Category: News

  • 2015 PEN Translation Prize Longlist

    2015 PEN Translation Prize Longlist

    PEN logo

    Yesterday, PEN America released their longlist for the PEN Translation Prize. Here are the books, as well as the publisher’s descriptions.


    The Sound of Our StepsThe Sound of Our Steps
    by Ronit Matalon
    translated from the Hebrew by Dalya Bilu

    In the beginning there was Lucette, who is the mother to three children — Sammy, a gentle giant, almost blind, but a genius with locks; Corinne, a flighty beauty who cannot keep a job; and “the child,” an afterthought, who strives to make sense of her fractured Egyptian-Jewish immigrant family. Lucette’s children would like a kinder, warmer home, but what they have is a government-issued concrete box, out in the thorns and sand on the outskirts of Tel Aviv; and their mother, hard-worn and hardscrabble, who cleans homes by night and makes school lunches by day. Lucette quarrels with everybody, speaks only Arabic and French, is scared only of snakes, and is as likely to lock her children out as to take in a stray dog.

    The child recounts her years in Lucette’s house, where Israel’s wars do not intrude and hold no interest. She puzzles at the mysteries of her home, why Maurice, her father, a bitter revolutionary, makes only rare appearances. And why her mother rebuffs the kind rabbi whose home she cleans in his desire to adopt her. Always watching, the child comes to fill the holes with conjecture and story.

    In a masterful accumulation of short, dense scenes, by turns sensual, violent, and darkly humorous, The Sound of Our Steps questions the virtue of a family bound only by necessity, and suggests that displacement may not lead to a better life, but perhaps to art.


    The Complete Stories of Clarice LispectorThe Complete Stories: Clarice Lispector
    translated from the Portuguese by Katrina Dodson

    The recent publication by New Directions of five Lispector novels revealed to legions of new readers her darkness and dazzle. Now, for the first time in English, are all the stories that made her a Brazilian legend: from teenagers coming into awareness of their sexual and artistic powers to humdrum housewives whose lives are shattered by unexpected epiphanies to old people who don’t know what to do with themselves. Clarice’s stories take us through their lives?and ours.

    From one of the greatest modern writers, these stories, gathered from the nine collections published during her lifetime, follow an unbroken time line of success as a writer, from her adolescence to her death bed.


    The BlizzardThe Blizzard
    by Vladimir Sorokin
    translated from the Russian by Jamey Gambrell

    Garin, a district doctor, is desperately trying to reach the village of Dolgoye, where a mysterious epidemic is turning people into zombies. He carries with him a vaccine that will prevent the spread of this terrible disease, but is stymied in his travels by an impenetrable blizzard. A trip that should last no more than a few hours turns into a metaphysical journey, an expedition filled with extraordinary encounters, dangerous escapades, torturous imaginings, and amorous adventures.

    Trapped in an existential storm, Vladimir Sorokin’s characters fight their way across a landscape that owes as much to Chekhov’s Russian countryside as it does to the postapocalyptic terrain of science fiction. Hypnotic, fascinating, and richly drawn, The Blizzard is a seminal work from one of the most inventive authors writing today. Sorokin has created yet another boldly original work, which combines an avant-garde sensibility with a taste for the absurd and the grotesque, all while delivering stinging truths about contemporary life and modern-day Russia.


    Nowhere to Be FoundNowhere to Be Found
    by Bae Suah
    translated from the Korean by Sora Kim-Russell

    A nameless narrator passes through her life, searching for meaning and connection in experiences she barely feels. For her, time and identity blur, and all action is reaction. She can’t quite understand what motivates others to take life seriously enough to focus on anything—for her existence is a loosely woven tapestry of fleeting concepts. From losing her virginity to mindless jobs and a splintered, unsupportive family, the lessons learned have less to do with the reality we all share and more to do with the truth of the imagination, which is where the narrator focuses to discover herself.


    The Game for RealThe Game for Real
    by Richard Weiner
    translated from the Czech by Benjamin Paloff

    Compared to Kafka and a member of the Surrealists, Richard Weiner is one of European literature’s best-kept secrets. The Game for Real marks the long overdue arrival of his dreamlike, anxiety-ridden fiction into English.

    The book opens with The Game of Quartering, where an unnamed hero discovers his double. Surely, he reasons, if he has a double, then his double must also have a double too, and so on . . . What follows is a grotesquely hilarious, snowballing spree through Paris, where real-life landmarks disintegrate into theaters, puppet shows, and, ultimately, a funeral.

    Following this, The Game for the Honor of Payback neatly inverts things: instead of a branching, expanding adventure, a man known as “Shame” embarks on a quest that collapses inward. Slapped by someone he despises, he launches a doomed crusade to return the insult. As the stakes grow ever higher, it seems that Shame will stop at nothing — even if he discovers he’s chasing his own tail.

    Blending metaphysical questions with farcical humor, bizarre twists, and acute psychology, The Game for Real is a riveting exploration of who we are — and why we can’t be so sure we know.


    SphinxSphinx
    by Anne Garréta
    translated from the French by Emma Ramadan

    Sphinx is the remarkable debut novel, originally published in 1986, by the incredibly talented and inventive French author Anne Garréta, one of the few female members of Oulipo, the influential and exclusive French experimental literary group whose mission is to create literature based on mathematical and linguistic restraints, and whose ranks include Georges Perec and Italo Calvino, among others.

    A beautiful and complex love story between two characters, the narrator, “I,” and their lover, A***, written without using any gender markers to refer to the main characters, Sphinx is a remarkable linguistic feat and paragon of experimental literature that has never been accomplished before or since in the strictly-gendered French language.

    Sphinx is a landmark text in the feminist, LGBT, and experimental literary canons appearing in English for the first time.


    Crime and Punishment Oliver ReadyCrime and Punishment
    by Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    translated from the Russian by Oliver Ready

    This acclaimed new translation of Dostoyevsky’s “psychological record of a crime” gives his dark masterpiece of murder and pursuit a renewed vitality, expressing its jagged, staccato urgency and fevered atmosphere as never before. Raskolnikov, a destitute and desperate former student, wanders alone through the slums of St. Petersburg, deliriously imagining himself above society’s laws. But when he commits a random murder, only suffering ensues. Embarking on a dangerous game of cat and mouse with a suspicious police investigator, Raskolnikov finds the noose of his own guilt tightening around his neck. Only Sonya, a downtrodden prostitute, can offer the chance of redemption.


    The Physics of SorrowThe Physics of Sorrow
    by Georgi Gospodinov
    translated from the Bulgarian by Angela Rodel

    A finalist for both the Strega Europeo and Gregor von Rezzori awards (and winner of every Bulgarian honor possible), The Physics of Sorrow reaffirms Georgi Gospodinov’s place as one of Europe’s most inventive and daring writers.

    Using the myth of the Minotaur as its organizing image, the narrator of Gospodinov’s long-awaited novel constructs a labyrinth of stories about his family, jumping from era to era and viewpoint to viewpoint, exploring the mindset and trappings of Eastern Europeans. Incredibly moving — such as with the story of his grandfather accidentally being left behind at a mill — and extraordinarily funny—see the section on the awfulness of the question “how are you?” — Physics is a book that you can inhabit, tracing connections, following the narrator down various “side passages,” getting pleasantly lost in the various stories and empathizing with the sorrowful, misunderstood Minotaur at the center of it all.

    The Physics of Sorrow will appeal to fans of Dave Eggers, Tom McCarthy, and Dubravka Ugresic for its unique structure, humanitarian concerns, and stunning storytelling.


    Hollow HeartHollow Heart
    by Viola Di Grado
    translated from the Italian by Antony Shugaar

    In this courageous, inventive, and intelligent novel, Viola di Grado tells the story of a suicide and what follows. She has given voice to an astonishing vision of life after life, portraying the awful longing and sense of loss that plague the dead, together with the solitude provoked by the impossibility of communicating. The afterlife itself is seen as a dark, seething place where one is preyed upon by the cruel and unrelenting elements. Hollow Heart will frighten as it provokes, enlighten as it causes concern. If ever there were a novel that follows Kafka’s prescription for a book to be a frozen axe for the sea within us, it is Hollow Heart.


    Paris NocturneParis Nocturne
    by Patrick Modiano
    translated from the French by Phoebe Weston-Evans

    This uneasy, compelling novel begins with a nighttime accident on the streets of Paris. The unnamed narrator, a teenage boy, is hit by a car whose driver he vaguely recalls having met before. The mysterious ensuing events, involving a police van, a dose of ether, awakening in a strange hospital, and the disappearance of the woman driver, culminate in a packet being pressed into the boy’s hand. It is an envelope stuffed full of bank notes. The confusion only deepens as the characters grow increasingly apprehensive; meanwhile, readers are held spellbound.

    Modiano’s low-key writing style, his preoccupation with memory and its untrustworthiness, and his deep concern with timeless moral questions have earned him an international audience of devoted readers. This beautifully rendered translation brings another of his finest works to an eagerly waiting English-language audience. Paris Nocturne has been named “a perfect book” by Libération, while L’Express observes, “Paris Nocturne is cloaked in darkness, but it is a novel that is turned toward the light.”

  • “The 100 Greatest British Novels” List

    “The 100 Greatest British Novels” List

    Jane Ciabattari polled 82 book critics from outside the UK in order to put together a kind of outsiders’ list of the 100 greatest British novels for BBC Culture. You can read the article here. I’m going to put the full list here, and I’d love to hear your thoughts — on this list, on lists in general, on British fiction, on books that belong, on books that don’t belong, etc. I hope to see you here or on Twitter! For me, lists are most helpful in providing me with things to read, whether those are things on the list or, usually more interestingly, things that are not on the list but that someone thinks should be.

    The BBC has put together a number of interesting articles about the list, including a more detailed look at the top 25 (here), Michael Gorra’s look at the why Middlemarch won (here), Hephzibah Anderson’s hypothesis as to why women rule this particular list (though they are not the majority) (here); and Fiona McDonald’s piece on what makes a “Great British Novel” (here).

    Links are to reviews that have been posted on this site.

    100. The Code of the Woosters (PG Wodehouse, 1938)
    99. There but for the (Ali Smith, 2011)
    98. Under the Volcano (Malcolm Lowry,1947)
    97. The Chronicles of Narnia (CS Lewis, 1949-1954)
    96. Memoirs of a Survivor (Doris Lessing, 1974)
    95. The Buddha of Suburbia (Hanif Kureishi, 1990)
    94. The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner (James Hogg, 1824)
    93. Lord of the Flies (William Golding, 1954)
    92. Cold Comfort Farm (Stella Gibbons, 1932)
    91. The Forsyte Saga (John Galsworthy, 1922)
    90. The Woman in White (Wilkie Collins, 1859)
    89. The Horse’s Mouth (Joyce Cary, 1944)
    88. The Death of the Heart (Elizabeth Bowen, 1938)
    87. The Old Wives’ Tale (Arnold Bennett,1908)
    86. A Legacy (Sybille Bedford, 1956)
    85. Regeneration Trilogy (Pat Barker, 1991-1995)
    84. Scoop (Evelyn Waugh, 1938)
    83. Barchester Towers (Anthony Trollope, 1857)
    82. The Patrick Melrose Novels (Edward St Aubyn, 1992-2012)
    81. The Jewel in the Crown (Paul Scott, 1966)
    80. Excellent Women (Barbara Pym, 1952)
    79. His Dark Materials (Philip Pullman, 1995-2000)
    78. A House for Mr Biswas (VS Naipaul, 1961)
    77. Of Human Bondage (W Somerset Maugham, 1915)
    76. Small Island (Andrea Levy, 2004)
    75. Women in Love (DH Lawrence, 1920)
    74. The Mayor of Casterbridge (Thomas Hardy, 1886)
    73. The Blue Flower (Penelope Fitzgerald, 1995)
    72. The Heart of the Matter (Graham Greene, 1948)
    71. Old Filth (Jane Gardam, 2004)
    70. Daniel Deronda (George Eliot, 1876)
    69. Nostromo (Joseph Conrad, 1904)
    68. A Clockwork Orange (Anthony Burgess, 1962)
    67. Crash (JG  Ballard, 1973)
    66. Sense and Sensibility (Jane Austen, 1811)
    65. Orlando (Virginia Woolf, 1928)
    64. The Way We Live Now (Anthony Trollope, 1875)
    63. The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (Muriel Spark, 1961)
    62. Animal Farm (George Orwell, 1945)
    61. The Sea, the Sea (Iris Murdoch, 1978)
    60. Sons and Lovers (DH Lawrence, 1913)
    59. The Line of Beauty (Alan Hollinghurst, 2004)
    58. Loving (Henry Green, 1945)
    57. Parade’s End (Ford Madox Ford, 1924-1928)
    56. Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit (Jeanette Winterson, 1985)
    55. Gulliver’s Travels (Jonathan Swift, 1726)
    54. NW (Zadie Smith, 2012)
    53. Wide Sargasso Sea (Jean Rhys, 1966)
    52. New Grub Street (George Gissing, 1891)
    51. Tess of the d’Urbervilles (Thomas Hardy, 1891)
    50. A Passage to India (EM Forster, 1924)
    49. Possession (AS Byatt, 1990)
    48. Lucky Jim (Kingsley Amis, 1954)
    47. The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman (Laurence Sterne, 1759)
    46. Midnight’s Children (Salman Rushdie, 1981)
    45. The Little Stranger (Sarah Waters, 2009)
    44. Wolf Hall (Hilary Mantel, 2009)
    43. The Swimming Pool Library (Alan Hollinghurst, 1988)
    42. Brighton Rock (Graham Greene, 1938)
    41. Dombey and Son (Charles Dickens, 1848)
    40. Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (Lewis Carroll, 1865)
    39. The Sense of an Ending (Julian Barnes, 2011)
    38. The Passion (Jeanette Winterson, 1987)
    37. Decline and Fall (Evelyn Waugh, 1928)
    36. A Dance to the Music of Time (Anthony Powell, 1951-1975)
    35. Remainder (Tom McCarthy, 2005)
    34. Never Let Me Go (Kazuo Ishiguro, 2005)
    33. The Wind in the Willows (Kenneth Grahame, 1908)
    32. A Room with a View (EM Forster, 1908)
    31. The End of the Affair (Graham Greene, 1951)
    30. Moll Flanders (Daniel Defoe, 1722)
    29. Brick Lane (Monica Ali, 2003)
    28. Villette (Charlotte Brontë, 1853)
    27. Robinson Crusoe (Daniel Defoe, 1719)
    26. The Lord of the Rings (JRR Tolkien, 1954)
    25. White Teeth (Zadie Smith, 2000)
    24. The Golden Notebook (Doris Lessing, 1962)
    23. Jude the Obscure (Thomas Hardy, 1895)
    22. The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling (Henry Fielding, 1749)
    21. Heart of Darkness (Joseph Conrad, 1899)
    20. Persuasion (Jane Austen, 1817)
    19. Emma (Jane Austen, 1815)
    18. Remains of the Day (Kazuo Ishiguro, 1989)
    17. Howards End (EM Forster, 1910)
    16. The Waves (Virginia Woolf, 1931)
    15. Atonement (Ian McEwan, 2001)
    14. Clarissa (Samuel Richardson, 1748)
    13. The Good Soldier (Ford Madox Ford, 1915)
    12. Nineteen Eighty-Four (George Orwell, 1949)
    11. Pride and Prejudice (Jane Austen, 1813)
    10. Vanity Fair (William Makepeace Thackeray, 1848)
    9. Frankenstein (Mary Shelley, 1818)
    8. David Copperfield (Charles Dickens, 1850)
    7. Wuthering Heights (Emily Brontë, 1847)
    6. Bleak House (Charles Dickens, 1853)
    5. Jane Eyre (Charlotte Brontë, 1847)
    4. Great Expectations (Charles Dickens, 1861)
    3. Mrs. Dalloway (Virginia Woolf, 1925)
    2. To the Lighthouse (Virginia Woolf, 1927)
    1. Middlemarch (George Eliot, 1874)

  • 2015 National Book Award Winners

    2015 National Book Award Winners

    Yesterday they announced the winners of this year’s National Book Awards. Find them below, in red! The other finalists are in a less festive gray, but not because they are not worth checking out.

    Fiction 6

    Fiction

    • Fortune Smiles: Stories, by Adam Johnson
    • Refund: Stories, by Karen E. Bender
    • The Turner House, by Angela Flournoy
    • Fates and Furies, by Lauren Groff
    • A Little Life, by Hanya Yanagihara

    Nonfiction 2

    Nonfiction

    • Between the World and Me, by Ta-Nehisi Coates
    • Hold Still, by Sally Mann
    • The Soul of an Octopus: A Surprising Exploration into the Wonders of Consciousness, by Sy Montgomery
    • If the Oceans Were Ink: An Unlikely Friendship and a Journey to the Heart of the Quran, by Carla Power
    • Ordinary Light, by Tracy K. Smith

    Poetry 6

    Poetry

    • Voyage of the Sable Venus, by Robin Coste Lewis
    • Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude, by Ross Gay
    • How to Be Drawn, by Terrance Hayes
    • Bright Dead Things, by Ada Limón
    • Elegy for a Broken Machine, by Patrick Phillips

    YPL 9

    Young People’s Literature

    • Challenger Deep, by Neal Shusterman
    • The Thing About Jellyfish, by Ali Benjamin
    • Bone Gap, by Laura Ruby
    • Most Dangerous: Daniel Ellsberg and the Secret History of the Vietnam War, by Steve Sheinkin
    • Nimona, by Noelle Stevenson
  • The Criterion Collection Announces February 2016 Releases

    The Criterion Collection Announces February 2016 Releases

    For those of you who come to The Mookse and the Gripes strictly for books, don’t worry — there will be book reviews posted this week. That said, this is going to be a film heavy week for a couple of reasons: 1) it’s the Criterion Blogathon, and I signed up for two posts (one for Brief Encounter, already posted here, and one for Mr. Thank You, coming later this week); and 2) there are many new releases I’m covering, including The Apu Trilogy, In Cold Blood, and Faust.

    So I figured why not also post on what The Criterion Collection is releasing next February, since they announced those today and they’ve definitely given us stuff to keep celebrating (though, strangely, a second month in a row with no upgrades from old DVD releases). The blurbs are from The Criterion Collection’s website (so are the links) — go there to see the details on the supplements.


    The Emigrants CoverFebruary 9, 2016

    The Emigrants (1971)
    The New Land (1972)
    d. Jan Troell

    First up, we have a two-disc Blu-ray box set with two long-rumored and anticipated titles from Jan Troell. This past July, Criterion released Troell’s debut Here Is Your Life (my thoughts here). I have never seen these, but I’m very excited to see more Max Von Sydow and Liv Ullmann.

    From The Criterion Collection:

    This monumental mid-nineteenth-century epic from Jan Troell (Here Is Your Life) charts, over the course of two films, a poor Swedish farming family’s voyage to America and their efforts to put down roots in this beautiful but forbidding new world. Movie legends Max Von Sydow (The Seventh Seal) and Liv Ullmann (Persona) give remarkably authentic performances as Karl-Oskar and Kristina, a couple who meet with one physical and emotional trial after another on their arduous journey. The precise, minute detail with which Troell depicts the couple’s story — which is also the story of countless other people who sought better lives across the Atlantic — is a wonder to behold. Engrossing every step of the way, the duo of The Emigrants and The New Land makes for perhaps the greatest screen drama about the settling of America.


    The KidFebruary 16, 2016

    The Kid (1921)
    d. Charles Chaplin

    How wonderful to get more Charlie Chaplin out on Blu-ray! This month we are getting Chaplin’s Essanay Comedies from Flicker Alley, earlier this year we got Limelight from Criterion. They are treating his work well, and it will be wonderful to see Chaplin and Coogan in high definition with this new 4K digital restoration of the 1972 rerelease. You will also be able to watch Nice and Friendly from 1922, featuring Chaplin and Coogan.

    From The Criterion Collection:

    Charlie Chaplin was already an international star when he decided to break out of the short-film format and make his first full-length feature. The Kid doesn’t merely show Chaplin at a turning point, when he proved that he was a serious film director — it remains an expressive masterwork of silent cinema. In it, he stars as his lovable Tramp character, this time raising an orphan (a remarkable young Jackie Coogan) he has rescued from the streets. Chaplin and Coogan make a miraculous pair in this nimble marriage of sentiment and slapstick, a film that is, as its opening title card states, “a picture with a smile — and perhaps, a tear.”


    Death by HangingFebruary 16, 2016

    Death by Hanging (1968)
    d. Nagisa Oshima

    Most of my experience with Japanese cinema has come from The Criterion Collection, which has released a lot of it. For whatever reason, though, the last couple of years have seen fewer releases of Japanese films, which is unfortunate since it is such a rich tradition and Criterion has the rights to many that remain unreleased. I’m very excited that we are getting more this month, and more Oshima at that.

    From The Criterion Collection:

    Genius provocateur Nagisa Oshima (In the Realm of the Senses), an influential figure in the Japanese New Wave of the 1960s, made one of his most startling political statements with the compelling pitch-black satire Death by Hanging. In this macabre farce, a Korean man is sentenced to death in Japan but survives his execution, sending the authorities into a panic about what to do next. At once disturbing and oddly amusing, Oshima’s constantly surprising film is a subversive and surreal indictment of both capital punishment and the treatment of Korean immigrants in his country.


    I Knew Her WellFebruary 23, 2016

    I Knew Her Well (1965)
    d. Antonio Pietrangeli

    I am completely unfamiliar with this film, other than hearing a few people speak highly of it. Italian cinema from the 1960s is another cinematic tradition treated well by The Criterion Collection in years past that seemed to be falling by the wayside until recently. This looks excellent!

    From The Criterion Collection:

    This prismatic portrait of the days and nights of a party girl in sixties Rome is a revelation. On the surface, I Knew Her Well, directed by Antonio Pietrangeli, plays like an inversion of La dolce vita with a woman at its center, following the gorgeous, seemingly liberated Adriana (Divorce Italian Style’s Stefania Sandrelli) as she dallies with a wide variety of men, attends parties, goes to modeling gigs, and circulates among the rich and famous. Despite its often light tone, though, the film is a stealth portrait of a suffocating culture that regularly dehumanizes people, especially women. A seriocomic character study that never strays from its complicated central figure while keeping us at an emotional remove, I Knew Her Well is one of the most overlooked films of the sixties, by turns hilarious, tragic, and altogether jaw-dropping.


    The GraduateFebruary 23, 2016

    The Graduate (1967)
    d. Mike Nichols

    For spine #800, The Criterion Collection is releasing an American classic with a new 4K digital restoration. It has been years — something like 15 — since I last watched this film, and I’m really looking forward to revisiting it with the supplements in this new edition.

    From The Criterion Collection:

    One of the most beloved American films of all time, The Graduate earned Mike Nichols a best director Oscar, brought the music of Simon & Garfunkel to a wider audience, and introduced the world to a young actor named Dustin Hoffman. Benjamin Braddock (Hoffman) has just finished college and is already lost in a sea of confusion and barely contained angst when he becomes sexually involved with the middle-aged mother (Anne Bancroft) of the young woman he’s dating (Katharine Ross). Visually imaginative and impeccably acted, with a clever, endlessly quotable script by Buck Henry (based on the novel by Charles Webb), The Graduate had the kind of cultural impact that comes along only once in a generation.

  • 2015 Giller Prize Winner

    2015 Giller Prize Winner

    scotiabankgillerprize_logo_eng_french10

    Fifteen DogsIt wasn’t the Shadow Giller Jury’s choice, and it was one of my least favorite on the Giller shortlist, but here’s this year’s winning book:

    • Fifteen Dogs, by André Alexis
  • The 2015 Shadow Giller Winner

    The 2015 Shadow Giller Winner

    Shadow_Giller_Prize

    Hello everyone! As I mentioned earlier, I once again had the pleasure of participating this year’s Shadow Giller Prize. We’ve selected our winner. It’s my second choice, but it wasn’t easy to pick between this and the book I finally landed on, so I’m very happy with the decision.

    I won’t spoil it here — go to our chair’s blog to see the result.

    Thanks to chair KevinfromCanda, Kim from Reading Matters and Alison Gzowski for another fun year!

  • 50th Anniversary Edition of John Williams’ Stoner

    50th Anniversary Edition of John Williams’ Stoner

    Stoner50thAnniversary_2048x2048I wrote about the book here and recorded a podcast about the book here, I still wanted to note NYRB Classics’ publication of a special 50th Anniversary Edition of John Williams’ Stoner, one of my favorite books of all time.

    As an ardent admirer of any row of beautiful NYRB Classics, which now publishes John Williams’ three masterpieces, the paperback with the conforming spine is still essential. So what does the 50th Anniversary Edition add, besides a new hardback cover?

    The answer is both not much and an awful lot. Let me explain.

    The text is obviously the same, though it has been repaginated (and I do feel like it fits a page in a more appealing way than the paperback). Both editions have the same lovely introduction by the late John McGahern. The principle difference is this: the new edition has a lengthy, previously unpublished correspondence between John Williams and his agent, Marie Rodell.

    This adds “not much” to the page count (about 25 pages), and if this isn’t your kind of thing then it won’t add much to your appreciation of the book or John Williams. However, for me it adds “an awful lot.”

    On the strength of three books published from 1960 to 1972 — Butcher’s Crossing, Stoner, and Augustus — Williams is one of my five favorite authors. While there are some common elements, these three books are very different: Butcher’s Crossing (which I wrote about here and podcasted about here) takes place in the American West in the 1870s; Stoner takes place in a college in the mid-twentieth century; and the epistolary style Augustus (which I wrote about here and podcasted about here) goes back to the first Roman Emperor.

    Each book is a full fledged masterpiece. I think about them each so often that I cannot help but look for anything else I can find that concerns the work of John Williams. I didn’t know what to expect when I started reading the series of letters that accompany the new edition of Stoner, but I was more than satisfied.

    The series of letters focuses on the publication of Stoner, but it begins at the publication of Butcher’s Crossing (Williams expresses his deep disappointment in the way his publisher marketed the novel) and ends looking forward to Augustus, so that fruitful decade, with its hopes and dreams, is covered. Williams recognized that his work was great and special, as humble as he tried to be in his letters. He hopes they might break open and make some good money — he believed they could, if the cosmos aligned — but he was proud of them despite commercial failure.

    Despite plans for more work, never published another novel before his death in 1994. I spent some time searching for the few extent excerpts of his unpublished final novel, The Sleep of Reason, which I wrote about here. Few authors have inspired me to do so much digging. Perhaps it’s because Williams is only now getting the recognition he deserved in life, and so his own sadness, dying while his books languished out of print and his final book unpublished after two decades of work. It’s a powerful story I enjoy thinking about, and this glimpse at the author at the other end of his career is refreshing and touching.

    Regardless of your preferred edition, I still highly recommend reading Stoner (and the rest of Williams’ work). I hope you do, and I’d love to hear your thoughts.

  • Prix Goncourt Winner

    Prix Goncourt Winner

    BoussoleThis year’s Prix Goncourt, which most consider to be France’s top literary prize (though any money comes from the boost in book sales and not the prize purse of €10), given to “the best and most imaginative prose work of the year,” was awarded to Mathias Énard for his novel Boussole, Énard’s ninth book (though one news agency reports it as his tenth, so I could be wrong). The book is about an Austrian musicologist on his sickbed where he thinks back on his travels to the East.

    The other three finalists for the prize were: Titus n’aimait pas Bérénice by Nathalie Azoulai, Les Prépondérants by Hédi Kaddour, and Ce pays qui te ressemble by Tobie Nathan.

    Two of Énard’s books — Zone and Street of Thieves — are available in English in translations from Charlotte Mandell, from Open Letter Books in the U.S. and from Fitzcarraldo Editions in the U.K. If there are others I’m not yet aware of, please let me know in the comments. Surely (hopefully?) Boussole will be coming to us sooner than later.


  • 2015 National Book Award Finalists

    2015 National Book Award Finalists

    Fiction

    • Refund: Stories, by Karen E. Bender
    • The Turner House, by Angela Flournoy
    • Fates and Furies, by Lauren Groff
    • Fortune Smiles: Stories, by Adam Johnson
    • A Little Life, by Hanya Yanagihara

    Nonfiction

    • Between the World and Me, by Ta-Nehisi Coates
    • Hold Still, by Sally Mann
    • The Soul of an Octopus: A Surprising Exploration into the Wonders of Consciousness, by Sy Montgomery
    • If the Oceans Were Ink: An Unlikely Friendship and a Journey to the Heart of the Quran, by Carla Power
    • Ordinary Light, by Tracy K. Smith

    Poetry

    • Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude, by Ross Gay
    • How to Be Drawn, by Terrance Hayes
    • Voyage of the Sable Venus, by Robin Coste Lewis
    • Bright Dead Things, by Ada Limón
    • Elegy for a Broken Machine, by Patrick Phillips

    Young People’s Literature

    • The Thing About Jellyfish, by Ali Benjamin
    • Bone Gap, by Laura Ruby
    • Most Dangerous: Daniel Ellsberg and the Secret History of the Vietnam War, by Steve Sheinkin
    • Challenger Deep, by Neal Shusterman
    • Nimona, by Noelle Stevenson
  • 2015 Man Booker Prize Winner

    2015 Man Booker Prize Winner

    A Brief History of Seven KillingsThe winner of this years Man Booker Prize is A Brief History of Seven Killings, by Marlon James!

    He is the first Jamaican born writer to win the prize! Lee is working up a review of this book, so we’ll have some coverage soon. In the meantime, I know many will be happy with this decision, so we’d all do well to read the book!

    You can go see the discussion of the book on the Mookse and the Gripes forum here.