The Guards, Ken Bruen
The Screwtape Letters, CS Lewis
The Pale King, David Foster Wallace
This Is Water, David Foster Wallace
Bossypants, Tina Fey
Wishful Drinking, Carrie Fisher
Odd Thomas, Dean Koontz
Darkness Under The Sun, Dean Koontz
The Wonderful Wizard Of Oz, Frank Baum

Once again it’s tough to exactly express just what made these books so damn appealing. “They’re about this guy name Kvothe. He’s kind of egotistical and is always starting shit. He goes to medival Hogwarts, learns Sexcromancy, and occasionally just completely loses his shit. Not a whole lot happens and by the time you finish the thousand page second book you’re more or less where the first book ended, which itself was not overstuffed with narrative events. It’s awesome!”

That said if Rothfuss finishes the story in one book. I will eat it. Page by page, with my shoe as garnish.

Yet at the risk of alienating my European Readers there is one area where I truly do believe America to be manifestly better. If it is snobbishness to be honest then so be it. I believe in the immutable superiority of American Crime. Y’all do not have crime the way we have crime. Here I’ll just pass the mike to Mr. Hicks…
I will admit that this prejudice extends to American Crime Fiction. If I want to know who stole the third Viscount’s cookies, I’ll give Father Brown a ring. If I wish to know who took Charles Withington’s necklace, intended for his lady most faire, Ms. Marple will be first on my list. If I’d like to read intermably paced meditations on the midlife crisises of Swedish Journalists, with the single laziest answer to a locked room mystery I’ve ever read I’ll be sure to get out my Oujia board and talk turkey with Stiegg Larson.
But I don’t usually want that…
What I want is Mike Hammer prowling the streets with blood on his first and a smile on his face. I want Patrick Kenzie facing the darkness within and out. I want Ellroy’s crew of sociopath doing the unmentionable to the unthinkable. I want Easy Rawlins turning over the rock of American history to reveal the worms beneath it. I want Carl Hiassen in Looney Tunes gone beserk, spreading perverse acts of ghastly mayhem across the Florida coast. I want the urban tragedies of George Pelecanos and Richard Price. I want Phillip Marlowe as Dante in the concentric circles of LA. I want The Continental Op. I want the lean, crazed shark efficency of Richard Stark. The single minded cruelty of Patricia Highsmith. In the words of Frank Miller I want Blood For Blood and by the gallons of it. USA! USA! USA!
I say this dear reader not just so I come off as an ugly American to my readers from other countries (that ship has sailed). But just so I can underline the fact that when I say that Ken Bruen’s The Guards
You’ve seen dysfunctional detectives before. They’re practically their own subgenre but I can more or less guarantee that you’ve never met a character as gloriously dysfunctional as Jack Taylor. An alcholic, and not the functional kind, rarely are we faced with a detective who must constantly check to see if he has pissed himself. Taylor is given to waking up not knowing where he’s been for the past three days. Watching this character put on his pants and make a cup of tea is an ordeal. Watching him try to solve a mystery involving some very dangerous people is like watching a blind man stumble into traffic.
His story is told with a devastating combination of laugh out loud prose, a firm sense of place and character and a coal black heart. The Killing Of Tinkers sits next to me like a live grenade I can’t wait.
(Postscript one: Many thanks to the wonderful Leopard13 for recommending The Guards. I owe you one.
Postscript two: Truth in criticism, one other exception to my Eurocrime rule would be David Peace. Who frankly kind of scares the shit out of me.)

So saying that Carrie Fisher’s Wishful Drinking
Feeling more like the script for a one woman show rather than a traditional memoir. Wishful Drinking doesn’t so much go through Fisher’s career as it does systematically drag every skeleton she has out of the closet, of which there are not a few. It’s fun for a while and then just gets a bit exhausting (even at a relatively slim length barely eighty pages depending what printing your looking at). But the fact remains that any book which contains an anecdote in which Cary Grant lectures the heroine on the dangers of LSD not once but twice, is not entirely a waste of time.


I didn’t really have any animosity towards Koontz. No more than any other career airport writer. I read quite a few of his books in Jr. High and High School and have fond memories of Watchers, The Door To December, and Fear Nothing as being fairly snappy pulp fiction. I grew tired of him when I realized that he was intent on shoehorning the same plot twist (“It’s the supernatural. No it’s not.”) into as many books as humanly possible. But like I said no real malice…
Until I read from The Corner Of His Eye, which depending on the day you ask me, is the worst book I’ve ever read.
The experience of reading from The Corner Of His Eye isn’t so much like reading a book as it is being caught in the stirrup of a bolting frothing horse for the time it takes someone to read a seven hundred page novel while shouting at you about Murder and Quantum Mechanics. It soured me to Koontz rather definitely and I haven’t read one of his books since.
Odd Thomas isn’t as bad, though it is singularly loopy. Koontz’s prose swings back and forth between quirky and demented like he’s a sociopathic Diablo Cody and if he wants to stop the narrative so Thomas can go off on a long tangent about whatever bothered Koontz today when he read the morning paper, then you had better believe he is going to do it. That things get overdone go without saying. Odd Thomas was at the end of the day, decidedly not for me.
That said, Odd himself is an appealing character, and I can understand why the series has struck a cord with so many people. I’m not going to go out of my way to continue the Odd Thomas series, but if circumstances put the next book in my hand my reaction would be something less than out and out horror.
Ironically, fate ended up putting a second Koontz story in my hand this month after a pause of ten years or so. Darkness Under The Sun


…

The completeness of vision in the scant novella is what is truly staggering. Such a thorough view it has on sins and counter sins that at times it feels as though Lewis has been given an objective place to view earthly life from outside of eternity. The mortal plane becomes as perilous as trying to walk across soaped ballbearings. There is not a more thorough compendium of human frailty I know of.
Yet as anyone who has read it knows Screwtape, is not some solemn hectoring tract. It is at times devastatingly funny and contains in its final pages some of the most powerful transcendental writings that I know of. It’s a work of satire, in which we are the targets and the best thing to be said about it is that it is easy to believe as the product of an inhuman mind.
It may truly be Lewis’s masterpiece.
(I supplemented the reading with Andy Serkis’s reading of The Screwtape Letters. As you might expect Serkis giving voice to all of inequity is awesome (He’s basically the new Tim Curry isn’t he?) Yet there is a serious qualm as the production is sponsored by Focus On The Family, an organization which is at best deeply problematic. Frankly I’m a little bit baffled at what an actor of Serkis’s stature is doing associating himself with the organization. But I suppose if I can gain wisdom from reading a correspondence between two demons, I can accept an excellent reading from a dubious sponser.)

Like Zombie Space Ship Wasteland, Bossypants is half traditional memoir half free form sketch comedy, and Fey excels at both.
As telling the jokes would be spoiling them (OK just one. I have sincere admiration and envy for the sentence in which Fey describes herself as crying “Like a three year old who just wants to bring her toy cash register into the bathtub.”)I will only note that Fey is remarkably adapt at handling each element of the book. It contains devastatingly funny passages, wistful sharply drawn sketches from her past and trenchant commentary on gender and society all without one of the elements ever overwhelming the other.
It’s a fantastic balancing act in a fantastic book. Fey remains in print as in life, deeply impressive.
