Sunday, June 12, 2011

I Been Reading Some Books


Here's a list and some parts I like of them.

I just finished "Billy Dead" by Lisa Reardon. I immediately liked the main character, Ray. The entire book is told from his perspective and begins after his brother, the town asshole to say the least, has been murdered.

Here's an excerpt I like:

"Jean's handling the Malibu okay for the liquor she's had. We're quiet, hanging limp somewhere real nice, halfway between awake and passed out. The red dot of Jean's cigarette sits above the steering wheel. I watch it swoop through the dark toward her mouth. It flares for a second, then swoops back again. That's when the deer pops up from the pavement smack in front of the car. A doe, red eyes staring straight at me, froze solid.

"'Oh,' says the doe in a brown velvet voice. 'Oh, no.' Like her heart's broke at the thought of dying already. Her disappointment is soft, giving up, resigned to the death about to hit her. My foot slams into the floorboard, kicking for the brake."

Luckily the deer escapes, untouched. The subject matter of the book is a little hard to take, I'll admit. There's domestic violence and worse, much worse. But it's one of those works that isn't about the horrible things that are happening, but the way they're presented and the things that happen after which make it so good. The main character is so well done I miss him already, and I about cried once or twice.

Also in rotation for the last couple of months is "The Bloody Chamber", a collection of loosely related short stories by the amazing Angela Carter. I'll never be done saying how much I love this woman's writing. She's the first author I've read where I regularly stop and shake my head at how well she can put a sentence together. Her skill is the kind that simultaneously inspires and depresses because it is just that good.

The following is from the story, "The Lady of the House of Love", which is like a mix of Nosferatu and Snow White:

"She rises when the sun sets and goes immediately to her table where she plays her game of patience until she grows hungry, until she becomes ravenous. She is so beautiful she is unnatural; her beauty is an abnormality, a deformity, for none of her features exhibit any of those touching imperfections that reconcile us to the imperfection of the human condition. Her beauty is a symptom of her disorder, of her soullessness."

If you've ever seen In the Company of Wolves you know the type of stories to expect from Angela Carter, as that movie is based off a story in this book. I also have a collection called "Burning Your Boats" which is definitely worth picking up.

Two eBooks I've been impressed all to hell with are "We, the Drowned" and "Touch".

"We, the Drowned" is "an epic tale about a small village by the sea" that spans a generation or two, at least, beginning in 1848 in Denmark. It reminds me of a collection of oral histories centering around Albert Madsen, beginning with tall tales of his father, following through with stories of his childhood and adventures as a young man sailing the world in search of his father, through the First World War, and beyond. I'm about halfway through on page 285. I love the stories in this book; I get seasick and I feel like I have hardcore sailing experience, and I love a book that spans a character's entire life. It feels like I've grown up with Albert, and I'm sad that at the current point in the book he's an old man.

"Touch" has turned out to be great, albeit accidental, companion book to "We, The Drowned". It has the same oral history feel to it, but this time the subject is a logging town in Canada, founded tamed by the narrator's grandfather. This book is full of powerful moments, realistic and otherwise; from the story of how hundreds of birds suddenly flew into the shack of a man about to starve to death after his dog seemingly calls to them by singing, to the sudden childhood loss of the narrator's father and sister after they fall into the iced-over river. I'm loving the realistic yet dreamlike quality of this book.

As these are both eBooks I've been reading for some time, getting excerpts is going to be too much of a pain. Just head to your local Barnes and Nobel or take my word for it and pick them up. If you have to pick one between the two, I'd go with "Touch".

Books, electronic or otherwise, are cheap and wonderful. Go out and get a couple. Give your passive entertainment a break for a while, exercise your brain, expand your horizons and your vocabulary. Then challenge someone at Scrabble or Words With Friends (I'm DavidCrake, btw) and show off all your work.

 - David

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