Need a book to bring to the beach — or your back yard? National Review Online asked some avid readers (and writers) for their recommendations.
John J. Miller
This fall, I’m scheduled to teach “Hemingway in Michigan,” a one-credit honors seminar at Hillsdale College. Our text will be The Complete Short Stories of Ernest Hemingway. The author spent much of his boyhood in what Michiganders call “Up North,” and we’re going to read all of the stories inspired by this period as well as a few other classics (such as “The Snows of Kilimanjaro”). So Hemingway will be on my desk through the summer and beyond.
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The best mystery novel I’ve read in a while is also a Michigan book: Misery Bay, by Steve Hamilton, who recently podcasted with me. It stars Alex McKnight, an ex-Detroit cop who rents out cabins in the Upper Peninsula and occasionally takes on P.I. work in one of the most remote areas of the country — not far, as it happens, from the setting of “Big Two-Hearted River,” which may be my favorite short story by Hemingway.
John Derbyshire
For Chinese fiction I recommend, Such Is This World @ sars.come, by Hu Fayun. Yes, I agree, it’s a simply awful title. Once you get past that, though, Hu Fayun’s book is a superior specimen of dissident literature — a fully formed novel with a good, varied cast of characters and a strong narrative thread. The author gives a picture of the Chinese Communist Party in close agreement with the one offered last year in Richard McGregor’s The Party: a secretive gangster-cult decorating its self-serving brutality with pretenses of loyalty, honor, and patriotism. One character comes close to calling the Party “our thing” (La Cosa Nostra – page 428). As a story of sensitive, cultured people trapped in political barbarism, Such Is This World bears comparison with the best of the Soviet-era dissident novels. Andrew Clark has done a very diligent translation, with copious footnotes explaining all the cultural references.
For a Chinese memoir, read Chinese Girl in the Ghetto, by Ying Ma. Ying Ma was born in South China in the late 1970s, shortly after the death of Mao Tse-tung and the end of the Cultural Revolution. Her brief memoir is in two parts. The first deals with her Chinese childhood up to age eight or nine. Then she immigrates to America with her parents and settles in the Oakland ghetto. The second half of her book tells of her experiences as an Asian immigrant living among America’s urban poor. Though unremarkable in themselves, those experiences are told with a simplicity and frankness that make them stick in the mind. Ying Ma is particularly unsparing on the casual racism of ghetto blacks: a taboo topic in polite society, but common currency in the conversation of Chinese immigrants. The book’s strongest impression, though, is of the stoical toughness of the author and her family, a toughness constrained and civilized by the ancient humanist tradition of their homeland. Tigers indeed; but with the hearts and sensibilities of philosophers.
For miscellaneous fiction, my pick is James Gould Cozzens. Several readers of my 2009 book We Are Doomed chid me for a dismissive comment I made about the mid-20th-century novelist James Gould Cozzens, of whom I had never heard when I wrote the book. By way of penance, I have read my way through five of Cozzens’s novels. His main subject matter is the dutiful, professional American middle class: lawyers (The Just and the Unjust, By Love Possessed), priests (Men and Brethren), doctors (The Last Adam), and the military officer classes, both career and drafted, of WWII (Guard of Honor). It was Guard of Honor that got Cozzens his Pulitzer (in 1949) and I agree the book is very well done — a coldly realistic picture of the social tensions and occasional chaos in a stateside military unit during wartime. Personally, though, I liked Men and Brethren best. (I wrote something about it here.) I thought The Just and the Unjust a bit over-researched, though a friend who is a working lawyer tells me it’s very true to life. I concur with the general opinion that By Love Possessed is over-written, though there are many good things in it. Give Cozzens a try. If you are a professional, pick the appropriate novel. As I said in the afore-linked piece: “Here is an elegant, honest, fastidious writer, swept to oblivion by changing tastes, by a national turn to the sentimental narcissism he loathed.”
For human sciences, revisit In Search of Human Nature, by Carl Degler. Though now 20 years old (first published 1991), Carl Degler’s book has worn exceptionally well for a work in such a fast-changing field. It helps that Degler is a professional historian, with no scientific or political ax to grind. He gives a refreshingly dispassionate account of the rise, fall, and re-rise of biological ideas in the human sciences (anthropology, psychology, sociology) from the later 19th century through to the 1980s. The triumph of “culture” explanations in the 1920s was, Degler makes clear, in part driven by ideological passions, but also by dissatisfaction with the empirically sparse state of the human sciences in the early 20th century. As good-quality data slowly accumulated, though — most especially data on animal behavior — biology made its comeback. This is a striking and very useful work of intellectual history.
Ilana Mercer calls her book “a labor of love to my homelands, old and new.” The old is South Africa, which the author left in 1995. The new is the U.S.A. In both nations the founding European stock yielded up their dominance in the interests of justice and liberty. Instead of moving to equal citizenship under fair laws, however, both nations — in different style and measure but with similarly dire results — have embraced official tribalism (“multiculturalism”) and state-enforced racial favoritism (“affirmative action”). For South Africa the transformation has been fatal — brutally so for victims of the nation’s swelling social disorder, as Ms. Mercer documents in heartbreaking detail. For the U.S.A. it is not too late to change course. The lesson of South Africa, if widely known, will help to open American eyes. Here is the lesson, in a compelling and important book.
— John Derbyshire hosts the weekly Radio Derb podcast on NRO.
I've had this issue with the NRO Summer reading list before. Sitting on a beach, waves crashing, sun shining, pretty girls walking by, radio broadcasting the ballgame...nobody wants to read The Brothers Karamazov or books about abortion. These are books for quiet winter nights in front of the fire. Andrew Klavan I can see, but too many of the others are for people who don't know how to turn off their minds and relax.
I love book lists, so thank you for your recommendations. I've just finished reading "Witness" by Whittaker Chambers--wow! What an amazing book, and though it is 60 years old, it explains the fabric into which our current headlines are woven. I wonder what Mr. Chambers would be saying if he were around today. Somehow I don't think he would be surprised that many of the issues he was gravely concerned about have only become more ingrained into our culture.
I'll leave you with a quote. "Evil is not something that can be condescended to, waved aside or smiled away, for it is not merely an uninvited guest, but lies coiled ... at home with good within ourselves. Evil can only be fought." Reminds me of Solzhenitsyn!
If you don't have time to read the whole book, be sure to read the introduction, entitled "Letter to My Children". Unforgettable.
On Cozzens, I may be the only English professor (ex-, I should add... I'm now a lawyer) who has taught Cozzens' Guard of Honor in the past 25 years or so. It's a great book, easily the best about World War II, because it captures the characters of the American men who fought it. It's a grown up book about grown up people -- something I think contemporary literature, and particularly contemporary "popular" literature, is sorely missing.
In fact, I would contend that the decline of American civilization can as easily be traced through the fact that we no longer have great, adult, middlebrow novelists like Cozzens and John Marquand (another favorite of mine), as through any other metric. Instead of books for grownups, we have "literature" that largely consists of writers' workshop graduates borrowing experiences and manufacturing authenticity by appeals to stereotypes of race, class and gender. None of it appeals to people who live their lives in the real world, but seems to speak only to people who spend their lives in coffeehouses in college towns or faculty lounges.
To put it bluntly, I doubt anyone in the Obama White House will have read a word of Cozzens. It's a foreign language to them.
Best wishes for the 4th of July to all NRO readers.
Since the royalties go to a charity to help wounded veterans, I also don’t hesitate to recommend my short book, “The Coming Collapse of the American Republic: And what you can do to prevent it.” It’s available at Amazon:
@John J. Miller: Given your professed enjoyment of Misery Bay, you'd love the Cork O'Connor mystery series by William Kent Krueger. Cork is a former Chicago cop who returns to his hometown near Minnesota's Boundary Waters where his half-Irish-half-Ojibwe blood makes for wonderful tales of the mysteries of the human heart. The books, dealing serially as they do with Cork's family, are best read in order. The first in the series is Iron Lake. The lastest will be out in August. I guarantee you won't be able to put any of them down.
My two pence: Robert Musil's The Man without Qualities. Turgid as Proust at times but a gem on every page. Re-reading all of F. Scott Fitzgerald. Spent the summer in Paris reading all of Edith Wharton (Smith's English book shop carries them) very satisfying. And if it rains and one is confined to the couch and screen, watch the Sorrow and the Pity-again and again.
I thank John Derbyshire for recommending Cozzen's Guard of Honor. I immediately went to abebooks.com and ordered a first edition from a bookseller in Oregon. I like military fiction like Richard McKenna's The Sand Pebbles, Herman Wouk's The Caine Mutiny, and James Jones's From Here to Eternity, and eagerly await the arrival of Cozzen's book.
might I also recommend "Gringos," by Charles Portis, the guy who wrote "True Grit"(the original novel, that is)? this is a total gem of a book about anthropologists, grifters, students on fellowships, and various other assorted types (in approximately the 1960s maybe?) in Mexico.
I first heard of this book over on powerline.com, which was odd because it has nothing to do with politics.
I read it in two sittings. it's just one of the most enjoyable books I've read in a long time. trust me, you'll like it!
I have one for you all. Mikel Dunham's "Buddha's Warriors" about the CIA and the support for the Tibetan struggle against the Chinese communists. He has a new project that you can view at kickstart.com...he is trying to get a book published of photographs by Tibetan refugees still languishing in Nepal...."Caught in Nepal" looks to be an evocative collection. I was in the Kali Gandaki valley in '74 and I and my group had no idea how much of a powder keg we were trekking through.
Happy Fourth to you all.
*That* is your idea of summer reading? Summer is supposed to be fun time, when you enjoy time away from the Real World, and you are going to chain yourself down with that kind of book?
My advice is to go buy a bunch of Trade Paperbacks of the PS238 or Nodwick comics by Aaron Williams (available online), sit back, and feel the way you did when you were a kid again. When you're done with them, you can hand them down to your kids, who can pass them around until they are dog-eared and tattered. Win-Win :)