Still, Logan has some interesting things to say about the excitement and potential of an unread book.
Sometimes I hold these books in my hands and imagine what I will learn from them. These books have affected my writing, and I haven’t even read them. Maybe we can learn as much from our expectations of a story as we can from the actual words on the page.Frankly, I rarely think about the unexplored worlds of unturned pages. Occasionally, I am overjoyed by what I find. For instance, there was the sensation of being blown to bloody smithereens when I finally read The Catcher in the Rye
But, for the most part, I am constantly nagged by the growing list of books I feel I should read. This reader's guilt grows from arrows shot my way from years in academia, lists of "Top 100 Must-Reads" from media critics, and, okay I'll admit it, the enticing cover art and blurbs on newly-acquired books. I spend my days swimming against the flood of books flowing into my house, struggling to keep up with the demands of review assignments and the whims of my wandering attention span which pull me toward one book or another. "Look, here's a new translation of Tolstoy! And, my oh my, doesn't that new Elmore Leonard look tasty?" I really want to read Ulysses
Here then, are those books currently residing on my very dusty shelves which have been begging me for years to take them down and crack their spines. I've divided the list into two parts between the established canon and those more recent (i.e., within the past 40 years) books which have piqued and tweaked my interest. I've also added a section for fresher books--those released in the last few years. It's an eclectic list populated by authors I've yet to meet, with only a few exceptions--Joyce, Cather, Nabokov, Proulx. (Note: when I say "Anything by...", I really mean "Something by..."). They're in roughly the order of my desire to read them.
The Classics
Ulysses
Lolita
Anything by Marcel Proust
The Woman in White
The Stories of John Cheever
The Complete Works of Isaac Babel
Portnoy's Complaint
Anything by P.G. Wodehouse
The Heart is a Lonely Hunter
The Red Badge of Courage
Anything by Thomas Hardy
Death Comes for the Archbishop
An American Tragedy
Jane Eyre
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
Lord of the Flies
Fahrenheit 451
Anything by JRR Tolkien
Nineteen Eighty-Four
Little Big
Frankenstein
Dracula
Gone With the Wind
The Grapes of Wrath
Vanity Fair
Dead Souls
Robinson Crusoe
A Separate Peace
Anything by Sinclair Lewis
Anything by Upton Sinclair
Riders of the Purple Sage
Recent Releases
A Confederacy of Dunces
Anything by Marilynne Robinson
Everything is Illuminated
Among the Missing
Half in Love
Close Range
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
Anything by Chuck Palahniuk
A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius
House of Leaves
Plainsong
Bright Lights, Big City
Anything by James Ellroy
Middlesex
For the Relief of Unbearable Urges
Master and Commander
White Teeth
Anything by Margaret Atwood
Europe Central
Life of Pi
Deliverance
Ship Fever
The Fortress of Solitude
The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
Possession
The Known World
The French Lieutenant's Woman
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?
Waiting
She's Come Undone
Wicked
New-ish Releases
Everything Ravaged, Everything Burned
The New Valley
The Language of Elk
The Ask
Sunnyside
As you can see, I'm in desparate need of sudden wealth, unlimited time, and a desert island.
So what about you? What books have you been meaning to get around to....someday? Post your list in the comment section below.
David, I love a lot of those.
ReplyDeleteBut take my advice and move Lolita to the top of the list. Now.
Nabokov's prose is the kind that makes you simultaneously burn with the desire to create something just like it and melt with the tragedy of knowing it can't be equaled.
Will do, PC. That's a great endorsement for "Lolita."
ReplyDeleteOkay, Vlad the Impaler just kicked Joyce's skinny little ass to the curb.