When I heard the screen door slam, I knew she was gone. I made it to the window just in time to see Joni Mitchellโs big yellow taxi pulling away and sweet, little 2005, waving at me from the back window. She had on my favorite โDay of the Deadโ T-shirt, and the hussy was smiling! The note on the TV said โSee you if Iโm ever back this way.โ Well, she wonโt be back, but she did give me some good books. Here is a list of the โ10 Keepers.โ
No Country for Old Men by Cormac McCarthy
New York: Alfred A. Knoph
$24.95 โ 309 pages
This dark parable comes in the guise of a noir thriller with all the trappings of a Jim Thompson novel. On the surface, it is about a drug deal gone bad, the desperate flight of the doomed, and the pursuit of a vengeful killer. However, at a deeper level, this tale concerns the collapse of the American Dream and the rapid approach of something akin to judgment and/or apocalypse.
Shakespeare: The Biography by Peter Ackroyd
New York: Doubleday & Company
$32.50 โ 572 pages
Yes, it is too long and it is repetitious. It is also marred by Ackroydโs fits of adulation for his subject. However, the authorโs extensive research is truly astonishing. In addition, many of the traditional concepts of Shakespeareโs life are either revised or demolished as a consequence of Ackroydโs findings. Finally, the descriptions of 16th century London are unforgettable โ especially in terms of the Elizabethan love of ritual and spectacle as it is reflected in the theatre.
Gilgamesh edited by Stephen Mitchell
New York: Free Press
$24 โ 290 pages
Before Samson, before Hercules, before Thor โ there was Gilgamesh. This epic is the story of literatureโs first hero. Part god and part mortal, Gilgamesh is capable of astonishing feats, yet he must die. In a desperate attempt to avoid his fate, he makes a journey to the end of the Earth where he hopes to acquire immortality. Translated by Stephen Mitchell, the quest of Gilgamesh reads like a disturbing parable of Iraq and America.
The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini
New York: The Berkley Publishing Group (Paperback)
$14 โ 371 pages
This novel about guilt and redemption sparked the creation of hundreds of discussion groups throughout the United States, and is undoubtedly destined for the movies. After betraying his half-brother and escaping Afghanistan, Amir finds his life in California haunted by guilt. When he discovers โa way to be good again,โ he decides to make a harrowing journey back to his devastated homeland to find Hassan, the kite runner. It is a search that could cost him his life.
Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro
New York: Alfred A Knopf
$24 โ 288 pages
Hailsham, nestled away in the rural English countryside, is a very special school. Certainly, the students are โspecial.โ Kathy, the narrator of this darkly poignant tale knows that she and her classmates are being prepared for โserviceโ to mankind. Little by little, Kathy (and the reader) learns just what that service is. In the world of โdonorโ surgery, Never Let Me Go is a very โtimelyโ novel in fact, Hailsham may already exist.
Haunted by Chuck Palahniuk
New York: Doubleday & Company
$24.95 โ 404 pages
In my humble opinion, Palahniuk is the most imaginative, audacious, shocking and humorous writer in America. This bizarre plot (a writersโ retreat in an abandoned theatre) reads like an anthology of Hitchcock, Rod Serling, and Stephen King with a generous helping of urban myths thrown in for โbrio.โ (If you are easily offended, donโt go near this book!)
Fleshmarket Alley by Ian Rankin
New York: Little, Brown & Company
$22.95 โ 432 pages
Anyone who is a fan of murder mysteries has probably sampled Ian Rankinโs โtartan noirโ collection. The appeal of these books is mostly due to the unique character of the morose and alcoholic protagonist, John Rebus, an aging warrior (police inspector) who suffers from perpetual burnout. In this latest offering (there are at least twelve โRebus novelsโ), John searches for a murderer in the dark streets of Edinburgh while listening to heavy metal bands and suffering bouts of unrequited lust for his associate, the lovely Siobhan Clarke.
Strange Affair by Peter Robinson
New York: William Morrow
$24.95 โ 368 pages
Like Ian Rankinโs John Rebus, Peter Robinsonโs police inspector, Alan Banks is also a glum, hard-drinking law officer. Well, it is little wonder. He has been abandoned by both his wife and his lover, his house has been burned by an arsonist and now, his brother has vanished, leaving only a cryptic message on Alanโs answering machine. Alanโs search leads to the 9/ll disaster and the disquieting discovery that his brotherโs life โchangedโ that day.
Windblown World: The Journals of Jack Kerouac edited by Douglas Brinkley
New York: Viking Press
$25.95 โ 387 pages
If there was ever any doubt about the profound influence of Thomas Wolfe on Kerouac, these journals should resolve the issue. Written while Kerouac was completing The Town and the City, Kerouac confesses his fears and frustrations in a diary format. He also plans his future, dreams and rants. It is a fascinating glimpse into Kerouacโs personal life. Most interesting of all is two unpublished pieces, โRain and Riversโ and โTales of Rainy Nights.โ Thank you, Douglas Brinkley.
New Stories from the Old South edited by Shannon Ravenel
Chapel Hill: Algonguin
$13.95 (paperback) โ 309 pages
Over the last two decades, Shannon Ravenelโs annual collection of โthe best in the Southโ has won critical acclaim. Certainly, the nineteen selected authors for 2005 looks like a Southern Whoโs Who. Dennis LaHaneโs โUntil Gwenโ is guaranteed to make those short hairs on the back of your neck tingle! Janice Daughertyโs โDumdumโ filled me with nostalgia for R. C. Colas and moon pies. Kevin Wilsonโs โThe Choir Directorโs Affairโ sent me to the dictionary to see what a โsplit uvulaโ is. Now I know!
