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Recent
Stories
June
12, 2003
Ray
McGovern
Deceived into War: Reflections of
a Former CIA Analyst
June
11, 2003
Jeffrey
St. Clair
Attack of the Hog Killers: Why the
Generals Hate the A-10
Elaine
Cassel
Meet Michael Chertoff: Ashcroft's
Top Gremlin
David Lindorff
The Republican Drive to Eliminate Overtime Pay
Tom
Gorman
Greens, the Antiwar Movement and 2004
Alfredo
Castro
Colombia: The Most Dangerous Place
on Earth for Trade Unionists
Nnimo
Bassey and Lawrence Bohlen
Bush Must Stop Telling Us What to
Eat!
Julie Hilden
Spike Lee v. Spike TV
CounterPunch
Wire
Blair Bros. Change Jobs!
Eric
Hobsbawm
The Empire Expands, Wider and Still
Wider
Steve
Perry
DHS: As Big
a Planning Snafu as Iraq?
June
10, 2003
Benjamin
Shepard
A Season in the Anti-War Movement
Chris
Floyd
Bush Family Lies About Iraq and Nazi
Germany
Wayne
Madsen
Weaponsgate
Jason Leopold
Powell's Denials Ring Hollow
Richard
Lichtman
Whining, Whimpering Leftists Confront the Logic of American World
Domination
Ray
Close
A CIA Analyst on Why the Lies About
WMD Matter
Hammond
Guthrie
Banking on Saddam?
Steve
Perry
Bush's Wars
Web Log 6/10
June
9, 2003
Alex
Coolman
Male Rape in US Prisons
Elaine
Cassel
Ashcroft is Coming!
Lee
Sustar
Is Iran Next?
Agustin
Velloso
Equatorial Guinea: Few Rich, Many
Poor
Gila
Svirsky
Some Lives Are Worth Less Than Others
Dr. Gerry
Lower
Human Worth in Bush's America
Michael
S. Ladah
A True Liberation
Ishmael Reed
Iraqi Slaughter, Mayhem and Plunder
Steve
Perry
How to Beat Bush, part 1
June
7 / 8, 2003
Alexander
Cockburn
The Terrible Truth
Jeffrey
St. Clair
Going Critical: Bush's War on Endangered Species
Joanne
Mariner
Ashcrofts Sides with Torturers
Steven
Sherman
A Different Theory of Everything
Ron Jacobs
Sports, Politics and the 60s
M.
Shahid Alam
Pauperizing the Periphery
Amelia
Peltz
If This is the Road, I'd Rather be Lost
Shelton
Hull
Another Powell, Another Capitulation
Binoy Kampmark
Nuclear Deterrence and North Korea
Ben
Tripp
A Fish Story
Sen. Robert
Byrd
Where is the Outrage?
Robin
Philpot
Congo Distortions
Julie Hilden
Murder and the Matrix
Laura
Flanders
An Interview with Isabel Allende
David Lindorff
The Last Byline
Adam
Engel
Talk Dirty Scary Monsters
Poets'
Basement
Kearney, Reiss, Guthrie, Albert and Hamod
June
6, 2003
Elaine
Cassel
Ashcroft the Insatiable
David
Krieger
The Big Lie
Ramzy
Baroud
Sharon and the Myth of the Peacemakers
Anthony
Gancarski
Sharansky: "Crucifixion is a Privilege"
Sam
Hamod
His Own Little Country
Sean Carter
Why Indict Martha Stewart and Not Ken Lay?
David
Lindorff
Cracks in the Consensus
Stew Albert
Ari's Great Set
Steve
Perry
Greens and
Moore in 04? No
June
5, 2003
Jeffrey
St. Clair
Pools of Fire: The Looming Nuclear
Nightmare in the Woods of North Carolina
Imraan
Siddiqi
Ann Coulter's Foul Mouth
Michael
Leon
Clinton, Reno & Waco: Remember What They've Done
Robert
Jensen
Texas Pledge Law Undermines Democracy
Ann Harrison
Rosenthal is Free, But the Fight isn't Over
Paul
Dean
How You Can Be Deliriously Happy in the Age of Bush
Gary Leupp
When Spooks Speak Out
Website
of the Day
Evidence in Black and White?
June
4, 2003
Alexander
Cockburn
Federal Judge Blinks; Rosenthal
Walks
Lisa
Walsh Thomas
The Isaiah Crowd: The Threat of Neo-Christianity
Jason
Leopold
Manufacturing the Iraq War
John Chuckman
Blackmail as Policy
Mazin
Qumsiyeh
Summit: Peace or Pretense?
Issam Nashashibi
Sharon's Sword of Damocles
Steve
Perry
Wolfowitz of Arabia: the VF interview transcript
June
3, 2003
Chris
Floyd
Copycat Killers: Bush, Jakarta and
the Slaughter in Aceh
Jason
Leopold
Wolfowitz Tells All
Elaine
Cassel
We Interrupt Your Normal Show to Bring You an Important Message
from Michael Powell: "Go to Hell, Americans!"
Tom
Crumpacker
The Politics of US Cuba Policy
William
S. Lind
Fourth Generation Warfare in Iraq
Sam
Hamod
The Final Brick in the Wall
Uri
Avnery
The Altalena Affair
Hammond
Guthrie
Stepping into Some Deep DARPA
Steve
Perry
The WashTimes'
al-Qaeda nuke "exclusive"
June
2, 2003
Arundhati
Roy
Day of the Jackals
Norman
Madarasz
Behind the Neo-Con Curtain: Plato,
Leo Strauss and Allan Bloom
Alain
Frachon and Daniel Vernet
The Strategist and the Philosopher: Strauss and Wohlstetter
Anthony
Gancarski
Anti-Imperialism, Then & Now
Standard
Schaefer
Wasted at the Pentagon
Jason
Leopold
Rocky's Advice to the Dems
Guthrie
& Albert
HUAC 58 Years Letter
Steve
Perry
The Politics of Terror Alerts
May
31, 2003
Alexander
Cockburn
A Whiner Called Horowitz
Gary Leupp
The Frauds of War
Dave
Lindorff
Clinton, Bush, Lies and Impeachment
Tom Stephens
Does It Matter that the Bush Administration Lied?
Sasan
Fayazmanesh
Who Is Next?
Joanne
Mariner
Trivializing Terrorism
Wayne
Madsen
Ayatollah Ashcroft's Busy Week
Larry Magnuson
Is a Television a Radio or a Billboard?
Elaine
Cassel
Wake Up, America!
Gila Svirsky
Waiting for the Lament to End
Susan
Davis
Kitchen Dreams
Chris Clarke
Barbra Streisand: Environmental Hypocrite
Chris
Floyd
Bush Locates Source of World Evil: God
Adam Engel
Gravity's End Zone
Poets'
Basement
Reiss, Guthrie, Orloski, Albert
May
30, 2003
Ben
Tripp
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Agenda
Neve
Gordon
The Bad Fence
Todd
Steiner
Endangered Ocean
Robert
Freeman
Bush's Tax Cuts: a Form of National Insanity
Sean
Carter
Utah Gets Fired Up for Executions
Daniel
Bacher
How Bush's War Violated International Laws
Tariq
Ali
Re-Colonizing Iraq
Steve
Perry
Bush Wars
Web Log
May
29, 2003
CounterPunch
Wire
WMD: Who Said What When
Jason
Leopold
Despite Thin Intelligence Reports,
US Plans Overthrow of Iran Regime
Ron
Jacobs
Popular Uprising, Inc.
Michelle
Ciaccorra
Bush's Nuclear Policy: Do As I Say, Not As I Do
Yves Engler
The Economics of Health Care in
America: Pay More to Die Sooner
Kimberly
Blaker
Vouchers for Jesus
Harry
Browne
Stakeknife: Britain's Army Spy at
the Top of the IRA
Stew
Albert
Cops of the World
Steve Perry
Greens 04: In or Out?
Hot Stories
CounterPunch
Wire
WMD: Who Said What When
Cindy
Corrie
A Mother's Day Talk: the Daughter
I Can't Hear From
Elaine
Cassel
Civil Liberties
Watch
Michel
Guerrin
Embedded Photographer Says: "I
Saw Marines Kill Civilians"
Uzma
Aslam Khan
The Unbearably Grim Aftermath of War:
What America Says Does Not Go
Paul de Rooij
Arrogant
Propaganda
Gore Vidal
The
Erosion of the American Dream
Francis Boyle
Impeach
Bush: A Draft Resolution
Click Here
for More Stories.
|
June
21, 2003
A Summer Reading List
CounterPunch's
Favorite Novels (in English)
[This appears to be the summer that fiction
finally makes its big return: Jayson Blair, Rick Bragg and the
Bush administration's brief for war. In the spirit of the times,
we at CounterPunch asked some of our favorite writers, friends
and columnists, including Lewis Shiner, Julie Hilden, Bill Kauffman,
Sam Smith and Bruce Jackson, to send us a list of their favorite
novels, written in English since 1900. Happy reading. AC/JSC]
Alexander Cockburn--coeditor
CounterPunch
Books-writ-in-English I'd throw in the
car to read on the way to somewhere? 20th century novels I truly
love? Start with P.G. Wodehouse. Two of his best, written
in the late 1930s or early 40s, The
Code of the Woosters and Jeeves
in the Morning. Up there with Shakespeare's best comedies.
And talking of Shakespeare, try to find Hugh Kingsmill's
Return
of William Shakespeare, a first person account of his
life and work by the Swan of A. Now move over to Virginia
Woolf's Orlando.
Close out with a little surrealist classic, written as a series
for the old English Lilliput, Maurice Richardson's Exploits
of Engelbrecht the Dwarf.
Adventure? Stanley Weyman's Under
the Red Robe, tighter than Dumas, set in Richelieu's
France, with its terrific first line, "Marked cards!"
Now for Arthur Ransome's children's classic We
Didn't Mean to Go To Sea, and then in a natural aquatic
progression, to that Irish revolutionary, Erskine Childers
and his Riddle
of the Sands, then to John Buchan's Greenmantle,
chock with all the ingredients of today's headlines about Islam,
terror, Osama, the Great Game, only written 70 years ago.
Now to Eric Ambler's Mask
of Dimitrios, then head east from Istanbul to India and
John Masters' haunting thriller The
Deceivers about stranglers (The Thugs) in the service
of Kali. Don't forget to pack Patricia Highsmith's The
Talented Mr Ripley, made into that great movie Plein
Soleil. Pack at least one of C.S. Forester's Hornblower
books, maybe Flying
Colors, where the austere commander has that torrid fling
with the Comptesse Marie de Gracay. Not enough women in this
list. How about Jean Rhys' Wide
Sargasso Sea and Rebecca West's The
Thinking Reed, with its playboy who "even when he
was peering down a woman's blouse managed to look as though he
was thinking about India".
Pick up my father Claud Cockburn's
Beat
the Devil, so much better than the movie Huston made
from it.Then on to Patrick Hamilton's London-set Slaves
of Solitude, noirer than noir. Something short, though
still noir-ish? Evelyn Waugh's Ordeal
of Gilbert Pinfold, so superior to the pompous war trilogy.
Now settle down with two by Joseph Conrad, both brilliant
about terrorism, Under
Western Eyes and The
Secret Agent. Close out with Flann O'Brien's At
Swim Two Birds and my one concession to heft, James
Joyce's Ulysses.
Throw in Henry Miller's Tropic
of Cancer.
You forgot to pack Mann, Musil, Broch? Lucky you. Another summer
safe from attack by Joseph and His Brothers, The Man Without
Qualities, not to mention the Death of Virgil. Next year, you
promise.
Jeffrey St. Clair--co-editor CounterPunch. (My top 20 in rough
order of preference.)
Far Tortuga-Peter
Matthiessen
(Moby Dick narrated by Bob Marley.)
Mumbo Jumbo-Ishmael
Reed
(A conspiratorial history of America that Howard Zinn might have
written if he'd been a black radical, obsessed with the blues
and jazz and blessed with a vicious sense of humor. Reed is our
funniest novelist since Twain and also one of the most painful.)
Go Down Moses-
William Faulkner
(Faulkner is the Poe of the 20th Century. But he's haunted by
bigger demons--here nothing less than cultural incest, human
enslavement, the destruction of wild nature by cut-and-run timber
companies and the extermination of the Indians of the Mississippi
Delta, all of which come crashing together in the extended version
of "The Bear," which forms the heart of this novel.)
Solo Faces-James
Salter
(The best novel ever written about mountain climbing, sex and
France--yes, they go together. The prose is as clear and
deadly as the sheer face of the Dru.)
Almanac of the Dead-Leslie
Marmon Silko
(The reconquest of America by the people, animals and plants
the masters of the nation mistakenly assumed they had annihilated.)
Ray-Barry
Hannah
(The white Ishmael Reed...on drugs.)
A Feast of Snakes-Harry
Crews
(The deep south in all its gothic weirdness, populated by the
next generation of Faulkner's Snopes, in prose distilled to two
syllable words and eight word sentences. But what sentences!)
The Plumed Serpent-DH
Lawrence
(Sex, power, sun and the old Mexico. Oddly, it's also
Jean-Luc Godard's favorite novel.)
The Executioner's Song-Norman Mailer
(The crowning achievement of Mailer's career and the best book
ever written on crime and punishment in the US.)
Tropic of Cancer-Henry
Miller
(The most liberating novel in English and one of the very best.)
Gravity's Rainbow-Thomas
Pynchon
(The secret history of WWII and the corporate plot behind the
engineering of the Cold War, with lots of Sadean sex, pigs, dirty
limericks, hallucinations, pie fights, anarchists, bad puns,
quantum physics and screwball comedy to rush things along.)
Tender is the Night-F.
Scott Fitzgerald
(Fitzgerald's true masterpiece about a Lost Generation of rich
and dissipated American expatriates, who almost get what they
deserve.)
A Place of Greater Safety-Hilary Mantel
(The most enthusiastic account of the French Revolution written
in English since Twain and a rip-roaring read.)
The Violent Bear It Away-Flannery O'Connor
(Religious zealots, sadistic families, visionary schizophrenics,
greedy bastards and a gumbo of freaks and outcasts. Just another
day in O'Connor's America.)
Sleeping Beauty-Ross
McDonald
(Lost children, narcissistic adults and the destruction of the
southern California coast by big oil. McDonald is also a better
writer than the more acclaimed novelists of So Cal's unique brand
of degeneracy, Raymond Chandler and Nathaniel West.)
The Last Good Kiss-James
Crumley
(For my money, the greatest hard-boiled detective novel ever
written and, like the second greatest, Hammett's Red
Harvest, it takes place in our greatest state: that would
be Montana.)
Deserted Cities of the Heart-Lewis Shiner
(Shiner defies categorization. He's often lumped with the cyberpunks,
but here he writes about rock 'n roll, drugs and the haunted
past of Mexico better than any living writer.)
The Monkeywrench Gang-Edward Abbey
(Too bad it's fiction. Or is it?)
Fool's Crow-James
Welch
(Hemingway spoke of loss as a measure of character. Papa was
bluffing. James Welch isn't. The Blackfoot novelist is the American
West's great historian of loss and this haunting novel about
the Blackfeet Tribe, the great horse raiders of the Rocky Mountain
Front, at the time of the white invasion is a beautiful and excrutiating
evocation of his tribe's history--and our own.)
Children of Light-Robert
Stone
(The best novel about Hollywood since the Last
Tycoon.)
Captain Blood-Rafael
Sabatini
(The first novel I reread.)
Flush- Virginia
Woolf
(I'm a sucker for dog stories.)
Ben Sonnenberg--CounterPunch counselor, former editor of Grand
Street, author Lost
Property: Memoirs of a Bad Boy.
Riddle of the Sands
-- Erskine Childers
Kim --
Rudyard Kipling
Riceyman Steps
-- Arnold Bennett
Manservant and Maidservant -- Ivy Compton Burnett
Parade's End
-- Ford Madox Ford
Cakes and Ale
-- Somerset Maugham
The Real Life of Sebastian Knight -- Vladimir Nabokov
Lolita --
Vladimir Nabokov
Island of Dr Moreau
-- H.G. Wells
Scoop
-- Evelyn Waugh
Animal Farm
-- George Orwell
Death of the Heart
-- Elizabeth Bowen
Novel on Yellow Paper -- Stevie Smith
The Rainbow
-- D.H. Lawrence
The Man Who Was Thursday -- G. K. Chesterton
USA Trilogy
-- John Dos Passos
A Lost Lady
-- Willa Cather
Zuleika Dobson --
Max Beerbohm
Momento Mori
-- Muriel Sparks
Passage to India
-- E.M. Forester
Between the Acts
-- Virginia Woolf
Stew Albert--poet and Overlord
of the Yippie
Reading Room. He can be reached at: stewa@aol.com
An American Dream--Norman
Mailer
USA--John Dos Passos
The Sun Also Rises--Ernest
Hemingway
The Iron Heel--Jack
London
The Great Gatsby--F.
Scott Fitzgerald
It Can't Happen Here--Sinclair
Lewis
Dog Soldiers--Robert
Stone
American Pastoral--Philip
Roth
Catch 22--Joseph
Heller
Underworld--Don
DeLillo
Lady Chatterley's Lover--DH
Lawrence
The Jungle--Upton
Sinclair
Dharma Bums--Jack
Kerouac
This Side of Paradise--F.
Scott Fitzgerald
Elaine Cassel -- former English
professor turned lawyer, law professor, legal columnist and blogger on
Civil Liberties.
The Golden Bowl --
Henry James (My favorite James.
The strains in a relationship are symbolized in a cracked urn;
emotionally charged, yet exquisitely restrained.)
The Invisible Man
-- Ralph Ellison (The outsider
portrays his separateness with sarcasm and a touch of humor.)
The Sweet Hereafter
-- Russell Banks (Aching emotionality
simmers just beneath the surface; spare prose, nary an unnecessary
word. My favorite short story author is Ray Carver, and this
Banks is the most Carveresque.)
Mr. Bridge & Mrs. Bridge -- Evan Connell
(Two novels, actually, of a 1940s couple describing their life
and marriage each through their own eyes. Each captures his/her
loneliness in a subtle way_read them together for the best experience
of two lives passing in the hall.)
The Citadel
-- A. J. Cronin (The tale of
a young Scottish doctor in the 20s, as he goes from a small-town
doctor barely making it to a London physician who has it made.
But he become disillusioned and recovers his love for medicine
and people.)
Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man -- James Joyce
(The ultimate "coming-of-age" novel from surely the
most important writer of the 20th century.)
To the Lighthouse
-- Virginia Woolf (A stream-of
consciousness narrative of a middle-class matron; dreamy setting.)
Sorrell and Son --
Warwick Deeping (A father sacrifices
and devotes his life to making a good life for his son. Poignant,
but with a "happy" ending.)
My Man Jeeves
-- P. G. Wodehouse (Hard to pick
my favorite Wodehouse, but this one will do. What is it about
Bertie Wooster and Jeeves, his valet, that appeals to me? The
deadpan sarcasm and subtle humor, I guess.)
A Handful of Dust--
Evelyn Waugh (A master of satire
and dry humor, Waugh pokes fun at his favorite victims--the British
upper class.)
Down and Out in Paris and London -- George Orwell (Ostensibly
a novel, this book is Orwell's thinly fictional account of a
time he spent "slumming it" in Paris and London. The
decadence is compelling.)
Ethan Frome --
Edith Wharton (The darkest of
Wharton's novels, the tragic tale of a desperately unhappy man
locked in a loveless marriage.
Native Son
-- Richard Wright (One of the
most important novels in the 20th century about the hopelessness
of being poor and black in the US in the 30s. In many ways, not
much has changed.)
Chris Clarke -- editor of
Faultline: the magazine
of the California environment.
Tortilla Curtain--T.C.Boyle
Black Sun--Ed
Abbey
The Brothers K--David
James Duncan
Continental Drift--James
Houston
Tripmaster Monkey--Maxine
Hong Kingston
The Octopus--Frank
Norris
Straight White Male--Gerald
Haslam
All the Little Live Things--Wallace Stegner
The Turquoise Dragon--David
Rains Wallace
Vida--Marge
Piercy
The Giant Joshua--Maurine
Whipple (Spelling correct)
All the Pretty Horses--Cormac McCarthy (despite the movie)
Animal Dreams--Barbara
Kingsolver
Bless The Beasts And Children--Glendon Swarthout
Bucking the Sun--Ivan
Doig
Michael Donnelly --
Salem, Oregon-based environmental organizer.
Slaughterhouse Five--Kurt
Vonnegut, Jr.
Where is Joe Merchant?--Jimmy Buffett
The Dispossessed--Ursula
LeGuin
A Canticle for Liebowitz--Walter M. Miller, Jr.
Lord of Light--Rodger
Zelazny
Tourist Season--Carl
Hiaasen
Little Altars Everywhere--Rebecca Wells
Dog Soldiers--Robert
Stone
Sometimes A Great Notion--Ken Kesey
The Butcher's Theater--Jonathan Kellerman
A Thief of Time--Tony
Hillerman
King Rat--James
Clavell
Condominium--John
D. MacDonald
1876--Gore
Vidal
Devil in a Blue Dress--Walter Mosley
The Foundation Trilogy --Isaac Asimov
Brave New World --Aldous
Huxley
Invisible Man --Ralph
Waldo Ellison
Adam Engel -- New York writer,
poet and CounterPunch contributor.
Gravity's Rainbow
-- Thomas Pynchon
JR --
William Gaddis
Americana --
Don Delillo
Invisible Man
-- Ralph Ellison
Ulysses --
James Joyce
Catch 22
-- Joseph Heller
Naked Lunch
-- William Burroughs
Absalom, Absalom!
-- William Faulkner
The Book of Daniel
-- E.L. Doctorow
Catcher in the Rye
-- J.D. Salinger
Don Quixote: Which Was a Dream -- Kathy Acker
Blood and Guts in High School -- Kathy Acker
Mumbo Jumbo
-- Ishmael Reed
USA Trilogy
-- John Dos Passos
The Making of Americans -- Gertrude Stein
Molloy, Malone Dies, The Unnamable -- Samuel Beckett
Carl Estabrook -- Visiting Scholar at the University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign and CounterPunch columnist.
SWORD OF HONOUR
-- Evelyn Waugh,
A DANCE TO THE MUSIC OF TIME -- Anthony Powell,
DOCTOR FISCHER OF GENEVA -- Graham Greene,
AT SWIM-TWO-BIRDS--
Flann O'Brien
ULYSSES
-- James Joyce
THE SOUND AND THE FURY -- William Faulkner
Gravity's Rainbow
-- Thomas Pynchon
EVERYTHING THAT RISES MUST CONVERGE --Flannery O'Connor
THE BLACK PRINCE
-- Iris Murdoch
MASTER AND COMMANDER
-- Patrick O'Brian
MANHATTAN TRANSFER
-- John Dos Passos
NAPOLEON SYMPHONY
-- Anthony Burgess
REGENERATION
-- Pat Barker
WOMEN IN LOVE
-- D. H. Lawrence
LOOK HOMEWARD, ANGEL
-- Thomas Wolfe
BEAT TO QUARTERS
-- C. S. Forester
A FLAG FOR SUNRISE
-- Robert Stone
LUCKY JIM
-- Kingsley Amis
OLIVER WISWELL
-- Kenneth Roberts
JULIAN
-- Gore Vidal
DAY OF THE LOCUST
-- Nathaniel West
THE GOLDEN GATE
-- Vikram Seth
LOLITA
-- Vladimir Nabokov
THE BLUE FLOWER
-- Penelope Fitzgerald
MR. AMERICAN
-- George MacDonald Fraser
GAUDY NIGHT
-- Dorothy L. Sayers
THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET -- Lawrence Durrell
THE LORD OF THE FLIES -- William Golding
MARJORIE MORNINGSTAR
-- Herman Wouk (Wait, I can explain...)
Julie Hilden -- laywer, columnist and author of the newly
published erotic novel Three
and the memoir The
Bad Daughter.
A Book of Common Prayer -- Joan Didion
The Book of Daniel
-- E.L. Doctorow
"His Dark Materials" trilogy -- Philip Pullman
The Left Hand of Darkness -- Ursula LeGuin
The Dispossessed
-- Ursula LeGuin
Affliction
-- Russell Banks
The Sweet Hereafter
-- Russell Banks
The Foundation Trilogy -- Isaac Asimov
July's People
-- Nadine Gordimer
The Late Bourgeois World -- Nadine Gordimer
Age of Iron
-- J.M. Coetzee
The Comfort of Strangers -- Ian McEwan
House of Stairs
-- William Sleator
Anything by Philip K. Dick
Bruce Jackson -- editor of
the web magazine BuffaloReport.com
and SUNY Distinguished Professor and Samuel P. Capen Professor
of American Culture at University at Buffalo.
Absalom, Absalom!
-- William Faulkner,
The Great Gatsby
-- F. Scott Fitzgerald,
Invisible Man
-- Ralph Ellison,
Native Son
-- Richard Wright
Call it Sleep
-- Henry Roth
Miss Lonelyhearts
-- Nathaniel West
The Maltese Falcon
-- Dashiell Hammett,
Gone With the Wind
-- Margaret Mitchell
From Here to Eternity -- James Jones
The Spy Who Came in From the Cold -- John Le Carre
The French Lieutenant's Woman -- John Fowles
The Stand
-- Stephen King
Their Eyes Were Watching God -- Zora Neale Hurston
Wise Blood
-- Flannery O'Connor
Little Big Man --
Thomas Berger
Ulysses
-- James Joyce
Lolita --
Vladimir Nabokov
Heart of Darkness --
Joseph Conrad
Ironweed
-- William Kennedy
Disgrace
-- J.M. Coetzee
Christine Karatnytsky -- New York Public Library for the Performing
Arts
Voss by
Patrick White
Martha Quest
by Doris Lessing
Swing, Hammer, Swing
by Jeff Torrington
The Grapes of Wrath
by John Steinbeck
The Loved One
by Evelyn Waugh
At Swim-Two-Birds
by Flann O'Brien
Archy and Mehitabel
by Don Marquis
Call of the Wild
by Jack London
Valis Trilogy
by Philip K. Dick
Bill Kauffman-- author of Dispatches
from the Muckdog Gazette: A Mostly Affectionate Account of a
Small Town's Fight to Survive (Henry Holt) and of a novel,
Every
Man a King (Soho Press), and three other books.
Burr and
Lincoln
by Gore Vidal--(America, by a true patriot and our greatest
living man of letters.)
The Brave Cowboy
by Edward Abbey--(An anarchist
Western. In the film version (Lonely are the Brave, starring
Kirk Douglas's jaw), screenwriter Dalton Trumbo shamefully changed
the hero's crime from rescuing a draft-resister to harboring
a family of adorable illegal immigrants. Abbey: Brave. Trumbo:
Coward!)
The Octopus
by Frank Norris, Giants
in the Earth by Ole Rolvaag, and The
Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck--(The great American
novel: take your pick.)
Babbitt
by Sinclair Lewis--A regionalist
dystopia by a Minnesota Firster. George Babbitt is a fool not
because he is provincial but because he has bought into the lie
of mass culture. If you drink at Starbucks and watch SEX AND
THE CITY, you're Babbitt. Dump FRIENDS; make friends!
The Magnificent Ambersons by Booth Tarkington--You've
seen Welles' butchered movie; now read the superior novel.
Jayber Crow
by Wendell Berry--The finest
book ever written about a barber. Berry is the exemplary American
agrarian.
Dandelion Wine
by Ray Bradbury--Just lovely.
My daughter and I read the opening pages (about the first day
of summer) every summer solstice. Yeah, I know, dandelions yellow
the yard in May, not June, but maybe things were different in
Ray's Waukegan.
Look Homeward, Angel
by Thomas Wolfe and On
the Road by Jack Kerouac--I loved these books when I
was 23, and I APOLOGIZE FOR NOTHING!
The Adventures of Wesley Jackson by William Saroyan--An
Armenian-American pacifist confronts The Good War and loses his
career. Saroyan was a soldier when he wrote this charming story
of a 19-year-old draftee who discovers that "our own army
was the enemy." Office of War Information commissar Herbert
Agar--a turncoat bastard who had been a Kentucky distributist
before going proto-Ashcroft--threatened him with a court martial
and tried to kill the book. Saroyan nailed the chickenhawks but
good: "when everybody else got shipped overseas they were
still writing scenarios for films encouraging everybody else
to face death like a scenario writer."
The Killer Inside Me
by Jim Thompson--Inspired an
aptly bleak album by one of my all-time favorite bands, Green
on Red.
Raintree County
by Ross Lockridge, Jr.--Indiana
golden boy writes 1,000-page Whitmanesque novel, then kills self.
No one has read this book for 50 years, but I love it.
Crazy Legs McBain by Joe Archibald--Hey, it's my list. Every fall I read this 1961
boys book about an unlikely college football star, a gawky kid
who runs punts back 90 yards, makes one-handed catches, and piledrives
the pretty boy-rich kid quarterback's face into the turf. Go
Bobcats!
Max Sawicky--economist at
the Economic Policy Institute and Tsar of the MaxSpeak
site.
don't die before reading:
Invisible Man
-- Ralph Ellison
Good as Gold
-- Joseph Heller
Catch 22
-- Heller
Naked Lunch
-- William S. Burroughs
Why Are We In Vietnam -- Norman Mailer
less taxing:
Berlin Game, Mexico Set, London Match (really one
book)--Len Deighton
Spy Hook, Spy Line, Spy Sinker (ditto);
-- Len Deighton
The Foundation Trilogy -- Isaac Asimov
Day of the Jackel --
Frederick Forsythe
everything by John Le Carre
Standard Schaefer--independent
economic journalist and cultural historian. He also co-edits
the New Review of Literature. He can be reached at ssschaefer@earthlink.net
Lincoln
--Gore Vidal
American Tabloid
-- James Ellroy
If He Hollers, Let Him Go -- Chester Himes
Love in the Ruins
-- Walker Percy
White Noise
-- Don Delillo
Infinite Jest
-- David Foster Wallace
Harlot's Ghost
-- Norman Mailer
Five Doubts
-- Mary Caponegro
Imaginative Qualities of Actual Things -- Gilbert Sorrentino
The Bushwacked Piano
-- Thomas McGuane
Lewis Shiner -- author of
Deserted
Cities of the Heart, Slam,
Glimpses,
and Say
Goodbye: the Laurie Moss Story.
HEART OF DARKNESS
-- Joseph Conrad
(Tainted by racism and imperialism, but undeniably compelling,
both in the narrative techniques and the sheer power of the story.)
THE SWEETHEART SEASON
-- Karen Joy Fowler
(Nostalgia was never like this--a women's baseball team in the
late 1940s reveals a weird America just under the surface, full
of wit, grace, and beauty.)
THE DIGGING LEVIATHAN
-- James P. Blaylock
(A loving attack on the very nature of science, hysterically
funny, and wonderfully unwilling to pass judgment.)
A THOUSAND ACRES
-- Jane Smiley
(Hard to pick just one from an oeuvre that's so varied and uniformly
excellent, but the emotional level in this one is stunning.)
MASTERS OF ATLANTIS
-- Charles Portis
(Deadpan novel of fringe culture and conspiracy from a seriously
underrated writer.)
Gravity's Rainbow
-- Thomas Pynchon
(The funniest, easiest-reading "difficult" book I know,
taking a slight edge over the also wonderful MASON
& DIXON.)
SAINT MAYBE
-- Anne Tyler
(Again, hard to pick just one, but this may be my favorite of
hers--caring, patient exploration of damaged characters trying
to make some headway in life.)
LAND OF LAUGHS
-- Jonathan Carroll
(Flawed novel with a deeply unsatisfying ending, but completely
unforgettable, with twists and turns unlike anything else out
there.)
DREAM SCIENCE
-- Thomas Palmer
(Hyper-realistic book about a man caught up in a series of impossible
events that have a primal, almost mythic quality, finally hijacking
our sense of what reality is.)
MARTIAN TIME-SLIP
-- Philip K. Dick
(Essentially a mainstream novelist of character, his best work
uses SF elements to tighten the screws on his protagonists--you'll
never look at Ken and
Barbie the same way after reading this.)
ENDLESS LOVE
-- Scott Spencer
(I don't know many other novels that get the obsessive quality
of young love as right as this one does--Spencer is another writer
with a large and varied body of work, all of which is great.)
DOG SOLDIERS
-- Robert Stone
(Word for word I can't think of a better stylist, but Stone's
books are too often about self-pitying drunks. Among the exceptions,
DAMASCUS
GATE may be a better novel, but this is his archetypical
work.)
Sam Smith -- editor of
the indispensable Progressive
Review and author of The
Great Political Repair Manual.
I don't read that many novels in part
because I resent novelists. They write lies, then get to call
it literature and turn beautiful women gooey-eyed at parties.
Journalists write the truth, then get to call it news and turn
bleary-eyed listening to politicians at press conferences. If
they start writing like novelists, it becomes a major scandal,
witness the recent troubles at the Times.
There are plenty of literary truth-tellers
and any summer would be better spent reading them than the average
novel. I particularly recommend the work of The Intitials: E.B
White, A.J. Liebling and H.L. Mencken, as well as anything by
James Thurber. Consider, for example, a good novel that makes
my list: "All the King's Men." Fine as it is, it doesn't
match Liebling's description of another Long in "The Earl
of Louisiana."
Further, having more than enough dysfunction
in my own family, I get no particular joy out of reading about
other people's problems, whether fictional or mildly disguised.
And I agree with Joe Rauh who once told me that he once declined
an invitation from Arthur Miller to see a tragic play because
"I didn't see why I should have to pay to see what I try
to avoid in real life."
But, unlike novelists, journalists tend
to do what they're told, so here's my list:
Sister Carrie--Theodore
Dreiser
The Great Gatsby--F.
Scott Fitzgerald
Brave New World--Aldus
Huxley
Catch 22--Joseph
Heller
1984--George
Orwell
Slaughterhouse Five--Kurt
Vonnegut
Animal Farm--Orwell
All the King's Men--Robert
Penn Warren
The Sun Also Rises--Ernest
Hemingway
Catcher in the Rye--JD
Salinger
Lord Jim--Joseph
Conrad
Lord of the Flies--William
Golding
Invisible Man--Ralph
Ellison
Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy--Douglas Adams
Finally, when I do read fiction, it tends
to be detective mysteries. I'm convinced that Dashiell Hammett,
Raymond Chandler, Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe, and Michael Innes tell
all one needs to know to get along in this life and how to avoid
trouble along the way. As Chandler once wrote of the detective
hero, "He has a sense of character, or he would not know
his job. He will take no man's money dishonestly and no man's
insolence without a due and dispassionate revenge. He is a lonely
man and his pride is that you will treat him as a proud man or
be very sorry you ever saw him. He talks as the man of his age
talks -- that is, with a rude wit, a lively sense of the grotesque,
a disgust for sham, and a contempt for pettiness. The story is
this man's adventure in search of a hidden truth, and it would
be no adventure if it did not happen to a man fit for adventure.
He has a range of awareness that startles you, but it belongs
to him by right, because it belongs to the world he lives in.
If there were enough like him, the world would be a very safe
place to live in, without becoming too dull to be worth living
in."
David Vest -- CounterPunch
columnist and rock'n'roller. His scorching new CD, Way
Down Here, is now available from CounterPunch.
MASTERS OF ATLANTIS--Charles
Portis
Written
on the Body -- Jeannette Winterson
Ellen Foster--Kaye
Gibbons
The Handmaid's Tale--Margaret
Atwood
The Knockout Artist--Harry
Crews
Hue and Cry--James
Alan MacPherson (I know, hush about it)
The Ambassadors--Henry
James
Last Exit to Brooklyn--Hubert Selby, Jr.
The Talented Mr Ripley--Patricia Highsmith
Jesse Walker -- associate editor of Reason
and author of Rebels
on the Air: An Alternative History of Radio in America (NYU
Press, 2001). http://jessewalker.blogspot.com
The Place of Dead Roads -- William S. Burroughs
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay -- Michael Chabon
The Man Who Was Thursday -- G.K. Chesterton
David Boring
-- Daniel Clowes
Aegypt
-- John Crowley
A Scanner Darkly
-- Philip K. Dick
The Sound and the Fury -- William Faulkner
Red Harvest
-- Dashiell Hammett
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man -- James Joyce
Impollutable Pogo
-- Walt Kelly
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest -- Ken Kesey
Motherless Brooklyn
-- Jonathan Lethem
The Third Policeman --
Flann O'Brien
Wise Blood
-- Flannery O'Connor
Mumbo Jumbo
-- Ishmael Reed
Burr --
Gore Vidal
Jimmy Corrigan
-- Chris Ware
The Woman Chaser
-- Charles Williford
Illuminatus!
-- Robert Anton Wilson & Robert Shea
Kimberly Willson -- Millar Library, Portland State University.
Golden Notebook--
Doris Lessing
Justine
-- Lawrence Durrell
Aaron's Rod --
D. H. Lawrence
The Years
-- Virginia Woolf
Light Years
-- James Salter
The Executioner's Song-- Norman Mailer
Sula--
Toni Morrison
Solstice
-- Joyce Carol Oates
Desperate Characters--
Paula Fox
The Crying of Lot 49--
Thomas Pynchon
Slaughterhouse Five--
Kurt Vonnegut
In the Cut
-- Susanna Moore
Death in the Family--
James Agee
Farewell, My Lovely--
Raymond Chandler
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