Best Books of the Year (or some of)

For the past month or so we’ve seen the annual steady stream of “Best Books of the Year” lists from websites, bloggers, magazines, critics, and newspapers. So, I thought that I would share my own unsolicited list. If you are a regular visitor to TBTP, then you probably know that books are a huge part of my life. Along with selling and collecting books, I’m a voracious reader. Although these days I’m spending more time reading on screens, I still manage to get through two or three actual old fashioned paper books per week on average. Here’s a partial “Best of” fiction list from 2018 that I can unreservedly recommend:

I’m still digesting this devastating debut novel by Native American author Tommy Orange. The novel weaves together the heartbreaking stories of 12 “urban Indians” as there paths lead to a Powwow in Oakland, CA.

I’ve been badgering people to read Ottessa Moshfegh since her wildly original debut book Eileen was released. Her newest novel’s amoral, narcissistic narrator may not evoke much empathy from the reader, but this meditation on material culture, the media, art, grief, and friendship will stay with you for a long time.

If Philip K. Dick was still around, this is exactly the kind of speculative fiction/social commentary that he would be writing. Gnomon offers a glimpse of a chilling near-future in a challenging read featuring out-of-control AI, dystopian regimes, and sharks.

Like many fans of Tana French’s terrific Dublin Murder Squad series, I was initially disappointed to find that The Witch Elm was a stand-alone title. But by the end of this gripping story about loss, memory, family, and identity I was a believer.

Less is a novel about a writer’s midlife crisis and his around the world trip to try and escape his past. Facing 50, Arthur Less suffers disappointment, humiliation, and one cringe-worthy episode after another, but somehow the book remains joyful and warmhearted.

You may not know Laura Lippman’s work yet, but her latest noir novel is a seminar on writing smart, nuanced characters, while delivering a smokey, haunting story.

Readers who are unfamiliar with Mick Herron’s espionage series centered on a gaggle of MI5 misfits from the Slough House should go back and binge read the first four brilliant and hilarious books and then devour this gem.

 

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The Book of the Future

 

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Library Porn

Every bibliophile that I know would love to have one of these in their neighborhood. This stunning little library was designed by Shulin Forest Architects to be a serene reading space for the book-loving village of Liangjiashan in Zhejiang Province, China. Set in the heart of town,the wood and steel library is supported by ten columns, which create a sheltered communal space under the building for social and literary events.

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Confusion of Confusions

With all of the recent maddening gyrations in the world’s stock markets, maybe the capitalist nabobs pulling the strings could benefit from perusing this 17th century financial guide recently up for auction by Sotheby’s Rare Book and Manuscript auctioneers. The title, Confusion de Confusiones, was written in 1688 by Joseph Penso de la Vega as a primer on the Amsterdam stock exchange for the immigrant community in the Netherlands. De la Vega was himself a refugee from the Spanish Inquisition. The final sale price for the book was expected to be about $300,000; it’s probably a safer investment than the stock market.

The main text is written as a series of dialogues between stock characters such as a philosopher, a merchant, and a shareholder. In the second dialogue appear perhaps the most enduring portion of Vega’s teaching about stock markets, his four rules for speculators explained by the shareholder, here in  translation:

“The first principle [in speculation]: Never give anyone the advice to buy or sell shares, because, where perspicacity is weakened, the most benevolent piece of advice can turn out badly.

“The second principle: Take every gain without showing remorse about missed profits, because an eel may escape sooner than you think, It is wise to enjoy that which is possible without hoping for the continuance of a favorable conjuncture and the persistence of good luck.

“The third principle: Profits on the exchange are the treasures of goblins. At one time they may be carbuncle stones, then coals, then diamonds, then flint-stones, then morning dew, then tears.

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America 2018

The Land of the Living Dead: a Narrative of the Perilous Sojourn therein of George Cowper, Mariner, in the Year 1835. Neal Fyne. London: Henry J. Drane, n.d. [1897]. Illustrations by E. A. Holloway. First edition.

Fantastic adventure fiction. Castaways on uncharted island fall under seemingly supernatural power of life and death held by the Mighty Justin, Lord of the Land of the Living Dead. In fact, the island is permeated by deadly volcanic gas for which Justin alone possesses an antidote that is administered only to loyal subjects.

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Reading Makes You Better

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Christmas 1966

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Here Comes Santa

 

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Intermission

Edward Hopper, Intermission (1963)

 

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It’s A Wonderful Banksy Life

Banksy has confirmed that a two-sided mural on an out of the way garage in Port Talbot, Wales is his newest work. From one angle it appears to feature a child happily catching snow flakes. However, viewed from a slightly different angle it reveals ash falling from a dumpster fire. Commentary on a Brexit Christmas ? Or maybe just his take on the world this holiday season.

 

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