~don delillo~ white noise

WNRead it in: ten days

Even before I read Don DeLillo’s novels, I knew he’d be my favourite author.  Just one of those feelings you get from the sort of people who recommend it to you, the sections of bookshops you see it in, the things you read on review websites about it.  And, because I am a wandering, aimless, philosophically minded, endlessly wondering, bored with life, depressive, inquisitive sort of person, DeLillo just happened to suit me perfectly.

This was the third DeLillo novel I’d read.  So it had to qualify with the expectations raised by Cosmopolis and, especially, Underworld.  It did well, I have to say.  It was sufficiently post-modern and depressing.  It was particularly thought-provoking.  It debated important philosophical questions.  It dealt with interesting characters.  The storyline satisfied me.

It is about a man who is professor of Hitler Studies at a university, and who is satisfied with his life until a cloud of toxic material forces his family to evacuate their homes.  This initiates much discussion about life and death and about humanity in general.

But I don’t usually read DeLillo for his storylines.  Rather, I like to see how he molds modern life into a spectral image haunting us every day, though we don’t realise it.  He gives us scenes set in supermarkets, on top of hills overlooking cityscapes, in air raid shelters, in bedrooms, in airports, on aeroplanes, on highways, everywhere that you would never think about setting a scene in.  He is the pedant of novelists – picking out the very trivial parts of life and giving them literary significance, empowering his readers with the ability to see what they always look over.

Actually, DeLillo always makes me quite depressed.  I do take pills for this, but I would like to commend DeLillo with the ability to do so, as it means his works stay in my mind for a long time and the thoughts he provokes are the subject of my mulling over for weeks, months, years to come.

Just to give you an example, here’s a conversation that I love, describing some very philosophic stuff:

We crossed the street.
“I believe, Jack, there are two kinds of people in the world.  Killers and diers.  Most of us are diers.  We don’t have the disposition, the rage or whatever it takes to be a killer.  We let death happen.  We lie down and die.  But think what it’s like to be a killer.  Think how exciting it is, in theory, to kill a person in direct confrontation.  If he dies, you cannot.  To kill him is to gain life-credit.  The more people you kill, the more credit you store up.  It explains any number of massacres, wars, executions.”
“Are you saying that men have tried throughout history to cure themselves of death by killing others?”
“It’s obvious.”
“And you call this exciting?”
“I’m talking theory.  In theory, violence is a form of rebirth.  The dier passively succumbs.  The killer lives on.  What a marvelous equation.  As a marauding band amasses dead bodies, it gathers strength.  Strength accumulates like a favor from the gods.” (page 277)

Read it if you: want to feel ever so slightly depressed, like beautifully crafted language, are prepared to see the world through different eyes, like interesting characters, like plot points that are never quite explained, want to think philosophically about life and death, wonder what sort of literary significance a supermarket has.

While reading this, listen to: Capture the Flag Broken Social Scene, KC Accidental Broken Social Scene, Stars and Sons Broken Social Scene, Hotel Broken Social Scene, Lovers’ SpitBroken Social Scene, Pitter Patter Goes My Heart Broken Social Scene, etc.

~don delillo~ underworld

URead it in: maybe three weeks

This was my inaugural DeLillo.  And what a fantastic thing it was.  Easily the best book I’ve read in my life.  Let’s just say it had everything I wanted out of it: interesting characters, many different intertwining plots, philosophical questions, moments of such poignancy that I could cry, images of beauty and of destruction, enough to interest me for the next of my life.  If I could bring one book onto a desert island, it would be this one.

We basically follow many different characters – I believe the main character might be Nick, who we meet as he is reunited with the lover of his youth, but we also follow the story of a baseball, the famous baseball hit during the Giants v Dodgers game, as it travels from person to person, against the backdrop of the Cold War.

DeLillo’s way of writing is not stable, it is fluid.  He flits between storylines – sometimes the thread that was raised in one section won’t be picked up again until hundreds of pages later – and his characters appear in multiple guises, in all ages, as many different sorts of characters.  It is a work of art, to say the least.  His mastery of language, the images he presents us, reflect not only an eye for what is beautiful, but what is startling about the human race.  He gives us humanity at its best and at its worst.  He gives us mysteries and problems unresolved.  He gives us thoughts that we never thought we could think.

In short, I am actually out of words to describe this work.  You will simply have to read it yourself.

Read it if you: want to think about life, want to be amazed, want to see the lives of a million different people without having to leave one room, want to explore the human mind, love a good book, love to think about philosophy, just love reading.  Just read it.

While you read this, listen to: Everything in its Right Place Radiohead, Black Wave The Shins, Cause=Time Broken Social Scene, Hold On Angus & Julia Stone

~haruki murakami~ 1Q84

1QRead it in: just over a month

I spent one month in Tokyo at the start of this year, hence I was inspired to read some literature spent in Tokyo.  Having said that, I did not read this one in Tokyo.  My ‘one book at a time’ rule meant that I was stuck on a particularly thick history of the Middle East which I couldn’t finish in time to enjoy Murakami in Tokyo.  So, alas, the month I spent reading this book was a month of nostalgia and longing for that fantastic city of cities.

It was a little strange, especially for me, for whom it was my first ever Murakami.  And what a Murakami to start with – his 1,000 page + epic (only when you combine books 1, 2 and 3, which is what I had to read).  Things of that size I sometimes have doubts about taking on – the commitment is akin to a long-term relationship.  That’s the other rule, you see, ‘finish every book you start’.

Yes, it was strange, a sort of science fiction, no fantasy, no literature, no something else.  A cross between many things.  At once a novel that manages to be completely realistic and enthralling, but at the same time mysteriously fantastical and unbelievable.  I think Murakami is playing around with suspension of disbelief at times.  It is an interesting read, to say the least.  But it is one that hooked me from the start.  After about 100 pages or so I wouldn’t have been able to put it down.

The storyline follows Aomame, who is an assassin-cross-instructor at a gym club whose fate happens to be entwined with that of Tengo, who is an unassuming cram school maths teacher.  Their lives join through connection with a mysterious religious cult whose spiritual beliefs end up ringing a little true and affecting the lives of everyone involved – especially that of Aomame and Tengo.

Read it if you: like stories set in Tokyo, don’t mind a bit of fantasy, enjoy clever allusions, believe in fate (once again), want to know how to kill people in very clever ways, enjoy philosophy, enjoy descriptive passages, enjoy seemingly meaningless events and characters (but keeping in mind that they probably do have meaning, you just haven’t worked it out yet).

While reading this, listen to: Sinfonietta Janáček , Alone in Kyoto Air, Baroque Social Broken Social Scene, Rolling By Big Scary

~david mitchell~ cloud atlas

CARead it in: nine days

Perpetual notes to myself have been written about the pitfalls of comparing films and books.  In my opinion, they must be savoured as entirely different entities that have their own artistic value for different reasons and should not be compared devoutly.  Nevertheless, sometimes it simply cannot be avoided.

I saw the film ‘Cloud Atlas’ and was amazed/intrigued/inspired (circle one).  All of the above.  I loved the idea of our savage, post-apocalyptic future, I adored Ben Whishaw in (most of) his roles (save the overly feminine ones) and was intrigued by a brand of science fiction that I may actually enjoy (I have been waging a mental war against science fiction for a very, very long time).  Hence, after the film finished, I directed myself to the bookshop and immediately bought this book.

It’s very good.  Just don’t compare it to the movie.  Somehow they differ enormously.  Therefore, I expected every twist and turn of the plotline that had so enraptured me in the cinemas, only it didn’t happen that way.  It surprised me immensely.  And, as always, I know I would have enjoyed it much better had I not seen the movie and known what it was all about beforehand.

The plotline is a little too complicated to explain in 25 words or less.  But I’ll try.  There are six inter-connected lives: an American on a voyage through the Pacific islands sometime in the 1800s, a young musician in the 1930s, a keen journalist involved with a dangerous corporation in the 1970s, an old, befuddled man trapped in a nursing home in modern times, a clone trapped in the surreal world of Neo Soul in the future and a man braving mystery and superstition in post-apocalyptic Hawaii.  As these stories move along, we realise they are all subtly connected.

Read it if you: like historical fiction, play a musical instrument, appreciate long words and clever plays on the English language, enjoy clever and philosophical science fiction, are not deterred by words mangled in attempts to portray different speaking patterns of post-apocalyptic humans, believe in fate/reincarnation/things like that, like exciting thriller stories, appreciate good literature.

While reading this, listen to: Transatlanticism Death Cab for Cutie, Lonely The Middle East, Set Fire to the Third Bar Snow Patrol, Her Disappearing Theme Broken Social Scene

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