Summer Reading
Long time since last I posted anything. I guess it's about time I wrote up something, and what could be easier than giving a run down on what I've been reading lately (or at least since I last gave such an update).
I've actually read quite a bit. One of the benefits from being in multiple book clubs and having an academic career. But I'm only going to focus on what I read for fun, only throwing in a few of the books I've tackled for school. If anyone wants to keep up with my reading life in real time, just hunt me down on Goodreads, as I use Goodreads regularly to track my reading progress.
Also, I should say that I've committed myself to reading all the Pulitzer Prize winners for fiction, so that's also given me a goal that has been directing my reading.
The last time I provided an update was nearly a year ago, in September of 2013, so I'll use that date as my starting point.
I'll link each book to its site on Goodreads, and you can find any reviews I might have posted about the book there.
Here goes ...
Warren Moore's Broken Glass Waltzes - "4" star ranking (out of five possible stars) - (This was a crime noir novel that I read on my Nook. I'm not much for this kind of literature, but it was a book published by a blogger whose writing I have come to like, so I figure I'd give it a go.)
James Martin, SJ's My Life with the Saints - "4" star ranking - (From my spiritual readings book club. Wonderful, engaging writing. I really enjoyed it.)
Juan Gabriel Vazquez's The Sound of Things Falling - "4" star ranking - (From another book club. A great addition to the Latin American literature collection.)
C. Alan Ames's Through the Eyes of Jesus: A Trilogy - "2" star ranking - (Bordering on the lowest "1" star ranking. Another book for my spiritual readings book club; but one which I didn't pick. I only read the first of the Trilogy and that's all I think I ever will read of it. I found it to be less than inspiring and very poorly written. Out of charity, I won't say anything else about it.)
Jesmyn Ward's Salvage the Bones - "4" star ranking - (From the couples book club. A hurricane Katrina novel. Very worthwhile read. Jesmyn Ward will now be teaching at Tulane University, which is very exciting.)
Miguel A. De La Torre's Reading the Bible from the Margins - "4" star ranking - (My pick for the spiritual readings book club. Vociferously despised by my more conservative, orthodox brothers in the club. If you want a radical re-reading of the bible as a testament to its social and political emphasis on solidarity with the poor, this book is for you. It's sometimes a bit in-your-face, but its liberation theology message is one that really resonates with me.)
Roberto BolaƱo's The Savage Detectives - "4" star ranking - (A selection for my men's book club. Loved it. Unique style of writing.)
Georges Bernanos's The Diary of a Country Priest - (One I have started on and off since college and finally just buckled down and read it.)
[NOTE: I'll have to come back and flesh out the details and links for the following books appearing below that I've read, but I'll just simply list them for now.]
Michael Cunningham's The Hours - (Pulitzer winner for 1999)
Booth Tarkington's The Magnificent Ambersons - (Pulitzer winner for 1919 and my selection for my men's book club.)
Elizabeth Bowen's The Death of the Heart - (Couples book club pick.)
Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass - (My book club with my youngest daughter.)
Homer's The Odyssey (My book club with my oldest daughter,)
Ernest Poole's His Family - (First Pulitzer winner for 1918.)
Janet M. Tavakoli's Archangels: Rise of the Jesuits - (Spiritual book club selection. Not mine. Pulpy trash fiction.)
Robert E. Barron's And Now I See...: A Theology of Transformation - (Spiritual book club selection. Very sophisticated theology and philosophy, but very good.)
Jeffrey Eugenides's Middlesex - (Pulitzer winner for 2003. Excellent book.)
Eudora Welty's The Optimist's Daughter - (Pulitzer winner for 1973.)
Robert Graves's I, Claudius - (Couples book club choice.)
Jhumpa Lahiri's Interpreter of Maladies - (Pulitzer winner for 2000)
Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlett Letter - (My book club with my oldest daughter.)
Thornton Wilder's The Bridge of San Luis Rey - (Pulitzer winner for 1928.)
Jack London's The Call of the Wild - (My book club with my youngest daughter.)
William Kennedy's Ironweed - (Pulitzer winner for 1984.)
John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath - "4" star ranking - (From the Pulitzer Prize winner collection and also the quintessential American novel classic. Definitely a worthwhile read. Odd that I had never read it until now.)
Currently reading and almost finished with:
Thomas Pynchon's V - (Men's book club selection.)
Margaret Ayer Barnes's Years of Grace - (Pulitzer winner for 1931)