Friday, April 6, 2012

April Comes In Like A Mouse

158. Life in a Day by Doris Grumbach

159. Orson Welles: Volume 2-Hello Americans by Simon Callow

160. Sanctuaries of the Woods by Hilde Hoefnagels

161. To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf

162. A World of Light by May Sarton

163. Divine Invasions: A Biography of Philip K. Dick by Lawrence Sutin

Friday, March 30, 2012

The End of March

146. Facing the Music by Larry Brown

147. The Magnificent Ambersons by V. J. Perkins

A look at the Orson Welles film

148. Kink by Kathe Koje

I meant to read her way back when.  Disappointing.

149. Aliens 4 by Theodore Sturgeon

150. The Beyonders by Manly Wade Wellman

Very enjoyable, if minor, alien invasion novel.  Kind of like a Larry McMurtry scifi book.

151. Childhood's End by Arthur C. Clarke

OK but a letdown after decades of hype.

152. The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath

Ditto.

153. Shadows of Fear edited by David G. Hartwell

154. Killing Time by Donald Westlake

155. The Green Ripper by John D. MacDonald

156. A Billion Days of Earth by Doris Piserchia

157. The Year's Best Horror Stories edited by Karl Edward Wagner

I should be on #250 by now if I'm going to get to 1000 this year.  At this rate, will be lucky to get to 750.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

March Continues With the Going On-ness

More writing this week, tens of thousands of words pouring out, and good ones, too.  Very happy with my writing for once.  I don't want to slack off on the reading, though, so I am finding the balance.  I don't know if I'll get to 1000 books this year, but I think I've been over that, and will just keep at it as long as it takes.

135. MY READING LIFE by Pat Conroy

I could have done with the long cry over what the evil North did to the saintly South--I think he gave that little matter of slavery half a sentence, and nothing at all for the valiant South's desire to have slavery in the new territories, but Southerners always seem to forget that part--and Conroy sure does complain about his father a lot.  But he expresses his love for books well, and I wish I could have gone to a few of those book parties.

136. THE YEAR'S BEST SCIENCE FICTION #20 - edited by Gardner Dozois

I'm starting to think I don't really like science fiction.

137. CALL IT EXPERIENCE by Erskine Caldwell

A writer's memoir that spends a little too much time detailing his moves around the country, and not enough on what he did there.  The first mention of a close relationship with a woman comes many pages in, and he's already got kids with her!

138. PLANT DREAMING DEEP by May Sarton

Terrific memoir of a solitary life.  Would have driven me up a wall not long ago, but can't get enough of her thoughts on living alone--see below.

139. GREAT WORLD CIRCUS by William Kotzwinkle

Magical, somewhat inscrutable fantasy.

140. AN ARMFUL OPF WARM GIRL by W.M. Spackman

141. EMPEROR OF THE AIR by Ethan Canin

Reread some of these, read others for the first time.  Still my favorite of his work.

142. JOURNAL OF A SOLITUDE by May Sarton

143. SONS OF DARKNESS - edited by Michael Rowe

144. DAUGHTERS OF DARKNESS - edited by Pat Keesey

145. DARK ANGELS - edited by Pat Keesey

Gay and lesbian vampires.  I don't know what I was thinking, either, but I blew through these, to coin a phrase, rapidly, and didn't get a rise out of any of 'em.  So I guess I'm not into gay vampires, or, shockingly, lesbian ones.

Friday, March 16, 2012

March Goes On

I went into this because I wanted to invigorate my writing, and so it shouldn't surprise me that I've been reading less and writing more.  That isn't going to divert me from my goal, but it is one of the things that makes it harder to reach 1000 by 2013.  I guess my goal should really be just to burrow my way through 1000 book as rapidly as I can, so I can get all the junky books and unread good stuff out of the way.

(This is the true purpose of all this--I have too many unread books.)

So I am up to clsoe to 65k in my new book, and am not reading as much, but it is a good exchange.

130. THE LAST MAN ON EARTH edited by Isaac Asimov and Martin H. Greenberg

Good collection of stories about one of my favorite SF subject (and a lot of people's least-favorite, I was surprised to learn).  The standout is by Edmund Hamilton called "In the World's Dusk," which is close to being a Clark Ashton Smith fantasy.  Also includes "The Underdweller," my favorite William F. Nolan.  This is going for big bucks on Amazon.

131. STORIES OF YOUR LIFE  by Ted Chiang

This guy is phenomenal.  Each story is good, but "Tower of Babylon" (which I'd read before) is one of the great stories of the past couple of decades.  The title story is innovative and sad, about a woman whose mind is altered as she tries to learn an alien language, so she can see into the future...I'll leave it at that.  Just read this one.

132. THE MEDIUM IS THE MASSAGE (sic) by Marshall McLuhan

133. THE YEAR'S BEST SCIENCE FICTION #19 edited by Gardner Dozois

134. THE APOCALYPSE NOW BOOK by Peter Cowie

Saturday, March 10, 2012

March

123. SLAN by A.E. Van Vogt (classic pulp SF, starts off well, droops in final stretch)

124. MEET ME AT INFINITY by James Tiptree, Jr. (I can't stand these parenthetical blurbs)

This is a collection of short stories and nonfiction by Alice Sheldon, who wrote as Tiptree during the feminist 60s on.  Not the best of her stuff, but I find her fascinating.

125. THE DARK COUNTRY by Dennis Etchison

Sharp, dark horror stories, horror-noirish in that he doesn't spend a lot of time on character but on the dark and horrible things happening to these people.  Zombies working at the corner store and a horrible opening sentence involving an eye.

126. THE FAITH OF A WRITER by Joyce Carol Oates

Fine observations about the obsessions of writers.

127. THE MAN WHO FELL TO EARTH by Walter Tevis

One of the best books of the marathon so far.  Much better than the overpraised movie, and the character is much easier to grasp.  In the end he doesn't seem jaded, as in the movie, but lost.

128. IN THE STACKS edited by Michael Cart

Good idea--stories about libraries--gone horribly wrong.

129. DISTANT STARS by Samuel R. Delany

Short stories, including a cool little fantasy, that, as good as they are, are in second-place to SRD's introduction about writing.  Great Michael Whelan cover, too.  Good short SF.



Saturday, March 3, 2012

The List: Books Read from February 1-29, 2012

86. Wondrous Beginnings ed. M.H. Greenberg (fantasy writers have the worst first stories)

87. Nancy Drew and the Flying Saucer Mystery by Caroline Keene (girls like this stuff?)

88. Entertainment by Algis Budrys

89. The Divine Invasion  by Philip K. Dick (big letdown, but he's still awesome)

90. Rod Serling's Other Worlds (includes The Underdweller, my  favorite William F. Nolan story)

91. Hallowed Be The Extreme by John Cunnings (beward of books with 'extreme' in the title)

92. The Cranes That Built The Cranes by Jeremy Dyson

93. Live Girls by Beth Nugent (a lot of 'edgy' fiction just dribbles away in the end)

94. The Golden Ass by Apuleius

95. Day of the Locust by Nathaniel West

96. City of Glass by Paul Auster (liked it, usually kind of thing I hate i.e. something by Paul Auster)

97. Boomerang by Barry Hannah (outstanding memoir-as-fiction or something)

98. Tours of the Black Clock by Steve Erickson (the best half-book writer around)

99. The Air-Conditioned Nightmare by Henry Miller (thought this was 100...ah shit...)

100. Wasp by Eric Frank Russell (cool scifi about a terrorist)

101. Phase IV by Barry N. Malzberg (makes more sense than the movie)

102. Year's Best Horror X by Karl Edward Wagner

103. Year's Best Horror XI

104. XII

105. IX

106. VI

107. VII

108. All-Night Visitors by Clarence Major (angry black stuff...kept saying "Don't hit me!" as I read)

109. Darkside ed. by J. Pelan (some truly disgusting stuff, not really horror...yuckaroony...)

110. Great Tales of Suspense (Waterhill Classics)

111. IN DREAMS BEGIN RESPONSIBILITIES BY DELMORE SCHWARTZ (find of the marathon!)

112. Spaceman Blues by B.F. Slattery

113. The Other World by John Wynne (dark packaging generally disappoints)

114. My Name is Legion by Roger Zelazny (ok RZ, not his best...will get to that)

115. The Last Lecture by Randy Pausch (just cuz you're dying doesn't make you a good writer)

116. Our Children's Children by Clifford D. Simak (neither does being dead)

117. Thunder on the LEft by Christopher Morley (GREAT writing, need to read again)

118. Stop-Time by Frank Conroy (outstanding memoir)

119. Horrible Beginnings by Martin H. Greenberg (best of the "beginnings" series)

120. Et Tu, Babe by Mark Leyner (smart, fast, gets tediously smart, fast)

121. Dusk by James Salter

122. Slan by A.E. Van Vogt

Somewhere I lost three books...but that brings us up to date.  Us?

Friday, March 2, 2012

The List: Books Read from January 1-31, 2012

1. The Stochastic Man by Robert Silverberg

2. The Futurological Congress by Stanislaw Lem

3. The Sword of Rhiannon by Leigh Brackett

4. Uncle Vanya by Anton Chekov

5. A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens

6. Cosmicomics by Italo Calvino

7. The Big Kerplop! by Bertrand Brindley

8. The Best Short Stories of J.G. Ballard

9. The Golden Gizmo by Jim Thompson

10. The Digger's Game by George V. Higgins

11. Woodcuts of Women by Dagoberto Gilb

12. Playboy of the Western World and Riders to the Sea by J.M. Synge

13. Oedipus Rex by Sophocles

14. Srendi Vashtar and Other Stories by Saki

15. Ray by Barry Hannah

16. The Moonlit Road and Other Stories by Ambrose Bierce

17. Monarch Notes: David Copperfield (It is so a book, shut up!)

18. The Man Who Would Be King by Rudyard Kipling

19. The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam

20. The Overcoat and Other Stories by Nikolai Gogol

21. Selections from the Journals by Henry David Thoreau

22. Empathy by Sarah Schulman

23. The Open Door by Floyd Skloot (It's his name.  Good book, too.)

24. Early Poems by Ezra Pound

25. Poems and Songs by Robert Burns

26. Selections from Flowers of Evil by Charles Baudelaire

27. An Empty Room by Talitha Stevenson (bad Brit pretentious crap about screwing--boo!)

28. The Elephant's Child and Others by Rudyard Kipling

29. How the Leopard Got Its Spots and Others by Rudyard Kipling (needed these after #27)

30. Contemporary Short Stories edited by Somebody MacDougal

31. Dr. Faustus by Christopher Marlowe

32. You Know Me, Al by Ring Lardner

33. Classic Mystery Stoeis edited by Somebody Green (this must've been my Dover sweep)

34. Recognition of Salantala by Kalidasa (oh yeah, I wouldn't have paid more'n a buck for that--Dover)

35. Prometheus Bound by Aeschylus  (A lotta talking about how hard it is to be chained to a rock)

36. Lysistrata by Aristophenes

37. Beowulf--can't believe no one's taken credit for this, this was pretty good!

38. The Time Machine by H. G. Wells

39. 1985 World's Best SF edited by Donald Wolheim

40. Confessions of an English Opium Eater by Thomas DeQuincy (sure gets the gabbiness right)

41. Crampton by Thomas Ligotti (first time Ligotti's let me down, bad X-Files-ish nothing)

42. All My Sins Remembered by Joe Haldeman (bummer ending!  Very 70's SF)

43. At Home in Milford by Jan Karon (just don't ask, okay?)

44. 8 Plus 1 by Robert Cormier

45. Overexposed by David Thomson

46. Cowboys Are My Weakness by Pam Houston (Lifetime movies about cowboys are your weakness)

47. The Wasp Factory by Ian Banks (heard how weird this was for years, but kind of a letdown)

48. Impossible Things by Connie Willis (have been a fan of her stories for years, novels not so much)

49. Another Marvelous Thing by Lorrie Colwin

50. Vanity of Duluoz by Jack Kerouac (not a big finish for Jack's career, but not bad)

51. Adrift in a Vanishing City by Vincent Czyz (Czyz...Czyz...Czyz...Not as much fun as Anthony Weiner)

52. Sturgeon is Alive and Well by Theodore Sturgeon ("Crate" is one of the best short stories ever)

53. Long After Midnight by Ray Bradbury (beginning a held-over series of Bradbury)

54. Pale Fire by Vladimir Nabokov (fucked up in a good way--and I think I even understood it)

55. The Hot Rock by Donald Westlake (one of the few writers who never disappoints)

56. That Old Cape Magic by Richard Russo (awful sitcom-level humor)

57. Dancing After Hours by Andre Dubus (Dubus short stories never disappoint, either)

58. Ghosts by John Banville

59. Asa, As I Knew Him by Sussanna Kaysen (would have been OK if it didn't get artsy retarded)

60. The Night (Alone) by Richard Meltzer (absolutely friggin awful)

61. I Knew A Phoenix by May Sarton  (not as much fun as when she's older and a shut-in)

62. The Doors of His Face, the Lamps of His Mouth by Roger Zelazny (always good in short story form)

63. Holy Christ only on 63? 

63. The Muller-Fokker Effect by John Sladek (post/sub-Vonnegut/Dick weirdness, clever but no fun)

64. Down and Out in Paris and London by George Orwell (you can feel the dirt in those Brit restaurants)

65. The Halloween Tree by Ray Bradbury

66. The Illustrated Man by Ray Bradbury

67. R is for Rocket by Ray Bradbury (I meant the dining areas, not just the kitchens...ah forget it)

68. On an Odd Note by Gerald Kersh (odd stories)

69. The Stars in Shroud by Gregory Benford (aliens use weapon that makes humans into pack rats)

70.Wooden Star by William Tenn (my arms are killing me, I gotta break at 75)

71. The Wonderful World of Robert Sheckley (course everyone breaks at 75, why not be original?)

72. All the Traps of Earth by Clifford D. Simak

73. The Best of Clifford D. Simak

74. The Green Hills of Earth by Robert Heinlein (haven't read much of  his but will read more this year)

75. The Island of Dr. Death and Other Stories and Other Stories by Gene Wolfe (not a typo)

76. Earth is Room Enough by Isaac Asimov (one of the first books I ever owned, given to me by my father)

77. If the River Was Whiskey by T. C. Boyle (I might as well do all of January at least)

78. House of Heroes by Mary LaChapelle

79. Airships by Barry Hannah

80. Don't Look Now by Daphne DuMaurier

81. The Coast of Chicage by Stuart Dybeck (recommended by a woman who didn't give me a second date)

82. Scholars and Soldiers by Mary Gentle (blech!  What garbage, can't anyone write a good fantasy story?)

83. Ballad of the Sad Cafe by Carson McCullers (awesome title story, but others are good, too)

84. Budrys Inferno by Algis Budrys (not so good shorts by a master)

85. The Year's Best Fantasy #3 edited by David Hartwell (must've been a lame year)

86. Magical Beginnings edited by Martin H. Greenberg (I ran into her again a month or so later, was weird)