Saturday, June 16, 2012

It's Book Selection Time!

With an eye toward how busy and distracted many of us are this summer, I've attempted to base selections this time around on the brevity of the text itself, or whether i'ts likely to be a fast read. All of these are from my personal tbr shelves.

The choices:

Ragnarok by A.S. Byatt. (192 pages) From Amazon: Ragnarok retells the finale of Norse mythology. A story of the destruction of life on this planet and the end of the gods themselves: what more relevant myth could any modern writer choose? Just as Wagner used this dramatic and catastrophic struggle for the climax of his Ring Cycle, so AS Byatt now reinvents it in all its intensity and glory. As the bombs of the Blitz rain down on Britain, one young girl is evacuated to the countryside. She is struggling to make sense of her new wartime life. Then she is given a copy of Asgard and the Gods - a book of ancient Norse myths - and her inner and outer worlds are transformed.

The Vet's Daughter by Barbara Comyns. (152 pages) From Amazon: The Vet's Daughter combines shocking realism with a visionary edge. The vet lives with his bedridden wife and shy daughter Alice in a sinister London suburb. He works constantly, captive to a strange private fury, and treats his family with brutality and contempt. After his wife's death, the vet takes up with a crass, needling woman who tries to refashion Alice in her own image. And yet as Alice retreats ever deeper into a dream world, she discovers an extraordinary secret power of her own. Harrowing and haunting, like an unexpected cross between Flannery O'Connor and Stephen King, The Vet's Daughter is a story of outraged innocence that culminates in a scene of appalling triumph.

 In a Perfect World by Laura Kasischke. (336 pages) From Amazon: This is the way the world ends... It was a fairy tale come true when Mark Dorn—handsome pilot, widower, tragic father of three—chose Jiselle to be his wife. The other flight attendants were jealous: She could quit now, leaving behind the million daily irritations of the job. (Since the outbreak of the Phoenix flu, passengers had become even more difficult and nervous, and a life of constant travel had grown harder.) She could move into Mark Dorn's precious log cabin and help him raise his three beautiful children. But fairy tales aren't like marriage. Or motherhood. With Mark almost always gone, Jiselle finds herself alone, and lonely. She suspects that Mark's daughters hate her. And the Phoenix flu, which Jiselle had thought of as a passing hysteria (when she had thought of it at all), well . . . it turns out that the Phoenix flu will change everything for Jiselle, for her new family, and for the life she thought she had chosen.

 Perdido Street Station by China Mieville. (640 pages) From Amazon: Beneath the towering bleached ribs of a dead, ancient beast lies New Crobuzon, a squalid city where humans, Re-mades, and arcane races live in perpetual fear of Parliament and its brutal militia. The air and rivers are thick with factory pollutants and the strange effluents of alchemy, and the ghettos contain a vast mix of workers, artists, spies, junkies, and whores. In New Crobuzon, the unsavory deal is stranger to none—not even to Isaac, a brilliant scientist with a penchant for Crisis Theory. Isaac has spent a lifetime quietly carrying out his unique research. But when a half-bird, half-human creature known as the Garuda comes to him from afar, Isaac is faced with challenges he has never before fathomed. Though the Garuda's request is scientifically daunting, Isaac is sparked by his own curiosity and an uncanny reverence for this curious stranger.While Isaac's experiments for the Garuda turn into an obsession, one of his lab specimens demands attention: a brilliantly colored caterpillar that feeds on nothing but a hallucinatory drug and grows larger—and more consuming—by the day. What finally emerges from the silken cocoon will permeate every fiber of New Crobuzon—and not even the Ambassador of Hell will challenge the malignant terror it invokes . . .

 Three Weeks in December by Audrey Schulman. (353 pages) From Amazon: In 1899 Jeremy, a young engineer, leaves a small town in Maine to oversee the construction of a railroad across East Africa. In charge of hundreds of Indian laborers, he soon finds himself the reluctant hunter of two lions that are killing his men in almost nightly attacks on their camp. Plagued by fear, wracked with malaria and alienated by a secret he can tell no one, he takes increasing solace in the company of the African who helps him hunt. In 2000 Max, an American ethnobotonist, travels to Rwanda in search of an obscure vine that could become a lifesaving pharmaceutical. Stationed in the mountains, she closely shadows a family of gorillas, the last of their group to survive the encroachment of local poachers. Max bears a striking gift for understanding the ape's non-verbal communication, but their precarious solidarity is threatened as a violent rebel group from the nearby Congo draws close.

I'll tally up and announce the winner on June 23.

9 comments:

litlove said...

I'm voting for Ragnarok, please! A good book to discuss, I'd imagine.

Rohan Maitzen said...

What a fascinating list! I'll second the vote for Ragnarok: Byatt is such an intelligent writer I'm willing to try it even though the genre (if that's the right word) would not otherwise be a draw to me.

StuckInABook said...

The Comyns is wonderful! Dark themes, but narrated in a matter-of-fact voice - a very striking, but Comyns-esque approach.

Jaimie said...

Hi! My name is Jaimie and would love to join the Slaves. Ragnarok looks like a great book to read and discuss. Thanks!

Colleen said...

Ragnarok!

I read Perdido Street Station a few months ago...A lot of it was great but it also had significant flaws, not the least of which was that it didn't really have to be as long as it was.

Danielle said...

Ragnarok please.

Stefanie said...

Fantastic list! My vote goes for the Comyns.

Sarah said...

Ragnarok as well please.

Jodie said...

Ragnarok is in my local library so it gets my vote. Imagine it will be lovely and layered.