Posted by: L.V. Lopez on: February 16, 2012
Admittedly, I knew very little about Michel Houellebecq (pronounced “well-beck”) before I read this novel. I knew he was the main inspiration for Iggy Pop’s underrated 2009 album Preliminaires. I knew he has been criticized for being an intense misogynist and racist. But then again, so was Henry Miller, so I let that slide. I [...]
Posted by: Keith Meatto on: January 30, 2012
Every cook knows olive oil is essential. For Tom Mueller, it’s the lifeblood of Western Civilization. In Extra Virginity, his lively, earnest, exhaustive, and sometime exhausting debut, Mueller discovers oil not only as food, but as fuel, lubricant, medicine, skin care, perfume, aphrodisiac, religious symbol, and way of life. In the words of one aficionado, [...]
Posted by: Keith Meatto on: January 18, 2012
The latest Ingo Schulze novel is an odd hybrid of sex comedy, road trip, and existential thriller. In Adam and Evelyn, the original sin occurs when an East German tailor named Adam sleeps with a female client. His girlfriend Evelyn catches him with his pants down, then flees to Hungary with a friend and her [...]
Posted by: Keith Meatto on: January 16, 2012
Ben Mezrich has chronicled the high-stakes shenanigans of shady students at elite educational institutions for nearly a decade. His best-sellers include: Bringing Down the House: The Inside Story of Six MIT Students Who Took Vegas for Millions; Ugly Americans: The True Story of the Ivy League Cowboys Who Raided the Asian Markets for Millions; and [...]
Posted by: Keith Meatto on: January 9, 2012
Roberto Bolaño is best known for his epic novels The Savage Detectives and 2666, which were translated from Spanish into English to wide acclaim after his death in 2003. In the final years of his life, in poor health and laboring to finish 2666, the indefatigable Bolaño wrote a series of columns for newspapers in [...]
Posted by: Keith Meatto on: January 3, 2012
To read Roberto Bolaño is to enter a world of poetry and violence, where fantasy meets the mundane and writing is a matter of life and death. Since he died in 2003, sixteen of his books, notably the epic novels The Savage Detectives and 2666, have been translated into English. The latest, The Third [...]
Posted by: Keith Meatto on: December 20, 2011
In the latest Ali Smith novel, a precocious 10-year-old girl asks: “If a story isn’t a fact, but it is a made up version of what happened…what is the point of it?” Her conversational companion, an eccentric middle-aged man, replies: “Think how quiet a book is on a shelf, just sitting there unopened. Then think [...]
Posted by: Keith Meatto on: December 19, 2011
2011 was the first year in which I read more new nonfiction than new fiction: the 10 books below are the best of the bunch. As with albums and songs, declaring the year’s best books is a subjective enterprise, with the added complication that it takes longer to read a book than to listen to [...]
Posted by: Keith Meatto on: November 14, 2011
Compared to his first two novels, the premise of the new Jeffrey Eugenides book seems tame. The Virgin Suicides (1993) features five teenage sisters who kill themselves. Middlesex (2002) is a multigenerational saga starring an understandably muddled hermaphrodite. His latest, The Marriage Plot, is about three kids who graduate from Brown in 1982 and try [...]
Posted by: Keith Meatto on: November 3, 2011
He’s a child prodigy and judo champ turned math tutor, aspiring novelist, and improbable chick magnet. She’s a martial arts teacher and masseuse who moonlights as an assassin. On the cusp of 30, both are lonely as hell, but terrified of commitment. So in 1984 – twenty years after they bonded in grade school—they find [...]