Monday, May 10, 2010

Decades' Best Books-An American Treasure Disappoints

MARK TWAIN's (Samuel L. Clemens) "The Man that Corrupted Hadleyburg and other Essays and Stories" 1900, gets 6* of 10 out of respect. In fairness, most of the compilation is from the 1800s. My opinion: read "Huck' Finn".
JI

More bad "Best of the Decades'" from a well-respected published source. In other words, we disagree:

PAT CONROY's "The Prince of Tides" 1986, this is too wordy for a good story (which it is). 5*. JA
ANNE MORROW LINDBERG's "Gift from the Sea" 1955, 4*. The best thing: short, worst: aristocratic. JA
SHERWOOD ANDERSON's "Winesburg, Ohio" 1919, some good descriptive phrases in a story of repression. 5*. JA
MILES FRANKLIN's (Stella Maria Sarah Franklin) "My Brilliant Career" 1901, 6* and surprisingly well written by a teenager near the turn of the century. JA
JEFFREY EUGENIDES's story published in 1993, "The Virgin Suicides", is best of what? Best hip 1990's story? In my doddering old age I hadn't been cognizant of the romanticizing of suicide. I didn't get it but the story's worth 7*. It at least has one of my favorite lines: "Don't waste your time on life". JI
JACK FINNEY's 1970 novel "Time and Again" carries the usual 7* blah blah blah review. "It's a good story with a couple of interesting turns". He tries his hand at historical fiction, and knows his NYC history. JA

Hey, where's "The Wind in the Willows" (1908, K. Grahame) on the '00's best list? Oh for the love of Toady, Mole and Water Rat!

The best of the 1700s: "Gulliver's Travels", 1726 and revised 1735, J. Swift (real title, get this, "Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World, in Four Parts. By Lemuel Gulliver, First a Surgeon, and then a Captain of Several Ships"), "Robinson Crusoe" (the first novel in English? I was surprised how little of the book was about R. C.'s man Friday. I think that you will be also. The book is written in "Old English" vernacular. That's a struggle. No pain no gain. It's worth the trouble.), D. Defoe, 1719.

And the 1800s? Not the S. L. Clemens "...Hadleyburg..." thing. I guess "Call me Ishmael." if you will.

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