Following the popularity of last yearβs post, here
again is a pictorial record of my reading from the previous twelve months,
to hopefully inspire and motivate your own reading choices. This time it comprises
a photograph taken every two months, of the books completed in the preceding
period.
Since I finished them, by definition all the included books have
merit to my mind (I would have abandoned them otherwise), and I very highly recommend almost all of them. Indeed I have found the quality of writing,
depth of insight, originality of ideas, and degree of empathy, inspiration and
exhilaration provided by this set of titles frequently quite breathtaking. A
number come with their own particular challenges of course, whether of style or
content, but that is always part of the deal β if you the reader are not up for
that then recognise you may be shutting off a key avenue for the development of
your personal understanding, ideas and appreciation.
I only found three titles genuinely problematic, Joyce and
Mieville were heavy going for considerable periods, the former also wearingly
self-indulgent for spells, and Nabokovβs Lolita comes with a pile of deeply uncomfortable
issues that individual readers will need to decide if they wish to engage with.
The difficulty I had with the latter book is reflected in the fact that I had
to put it aside for nine months while part way through, before returning to
complete it last summer, and I recognise that I may have to steel myself for a re-read at
some point to try and comprehend why it is held up by many (but certainly not
all) to be a great novel β currently I donβt entirely see it.
Everyone comes to a particular book from their own unique situation, with consequent personal baggage and perspective, so draw what you will from
the following titles. Many helpful reviews are available online, I particularly recommend those on the Guardian website at www.theguardian.com/books . In an act of gross oversimplification, and at the risk of being a little crass, I have also given each title a rating to roughly indicate what I personally got, that was positive, from each:
π π π π π Truly Special/Exceptional
π π π π Very Good and deeply rewarding
π π π Middling to Good, competent and worthwhile but not special
π π Poor/Disappointing, borderline whether I finished it
π Dreadful, by definition not finished and hence doesn't appear
January & February
Bleak House β Charles Dickens π π π π π
Autumn β Ali Smith π π π π
The New York Trilogy β Paul Auster π π π π π
The Lonely City β Olivia Laing π π π π
Men Explain Things to Me β Rebecca Solnit π π π π
March & April
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man β James Joyce π π
To the River β Olivia Laing π π π π
Love of Country β Madeleine Bunting π π π
Golden Hill β Francis Spufford π π π π
Beloved β Toni Morrison π π π π π
Selected Poems β Emily Dickinson π π π π π
May & June
The Balloonist β MacDonald Harris π π π π
Riddley Walker β Russell Hoban π π π π π
Lord of the Flies β William Golding π π π π
The Bricks that Built the Houses β Kate Tempest π π π π
Blood Meridian β Cormac McCarthy π π π π
Falling Awake - Alice Oswald π π π π π
ll account of his
final racing season which still leaves him and his readers well in love with
cycling and its wonderful culture.
And finally an antidote to all the worlds current frenetic madness, in a fine
compilation of the beautiful writings of the under appreciated late Welsh
naturalist William Condry. There are times when you need a book like this,
found hiding in a shop in Aberystwyth.
July & August

David Jones: Engraver, Soldier, Painter,
Poet β Thomas Dilworth π π π π
Lolita β Vladimir Nabokov π π π
My Cousin Rachel β Daphne Du Maurier π π π π
Empire of the Sun β J G Ballard π π π π π
No is Not Enough β Naomi Klein π π π π
The Unaccompanied β Simon Armitage π π π π
e just out!).
And Iain Sinclair manages to beautifully and gently expand your mind in his
unique mysterious way as he eruditely ambles through his childhood haunts on
the Gower, embracing creative connections at every turn (Dylan Thomas, Vernon
Watkins, Ceri Richards...).
In stark contrast is Philip Dick's sixties sci-fi masterpiece, or should that
simply be alternative history since it describes a post-war America run by the
Japanese and Germans who had won. Either way it disorientatingly focuses on a
few ordinary lives and small scale events, with an emerging considerable and
odd emphasis on Chinese philosophy that develops an unsettling power and a
climax strangely reminiscent of 2001. A very sixties example of the
drug-fuelled creative process, which certainly stays with you afterwards and
keeps you pondering...
September & October
The
Rehearsal β Eleanor Catton π π π π
Clay
β Melissa Harrison π π π π
A
Life of Walter Scott β A N Wilson π π π
The
Great War and Modern Memory β Paul Fussell π π π π
October
β China Mieville π π π
In
the Cairngorms β Nan Shepherd π π π
I then wended my way out of the city on the Thames, courtesy of Rachel
Lichtensteinβs atmospheric homage to the Estuary of her books title and her
home. A passionate and compelling capture of another marginal place, of land
and water, made particularly real through the lives of many of its fascinating
current occupants, often in conversation; a genuine treat. It also contains a
number of superb quotes from Joseph Conrad that neatly reminded me of the book
I had to read next.It is a special pleasure when a book you start in the hope it will be
merely good, rapidly blows your mind. Magnificent is the only word for Conradβs
The Mirror of the Sea. It is rare in simply setting out to provide the reader
the sense of being at sea in a sailing ship at the end of the nineteenth
century, without any single underlying adventure tale or narrative. Itβs the only
non-fiction by Conrad and is underpinned by the experience and knowledge of
twenty years at sea working his way up to captain, and the intellect and sheer
writing prowess of one of the greatest authors of all time. Every sentence
counts for something, and the wonder, fear, psychology, atmosphere and
complexity of every aspect of sailing is covered along with an astonishing
level of observation and insight of human nature and the human condition. A
captivating read and true classic. There is also a beautiful chapter on the
Thames estuary, making for the smoothest of transitions from Lichtensteinβs
workNovember & December

Bending Adversity, Japan and the Art of Survival β David
Pilling π π π π
Silence, in the Age of Noise β Erling Kagge π π π
Waverley β Walter Scott π π π π π
The Spy Who Came in from the Cold β John Le Carre π π π π
La Belle Sauvage - Philip Pullman π π π π
See Also: A Year of Reading - In Pictures (2016)
Favourite Listening of 2017