A fine balance
Books that I have read, re-read or currently reading in the last 6 months with a single line opinion (In no particular order).
1. The catcher in the rye – JD Salinger
(Introduced me to Salinger. Must read)
2. Raise high the roof beams Carpenter & Seymour: an Introduction – JD Salinger
(Raise high the roof beams Carpenter is brilliant. Seymour: an Introduction is tedious, self-indulgent, repititive)
3. Franny & Zooey – JD Salinger
(Franny is normal Salinger. Zooey is marginally better)
4. Nine stories – JD Salinger
(Mixed bag. The ones I liked are 'Uncle Wiggily in Connecticut', 'Just before the war with the Eskimos', 'For Esme with love and Squalor' and 'Pretty mouth and green my Eyes')
5.Lord of the flies – William Golding
(Read for the concept.Deep.Normal writing)
6. A clockwork orange – Anthony Burgess
(Uses sometimes-difficult-to-understand slang. Great plot)
7.A fine balance – Rohinton Mistry
(Introduced me to Rohinton Mistry. Will remain one of my all time favourites)
8. Family matters – Rohinton Mistry
(Good. But my frame of reference is set by 'A Fine Balance'. Difficult to match)
9.Sacred Games – Vikram Chandra
(Cops & Robbers tale. Unapologetic. Racy read. Good)
10. Love & Longing in Bombay – Vikram Chandra
(Set of five stories. Good not great. Liked 'Artha' the most followed by 'Shanti')
11. Red Earth & pouring Rain - Vikram Chandra
(Tedious. Thought it pseudo-intellectual. Couldn't finish.)
12.A suitable boy – Vikram Seth
(Lazy, luxurious, great writing. Liked it)
13.Hullabaloo in the guava orchard – Kiran Desai
(really good writing in spite of the plot)
14. Selected short stories of Nikolai Gogol – Nikolai Gogol
(Currently reading. First signs good)
15.The Namesake – Jhumpa lahiri
(Good. Liked the 'Interpreter of maladies' much better)
16. The world according to Garp – John Irving
(Introduced me to John irving. Was startled by the book. Liked it)
17.The Cider House Rules – John Irving
(My John irving favourite. On par with 'The World according to Garp')
18.A prayer for Owen Meany – John Irving
(A whole book created on the thinnest premise. Couldn't wait for it to end)
19. The Hotel New Hampshire – John Irving
(Has all those John irving staples. Bears, Vienna. Good only in parts.)
20. The kite runner – Khaled Hosseini
(Kept me interested. Too formulaic. Maybe the best he will ever write)
21.The city of God – Paulo Lins
(Too full of violence, drugs etc. Got on my nerves after some time)
22.Sons & Lovers – D H Lawrence
(Didn't know what to expect. Liked it)
23.The Same Sea – Amos Oz
(Read a novel in this form for the first time. Loved it)
24.Pomegranate Soup – Marsha Mehran
(Has some really tasty looking recipes. Found the novel quite superficial)
25.The Great Gatsby – F Scott Fitzgerald
(OK. Didn't do anything great for me and definitely did not match the hype it has around it)
26. Bend in the river – VS Naipaul
(Introduced me to Naipaul. Loved it)
27. A house for Mr Biswas – VS Naipaul
(Long. Tedious. However, a good read if patient)
28.Babbitt - Sinclair Lewis
(Very very tedious. But liked it)
29.The Shining – Stephen King
(Typical Stephen King. Scared me. But forgettable as soon as you finish it)
30.The Secret life of bees – Sue Monk Kidd
(Nothing great. Pass)
31. Fried green tomatoes at the Whistle stop cafe - Fanny Flagg
(In the genre of 'To kill a mockingbird'. Comes nowhere near)
32.The Wedding – Nicholas Sparks
(Too too mushy. Read it when I had nothing else to read. But still don't know how I read it)
I have never read so much in such a time frame. I am the cat with the cream smeared all around my mouth.
And yes...I work too........Really. I do.
1. The catcher in the rye – JD Salinger
(Introduced me to Salinger. Must read)
2. Raise high the roof beams Carpenter & Seymour: an Introduction – JD Salinger
(Raise high the roof beams Carpenter is brilliant. Seymour: an Introduction is tedious, self-indulgent, repititive)
3. Franny & Zooey – JD Salinger
(Franny is normal Salinger. Zooey is marginally better)
4. Nine stories – JD Salinger
(Mixed bag. The ones I liked are 'Uncle Wiggily in Connecticut', 'Just before the war with the Eskimos', 'For Esme with love and Squalor' and 'Pretty mouth and green my Eyes')
5.Lord of the flies – William Golding
(Read for the concept.Deep.Normal writing)
6. A clockwork orange – Anthony Burgess
(Uses sometimes-difficult-to-understand slang. Great plot)
7.A fine balance – Rohinton Mistry
(Introduced me to Rohinton Mistry. Will remain one of my all time favourites)
8. Family matters – Rohinton Mistry
(Good. But my frame of reference is set by 'A Fine Balance'. Difficult to match)
9.Sacred Games – Vikram Chandra
(Cops & Robbers tale. Unapologetic. Racy read. Good)
10. Love & Longing in Bombay – Vikram Chandra
(Set of five stories. Good not great. Liked 'Artha' the most followed by 'Shanti')
11. Red Earth & pouring Rain - Vikram Chandra
(Tedious. Thought it pseudo-intellectual. Couldn't finish.)
12.A suitable boy – Vikram Seth
(Lazy, luxurious, great writing. Liked it)
13.Hullabaloo in the guava orchard – Kiran Desai
(really good writing in spite of the plot)
14. Selected short stories of Nikolai Gogol – Nikolai Gogol
(Currently reading. First signs good)
15.The Namesake – Jhumpa lahiri
(Good. Liked the 'Interpreter of maladies' much better)
16. The world according to Garp – John Irving
(Introduced me to John irving. Was startled by the book. Liked it)
17.The Cider House Rules – John Irving
(My John irving favourite. On par with 'The World according to Garp')
18.A prayer for Owen Meany – John Irving
(A whole book created on the thinnest premise. Couldn't wait for it to end)
19. The Hotel New Hampshire – John Irving
(Has all those John irving staples. Bears, Vienna. Good only in parts.)
20. The kite runner – Khaled Hosseini
(Kept me interested. Too formulaic. Maybe the best he will ever write)
21.The city of God – Paulo Lins
(Too full of violence, drugs etc. Got on my nerves after some time)
22.Sons & Lovers – D H Lawrence
(Didn't know what to expect. Liked it)
23.The Same Sea – Amos Oz
(Read a novel in this form for the first time. Loved it)
24.Pomegranate Soup – Marsha Mehran
(Has some really tasty looking recipes. Found the novel quite superficial)
25.The Great Gatsby – F Scott Fitzgerald
(OK. Didn't do anything great for me and definitely did not match the hype it has around it)
26. Bend in the river – VS Naipaul
(Introduced me to Naipaul. Loved it)
27. A house for Mr Biswas – VS Naipaul
(Long. Tedious. However, a good read if patient)
28.Babbitt - Sinclair Lewis
(Very very tedious. But liked it)
29.The Shining – Stephen King
(Typical Stephen King. Scared me. But forgettable as soon as you finish it)
30.The Secret life of bees – Sue Monk Kidd
(Nothing great. Pass)
31. Fried green tomatoes at the Whistle stop cafe - Fanny Flagg
(In the genre of 'To kill a mockingbird'. Comes nowhere near)
32.The Wedding – Nicholas Sparks
(Too too mushy. Read it when I had nothing else to read. But still don't know how I read it)
I have never read so much in such a time frame. I am the cat with the cream smeared all around my mouth.
And yes...I work too........Really. I do.
Labels: Books
7 Comments:
hey rajesh, am glad you put out this post...the one-liner review will certainly help me decide which ones to read or forego.
my problem is one of plenty...even i am doing a lot of reading but not completing any of the novels i start...i hope to strike a purple patch soon and then come out with a similar post. rite now i just drive the librarian mad with countless renewals!
i really needed this inspiration!!!
Ya...I understand the problem:-)
Especially here in the US with such enormous, delicious libraries.
Whenever I go there, I feel like I want to bring back everything.
Try Orhan Pamuk's books too('My name is Red' is supposed to be really good though I havent read it yet. I am reading his 'Snow' and that's great so far)and do take the opinions with a pinch of salt. There is every chance that you might differ.
mm..great list..though havent read most of em..but the mix of authors are nice..esp nice to see a salinger fan..i liked kite runner a lot..and like you said he could be a one book wonder!!
Mathew
Its the single most important reason for staying in the US. Must say I am overwhelmed with the book collections in the libraries here. Makes me want to start a string of libraries in India :-)
i feel pretty bad after seeing this list...i saw sacred games in some library last week, tht one itself would take me a year :)
BVN
Try reading 'Sacred Games'. Even though its long, its 'unputdownable' (To borrow a cliche).
And I am sure you must read. Your writing suggests that.
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