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Uni's 2017 in literature

YEAR END LIST 11/14. I've read a lot of stuff this year. And you?
1Blood Command
Cult Drugs


Thomas Mann - Death in Venice (1912)

I will open up a little something to you that you should have discovered a long time ago if you are writing stories on constant basis. Something this novel is all about, directly and contextually. The way to overcome the writer's block is to write about it. If you can't figure out what to do about it, just channel it into writing about how you can'T figure out what to do with it. Thomas Mann did that in Death in Venice. This is a book by a man with the writer's block, about a man with the writer's block, both of whom are doing their hardest to avoid doing what they need to and/or getting mixed up in all sorts of mischief, while secretely just avoiding facing the real problem he has. It seems to me that that was the primary reason Mann wrote this and all of the additional references to mythology and philosophy were merely thrown in after the novel was finished, as the block was lifted.
8/10
3Oathbreaker
Eros|Anteros


Stefan Zweig - The Royal Game (1941)

Zweig's particular kind of storytelling is now apparent to me. He writes in ich-form, but makes the protagonist sit and listen to someone else's monologue. This story might be even more striking than Amok, because of its realism. Amok seemed to be more of a slight harsh realism fairytale, but the very fact that the Royal Game's isolation tortures were real makes this way more impactful. You can just sense that crushing feeling of forced solitude. I also noticed that there are two recurring themes in Zweig's work. Torment and obsession. But the two novels deal with them in different ways. The Royal Game focuses of obsession caused by torment, while Amok deals with torment caused by obsession. Nonetheless, the pattern is there.
9/10
4Moses Sumney
Aromanticism


Heinrich Mann - Professor Unrat (1905)

Considering Heinrich Mann's distaste for German educational system and methods, reading this actually brought smile on my face. This is not just some story about an amoral man positioning himself as a professor, this is Heinrich Mann's personal revenge against the torment that was inflicted upon him as a child. For his own comfort he imagines that all of those ruthless scholars that pretty much ruined his life are deep down just envious animals, waiting to burst out.
8/10
5Xiu Xiu
Forget


Hermann Hesse - Beneath the Wheel (1906)

The similarities between the lives of Hesse and Mann are uncanny, expect while Mann failed his education, Hesse simply ran away from it. This is not a belitteling of authority like with Mann, this is just a straightforward laying out of facts about how ridiculous the average standards of education were back then and how it can mess up a child's mind.
9/10
6Wax Fang
Victory Laps


Andre Breton - The Magnetic Fields (1920)

The namegiver to Stephin Merritt's band, of course I couldn't avoid it. Incredibly hard to read, but then again, so is pretty much everything in these hardcore surrealist works.
7/10
7Trisomie 21
Elegance Never Dies


Boris Vian - Froth on the Daydream (1947)

Incredibly hard to read [2]. This was actually my second attempt.
7/10
8Beyond The Wizard's Sleeve
The Soft Bounce


Anatole France - Penguin Island (1908)

Satirical reimagination of French history that served as a sort of protest back in the day. Unfortunately nowadays it reads a little clumsily and the overall absurd analogy seems more laughable than laugh inducing. It's still interesting to see the morale of the times soak through each page, but it is more or less a testament of its time and nthing more.
6.5/10
9Fred Thomas
Changer


Richard K. Morgan - Woken Furies (2005)

At last I got a chance to read the final instalment of Takeshi Kovacs series earlier this year, only to later find out Netflix is doing an adaptation of the first book, Altered Carbon, due till early 2018. What I always loved about Morgan's writing was how intricate and detailed his world was. Besides, he always delved into new directions with each book. The first book, Altered Carbon, was a pure cyberpunk fuckery. The second was more of a grounded space opera (if that makes sense). The third book, however, feels like a flat out war sci-fi.
9/10

also important, read Morgan's Alterd Carbon before Netflix releases the series adaptation
10Kairon IRSE!
Ruination


Andreas Eschbach - The Carpet Makers (2005)

I can't tell if this novel is written unconventionally and therefore I love it, or if it is written clumsily and therefore I hate it. It has no real plot and no main characters. It is just a collection of stories that are meant to open up this world of carpet-making planet (literally), whose inhabitants are raised with one goal in their life: design and sew an enormous and delicate carpet that you will then sell to a royal trader and ship it off to the galactic emperor's castle, and for the money you will be given will your children live their entire lives. I will not tell you anything above that, because the revelation at the end is truly deeply satisfying. Still, the was the book is written is just odd and I often felt disinterested because of the absolute encyclopedically pedantic straightforwardness of the narration. (also, the out-of-nowhere love story at the end just makes no sense)
7/10
11The Burning Hell
Public Library


Andre Gide - Return from Soviet Union (1936)

A fun read. It really puts things into perspective, when you see an absolute communist take a trip to USSR and try to interact with people there with humour and lighthearted attitude, but come off as condescending and cynical, for which he was also discredited by his own peers. I think that Andre Gide was so sure with communism and so loyal to his ideology that even if he did critique some of the things he encountered on his trip through USSR, it had no effect on anything. To him communism was such an obviously great thing that even if there were flaws, you could still work on them. Unfortunately for him, others took it as a direct hit against the system and started a boycott against Andre Gide. Poor guy, but that's what you get, when you go into communist haven with humour.
7/10

This also reminds me of a lyric from The Burning Hell's Nonfiction:
"When you've got reality who needs to make up stories?"
12Vestfalia's Peace
Loneliness


Clifford D. Simak - Time and Again (1951)

C.D. Simak is by far one of the most imaginative writers out there. With that said, though he does have an imagination, he does not know how to make a cohesive narrative.
6/10
13Di Derre
Gym


Jo Nesbo - The Thirst (2017)

I don't know, you guys. This has been quite a poor year for poor old Nesbo. First, the Snowman movie turned out ot be shite, then this book turned out to be possibly the weakest in the series. I actually hoped that he'd stop with this whole Harry Hole series altogether after The Police or The Phantom, and focus more on independent novels, but here we are. I don't know. It just kind of lacks any real grip like pretty much anything before did. Before this I could only surmise that the weakest episodes in the series were the first two books, because Jo had no clear vision yet of what exactly he was going for. Now, the weakest link is this, because Jo probably has nothing new to say. It's really a shame. It's not a complete crapbucket, but it is fairly disappointing. Now I hope that we'll get one more book that'll conclude Harry Hole's narrative in a grand and triumphant way, cause this can't be the end. God, I hope it's not.
6/10
14Circle
Terminal


China Mieville - This Census-Taker (2016)

An interesting idea to tell a story from a perspective of a confused child with troubles correctly connecting the dots and properly recalling events in his life. Unfortunately, the book gets a little dizzying by the end as you're trying to keep up with everything that's been said. Not a new thing for Mieveille, but still. Maybe it was only my problem, as I did read this book not on one sitting, but with constant interruptions and over a longer period of time. Nonetheless, it is still a decent enough read, although by far not the first Mieville book you should read.
6.5/10
15Bullet Bane
Continental


Artur London - The Confession (1968)

I don't know why I was so into communist writing this year. Even without knowing that Artur London was wrongly accused by the government of fake crimes during Czechoslovak party purge in the 50s, the parallels to a man's transformation from a loyal ideologist to an opponent are quite clear. It is an alter-ego autobiography of a man who was among those accused of made up crimes, because the party needed to be shaken up a little. The book channels through his life as a devout communist, to the paranoia of being watched and observed, to eventually being imprisoned for life and tortured. It's a really grim experience and leaves that uncomfortable, ugly aftertaste you just can't easily shake off.
9/10
16Incendiary
Thousand Mile Stare


SJ Watson - Before I Go To Sleep (2011)

On one hand, the story of distrust amidst a memory loss is decent and the way of telling that through reaching further and deeper into one's diary is also captivating. But on the other hand, this novel was written so vapidly and time after time I was losing my interest and regaining it again. And like that on repeat. Ugh.
6/10
17Dispatch
America, Location 12


Henri Barbusse - Under Fire (1916)

Now this was a really disturbing read. Barbusse was one of those authors who believed that the best way of transmitting the horrors of war was not to sugarcoat them into any nice words. Therefore if there was a scene of someone burning, he will tell you with medical precision exactly what happens to the guy in flames. If someone gets shot a couple of time, he will describe just what an open shotwound looks like. If some unlucky bastard gets into a gassed area, Barbusse will be happy to let you know on two to three pages just how fucking unbearable the guy's sufferings were and what exactly it looked like when he starts vomiting out his intestants.
7.5/10
18Count to Altek
She Will Fly With You Forever


Sully Prudhomme - Stances et poemes (1865)

To be fully honest, I didn't read this as a book, I just scraped off all of the poems in vaguely chronological order off of internet in various translations to all sorts of languages I know. Still a nice read. I actually just wanted to know who this guy was, since he did beat Lev Tolstoy at Nobel Prize for Literature back in the day. He's actually really good.
7.5/10
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