Tag Archives: Jonathan Franzen

What Are You Reading?

Photo by Petar Milosevic

Photo by Petar Milosevic

Spring is here again, and there’s no better way to celebrate than by digging out that old bunny costume from underneath your bed and walking the streets in it smoking a carrot and handing out to random passersby plastic eggs with cryptic messages inside like “Why does Dolly always get to lick the spines on brackish mackerel night?”

Hmmm…not sure where that…

Hey, what’s the SECOND best way to celebrate Spring?

By reading a good book outdoors, of course.

Here’s what I’ve been reading recently under the emergent sun: the stunning allegorical YA novel Challenger Deep, by Neal Shusterman, about a teen’s battle with mental illness; Purity by Jonathan Franzen, about a millennial’s search for herself and her parents’ true identities in a hyper-connected world; and Nothing to Envy, by Barbara Demick, about successful defectors from North Korea who survived its brutal famine of the mid to late 1990’s.

So that’s me, what have YOU been reading these days?

What Are You Reading?

Photo by Lienhard Schulz

First let’s take a moment to share a collective gasp over the stunning fact that we’re already seven months into the year 2012. What happened? And why so fast?

Well, what better way to cauterize the pain as we stagger into these remaining dog days than a discussion about what you’ve read this summer so far and what you’re looking forward to reading in the Fall. Are your reading habits different depending on the season? Do you reserve your guilty pleasures for Memorial Day through Labor Day Weekend? I.E., are you chained, right now, literally, to the Fifty Shades of Grey trilogy? Has this been your Summer of S&M, and come September 5th you’ll be wrapping the naughty books up in your white clothes and burying everything in the backyard?

While I haven’t had the pleasure, guilty or otherwise, of reading Fifty Shades, I wouldn’t save it for the summer. I pretty much read whatever no matter the time of year. Although I tend to stick exclusively with literary fiction, I changed things up recently and read Mark Haskell Smith’s Heart of Dankness, a riveting narrative nonfiction work exploring the Cannabis Cup in Amsterdam and the medical marijuana industry in California. Then I dove into John le Carre’s spy-thriller Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy before returning to familiar ground with Jonathan Franzen’s latest “how we live now” novel Freedom. Next up was the YA novel Dark Eden by Patrick Carman, about a group of kids involved in a therapeutic experiment of questionable ethics, and am now currently reading A Visit From The Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan, which won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 2011.

This Fall I’m looking forward to Ian McEwan’s Sweet Tooth, Antoine Wilson’s Panorama City (by the way, I also recommend you check out his first novel, The Interloper) and Barbara Kingsolver’s Flight Behavior.

So what have you read this summer, what are you reading now, and what are you looking forward to in the coming Autumn months?

An Important Question

Photo from US Navy

It’s been awhile since I’ve asked this of anyone, but what the hell: would you mind looking at this strange growth on my—wait, hold up, mixed up my notes.

This post is about reading. Yes, that’s right.  So, what are you reading right now? What are you planning to read this year?

Me, I’m currently navigating through Moby-Dick for our book group, and excerpts from two novels being workshopped in my writer’s group. After Melville I’ll get back into Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins (I’m a little over halfway home there), and then plan on diving into The Book of Lost Things, by John Connelly. From there it’s finally time to open Drood, by Dan Simmons.

Also on the 2012 to-read list are Affliction, by Russell Banks, Freedom, by Jonathan Franzen, and The Book Thief, by Markus Zusak.  Then there’s State of Wonder, by Ann Patchett and The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake, by Aimee Bender.

Hopefully, I can get these (and more?) in between my writing projects. Of course, to quote Stephen King, “If you don’t have time for reading, you don’t have time for writing.” And if you disagree, he will fight you.

Send me your lists!