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Read into it what you
will
This list includes only
titles I’ve reviewed, so apologetic nods go to fascinating books I
never got around to writing about, such as Gillian Rose’s Love’s
Work, Julia Leigh’s The Hunter, and James Kelman’s A
Disaffection. Sadface too for the absence of books like Adam
Mars-Jones’s Cedilla and Edward St Aubyn’s At Last.
(No, I didn’t have a no aristos rule.) Oh, a note relating to
the squeezing of time this year: more than half of these books have
fewer than 160 pages. And yes, I’ve gone over the twelve. I always do.
Richard Beard: Lazarus is Dead
This list is alphabetical by author, but if I had to choose my
favourite new book of the year, it would be this one; this one would be
it. (Mirroring; that’s a clue, you see.) It ticked all my hard-to-reach
boxes, with its straight face, twinkly eye, but untongued cheek. It’s a
novel, it’s a biography, it’s a study in fiction and storytelling, and
it’s got Jesus. It deserves to be massively popular.
John Burnside: A Summer of Drowning
I had lost my way with John Burnside’s early fiction (in truth, he says
that he lost his way with it), but the clamour of praise for
his latest novel became impossible to ignore. I read the book just to
shut it up. It’s a whispering, creepy, insistent horror story, set in
darkest northest Norway, which plays with what artists do and whether
it is right or not that “to refuse oneself is exemplary.”
Italo Calvino: Mr Palomar
This was a book I never finished on my first love affair with Calvino
15 or 20 years ago. I now see why: it’s a tricky little thing, the
oddest of character studies told in philosophical musings, with
beautiful prose (thank you, translator William Weaver) that is not just
decorative. It is also as intricate structurally as a Chinese puzzle
ball. An Italian puzzle book, then.
Anne Enright: The Forgotten Waltz
I was told this year, with apparent relish, that Enright’s The
Gathering was the lowest-selling Booker winner of the last decade.
This meaningless factoid (is it even true?) made me want to reread that
book, which I know will give up more with every visit. Meanwhile, her
new novel is immediately impressive and subversive, with its sly take
on a grand universal – adultery – and a pin-sharp portrait of right
now: the Irish property crash and financial crisis. This is how good
‘literary fiction’ can be.
Marlen Haushofer: The Loft
Straight from nowhere, drawn to my attention by the translator’s
trusted name, comes the quiet, seething story of an Austrian housewife
who discovers her old diaries. It is one of those looping, unified
narratives that draws the reader in from seemingly innocuous
beginnings: “From our bedroom window we can see a tree that we can
never seem to agree about…” In a loft in central Europe in the mid-20th
century, all human life is here.
Lars Iyer: Spurious
A blog I never got around to reading became a book
I couldn’t stop. I’m glad it went that way, in the spirit of Geoff
Dyer, who doesn’t read journalism by his favourite writers as it
appears, so that he can read it all at once in book form. Spurious
is the funniest book I read all year, and follows two frenemies (yep)
as they fail entirely to make progress on anything, or even to agree on
what form progress might take. “‘Go on, tell me,’ says W., getting
excited. ‘How fat are you now?’”
Denis Johnson: Jesus’ Son
This book of stories, due for reissue in the UK by Granta Books in
autumn 2012, is linked by its drifting narrator: hyperbleary, all
edges, semiconscious through illicit medication. But the writing is as
tight as our man is louche, and the book provides a porthole I couldn’t
tear myself away from, into a way of life I’d never want to go near.
Like Spurious, it’s surprisingly funny - which is the
only kind of funny that I like. Listen to Tobias Wolff read the best
story, ‘Emergency’, here.
Georges Perec: W or The Memory of Childhood
Perec to me was the arch-trickster of European postmodernism, the homme
who put the ‘Ooh!’ into Oulipo. His lipogrammatic novel La
Disparition; his jigsaw-puzzle epic Life: A User’s Manual.
But Perec reportedly wanted to write one of everything, and when
Wikipedia describes this book as “a semi-autobiographical work that is
hard to classify,” well, you can say that again. Don’t classify it:
read it, with its jocular-sinister parallel world where Olympic ideals
reign, and its dual title with one meaning. W is the sort of
book which makes you (made me) rush off and buy all the author’s other
books that you didn’t have.
Jack Robinson: Days and Nights in W12
Another unclassifiable wonder, written under a pseudonym (what a
childish conceit). Above all it’s that rarest of things: a
self-published book that is not just readable but essential. (Go
on: I challenge you.) Robinson, aka Charles Boyle, brings a magpie eye
and a big imagination to scenes of daily life in the streets that
surround him, inventing, questioning, enlightening and confusing. It’s
plotless, semi-fictional, fragmented, and touched with the brilliance
of a man who, if he does know how to write a bad sentence, is keeping
it to himself.
Nicholas Royle: Quilt
This novel is a not-quite-seamless blend of an
affecting study of grief (a man deals with his father’s death) and an
aggressive literary experiment. It, or its narrator, devolves into a
sort of madness by the end, obsessed by rays (the flatfish). Then,
after the end, there is an thrilling afterword which acts as an attack
on complacent literary culture and as a manifesto for books like this.
Can I join your club, Professor Royle?
Sjón: From the Mouth of the Whale
Here is a book in a field of its own for sheer eccentricity and oddness
– perhaps challenged by Blake Butler’s There Is No Year,
which narrowly missed my list. Sjon’s book wins by sheer force of charm
and character. I struggled to capture it in my review, when I’d just
read it, so the chances of my doing better now are slim. It’s full of
enquiry, discovery and intellectual jeux d’esprit in 17th
century Iceland. (I know!) Just read it.
Alberto Barrera Tyszka: The Sickness
If there’s a stereotype for the sort of book that appeals to me
instinctively, it would be a slim, unflinching novel in translation
about an ostensibly gloomy subject matter. How kind, then, of Alberto
Barrera Tyszka to write me one. It’s about a doctor who cannot bear to
share his father’s cancer diagnosis with him. (So, fathers and sons
too: another guaranteed tickler for me these days.) Perhaps as I get
even older, I will no longer care to be reminded that life is chaos
which ends randomly; but for now, this is just the ticket.
Jiří Weil: Life with a Star
An addition to the great canon of Holocaust literature may not seem
urgent, but as this book is 60 years old, I was already rather late to
it. (When I wrote my review, it was out of print in the UK, but it will
be reissued by Daunt Books in April 2012.) Life with a Star
is brimming with irony and pathos, and the blackest humour that helps
address the greatest enormities. Fearing extermination by the unnamed
oppressor, one man points out, desperately, that the whole population
of Earth is going to die anyway, so what does it matter? “That won’t
help us,” replies another. “Even if everyone dies, we will be the
first.”
Jeanette Winterson: Why Be Happy When You Could
Be Normal?
It was a joy to return this year to one of my favourite writers, whose
invention and boldness even in the well-trodden genre of childhood
memoir make every page sparkle and glow. A mature companion piece to Oranges
are not the only fruit – and looking likely to match it in
popularity - it is a love story, a family story, a comedy, and a
call to arms for those who still give a damn about literature. That’s
you.
John
Self
To
read more of John Self's book reviews, check out his blog at The Asylum.
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