Author: Ian

Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage, by Haruki Murakami (2014)

With fewer fantastical elements than Kafka on the Shore or Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World, Murakami’s most recent novel covers more realistic scenarios that still raise larger, otherworldly questions.  The title character, a quiet loner, becomes estranged from his four childhood friends without explanation, and embarks on a quest from Nagoya to Finland to find out why. We never discover the secrets of Tsukuru’s past exactly, but that’s never the point with Murakami.  My one qualm is the flat exposition in the opening chapters, though this (fortunately) gives rise to more significant scenes quickly enough.

Rating:

4-kafkas

Where I Got It

Impromptu Christmas gift (2015) from my brother, who got two copies and gave me the paperback edition while keeping the hardcover (pictured above, much cooler).

More

Haruki Murakami’s website

Wikipedia page

American Cornball: A Laffopedic Guide to the Formerly Funny, by Christopher Miller (2014)

An encyclopedia of humor clichés of the Looney Tunes/newspaper comic variety, American Cornball covers the ubiquitous falling anvils, stinky limburger, and bindlestick-carrying hoboes of the first two-thirds of the twentieth century, along with why and how these now-outdated gags entered the mainstream.  Miller realizes (rightly!) that books about funny things should also themselves be funny, and writes with graceful wit and humor.  The book is also exhaustive, with enough pictures, literary references, and observations about the human condition to keep the fun moving through the 500 pages from A to Z (or, from “Absentminded Professors” to “Zealots”).

Rating:

5-kafkas

Where I Got It

Ordered online, Summer 2015.

More

Amazon page

NPR Interview with the author

 

Less Than Zero, by Bret Easton Ellis (1985)

Bret Easton Ellis’s first novel feels like a 1980s version of The Sun Also Rises with heroin, male prostitution, and at least one snuff film, which was probably the same level of scandal as when Hemingway’s characters got drunk and had premarital sex in 1926. The whole novel evokes a quiet, disconcerting loathing for the fast-paced, aimless LA lifestyle of its post-high school characters, with subdued yet depressing descriptions of everything from desert scenery to shooting up heroin. It’s also a fast read that leaves you with a distinctly unsettled feeling, but in a good way.

Rating:
4-kafkas
Where I Got It

Ordered online in Summer 2015 after having this on my informal To-Read list since college.

More

Wikipedia page

 

 

 

Why Write a Blog About Creative People and Their Day Jobs, Anyway?

I’ve been writing for a long time, and I’ve been reading books (and blogs) about writing for almost as long: books on craft, narrative, symbolism, genre, and a bunch of other stuff I can’t think of right now.  I’ve also read a lot about how to get your writing published (there are MILLIONS of people out there who can tell you how to write the perfect query letter. Well, maybe not millions, but a lot), as well as how to make a living as an artist/writer/creative person in the internet age, where things have changed from Continue reading »