Talking up the likes of The French Lieutenant's Woman and Le Grande Meaulnes, the Guardian's list of 50 best summer reads ever offers a useful alternative to the generic summer blockbuster.
The Leopard - Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa
There must be some people who when parked on a beach feel they should be in the permafrost with Ivan Denisovich, but I'm not one of them. No, give me the sumptuous, wistful, sensual, warm-blooded Leopard any day. It may be Sicily in the 1860s but everything is in there: appetite, love, history's cruel laughter, lamplit Palermo, the rustle of silk. You live the Prince of Salina's life and revisit your own with an almost unbearably sharpened awareness of the texture of life.
Le Grand Meaulnes? Is Le Grade Meaulnes a different book, or a typo?
(Oh God... 3 months of reading the blog, and my first comment is a pedantic one!)
Posted by: Charlotte | July 06, 2009 at 08:54 AM
What a fun question to have to answer.
I grew up in Alaska, where summer lasts seemingly forever, because it never gets dark. Since I'm not much of a sun worshipper, this always made me annoyed. I think this is why I loved reading H. P. Lovecraft in the summer. The dark, fetid dank world of his stories was an imaginary antidote to the relentless glare of an arctic summer.
The stories of John Cheever also make excellent summer reading, because they are tragic-comic fables about the kind of people who can afford to sit on the beach all summer reading.
I also find diaries and memoirs make perfect summer reading. The three volumes of Witold Gombrowicz's diary will blow your mind and teach you more than you ever wanted to know about prostitution in Buenos Aires.
Happy reading!
Posted by: Niall | July 06, 2009 at 11:17 AM