A big part of the reason that I love this novel is that it was very difficult for me to get into it and to finally finish it, which is particularly embarrassing because someone I know had the same problem with One Hundred Years of Solitude and I gave them a lot of grief about it. If you are already a Gabriel Garcia Marquez fan, you probably already have read and love this novel, but if not I urge you to read all of it -- short stories, novels, and non-fiction. And this is not the novel to start with; you have to build up to Love in the Time of Cholera, but it is such a rich and rewarding experience, when you finally get there.
The Bookhive List: 'One Hundred Years of Solitude' by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
People who took four years of high school Spanish will tell you that you can't really appreciate Gabriel Garcia Marquez in English translation. These people probably heard this from their Spanish teacher and now whip it out at parties as a kind of intellectual gauntlet-throw-slash-conversation-ender. Gently remind these assholes that Gabriel Garcia Marquez read many of his favorite authors via translation, including those whose influence is most strongly felt in his work, like Virginia Woolf and William Faulkner. And to say this about Gabo and not every other author who doesn't write in English is truly insulting.
Read One Hundred Years of Solitude, please, in whatever language you prefer. Besides being one of the greatest family epics ever written, it is also the quintessential magical-realism novel. It is beautiful and it is very affecting and despite what the wannabe Spanish snobs might tell you, it is a worthwhile endeavor even in English.
The Bookhive List is a weekly recommendation of my all-time favorite, must-read books.
Books on Love, Part II: Optimists Version
Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston -- My favorite thing about this novel is that I read it in school and in our discussion it quickly became obvious that everyone had a completely different opinion on which man was Janie Crawford's one true love. This one's all about love as life-long journey.
Middlemarch by George Eliot -- Three different central love stories, each very distinct. Everyone has their favorite, and Fred Vincy's struggle to demonstrate his worth to Mary is definitely mine. Not just a great love story, one of the best novels ever written.
The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton -- Does not qualify for everyone's definition of a "love story," but I think there's something really beautiful and admirable about the central relationship between Newland Archer and his wife May Welland. Her cousin the Countess Olenska shows up and Newland wastes about 400 pages in a cloud of passion and lust but still marries May in the end; they have a very long, happy marriage and several lovely children. Some people hate this ending, but I'm a huge fan of it because it feels very possible, plus, Winona Ryder is May Welland in the film adaptation and I will never not take her side.
Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez -- A widow revisits her first love after the death of her husband and the results are beautiful and sad. There is a stillness to this novel that absolutely knocks you to the floor.
Harry Potter series by J.K. Rowling -- Because there is no greater literary love than the slow-burning relationship between [SPOILER ALERT] Hermione Granger and Ron Weasley. She gives him up to fight the greatest darkness the world has ever known and a part of me was secretly mad that she didn't divorce him before the epilogue scene.
Persuasion by Jane Austen -- Because there has to be a Jane Austen on the list and this one is very quietly the best Jane Austen novel.
Book Trailers: 'Norwegian Wood' by Haruki Murakami
The 2014 Nobel Prize for Literature will be announced later this week and Haruki Murakami is by far the favorite. The Japanese author published an extraordinary new novel in August, and just recently dropped a new short story, just for the heck of it; that only adds to his already impressive oeuvre, including the blockbuster IQ84, one of the most talked-about novels in recent years.
My experience with his writing goes back quite a bit further to Norwegian Wood, his first novel that skyrocketed him to literary fame in Japan, so much so that he left the country in order to work in peace. When a friend started dating a girl from Japan, I interrogated her immediately on its popularity, and she confirmed that just about everyone reads it as a teen, maybe comparable to The Catcher in the Rye in America. Although she admitted, it's not exactly age-appropriate because of all the sex and suicide and whatnot. I saw the trailer for the film adaptation via Hollister Hovey and was struck by the incredible aesthetics of it, along with the Johnny Greenwood score (of Radiohead fame, and the composer/musician responsible for the scores of 'The Master' and 'There Will Be Blood,' two of my favorite movies). So I read the novel, with the primary objective of seeing the movie afterward, but also because Murakami was very much "on my list" and this seemed as good a reason as any to check it out.
It makes for a quick but emotionally intense read; I'm reading Alice Munro these days and her stories remind me of the Norwegian Wood experience of diving head first into a very intense but short-lived narrative. It is considered to be Murakami's most straight-forward narrative, so it is not necessarily indicative of what to expect from his more recent novels. I should mention also that he is very involved in the translation of his work from Japanese to English, so this is not one of those instances when your college friends tell you that it simply isn't the same if you can't read it in Japanese (Gabriel Garcia Marquez read French and Russian literature translated into Spanish and it didn't hurt him any, just sayin').
If melancholy and teenage suicide and manic pixie dream girls aren't really your cup of tea, this might not be for you, but it is really beautiful and sad and gorgeous, and if you're like me, it will make you crave good noodles constantly.
The Better Beach Read
I have always hated the phrase "beach read," and the notion it represents, that somehow your vacation is the only appropriate time for pleasure reading or genre fiction. It seems like the kind of unrealistic trope that is exacerbated by magazines, like you should buy some sunglasses based on your "face shape" and a swim suit that emphasizes your "small bust" and get a "beach read" for your vacation. I have a tendency to bring on vacation any book on my TBR list that is compact and lightweight, i.e. paperback, and there is usually no rhyme or reason to it. That said, I can concede that people often want good books for vacation time with the implication being that they'll be sitting in a hammock, on a beach, or poolside for long stretches of time and need a book that they can really disappear into. Thus, the following, my recommendations for beach books this summer:
Read moreThis Week in Books: the Ethics of Shelving, Authors on the Internet
I loved this article from The Atlantic about shelving books in book stores. They actually call out the common Gabriel Garcia Marquez foible (I have actually pointed this out to a grateful book store employee before; in the 'M's people!).
Marja Mills' new pseudo-biography of Harper Lee came out on Tuesday and has been getting tons of press. Harper Lee herself has been against the publication, which she deems "unauthorized," and she reiterated her sentiments this week.
Flavorwire had a nice round-up this week of "The 35 Writers Who Run the Literary Internet." Some of these I strongly agree with (Teju Cole, Roxane Gay), and others I'm very ambivalent about (the number of Twitter followers does not equate with quality level). However, if you're new to the world of contemporary authorship on the Internet, this is a good place to start. Add a few of the mentioned Tumblrs to your RSS feed to become better acquainted (and don't forget that most of these folks have actually physical books that were recently published, if you're a total ludite).