Book Digest: March 3, 2008
Regular readers of this space will notice the continuation of my recent genius brainstorm of asking writers of my acquaintance to offer a tidbit about their current reading. Nicholson Baker—whose amazing new opus, Human Smoke, was noted in this very same space—is this week’s contributor.
(Being a sensitive guy and congenial writer, he offered a short version of what follows. I demurred.)
The End of Empire
Netherland
Due ConsiderationsNew Yorker
Eothen
Also, former Random House editor Daniel Menaker has a new book-oriented show called Titlepage. I was trying to decide whether to provide you with the link to The New York Times piece or the show’s publicist’s web page. Why need I choose? I’ll give you both.
The Savage Detectives by Roberto Bolaño

Without digressing into my arcane reasons for holding such, I am not a big fan of the softcover book and thus I am reluctant to pay much attention. But I noticed that Bolaño’s The Savage Detectives has a new life in this format and so I must (again) enthusiastically encourage you to have a peek at the dead Chilean’s masterwork.
Arkansas by John Brandon

As seems the case for many of the McSweeney’s literary discoveries, Brandon’s story may be as interesting—possibly more so—than his fiction. Apparently he currently works in a Frito-Lay factory and his publishers seem to be gleefully touting his résumé of odd employments. It would be wonderful if Brandon were another Larry Brown, but in any case his first book makes use of southern Arkansas and its denizens, creating a narrative described by one McSweeney’s partisan as “half Denis Johnson, half Elmore Leonard.” Two halves that add up to more than one.
» Read an excerpt from Arkansas
The World That Made New Orleans: From Spanish Silver to Congo Square by Ned Sublette

Sublette is a remarkable man. A gifted and sincere musician—his last recording, Cowboy Rhumba, featured a meringue version of “Ghost Riders in the Sky”—he is the founder of Qbadisc Records, an ethnomusicologist, a producer of public radio’s Afropop Worldwide, and the author of a projected two-volume history of Cuban music. It should be superfluous to say so, but if anyone can tackle the enviable task of explaining the musical history of New Orleans and its milieu to the rest of us, it is Sublette.
187 Reasons Mexicanos Can’t Cross the Border: Undocuments 1971-2007 by Juan Felipe Herrera

All this fulminating around illegal aliens and immigration suggests to me the importance of reminding America that its other cultures have made this country vivid and viable and lively. Herrera appears to be in a state of permanent gypsyhood—though whether his travels fuel his writing or the other way around is not clear. In any case, this anthology showcases 35 years of Herrera’s “undocuments.”
Fire to Fire: New and Selected Poems by Mark Doty

Getting the jump on National Poetry month (every April since 1996!), I am thinking that at some near and future date I should do a roundup exclusively of poetry. Of course, I have already exposed my lack of expertise in this area—still, I forage on. In the meantime, here’s well-loved poet Doty’s collection of new poems and some selected from his previous seven books.
Desperate Passage: The Donner Party’s Perilous Journey West by Ethan Rarick

Even casual readers of American history have some awareness of the incident and events surrounding the Donner Party—an 1846 wagon train trapped with little sustenance or shelter in the Sierra Nevada Mountains for one harrowing winter. Countless books have been written about it—a stack Rarick adds to by unearthing new archaeological evidence and letters and diaries of Donner Party descendents with the aim of deflating the cloud of myth that surrounds it. Rarick offers: “The Donner Party is a story of hard decisions that were neither heroic nor villainous. Often, the emigrants displayed a more realistic and typically human mixture of generosity and selfishness, an alloy born of necessity.”
Major: A Black Athlete, a White Era, and the Fight to Become the World’s Fastest Human Being by Todd Balf

Based on the superlative account that Balf made of a mid-19th-century naval expedition to the Darien Gap in The Darkest Jungle, I am fully confident of his nose for a good story and his chops for making it sing. The subtitle of this tome sums up the turn-of-the-20th-century story of Major Taylor, a black superstar bicyclist—and apparently the first black American sports celebrity. Which of course made him a target and a big story. Balf climaxes this tale with a 1904 race in Australia with Taylor’s persistent rival, Floyd “Human Engine” McFarland—for the right to be named the fastest man alive.
» Read an excerpt from Major
World Made by Hand by James Howard Kunstler

If you missed Kunstler’s startling The Long Emergency, you missed an eye-opening explanation of the likelihood and consequences of dramatically decreased global oil reserves—which Kunstler managed to make interesting, though unsettling. In this piece of fiction, Kunstler has cast an eye to a future with vastly diminished fossil-fuel availability and a number of other catastrophes that beset the residents of his made-up Union Grove, N.Y.—life, as you will, after the long emergency.
» Read an excerpt from World Made by Hand
A Step From Death: A Memoir by Larry Woiwode

Is there a trend brewing here? First David Shields, stirred by ruminations about his aging father, pens The Thing About Life is That One Day You’ll Be Dead. Now comes North Dakotan Woiwode, writing to his son he as contemplates his dwindling mortality. Considering its inevitability, contemplation of one’s own demise is inescapable. A few words and thoughts by gifted writers here and there are a useful palliative—at least, I think so.
Split Estate by Charlotte Bacon

Former New Hampshirite Bacon, who is now ensconced in Bali with her family, has published her fourth book, the tale of a New York City family grieving over the suicide of the mother. The father takes his young brood to his mother’s ranch in his birth state, Wyoming, which naturally has some curative effects on this damaged and truncated family. Unfortunately, the mineral rights for the ranch (thus the title) have been sold off, threatening the family’s well being, such as it is. All of which makes for Bacon’s skillful rendering and use of the notion of “split estates.”
Green Chic: Saving the Earth in Style by Christie Matheson

My conscience, such as it is, compels me to offer notice of these green-proselytizing booklets (Wake Up and Smell the Planet: The Non-Pompous, Non-Preachy Grist Guide to Greening Your Day) hoping the accretion of such tomes will in some way add to our body of knowledge and, more importantly, our will to change our nasty, dumb, wasteful habits. This one apparently offers painless ways to be “hip, classic, and stylish” and still save Mother Earth.
Modernism: The Lure of Heresy From Baudelaire to Beckett and Beyond by Peter Gay

Gay is, at the least, a very dependable historian of culture and ideas and, having imbibed in formal psychoanalytic training, practices a loose, relaxed form of psychohistory. Which means he emphasizes the individual’s impulse to counter the reigning order and conventional wisdom. According to Gay, modernism “produced a fresh way of seeing society and the artist’s role in it, a fresh way of valuing works of culture and their makers. In short, what I am calling the modernist style was a climate of thought, feeling, and opinion.” Gay offers two essential characteristics: “First, the lure of heresy that impelled [artists’] actions as they confronted conventional sensibilities; and, second, a commitment to a principled self-scrutiny.” Need I point out that grasping modernism is a (small?) step toward understanding that naughty phrase, “postmodern?”