I’ve been reading more recently, which is great! I have a great big back-log of books which have come highly recommended by friends. I’ve culled the list down further, and now I’ll pass on a few recommendations of my own:
Fiction:
Inherent Vice, by Thomas Pynchon:
The guy who gave us Gravity’s Rainbow and The Crying of Lot 49 spent a very long time writing two huge back-to-back epics of mind-numbing complexity. Then he took a break and wrote Inherent Vice for fun. It’s the early 70′s in Southern California. Surfing, free love and good weed are still around, but the great party that was the 60′s seems to be fading and signs of the inevitable hangover are looming. The story follows a hippie-haired private investigator as he searches for his missing ex-girlfriend and her new man. In a style reminiscent of The Big Lebowski, the main character stumbles his way into conspiracies far beyond his paygrade, involving among other things: real estate development, drug smuggling, police corruption and dentistry.
Pynchon is my favorite prose-writer ever, and this book contains a few pages that can sink you right into a mindset you hadn’t sampled before. Plus, as his amusing side-project, it has plenty of smart, fun dialogue. Today a friend pointed out one of the better lines in Inherent Vice:
“Man, you’re one crazy white mother fucker.”
“How can you tell?”
“I counted.”
The Things They Carried, by Tim O’Brien
I was told that this was a series of short stories about the Vietnam War written by a guy who served there. The opening story is the most famous one, and it shares the name of the whole collection. I wrote an essay on that story in college, focusing on how O’Brien writes cyclically. Like a really good stand up comedy routine, in moments of lingering tension, old and relevant material from earlier in the story pops up again. Small phrases in the story become loaded with thoughts or emotions, and they become ammunition for later; at a tense pause in a story, O’Brien can call down a lightning strike of thought or emotion with just a couple of words.
The above were my thoughts on just one of the stories. I read another later in college and didn’t like it very much. It gave me the impression that the book was a series of unrelated stories, some of which were good and some of which were mediocre. Yesterday I picked up The Things They Carried while waiting for a friend in a book store and read the second story. To my surprise, it was practically an epilogue for the story before it (the one I wrote the essay on), drawing significantly on it and taking the feelings from it in new directions. My mind started contemplating the potential of this style over 200 pages, and I was sold.
I’m over halfway done with the book now, and all I can say is wow. It’s deliberately not about shock or tragedy or bravery or anything you can neatly package and take away. It’s about the experience of the Vietnam War, avoiding explanation and understanding, focusing instead on intense sensations and feelings.
O’Brien brings about those moments where one phrase explains a great many things at once, where you stop and think: “wow, he just communicated that in the perfect way.” Lots of books have these moments, but I can’t recall a book that has these moments in higher frequency than The Things They Carried. More than once per page. That’s more than Pynchon. It’s more than most Shakespeare. Read this book.
The Lies of Locke Lamora, by Scott Lynch:
If you like unapologetic fantasy novels, this is a great one. I actually read it over a year ago, but I just started the sequel, so I’m reminded of it. It follows a gang of lovable con-artists in a corrupt fantasy city as they get in waaaaaaaaaay over their heads and have to think and scheme their way out of it.
Nonfiction:
Charlie Wilson’s War, by George Crile
It was made into a movie with Tom Hanks. I haven’t seen the movie. I hear it’s relatively faithful to the book (though it can’t possibly include more than 15% of the info from the book). This non-fiction reads like fiction, like a mockumentary. This is partly due to George Crile’s writing and partly due to the simple fact that the characters involved are larger than life, or rather larger than life should be allowed to get.
This is the story of how one written-off playboy congressman and a couple of black sheep agents at the CIA tricked, outmaneuvered, strongarmed, won over or circumvented both houses of Congress, the media, civil rights groups, the heads of the CIA, the President, and several foreign countries in order to fund a war against Soviet Russia in Afghanistan–a war no one wanted the Afghans to win. This true story is so entertaining because there is a constant barrage of amazing events that just shouldn’t be possible.
Outliers, Tipping Point and Blink, by Malcolm Gladwell
Very good books about the counter-intuitive way in which the world works. Gladwell has a very entertaining non-fiction voice, and uses it to present alternative ways of looking at how we tick. Outliers breaks down the makings of extremely successful people, from athletes to entrepreneurs. He finds some very serious patterns, and they’re not what you might think. Tipping Point looks at social phenomena, from resurgence in retro fashions to inexplicably plunging crime rates. Blink examines the mechanics of people’s ability to make snap-judgments, and why they’re usually right. I like all three books, but I’d definitely recommend Outliers most highly, then Tipping Point, then Blink.
A Short History of Nearly Everything, by Bill Bryson
The title says it all: from the big bang to quantum mechanics, covering everything in between. Bill Bryson is a travel writer, so this book is not only accessible to lay people, but often wildly entertaining. It covers the major scientific advances of humanity, and also the weird stories of the people making those discoveries. From stuffy aristocratic rivalries to the man who voyaged to India during British colonial times to take measurements of Venus moving across the sun, arrived late and missed it, stayed in India for 7 years to catch Venus the next time around, and had his view obscured by a cloud. This book is both illuminating and entertaining.














































