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Book lists abound at the beginning of summer and then again at Christmas.  Two distinct types of books generally populate these lists; lighter books for reading in the sun, preferably by a beach, pool, or campsite, and books with a more serious bent for the days when the we envision ourselves curling up by the fire with a book.  I live in Los Angeles where it is beautiful year round, but still find my reading falls into this timeline.  At one of my book groups, a member suggested reading Proust for the July meeting.  I very much want to read Proust, but said he should be read in the winter.  Swann’s Way feels oppressive in bright sunshine, for me there needs to be a bit of a chill in the air.

Few things catch my eye as quickly as a book list.  First, it’s a quick way to learn about new books, no long review of the book, just a snapshot.  Second, certain types of lists test my reading.  How many books on the greatest works of the 20th century/all time/American literature, etc. have I read?  I like the lists where I’ve read many of the books, I feel affirmed.

When this week’s Newsweek arrived I raised my eyebrows.  First, the cover isn’t Michael Jackson (and with all respect to his family and fans, I was relieved), although the newstand version has his picture, the subscriber one does not.  The cover is a picture of someone reading, a book (in paper), and the feature article is “What to Read Now.”  Not summer reading list, not the best whatever list, but what to read to understand our world better today.  50 books. 

First, a quick overview of the list, then the calculation.  Of the 50 books, I’ve read six, so I’m over the 10% mark, a mark only good as an interest rate on a savings account.  I tried adding in the books on the list that I own and that I have seen my Mom or Leslie reading.  It didn’t help too much. 

Books_SuperSLAHThe list is designed to help us understand our current world and the first book is The Way We Live Now by Anthony Trollope, written in 1875, that would be 134 years ago.   Actually, this isn’t the first time I’ve heard that book referenced, it’s about a financial and moral crisis in England and has a character that people have identified as Madoff.  If only more people read their classics. . .

The list is a combination of fiction, politics, history, sociology, psychology, religion, environmental, and science.   The topics chosen are interesting.  A couple of books on terrorism, of course, but also the roots of British soccer violence.  The environment is represented by Faulkner’s The Bear and Berry’s ode to the family farm in The Unsettling of America.  Biographies include J. Robert Oppenheimer (American Prometheus by Kai Bird and Martin F. Sherwin), Whittaker Chambers by Sam Tanenhaus as one of the founders of the modern right, and Winchell by Neal Gabler as the original Rush Limbaugh.  Race, war and film are covered also. 

It’s an interesting concept, thinking of books that help understand the world overall.  Which ones are you tempted to read?  Which ones would you choose?  I’m going to revise my list for the World Citizen Challenge with this in hand to broaden my viewpoint.

We’re not the only ones who want to hear your viewpoint on the books selected and your suggestions for other books, over at My Friend Amy there’s the opportunity to pick one of the books from the list to read and then discuss, join her conversation also.

FYI, Newsweek also crunched the top ten from several 100 Best Books lists and came up with their own Meta-list.  I did better here, I’ve read over 40% and heard of all but two of them.  Nothing very unusual about this list, War and Peace is first, 1984 second, and Ulysses is third.

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Alexis Wright kindly takes the time to tell us a little bit about her love for books.

Alexis Wright is a writer of both fiction (Plains of Promise and the recently published gorgeous work of magical realism Carpentaria,which, as an Angeleno, I keep wanting to call “Carpenteria”) and non-fiction (Grog War).  She is a member of the Waanyi nation and an activist for all Aboriginals.   I was sent Carpentaria which uses language like a paintbrush and Australia like a canvas, and thought I’d save any mention of it for “Translated Tuesday” until it occurred to me that an Australian book doesn’t actually need to be translated for us Americans.

I may not be a genius, but Wright fortunately is.  And she was kind enough to respond to our author interview questions, which allows us to expose our readers to new authors without losing sight of our goal of promoting bookstores.   The questions are ours, the answers all hers.   I dare you not to find her fascinating. 

1.  Did you have a special bookstore in your life when you were growing up, that helped foster your love of reading and writing?

 I do not remember stepping into a bookstore in the first 20 years of my life.  There was no bookstore in my home town of Cloncurry, which is located in the savannah country of North West Queensland, of Northern Australia.  I do not think any of the small towns in Northern Australia had a bookstore, and many would still not have a bookstore now. 

 There may have been a bookstore in the large coastal town of Townsville, 784 kilometres east from Cloncurry, or else, 1,800 kilometres south to Brisbane, the capital city, of Queensland.  I discovered bookstores when I first left home while I was living and studying in Dunedin, New Zealand.

 I had a wonderful grandmother, and as a child, I spent a great deal of time with her.  She lived on the edge of town in a corrugated iron house with a big garden of vegetables she grew from the seeds she harvested from the year before, and she would often take me on long walks through isolated bush land, and along the dry riverbeds outside of town, and through all of these places, she would tell stories about the bush, and of our traditional homeland in the Gulf of Carpentaria. Our Waanyi Nation is situated a few hundred kilometres further north from Cloncurry, and before she became very old, she always talked about how she wanted to return to her traditional country. It was never really possible for her to return to live, because the land was already stolen from Aboriginal people and was under the ownership of white pastoralists by Australian law, and it was very difficult for Aboriginal people to get permission to be on their traditional land.  She did return twice to visit, when her traditional country was converted into a national park.

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