I read the concluding story in Ben Shattuck's The History of Sound, "Origin Stories," this morning and am counting it as my first read of 2025. The collection covers a lot of the same territory as North Woods, although I prefer this one to that, and has a structure faintly reminiscent to Cloud Atlas. I listened to several chapters while traveling in December and read the remaining on the kindle. I gave it five stars on Goodreads, which indicates that I want to read it again at some point. Perhaps I can convince book club to read it since everyone loved North Woods.
I'm starting the year surrounded by stacks: of scifi/fantasy informed by Jo Walton's list of iconic books of the 21st century; of a selection of Tournament of Books shortlist fare; of Jane Austens to read with Bluestalking's Austen 250 in 2025 project; and random other books I'd like to read sooner than later. I want to reread Dostoevsky's Notes from Underground before reading Edwin Frank's Stranger Than Fiction: Lives of the Twentieth-Century Novel.
I read a few novels back to back last year that either had a dead narrator or dead main characters; I'm intending to repeat that experience this year just for the fun of it. I'm hoping I won't encounter as many endings that simply didn't work for me as last year--really, authors, don't write yourself into a hole and go all Alice In Wonderland on us instead of having the guts to just let the chips fall where they may.
Happy reading, everyone.
I just started Kelly Link's Book of Love, with POV characters who are dead. Maybe. And I loved Katy Simpson Smith's The Everlasting, with a POV character/commentator who is not dead but knows as much as Death.
ReplyDeleteI bought The Everlasting based on your Goodreads review! Maybe I'll read it along with the Link (TOB's stack)) and Evie Wyld's The Echoes.
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