PW’s Top Ten of 2009

Gotta love the end of the year lists…  What amazes me is how few cross-over titles I’m seeing this year, though?  Here is Publisher’s Weekly list, plus a brief excerpt why:

AgeofWonder PWs Top Ten of 2009The Age of Wonder: How the Romantic Generation Discovered the Beauty and Terror of Science
Richard Holmes.
tstar PWs Top Ten of 2009The Romantic imagination was inspired, not alienated, by scientific advances, argues this captivating history. Holmes, author of a much-admired biography of Coleridge, focuses on prominent British scientists of the late 18th and early 19th centuries…  Their discoveries, he argues, helped establish a new paradigm of Romantic science that saw the universe as vast, dynamic and full of marvels and celebrated mankind’s power to not just describe but transform Nature.  

AwaitYourReply PWs Top Ten of 2009Await Your Reply
Dan Chaon.
tstar PWs Top Ten of 2009Three disparate characters and their oddly interlocking lives propel this intricate novel about lost souls and hidden identities from National Book Award finalist Chaon (You Remind Me of Me)… Chaon deftly intertwines a trio of story lines, showcasing his characters’ individuality by threading subtle connections between and among them with effortless finesse, all the while invoking the complexities of what’s real and what’s fake with mesmerizing brilliance. This novel’s structure echoes that of his well-received debut—also a book of three—as it bests that book’s elegant prose, haunting plot and knockout literary excellence. (S

BigMachine PWs Top Ten of 2009Big Machine
Victor Lavalle.

tstar PWs Top Ten of 2009LaValle has garnered critical acclaim for his previous works (a collection, Slapboxing with Jesus, and novel, The Ecstatic), and his second novel is sure to up his critical standing while furthering comparisons to Haruki Murakami, John Kennedy Toole and Edgar Allan Poe. Ricky’s intoxicating voice—robust, organic, wily—is perfect for narrating LaValle’s high-stakes mashup of thrilling paranormal and Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man, as the fateful porter—something of a modern Odysseus rallied by a team of spiritual X-men—wanders through America’s messianic hoo-hah.

Cheever PWs Top Ten of 2009Cheever: A Life
Blake Bailey.

Rebellious Yankee son of a father who fell victim to the Depression and a doo-gooder-turned-businesswoman mother, father to three competitive children he rode mercilessly but adored, chronicler par excellence of the 1950s American suburban scene while deploring all forms of conformity: John Cheever (1912–1982) was a mass of contradictions. Bailey’s book is fine in descriptions of Cheever’s reactions to other writers, such as his adored Bellow and detested Salinger. Bailey is also sensitive in describing the prickly dynamic of Cheever’s domestic life, lived through a haze of alcoholism and under the shadow of extramarital heterosexual and homosexual relationships.

FieryPeace PWs Top Ten of 2009A Fiery Peace in a Cold War: Bernard Schriever and the Ultimate Weapon
Neil Sheehan.
The military-industrial complex proves an unlikely arena for plucky individualism in this history of the men who built America’s intercontinental ballistic missile program in the 1950s and ‘60s… Sheehan gives a fascinating run-down of the engineering challenges posed by nuclear missiles, but the main action consists of bureaucratic intrigues, procurement innovations and epic briefings that catch the president’s ear and open the funding spigots. Like the author’s Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award-winning A Bright Shining Lie, this is a saga of underdog visionaries struggling to redirect a misguided military juggernaut, this time successfully: the author credits Schriever’s missiles with keeping the peace and jump-starting the space program and satellite industry.

InOtherRooms PWs Top Ten of 2009In Other Rooms, Other Wonders
Daniyal Mueenuddin.
tstar PWs Top Ten of 2009In eight beautifully crafted, interconnected stories, Mueenuddin explores the cutthroat feudal society in which a rich Lahore landowner is entrenched. An elegant stylist with a light touch, Mueenuddin invites the reader to a richly human, wondrous experience.

JeffinVenice PWs Top Ten of 2009Jeff in Venice, Death in Varanasi
Geoff Dyer.
tstar PWs Top Ten of 2009Two 40-ish men seeking love and existential meaning are the protagonists of these highly imaginative twin novellas, written in sensuous, lyrical prose brimming with colorful detail. Dyer’s ingenious linking of these contrasting narratives is indicative of his intelligence and stylistic grace, and his ability to evoke atmosphere with impressive clarity is magical. Both novellas ask trenchant philosophical questions, include moments of irresistible humor and offer arresting observations about art and human nature. For all his wit and cleverness, Dyer is unflinching in conveying the empty lives of his contemporaries, and in doing so he’s written a work of exceptional resonance.

LostCity PWs Top Ten of 2009The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon
David Grann
tstar PWs Top Ten of 2009In 1925, renowned British explorer Col. Percy Harrison Fawcett embarked on a much publicized search to find the city of Z, site of an ancient Amazonian civilization that may or may not have existed. Fawcett, along with his grown son Jack, never returned, but that didn’t stop countless others, including actors, college professors and well-funded explorers from venturing into the jungle to find Fawcett or the city… By interweaving the great story of Fawcett with his own investigative escapades in South America and Britain, Grann provides an in-depth, captivating character study that has the relentless energy of a classic adventure tale.

 

ShopClass PWs Top Ten of 2009Shop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into the Value of Work
Matthew B. Crawford
tstar PWs Top Ten of 2009Philosopher and motorcycle repair-shop owner Crawford extols the value of making and fixing things in this masterful paean to what he calls manual competence, the ability to work with one’s hands. According to the author, our alienation from how our possessions are made and how they work takes many forms: the decline of shop class, the design of goods whose workings cannot be accessed by users (such as recent Mercedes models built without oil dipsticks) and the general disdain with which we regard the trades in our emerging information economy. Unlike today’s knowledge worker, whose work is often so abstract that standards of excellence cannot exist in many fields (consider corporate executives awarded bonuses as their companies sink into bankruptcy), the person who works with his or her hands submits to standards inherent in the work itself: the lights either turn on or they don’t, the toilet flushes or it doesn’t, the motorcycle roars or sputters. With wit and humor, the author deftly mixes the details of his own experience as a tradesman and then proprietor of a motorcycle repair shop with more philosophical considerations.

Stitches PWs Top Ten of 2009Stitches
David Small
tstar PWs Top Ten of 2009In this profound and moving memoir, Small, an award-winning children’s book illustrator, uses his drawings to depict the consciousness of a young boy. The story starts when the narrator is six years old and follows him into adulthood, with most of the story spent during his early adolescence. The youngest member of a silent and unhappy family, David is subjected to repeated x-rays to monitor sinus problems. When he develops cancer as a result of this procedure, he is operated on without being told what is wrong with him. The operation results in the loss of his voice, cutting him off even further from the world around him. Small’s black and white pen and ink drawings are endlessly perceptive as they portray the layering of dream and imagination onto the real-life experiences of the young boy. Small’s intuitive morphing of images, as with the terrible postsurgery scar on the main character’s throat that becomes a dark staircase climbed by his mother, provide deep emotional echoes. Some understanding is gained as family secrets are unearthed, but for the most part David fends for himself in a family that is uncommunicative to a truly ghastly degree. Small tells his story with haunting subtlety and power.

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2 Comment(s)

  1. What intrigues me about all of the “best of the best” book lists that are published at the end of each year is how few I, an avid reader, have not only not read but haven’t read reviews about the titles. Thanks for sharing the lists as they come by your desk; it gives me endless reading in the year to come. “So many books, so little time!”

    Linda | Dec 21, 2009 | Reply

  2. I agree, Linda!! So, the question is… WHY? I wonder if the lists are done in the same spirit as the Oscar nominees — in other words, focused on “late in the year” publications to get readers to take note the following year? I really try to be aware of the “Must Reads” each year and am still so surprised by the end-of-year lists… Sigh!

    Kristen | Dec 22, 2009 | Reply

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