the books of 2003
Jan. 6th, 2004 12:06 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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.
no subject
Date: 2004-01-05 08:49 am (UTC)I did rather like the beginning bits of Atonement, but Adele Geras's Facing the Light does the same country house party stuff much better, without getting bogged down in war (and without the horrible ending). Shame about the title, though.
Oh, and Behind the Scenes at the Museum! I'd forgotten about that - it's my favourite of hers, and the only one I don't own. Must put those WHSmith vouchers to use...
no subject
Date: 2004-01-05 09:10 pm (UTC)Have you read Kate A's short stories (Not the End of the World)? I've been thinking of getting that...
no subject
Date: 2004-01-05 09:19 pm (UTC)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 ;-)