The Mighty TMFTML was kind enough to link to the Spectator's Christmas list of Books of the Year yesterday, so rather than reinvent the wheel, I figured I'd point out which titles are of particular interest here at TEV.
Nothing on Clive James' list grabbed me but I thoroughly enjoyed his own collection of essays released this year, As of This Writing. I consider him a model critic and have always enjoyed his work.
Nicholas Rankin's Telegram from Guernica showed up a number of times, and I remember reading great reviews earlier this year in both LRB and TLS. So I guess that's sealed it.
Anita Brookner includes two on her list that grab me - Janet Malcolm's Reading Chekov and Mavis Gallant's Paris Stories (part of the superb NYRB series). I've had Paris Stories in my hand a dozen times - the intro is written by Michael Ondaatje - and so I guess it's time to pull the pin. And even though Malcolm's In the Freud Archives was controversial, I find her prose lucid and her judgment (generally) sound.
Niall Ferguson's Empire has been written up a lot this year, all about how we Americans don't have the stomach for empire-building (which is fine with me but someone should tell that to Bush, Rummy & Co.). I've been interested, thinking about waiting for paper but I may take the plunge. He's a controversial British historian who has suggested that if Britain had stayed out of World War I, Hitler might never have risen to power.
I also noted Francis King's inclusion of Tayeb Salih's Season of Migration to the North which, pending Moorishgirl's approval, I'll give a look-see.
For what it's worth, I read Season of Migration for a postcolonial literature class and thought it was excellent and profoundly disturbing. Laila, what's your take?
Posted by: Maud | November 14, 2003 at 09:08 AM
Loved the James essays too. The best are from 20 or 30 years back, so no need to revise one's opinion of CJ in his more recent incarnation as PBS blowhard. Can he be right, though, that Nicholson Baker owes something stylistically to James Agee?
Posted by: Sam | November 15, 2003 at 01:59 PM