the books of 2003
My, I've been a bookworm.
Mark Haddon: "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time"
Ben Elton: "Dead Famous"
Haruki Murakami: "Sputnik Sweetheart"
David Lodge: "Thinks..."
Jonathan Lethem: "Amnesia Moon"
Alasdair Gray: "Lanark"
Milan Kundera: "The Unbearable Lightness of Being"
Dylan Thomas: "Under Milk Wood"
Jonathan Franzen: "The Corrections"
A. S. Byatt: "The Biographer's Tale"
Yann Martel: "Life of Pi"
Russell Hoban: "Riddley Walker"
Will Ferguson: "Happiness(tm)"
Jonathan Safran Foer: "Everything Is Illuminated"
Donna Tartt: "The Secret History"
Kate Atkinson: "Behind the Scenes at the Museum"
Chuck Palahniuk: "Choke"
Banana Yoshimoto: "Goodbye Tsugumi"
Dan Rhodes: "Anthropology"
Ted Hughes: "Birthday Letters"
Louise Wener: "Goodnight Steve McQueen"
Erica Jong: "Parachutes & Kisses"
(chunks of) The Journals of Sylvia Plath
Roger McGough: "Blazing Fruit"
Sylvia Plath: "The Bell Jar"
Ian McEwan: "Atonement"
Maggie O'Farrell: "My Lover's Lover"
Chris Ware: "Jimmy Corrigan, The Smartest Kid On Earth"
Sarah Champion (ed): "Disco Biscuits"
Toby Litt: "Deadkidsongs"
Tibor Fischer: "The Collector Collector"
Annie Proulx: "Accordion Crimes"
Nick Hornby: "31 Songs"
Jim Crace: "The Devil's Larder"
Will Self: "Tough, Tough Toys for Tough, Tough Boys"
Mark Dunn: "Ella Minnow Pea"
Favourites: Lanark (combines reality and fantasy and does them both brilliantly. Wise and unsettling and utterly riveting. Book of the year by a long shot). Honourable mentions: Life of Pi, Everything is Illuminated, Riddley Walker, The Secret History, Anthropology, Birthday Letters
Least favourites: This is harder for books, since if I hate a book I don't usually persevere to the end. But see 'most disappointing'. Oh, there is one: Happiness(tm) wanted to be clever, but felt like several hundred tired old urban myths and email forwards dumped in a blender.
Funniest: Thinks..., Behind the Scenes at the Museum (in a black, blitz-humour sort of way), Everything is Illuminated (when it wasn't being tragic), bits of Parachutes & Kisses.
Most disappointing: Atonement, The Biographer's Tale (both by authors whose other books I'd enjoyed, neither of these did anything for me at all).
Weirdness award: Possibly Riddley Walker, which is in post-apocalyptic mangled English and may remove your ability to spell. Or Anthropology, a hundred hundred-word stories about a hundred peculiar girlfriends.
Mark Haddon: "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time"
Ben Elton: "Dead Famous"
Haruki Murakami: "Sputnik Sweetheart"
David Lodge: "Thinks..."
Jonathan Lethem: "Amnesia Moon"
Alasdair Gray: "Lanark"
Milan Kundera: "The Unbearable Lightness of Being"
Dylan Thomas: "Under Milk Wood"
Jonathan Franzen: "The Corrections"
A. S. Byatt: "The Biographer's Tale"
Yann Martel: "Life of Pi"
Russell Hoban: "Riddley Walker"
Will Ferguson: "Happiness(tm)"
Jonathan Safran Foer: "Everything Is Illuminated"
Donna Tartt: "The Secret History"
Kate Atkinson: "Behind the Scenes at the Museum"
Chuck Palahniuk: "Choke"
Banana Yoshimoto: "Goodbye Tsugumi"
Dan Rhodes: "Anthropology"
Ted Hughes: "Birthday Letters"
Louise Wener: "Goodnight Steve McQueen"
Erica Jong: "Parachutes & Kisses"
(chunks of) The Journals of Sylvia Plath
Roger McGough: "Blazing Fruit"
Sylvia Plath: "The Bell Jar"
Ian McEwan: "Atonement"
Maggie O'Farrell: "My Lover's Lover"
Chris Ware: "Jimmy Corrigan, The Smartest Kid On Earth"
Sarah Champion (ed): "Disco Biscuits"
Toby Litt: "Deadkidsongs"
Tibor Fischer: "The Collector Collector"
Annie Proulx: "Accordion Crimes"
Nick Hornby: "31 Songs"
Jim Crace: "The Devil's Larder"
Will Self: "Tough, Tough Toys for Tough, Tough Boys"
Mark Dunn: "Ella Minnow Pea"
Favourites: Lanark (combines reality and fantasy and does them both brilliantly. Wise and unsettling and utterly riveting. Book of the year by a long shot). Honourable mentions: Life of Pi, Everything is Illuminated, Riddley Walker, The Secret History, Anthropology, Birthday Letters
Least favourites: This is harder for books, since if I hate a book I don't usually persevere to the end. But see 'most disappointing'. Oh, there is one: Happiness(tm) wanted to be clever, but felt like several hundred tired old urban myths and email forwards dumped in a blender.
Funniest: Thinks..., Behind the Scenes at the Museum (in a black, blitz-humour sort of way), Everything is Illuminated (when it wasn't being tragic), bits of Parachutes & Kisses.
Most disappointing: Atonement, The Biographer's Tale (both by authors whose other books I'd enjoyed, neither of these did anything for me at all).
Weirdness award: Possibly Riddley Walker, which is in post-apocalyptic mangled English and may remove your ability to spell. Or Anthropology, a hundred hundred-word stories about a hundred peculiar girlfriends.
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Have you read Kate A's short stories (Not the End of the World)? I've been thinking of getting that...
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Kate Atkinson: I actually own Not the end of the world, and had forgotten about it until this moment! I bought it during term-time, so had no time to read it, and had evidently been side-tracked by the time I was allowed to read it. I did read a few of them, and enjoyed them, but, IIRC, they were more like vignettes than actual stories. And I think I had the problem I often do with short stories, where my brain's marked the book as a novel, so the setting has to be more different than she managed for me to re-set between stories ;-)