knew and loved it as a movie long before I realized that it was based off a book. There is much debate over whether or not books make good movies, and what you lose when you change plot points. At what point is storytelling more important than staying true to the book? Usually when you love the movie first it is easy to accept the changes, this is true of White Oleander, and it is also true ofPractical Magic.

The story is the same, more or less. The differences come more from the medium than the variations in plot — although the daughters are not a key part of the film. Hoffman’s writing is poignant and passionate. It is a book about sisters, growing up, and love. It is the kind of book that demands to be read until finished even if that means reading it while walking down the sidewalk to your bus stop or staying up until 2:00 a.m. on a week night. These are topics that everyone can relate to and despite being so universal are rarely so poignantly phrased. 

Practical Magic also leaves you with the undeniable, unmistakable feeling of a good story, good writing, and perfectly phrased sentences. Hoffman is good at writing and capturing relationships between people.

Gary knows this all sounds awfully stupid, but most things he’d say at this moment probably would.

Much like White Oleander this story leaves you breathless, excitable, and in its own ineffable way is everything a good story should be. Be it on the screen or on a page these stories are deeply enjoyable and meaningful. The mind will wander to them and every so often quotes from the book and clips on Youtube will be shared without a second thought.