Subject: Sorry for EXTREME lateness.
Author:
Posted on: 2015-06-25 07:04:00 UTC
But I refuse to not participate, even though we're on the second page now!
Fiction
Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë: This is fun because in spite of being grouped with all those stodgy old English stories, WH is filled with surprisingly cruel and rude attitudes, which makes it feel a lot more modern.
Stories of Hawai'i by Jack London: A group of short stories based on London's time spent in Hawai'i. Interesting for its time period in that native Polynesians and Asian immigrants are by and large the protagonists, while white folks are ignorant tourists at best and malevolent abusers at worst. An interesting historical look at early twentieth century Hawai'i, but also entertaining stories.
Boy's Life by Robert R. McCammon: It's been years since I read this novel, but the story is still fresh in my memory, it's so exciting and complex. It's a little hard to explain without giving away the plot, but it's essentially different events a boy experiences in his home town after witnessing someone drown. The drowning mystery is the backbone, but the novel has many other stories going on, too. Some of it is fantastical, some of it is mundane, but they all feel real enough to have happened. Just generally well-written.
Deprivers by Steven-Elliot Altman: Sort of an X-Menish world, but where all the powers involve influencing the senses of those the deprivers interact with. The world-building is good enough to ignore the "another superhero world"iness of it. Been trying to design a depriver as a PPC agent, but no luck yet.
God's Country by Percival Everett: A Western about a black man's and a young girl's journeys, but told through the narration of an awful man who doesn't deserve their company. I honestly don't remember the plot too well, but the writing is powerful.
Catch-22 by Joseph Heller: Yeah, one of the generic "classics," but it really is that good. It's written in a hilarious way, but still shows the futility of war and the hypocrisy of the politics behind them.
The Mouse That Roared by Leonard Wibberley: Pretty much the same as above, but much less manic in its humor.
Skin by Ted Dekker: A "stranded in remote location" murder mystery, but it's a lot more complex than that. There's a twist that is delightful in it's sheer, glorious, out-of-nowhere, never-guess-that-in-a-million-years-ness. I forget the meaning behind the title, but I'm pretty sure there weren't any sex scenes.
Blasphemy by Douglas Preston: Scientists working on a supercollider fall under siege by a religious group. The overall plot isn't quite that cut-and-dry; there's also a murderer among the staff, and they're worried they really have accidentally discovered something of spiritual significance, but are afraid to admit it to the outside world. Probably the weakest suggestion on this list, but I feel the very last page makes reading the rest worth it.
From a Buick 8 by Stephen King: One of the King's lesser known novels, I think it's his best I've read so far. I won't even describe the plot or antagonist, because the story is really about how the protagonists react psychologically to what's happening. It also contains some of King's best descriptive passages of bizarre things. "Curiosity killed the cat, but satisfaction brought it back."
Non-Fiction
The Professor and the Madman by Simon Winchester: The history of the creation of the Oxford English Dictionary, but better than it sounds. Aside from giving fun trivia about different words, it describes the lives of the teacher who headed the project and the single greatest contributor of definitions, who resided as a permanent resident of a mental institution.
Revolutionary Characters by Gordon S. Wood: An interesting series of short essays about the U.S. "founding fathers," describing them as people, and explaining their political views in an easy-to-understand way.