Regular readers will know that the first two months of my year of books from Heywood Hill bookshop in Mayfair were absolute hits (see hereand here). They were so good I was beginning to think they were living in my head. I wondered if they could keep it up. On the whole I would say yes, they did keep it up. However…
This choice was a winner because Heywood found something that is both in my comfort zone in setting, tone, and writing style. And they get kudos for giving me a ghost story, something I would never pick up on my own. I wanted them to challenge my usual reading choices. So no faults for their choice. Where it falls down is that the book just isn’t that good. I kind of liked it at first but then I started to have problems with the one dimensionality of the characters and a story that I grew to care less and less about as each page passed.
This choice was a winner because it is exactly the kind of book I would love. But. I read it when it first came out and hated it because I thought Hill set up a narrative framework and then proceeded to ignore it and just blather about whatever bookish topic she wanted to blather about. And don’t even get me started on her thoughts on book bloggers. What a dip.
[For those who don’t know, I am participating in A Century of Books this year which requires me to read one book from each year from 1919 through 2018.]
My biggest challenge for this less-than-a-decade, decade is that I’ve got a lot of 2016 and 2017 stuff that I want to read I don’t know how in the world I am going to choose.
2010
Conversations with Beethoven – Sanford Friedman My Animal Life – Maggie Gee The Midnight Promise – Zane Lovitt Eva Sleeps – Francesca Melandri
2011
The Girl in the Polka-Dot Dress – Beryl Bainbridge Everything Happens Today – Jesse Browner At the End of a Dull Day – Massimo Carlotto The Adults – Alison Espach The Love of My Youth – Mary Gordon Rodin’s Debutante – Ward Just Wish You Were Here – Graham Greene
2012
Winter Journal – Paul Auster Aftermath – Rachel Cusk The Lola Quartet – Emily St. John Mandel The Flame Alphabet – Ben Marcus Jack Holmes and His Friend – Edmund White
The Ben Marcus volume was recommended by a bookseller at Three Lives in New York when I mentioned I liked a dystopia like Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel.Meanwhile The Lola Quartet seems like a non-dystopic Mandel.
2013
The Automobile Club of Egypt – Alaa al Aswany Maggie and Me – Damian Barr Harvest – Jim Crace Last Friends – Jane Gardam The Last Banquet – Jonathan Grimwood The World is a Wedding – Wendy Jones Sight Reading – Daphne Kalotay The Perfume Collector – Kathleen Tessaro All the Birds, Singing – Evie Wyld
2014
The Boston Girl – Anita Diamant The Pope’s Daughter – Dario Fo A Paris Apartment – Michelle Gable Arctic Summer – Damon Galgut American Romantic – Ward Just The Golden Age – Joan London The Children Act – Ian McEwan The Dismal Science – Peter Mountford The Pathless Sky – Chaitali Sen The Meaning of Maggie – Megan Jean Soavern Nora Webster – Colm Toibin
A Paris Apartment sounds like it will be a total delight for me, but there is also a chance that it is twee, pandering, dross.
2015
The Distant Marvels – Chantel Acevedo The Seventh Function of Language – Laurent Binet The Green Road – Anne Enright The Vienna Melody – Ernst Lothar Girl at War – Sara Novic The Gardens of Consolation – Parisa Reza Checkpoint – Jean-Christophe Rufin Skyfaring – Mark Vanhoenacker
I feel like Girl at War was one of those that was ubiquitous in the blogsphere and I still have read it. Same thing with The Green Road. I think that one was up for a prize. Skyfaring seems like a total pleasure read for me. Non-fiction about the life of a commercial airline pilot.
2016
A Doubter’s Almanac – Ethan Canin Transit – Rachel Cusk Weekend – Jane Eaton Hamilton Rain – Melissa Harrison Hot Milk – Deborah Levy This Must Be the Place – Maggie O’Farrell Commonwealth – Ann Patchett A Very English Scandal – John Preston The Woman on the Stairs – Bernhard Schlink All That Man Is – David Szalay Do Not Say We Have Nothing – Madeleine Thien The Arrangement – Ashley Warlick Our Young Man – Edmund White The Natural Way of Things – Charlotte Wood
The choice for 2016 is just plain insane. Why I haven’t already read the O’Farrell and Patchett I don’t know. I’m very drawn to the Schlink and I am just dying to devour (and savor) the slim Harrison.
2017
Difficult Women – Roxane Gay Midwinter Break – Bernard MacLaverty The Crossing – Andrew Miller Elmet – Fiona Mozley Welcome to Lagos – Chibundu Onuzo George and Lizzie – Nancy Pearl Sympathy – Olivia Sudjic Midnight at the Bright Ideas Bookstore – Matthew Sullivan The Peculiar Life of a Lonely Postman – Denis Theriault When the English Fall – David Williams
The Williams is high on my list as is Mozley, and MacLaverty. This is the year I am second most likely to read more than one. Even if I am behind on the challenge.
[For those who don’t know, I am participating in A Century of Books this year which requires me to read one book from each year from 1919 through 2018.]
2000
The Goodbye Kiss – Massimo Carlotto The Copenhagen Papers – Michael Frayn The Pleasure of Their Company – Doris Grumbach Greene on Capri – Shirley Hazzard The Foundation Pit – Andrey Platonov
Massimo Carlotto’s hardboiled noir mysteries total page-turning quick reads so The Goodbye Kiss could really float to the top if I am in the mood for something escapist. I really like his books despite how sexist they are. In June we are going to be on boat near Capri so I am kind of tempted to read Greene on Capri.
2001
The Sweetest Dream – Doris Lessing The Jewish Husband – Lia Levi A House Unlocked – Penelope Lively The African Safari Papers – Robert Sedlack Love in a Dark Time – Colm Toibin Kyoto – Kate Walbert
I think the Toibin is non-fiction, but I won’t hold that against it.
2002
The Book of Illusions – Paul Auster Land’s End – Michael Cunningham Fragrant Harbour – John Lanchester
2003
Oracle Night – Paul Auster The Lucky Ones – Rachel Cusk The Sea House -Esther Freud How the Light Gets In – M.J. Hyland Timoleon Vieta Come Home – Dan Rhodes
I loved one Dan Rhodes (Marry Me) and DNF’d another one so I’m not sure how I feel about trying this one. Also ambivalent about the Freud, I thought Mr. Mac and Me was just okay.
2004
The Red Queen – Margaret Drabble Utu – Caryl Ferey The Second Death of Unica Aveyano – Ernesto Mestre-Reed
I have plenty of other Drabbles and other two are total wild cards to me and are very enticing.
2005
Margherita Dolce Vita – Stefano Benni Poisonville – Massimo Carlotto Pearl – Mary Gordon Making it Up – Penelope Lively
Love Lively. Really like Carlotto. Okay with Gordon. Don’t know anything about Benni.
2006
The Elegance of the Hedgehog – Muriel Barbery Arlington Park – Rachel Cusk The Sea Lady – Margaret Drabble Amazing Disgrace – James Hamilton-Paterson Forgetfulness – Ward Just In the Country of Men – Hisham Matar Moffie – Andre Carl van der Merwe Washing Dishes in the Hotel Paradise – Eduardo Beigrano Rawson Gomorrah – Roberto Saviano The Night Watch – Sarah Waters
Crazy how some years have so many things to choose from. And this one has more diversity than other years: South Africa, Uruguay, Libya, Italy, France, US, UK…
2007
The Road Home – Rose Tremain Lions at Lamb House – Edwin M. Yoder
I want to like the Yoder but since it has a Henry James theme I am worried about the tediousness factor.
2008
The Rehearsal – Eleanor Catton Zulu – Caryl Ferey Rancid Pansies – James Hamilton-Paterson The Sorrows of an American – Siri Hustvedt Alfred and Emily – Doris Lessing Anathem – Neal Stephenson
I will have to really be comfortable with my progress to pick up Anathem. It’s huge. Also big, but not quite huge is Zulu.
2009
The Bradshaw Variation – Rachel Cusk The Man in the Wooden Hat – Jane Gardam The Selected Works of T.S. Spivet – Reif Larsen
I read Old Filth so long ago I almost feel like I need to re-read it before picking up The Man in the Wooden Hat. But that probably won’t happen.
[For those who don’t know, I am participating in A Century of Books this year which requires me to read one book from each year from 1919 through 2018.]
1990
The Boss Dog – M.F.K. Fisher
I’ve already started this one. It is very short and about southern France, but for some reason I don’t find it very compelling. It’s taking me much longer to read than it should.
1991
Long Ago in France – M.F.K. Fisher Coming into the Endzone – Doris Grumbach City of the Mind – Penelope Lively
Based on my note for 1990, I’m not sure how I will feel about Long Ago in France. Plus let’s be real, this is the first Penelope Lively on my list. It’s bound to get read.
1992
English Music – Peter Ackroyd
Arcadia – Jim Crace
Black Dogs – Ian McEwan
I so loved Jim Crace’s novel Being Dead. I really need to read something else by him. I have one or two others on the list in addition to this one.
1993
Saving Agnes – Rachel Cusk The Furies – Janet Hobhouse In a Country of Mothers – A.M. Homes The Green Knight – Iris Murdoch
Pretty sure Saving Agnes is going to get the nod. I’ve got a stockpile of Cusks that I am very interested in reading. I think this is the earliest of them. The A.M. Homes would be second choice.
1994
None to Accompany Me – Nadine Gordimer Notes of a Crocodile – Qiu Miaojin
1995
The Blue Flower – Penelope Fitzgerald The Book of Knowledge – Doris Grumbach Total Chaos – Jean-Claude Izzo Love, Again – Doris Lessing How Long Has This Been Going On? – Ethan Mordden
1996
A Life in the Day – Doris Grumbach The Beauty of Men – Andrew Holleran The Debt to Pleasure – John Lanchester At Eighty-Two – May Sarton
1997
Dog Day – Alicia Gimenez-Bartlett Mendel’s Dwarf – Simon Mawer Four Letter’s of Love – Niall Williams
I thought Mawer’s novel The Glass Room was such a fine book that I was surprised to read Trapeze which seemed kind of lazy and superficial in comparison. I will be interested to see which end of the spectrum Mendel’s Dwarf falls on.
1998
Quarantine – Jim Crace The House Gun – Nadine Gordimer Spiderweb – Penelope Lively Storm Tide – Marge Piercy
An embarrassment of riches for 1988.
1999
Atomised – Michel Houellebecq The Blackwater Lightship – Colm Toibin
I think Atomised will be a bit outside my comfort zone so more likely to read the Toibin, unless I am so far ahead of schedule that I don’t mind going more slowly.
[For those who don’t know, I am participating in A Century of Books this year which requires me to read one book from each year from 1919 through 2018.]
1980
The Hidden Target – Helen MacInnes Recovering – May Sarton
An intelligent spy novel or a journal of a beloved author recovering from a mastectomy? Not to be flip, but both of these tug at me equally. It’s going to come down my mood at the time.
1981
The Missing Person – Doris Grumbach To the Islands – Randolph Stow
1982
A Soldier’s Legacy – Heinrich Boll At Freddie’s – Penelope Fitzgerald Monsignor Quixote – Graham Greene A Pale View of the Hills – Kazuo Ishiguro The True Deceiver – Tove Jansson Anger – May Sarton Sleepwalking – Meg Wolitzer
So much here to tempt. An early Wolitzer, a late Greene. Penelope Fitzgerald is never a bad idea. I’ve read two Tove Jansson short story collections, one of which I really liked and one which left me ambivalent. I am curious to see what she does in a novel. I blow hot and cold on Ishiguro. Well, I actually don’t feel that strongly, I blow warm and cool on Ishiguro. I’ve tried reading A Pale View of the Hills previously and didn’t make it very far. If this edition was so pleasant to the touch and the eye I probably would have gotten rid of it a long time ago. Given my other choices, it also seems unlikely it’s going to get read this year.
1983
A Place on Earth – Wendell Berry The Philosopher’s Pupil – Iris Murdoch
Back in my planning school days I read some of Berry’s non-fiction. For some unknown reason I am not drawn very strongly to this novel. Maybe because that is no how he made his name (at least with me) and so I feel like it can’t be any good. On the other hand a giant, late, Murdoch has me a bit ambivalent.
1984
Watson’s Apology – Beryl Bainbridge The Ladies – Doris Grumbach Good Daughters – Mary Hocking The Busconductor Hines – James Kelman Testing the Current – William McPherrson At Seventy – May Sarton
At some point I have to read some Bainbridge. I’ve just assumed I would like her and buy of cheap editions when I find them, but I don’t think I have every read any of them. I really need to figure out if she is someone I would like. I love the title The Busconductor Hines and the book is totally unknown to me.
1985
Quinx – Lawrence Durrell The Tenth Man – Graham Greene Indifferent Heroes– Mary Hocking Last Call – Harry Mulisch The Good Apprentice – Iris Murdoch
Durrell’s Quinx if the last novel in a five-book series. There is no way I can read it until I read the other four. But I don’t own the other four.
1986
To the Land of Cattails – Aharon Appelfeld The Papers of Samuel Marchbanks – Robertson Davies Innocence – Penelope Fitzgerald Welcome Strangers – Mary Hocking
1987
In the Country of Last Things – Paul Auster The Book and the Brotherhood – Iris Murdoch Civil to Strangers – Barbara Pym
I’ve already started reading In the Country of Last Things so I guess that answers that. I’ve also listened to the amazing Vanessa Redgrave reading the book, but I was following along with the book and the recording is abridged so that is kind of annoying. Redgrave is so good, I wish to heck she had read the whole book.
1988
The Lyre of Orpheus – Robertson Davies The Beginning of Spring – Penelope Fitzgerald The Captain and the Enemy – Graham Greene Beirut, Beirut – Sonallah Ibrahim Mother London – Michael Moorcock After the Stroke – May Sarton
Given that there are so many wonderful repeat authors on my TBR I am getting a little bored with some of their names at this point in my cataloging effort. Based on that and that alone, I think I will go for Beirut, Beirut or Mother London.
1989
Jigsaw – Sybille Bedford A Natural Curiosity – Margaret Drabble The Other Side – Mary Gordon Jack – A.M. Homes The Message to the Planet – Iris Murdoch Damascus Nights – Rafik Schami
Probably going to be Damascus Nights. It is one of the books I bought by authors from countries on President Pumpkinhead’s no admittance list. Asshole.
[For those who don’t know, I am participating in A Century of Books this year which requires me to read one book from each year from 1919 through 2018.]
The 1970s are going to be weird for me. On the one hand there are tried and true authors, but on the other are books I have never heard of and know nothing about. There are no obvious choices.
1970
Children Are Civilians Too – Heinrich Boll The Hopeful Traveller – Mary Hocking Houses – Borislav Pekic Last Things – C.P. Snow
1971
A Meaningful Life – L.J. Davis The Climbing Frame – Mary Hocking Message from Malaga – Helen MacInnes Mawrdew Czgowchwz – James McCourt Equal Danger – Leonardo Sciascia Unforgiving Years – Victor Serge Not to Disturb – Muriel Spark
I’ll never be able to discuss the James McCourt novel. That’s a lot of consonants.
1972
The Acolyte – Thea Astley No Name in the Street – James Baldwin Short Letter, Long Farewell – Peter Handke Upstairs Downstairs – John Hawkesworth The Bridge of Beyond – Simone Schwarz-Bart The Malcontents – C.P. Snow Augustus – John Williams
I almost didn’t put the John Hawkesworth on this list as it’s a novelization of the 1970s Upstairs Downstairs and didn’t seem like a “real” book to me but more of a novelty item. The Baldwin almost didn’t make the list because it is a collection of essays rather than a novel. I love the title Short Letter, Long Farewell.
1973
The Dressmaker – Beryl Bainbridge The Black Prince – Iris Murdoch The Siege of Swayne Castle – R.C. Sherriff The Hothouse by the East River – Muriel Spark Other Men’s Daughters – Richard Stern
When I purchased Other Men’s Daughters recently I had a lot of people chime in on Twitter that it was an excellent book.
1974
Doctor Frigo – Eric Ambler The Snare of the Hunter – Helen MacInnes In Their Wisdom – C.P. Snow
This perfect storm of authors I like with no other wild cards to choose from. It also represents the last bit of each of their writing output for Ambler (only 2 more books to be published and Snow (only 1 more). MacInnes had a bit more steam left with 5 more yet to be published.
1975
The Realms of Gold – Margaret Drabble First Love, Last Rights – Ian McEwan The Odd Angry Shot – William Nagle
This is going to be a tough choice between the Drabble and McEwan but I think the fact that this is McEwans first novel may tilt the month in his favorite.
1976
The Spring – Kerstin Ekman Agent in Place – Helen MacInnes A World of Light – May Sarton
1977
The Dark Lady – Louis Auchincloss
It’s going to be hard to choose for 1977. Which will it be…?
1978
Injury Time – Beryl Bainbridge God on the Rocks – Jane Gardam Prelude to Terror – Helen MacInnes The High Cost of Living – Marge Piercy A Reckoning – May Sarton The Moro Affair – Leonardo Sciascia Fields of Fire – James Webb The Volunteers – Raymond Williams
1979
Pig Earth – John Berger The Safety Net – Heinrich Boll Slow Homecoming – Peter Handke Territorial Rights – Muriel Spark
[For those who don’t know, I am participating in A Century of Books this year which requires me to read one book from each year from 1919 through 2018.]
1960
Eating People is Wrong – Malcolm Bradbury The Lovely Ambition – Mary Ellen Chase Trustee from the Toolroom – Nevil Shute Butcher’s Crossing – John Williams
I really loved John Williams’ novel Stoner so I’ve owned Butcher’s Crossing for ages. The thing is ,because it is a Western of sorts I haven’t been able to bring myself to read it. I’ve heard people say it is great but I haven’t been able to get over the Western part. I should choose it for 1960 but I could also see myself going for the Nevil Shute which I know I will enjoy.
1961
The Judas Tree – A.J. Cronin The Fringe Dwellers – Nene Gare Everything Flows – Vasily Grossman Sunlight on a Broken Column – Attia Hosain The Chateau – William Maxwell A Trip into Town – Michael Rubin The Winter of Our Discontent – John Steinbeck In a Summer Season – Elizabeth Taylor Dawn – Elie Wiesel
I think William Maxwell is best known for his short stories. I remember a friend in 1995 telling me I should read his stories. So over the years I’ve purchased a few of his anthologies and I haven’t even read a first line. I also bought this novel of his The Chateau. It had a nice cover and I am still holding onto this notion that I have had since 1995 that William Maxwell is someone I should read. This might be his year.
1962
That’s How it Was – Maureen Duffy An Unofficial Rose – Iris Murdoch Morte d’Urban – J.F. Powers Day – Elie Wiesel
I’m completely ambivalent about all of these titles except for Day. I used to really love Iris Murdoch but I am not sure that I still do. And the Murdochs I have on my TBR are all a little thick. I also have a sense that I prefer early Murdoch.
1963
Cobbler’s Dream – Monica Dickens Careful, He Might Hear You – Sumner Locke Elliott The Guilt Merchants – Ronald Harwood A Day in Late September – Merle Miller Let’s Kill Uncle – Rohan O’Grady Joanna and Ulysses – May Sarton
Merle Miller is an author I only know about because of Nancy Pearl’s first book Book Lust. I’ve read two or three of his novels and liked them and had fun uncovering his work while browsing used book shops. I think I have been saving them for a rainy day. As for Sarton’s Joanna and Ulysses, which is about a woman meeting a mistreated donkey. I love Sarton, but I am not sure how I feel about that.
1964
The Rector – Louis Auchincloss Hard Rain Falling – Don Carpenter Kate and Emma – Monica Dickens The Hand of Mary Constable – Paul Gallico The Sparrow – Mary Hocking Dancing Lessons for the Advanced in Age – Bohumil Hrabel Corridors of Power – C.P. Snow The Soul of Kindness – Elizabeth Taylor
This is one of those years where I could go several different directions and probably be happy, but I really have been wanting to read another Auchincloss lately. I totally enjoyed The Book Class and The Partners and don’t know why I haven’t ever come across anyone who has read him.
1965
My Dog Tulip – J.R. Ackerly The Garden of the Finzi-Continis – Giorgio Bassani The Millstone – Margaret Drabble The Comedians – Graham Greene The Young Spaniard – Mary Hocking The Double Image – Helen MacInnes The Red and the Green – Iris Murdoch The River Between – Ngugi Wa Thiongo
I saw the movie The Garden of the Finzi-Continis when I was taking Italian language classes way back in college. Since I am taking Italian again, might be fitting to read the book finally. But I must admit that My Dog Tulip is kind of calling my name.
1966
The Embezzler – Louis Auchincloss The Railway Police – Hortense Calisher The Room Upstairs – Monica Dickens
1967
Dirty Story – Eric Ambler Towards the End of the Morning – Michael Frayn A State of Change – Penelope Gilliatt Ask No Question – Mary Hocking A Flag on the Island – V.S. Naipaul The Mimic Men – V.S. Naipaul All the Little Live Things – Wallace Stegner
1968
A Compass Error – Sybille Bedford Eva Trout – Elizabeth Bowen The Landlord’s Daughter – Monica Dickens A Very Private Life – Micheal Frayn A Time of War – Mary Hocking The Heritage – Frances Parkinson Keyes Talk – Linda Rosenkrantz To Each His Own – Leonardo Sciascia The Sleep of Reason – C.P. Snow Sarah’s Cottage – D.E. Stevenson
I think I am going to have to try and shoot for The Heritage by Frances Parkison Keyes. Sometimes I buy books for some combination of age, cover, and a vague sense that I might be finding the next best (old) thing or a new favorite author. I’ve done that with FPK and I think the time has come to figure out if I made a mistake or not.
1969
The Woman Destroyed – Simone de Beauvoir A Pocketful of Rye – A.J. Cronin Fat City – Leonard Gardner Checkmate – Mary Hocking The Road Through the Wall – Shirley Jackson The Play Room – Olivia Manning
Memoirs of an Anti-Semite – Gregor von Rezzori Seasons of Migration to the North – Tayeb Salih The Poet and the Donkey – May Sarton
Huh. Another May Sarton donkey book? I have at least 3 Cronin’s on my shelves. I am going to have to read at least one of them. I have liked he two other novels of his that I have read. Olivia Manning is someone I have read but I may not have been in the mood for her. My problem is hat she has a series or two and I don’t know if this fits into tone of them.
If this cover wasn’t fabulous enough, look at Ilka’s other novel: In Bed We Cry
I shouldn’t be surprised that my TBR is full of authors that I love, but it’s starting to feel a bit samey. Crompton, Dickens, Stevenson, Thirkell…I get it. Based on their ubiquity alone I think this is the decade I am going to force myself away from them. Of course this is how I feel at this moment just looking at the list. Who knows what order I will read everything. I might be in need of the old chestnuts. But for now, I am going to choose outside the box.
…I just finished annotating the list and realize that my cozy favorites start to fade out mid-decade and give way to grittier stuff–and more men.
[For those who don’t know, I am participating in A Century of Books this year which requires me to read one book from each year from 1919 through 2018.]
1950
Frost at Morning – Richmal Crompton The Feast – Margaret Kennedy The Sure Thing – Merle Miller Shadow of a Man – May Sarton Music in the Hills – D.E. Stevenson Summer in the Country – Edith Templeton Brat Farrar – Josephine Tey County Chronicle – Angela Thirkell The Lost Traveller – Antonia White
She might be familiar to many of you but Josephine Tey is an unknown quantity to me so she might get the nod. I’m not much of a mystery fan so we will she if does anything for me. I have a fair amount of Sarton on my TBR but much of that comes in the form of her journals in the 1970s and 1980s so an earlyish novel by her might be just the thing.
1951
The Loved and Envied – Enid Bagnold New York 22 – Ilka Chase Lucy Carmichael – Margaret Kennedy Merry Hall – Beverly Nichols Shoulder the Sky – D.E. Stevenson
I have a few Margaret Kennedys (including another one in 1950) but have never read any of her books. I think the Virago crowd really like her so she may be my choice. I bought New York 22 because it has a fabulous cover. I’m not sure it is any good so I am tempted to read this one so I can move it along to a new home and get it off of my shelves. As much as I like the cover, I am not going to keep it as an object.
1952
The Village – Marghanita Laski Martha Quest – Doris Lessing The Gentlewoman – Laura Talbot Happy Return – Angela Thirkell Men at Arms – Evelyn Waugh The Sugar House – Antonia White
The Lessing is the first of her so-called “Children of Violence” series. The fact that it is the first makes me think I should give it a whirl. Although I don’t think I own any of the other five.
1953
No More Meadows – Monica Dickens Reflections on a Marine Venus – Lawrence Durrell The Little Ark – Jan de Hartog Troy Chimneys – Margaret Kennedy Five – Doris Lessing Laughter on the Stairs – Beverly Nichols Ernesto – Umberto Saba The Easter Party – Vita Sackville-West The Gipsy in the Parlour – Margery Sharp Five Windows – D.E. Stevenson Jutland Cottage – Angela Thirkell The Kraken Wakes – John Wyndham
If I want a fun read that will take me about two seconds to finish, I would head straight for The Kraken Wakes. I’m also very tempted by Ernesto by Umberto Saba. It’s a gay novel written (and unfinished) in 1953 that wasn’t published until 1975, many years after his death in 1957. The Little Ark is a book I feel like I have had forever. It was purchased because the cover was nice but I have no idea if I will love or hate it. So it’s one of those books that needs to shit or get off the pot. (I need to come up with a better way of describing that kind of book.)
1954
Rowan Farm – Margot Benary-Isbert Who Was Changed and Who Was Dead – Barbara Comyns The Cobweb – William Gibson A Charmed Life – Mary McCarthy The Wicked Pavilion – Dawn Powell I Knew a Phoenix – May Sarton Slide Rule – Nevil Shute Sweet Thursday – John Steinbeck What Did it Mean? – Angela Thirkell The Flint Anchor – Sylvia Townsend Warner Beyond the Glass – Antonia White
No need to go through this list. I’ve already read Slide Rule by Nevil Shute this year. It is an autobiography of his time as an aeronautical engineer but it might as well have been one of his novels.
1955
Memories of Arlington, VT – Dorothy Canfield The Story of a Shipwrecked Sailor – Gabriel Garcia Marquez The Doves of Venus – Olivia Manning Faithful are the Wounds – May Sarton Red Lights – Georges Simenon Enter Sir Robert – Angela Thirkell
I think is either going to be a Sarton or Garcia Marquez year. Although that Simenon does have a forward by Anita Brookner…
1956
A Legacy – Sybille Bedford Friends at Court – Henry Cecil Every Eye – Isobel English The Hunters – James Salter Never Too Late – Angela Thirkell
I’m not sure what really prompted me to buy the James Salter novel late last year. I think it is a Korean War story. That seems very decade appropriate and a break from everything else on my list.
1957
On Leave – Daniel Anselme Fire, burn! – John Dickson Carr The Edge of Darkness – Mary Ellen Chase Bitter Lemons – Lawrence Durrell Esprit de Corps – Lawrence Durrell The Day the Money Stopped – Brendan Gill
Is this the same Brendan Gill who wrote for The New Yorker? If only there was a way to find out. I love the title Bitter Lemons.
1958
Things Fall Apart – Chinua Achebe The Northern Light – A.J. Cronin The Ten Thousand Things – Maura Dermout Man Overboard – Monica Dickens Stiff Upper Lip – Lawrence Durrell The Sundial – Shirley Jackson A Ripple from the Storm – Doris Lessing The Road to Wigan Pier – George Orwell The Well – Sinclair Ross Alfred and Guinevere – James Schuyler Robinson – Muriel Spark Engaged in Writing – Stephen Spender
Boy, 1958 is a tough one for me. I’m very attracted to the Achebe, Jackson, Orwell, and Ross. (That would make a great name for a law firm. I’m tempted to write a novel just so I can have the protagonist work at Achebe, Jackson, Orwell, and Ross. Although they could also be charted accounts who help him float the shares of his aviation manufacturing firm ala Slide Rule.) Also, I lied earlier. I do have more of Lessing’s Children of Violence series, but A Ripple From the Storm is number 3 and I don’t have number 2.
1959
All in a Lifetime – Walter Allen Passage of Arms – Eric Ambler Sorrow Laughs – Harry Bloom Life and Fate – Vasily Grossman The Letter from Spain – Frances Parkinson Keyes Walkabout – James Vance Marshall The Outward Urge – John Wyndham
Do’h, I’ve already read Passage of Arms this year. So I don’t need to comment on the rest, which is a good thing because I don’t really know much of anything about them.
It will be interesting to see how many of these touch on the war. I’m guessing it won’t be The Ox-Bow Incident.
[For those who don’t know, I am participating in A Century of Books this year which requires me to read one book from each year from 1919 through 2018.]
1940
Mr Skeffington – Elizabeth von Arnim Final Edition – E.F. Benson The Ox-Bow Incident – Walter van Tilburg Clark Steffan Green – Richmal Crompton A Stricken Field – Martha The Power and the Glory – Graham Greene Bethel Merriday – Sinclair Lewis The Living Mountain – Nan Shepherd Landfall – Nevil Shute George Passant/Strangers and Brothers – C.P. Snow
Well, it won’t be the von Arnim. I’ve already given that one away. I think I’m done with her. I’ve read half of The Power and the Glory but it has been so long since I put it down that I would have to start from the beginning. It obviously wasn’t gripping me in the way his novels have.
1941
The Land of Spices – Kate O’Brien Mrs Tim – D.E. Stevenson Over to Candleford – Flora Thompson
It really is time I discovered Mrs Tim. I’ve read so many other Stevenson’s but this classic has so far escaped my attention.
1942
Enduring Riches – Margaret Flint Farmer Takes a Wife – John Gould The Company She Keeps – Mary McCarthy A Time to Be Born – Dawn Powell One Small Candle – Cecil Roberts Marling Hall – Angela Thirkell
I can’t believe I loved Victoria 4:30 by Cecil Roberts so much and I haven’t yet read this other Roberts. Then again I love Mary McCarthy and I might need her as a foil to all the British authors.
1943
Two Serious Ladies – Jane Bowles Also the Hills – Frances Parkinson Keyes Celia’s House – D.E. Stevenson Candleford Green – Flora Thompson
The Jane Bowles is apparently avant-garde. I am not sure how I will feel about that, but this might be a good time to try.
1944
Liana – Martha Gellhorn Green Dolphin Street – Elizabeth Goudge Rest and Be Thankful – Helen MacInnes The Friendly Young Ladies – Mary Renault The Signpost – E. Arnot Robertson Chedworth – R.C. Sherriff Listening Valley – D.E. Stevenson Growing Up – Angela Thirkell
At some point this year I will read one of the many Helen MacInnes’ that I have. She can kind of scratch my Ambler itch.
1945
The Green Years – A.J. Cronin Thursday Afternoons – Monica Dickens Prospero’s Cell – Lawrence Durrell Loving – Henry Green The House in Clewe Street – Mary Lavin The Journey Home – Zelda Popkin Miss Bunting – Angela Thirkell Apartment in Athens – Glenway Wescott
I’ve read a lot of Monica Dickens lately so that one might stay on the shelf for now. I’m kind of in the mood for Durrell right now. He isn’t quite as sunny as his brother Gerald, but writes about sunny Corfu and Egypt. I didn’t really enjoy Glenway Wescott’s The Pilgrim Hawk but the title of this one has me thinking of Rachel Cusk’s Outline. I know that is a weak link, but might be enough for me to give it a whirl.
1946
Jill – Philip Larkin To Bed with Grand Music – Marghanita Laski Then and Now – W. Somerset Maugham Doreen – Barbara Noble That Lady – Kate O’Brien Bright Day – J.B. Priestly The Bridge of Years – May Sarton Britannia Mews – Margery Sharp Bell Timson – Marguerite Steen
Philip Larkin is the poet and friend of Barbara Pym who helped revive interest in her work which then in turn led to her publishing more novels. He also wrote a couple of novels, both of which I own and neither of which I have read. It’s definitely time to see what the man was about.
1947
Albert Sears – Millen Brand The Path to the Spiders’ Nest – Italo Calvino Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow – M. Barnard Eldershaw A Girl in Winter – Philip Larkin One Fine Day – Mollie Panter-Downes The Evenings – Gerard Reve Letty Fox: Her Luck – Christina Stead Stillmeadow Seasons – Gladys Taber A View from the Harbour – Elizabeth Taylor Friday at Noon – Benedict Thielen Peace Breaks Out – Angela Thirkell The Old Bank House – Angela Thirkell
If I had to choose at this moment I would pick One Fine Day.
1948
The Casino – Margaret Bonham Narcissa – Richmal Crompton Joy and Josephine – Monica Dickens Catalina – W. Somerset Maugham That Winter – Merle Miller Long After Summer – Robert Nathan The Locusts Have No King – Dawn Powell The Foolish Gentlewoman – Margery Sharp Another Year – R.C. Sherriff Tomorrow Will Be Better – Betty Smith Love Among the Ruins – Angela Thirkell Private Enterprise – Angela Thirkell
I may need a little Betty Smith to put it all into perspective. Then there is Merle Miller, an author I never would have heard about if not for Nancy Pearl’s Book Lust. I think I have read three of his and not been disappointed. They are medium hard to find at used bookstores so that always makes for a happy moment to find one in the wild.
1949
Strong Citadel – Katherine Newlin Burt The Matchmaker – Stella Gibbons The God Seeker – Sinclair Lewis Prairie Avenue – Arthur Meeker Tea with Mr Rochester – Frances Towers
I really disliked Cold Comfort Farm, but the Vintage edition of The Matchmaker was pretty enticing. I bought Prairie Avenue because it had an interesting old dust jacket. But I think the action takes place about 50 years prior so it may not be the best representation of 1949.
Dang. I just went through the list. It seems like it is going to be a good decade, but so many books by authors I love (and many cozy reads), it was actually rather boring to annotate the list. Maybe you all have suggestions which of these gems I should read.
As usual, the full TBR can be found at the bottom of the post.
[For those who don’t know, I am participating in A Century of Books this year which requires me to read one book from each year from 1919 through 2018.]
1930
As We Were – E.F. Benson The Deepening Stream – Dorothy Canfield The Shutter of Snow – Emily Holmes Coleman The Weatherhouse – Nan Shepherd Journey’s End – R.C. Sherriff and Vernon Bartlett Miss Mole – E.H. Young
I’m probably going to go for the Sherriff. I was so excited to find this volume as his books are hard to find here in the US, but I’ve been sitting on it for a long time. I have so enjoyed (loved) The Fortnight in September and The Hopkin’s Manuscript, I think I was afraid to read another Sherriff in case it wasn’t good. And this one has a co-author. Those always make a bit wary.
1931
Friends and Relations – Elizabeth Bowen Mystery in the Channel – Freeman Wills Crofts Poor Caroline – Winifred Holtby Simpson – Edward Sackville-West
This one is a total question mark. I have no idea which of these rise to the top when the time comes.
1932
As We Are – E.F. Benson Secret Lives – E.F. Benson The Pure and the Impure – Colette Marriage of Hermione – Richmal Crompton Portrait of a Family – Richmal Crompton Orient Express – Graham Greene Down the Garden Path – Beverly Nichols Lonely Road – Nevil Shute Death Under Sail – C.P. Snow The Gods Arrive – Edith Wharton One Way of Love – Gamel Woolsey Jenny Wren – E.H. Young
This could be a really good year. I mean I could read my way through this entire year and be pretty happy. This is the opposite of 1931, all of these jump out at me.
1933
Bonfire – Dorothy Canfield The Holiday – Richmal Crompton A Thatched Roof – Beverly Nichols A Pass in the Grampians – Nan Shepherd High Rising – Angela Thirkell Frost in May – Antonia White
This may be the earliest Thirkell I have, so that one may win the race.
1934
Luminous Isle – Eliot Bliss The 12.30 from Croydon – Freeman Wills Crofts Chedsy Place – Richmal Crompton A London Child of the 1870s – Molly Hughes A Pin to See the Peep Show – F. Tennyson Jesse Devoted Ladies – Mary Keane Rumour of Heaven – Beatrix Lehmann Work of Art – Sinclair Lewis Going Abroad – Rose Macaulay The Flowering Thorn – Margery Sharp The Search – C.P. Snow The Curate’s Wife – E.H. Young
An obscure Sinclair Lewis. That’s probably going to be the winner. I’ve read most of his novels and I’ve owned this one for a long time. I feel like Stuck in a Book recently posted something about A Pin to See the Peep Show, and what about that title. Hmm.
1935
Untouchable – Mulk Raj England Made Me – Graham Greene O These Men, These Men! – Angela Thirkell
My guess is a book I wrote with that title would not be similar in anyway to the one Thirkell wrote.
1936
The Dark Frontier – Eric Ambler Caroline – Richmal Crompton The Old Man’s Birthday – Richmal Crompton Innocent Summer – Frances Frost None Turn Back – Storm Jameson Mary Lavelle – Kate O’Brien Turn, Magic Wheel – Dawn Powell Greengates – R.C. Sherriff Summer Will Show – Sylvia Townsend Warner
I really want to say Ambler on this one but I’ve had 3 or 4 Dawn Powells on my shelves for a very long time. I think it is probably time to get her a go. Even though I have other of her books (is that grammatical?) I like starting with an author’s earliest books as possible.
1937
John – Irene Baird Friend of the Rich – E.F. Benson Janet – E.F. Benson The Unwanted – E.F. Benson There Are Four Seasons – Richmal Crompton Alas, Poor Lady – Rachel Ferguson The Nutmeg Tree – Margery Sharp Journey by Moonlight – Antal Szerb Summer Half – Angela Thirkell Hunt the Slipper – Violet Trefusis
Boy, the 30s really are a cozy-fest.
1938
I’m Not Complaining – Ruth Adam Cause for Alarm – Eric Ambler Journeying Wave – Richmal Crompton Brighton Rock – Graham Greene In Hazard – Richard Hughes Lions and Shadows – Christopher Isherwood Single Hound – May Sarton The Professor – Rex Warner
If I was adventurous I would choose In Hazard. I bought it solely for its cover.
1939
Seasoned Timber – Dorothy Canfield Merlin Bay – Richmal Crompton The Morning Is Near Us – Susan Glaspell Manja – Anna Gmeyner Party Going – Henry Green The Confidential Agent – Graham Greene The Lawless Road – Graham Greene The Brandons – Angela Thirkell Lark Rise – Flora Thompson