Friday, December 30, 2022

A Dream of Escaping from Ourselves: Reading in 2022


"The bonds between ourselves and another person exist only in our minds. Memory as it grows fainter loosens them, and not withstanding the illusion by which we want to be duped and which, out of love, friendship, politeness, deference, duty, we dupe other people, we exist alone. Man is the creature who cannot escape from himself, who knows other people only in  himself, and when he asserts the contrary, he is lying.... [The] memory of a particular image is but regret for a particular moment...."

-- Marcel Proust, In Search of Lost Time

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Story is memory. Whether it's a true story you're after or a made up story, every story is a carefully selected collection of images pulled from somewhere in our conscious and subconscious minds; every story is a meticulously controlled fabric knitted from either first-hand memory, or second-hand memory, or an objective memory (gathered from interview and research), or a hybrid fictionalized memory, balancing the delicate territory between real and make-believe until the line between the two grows clear enough for us to see that there is no such thing as an entirely true story, nor is there anything entirely a product created from imagination.

Memory doesn't work like that. Memory won't work like that. Memory won't leave us alone. And memory has more than just a passing interest in what we choose to do with it.

A true story is not true in the sense that most of us think of the word "true." And a make-believe story is not make-believe in the way most of us learn that idea in childhood. A story is never all true, and a story is never all untrue.

It can be both. It is often neither. It will always be all of the above.

None of this is news. For as long as writing has existed it's been pretty straightforwardly understood that writing--either fiction or nonfiction--is based upon truth. Writers write what they know, after all, as the rule goes. And if a writer doesn't know, then he/she finds out. And what is gleaned from those who do know combines, then, with the memories of the writer to form the story--all of which will at some point, hopefully, connect with the selective memories of the reader. And from this there will be Truth uncovered and distilled.

All of this occurred to me as I was looking over a list of the various books I've read during the past twelve months. When filtering through them with the idea of selecting some of my favorites, I noticed some random classifications or relationships among my "best reads" of 2022:

  • 1 collection of short stories
  • 1 collection of poetry
  • 1 work translated into the English language
  • 1 collection of letters/correspondence
  • 1 work by a renowned humorist/essayist
  • 2 works written by stand-up comedians/actors
  • 2 works (one fiction and the other nonfiction) either by or about musicians
  • 2 works of postmodernist metafiction
  • 2 "comeback" novels--after 16 years of unpublished silence--from one of the great living novelists
  • 2 novels whose plots hinge crucially on the world of higher mathematics
  • 2 nonfiction oral histories
  • 2 works (written independently and both nonfiction) by a husband and his wife
  • 8 novels
  • 10 works of nonfiction
In itself, none of this means anything, I know. But I also noticed in these titles I've selected this year the importance of the notion of memory, as discussed above. In each of the books I've chosen for this list the theme of memory breathes in and out. It is a part of them. It is inside them. It is alive in them. The theme of memory is central to all of these books.

If it's true that all story is memory, and if Marcel Proust is correct when he suggests that man is a helpless solipsist, viewing all of life and our interactions with others only through the lens of how it affects us, then memory is a lie that we tell ourselves. It is our version of events to satisfy us, to satiate us, to seduce us into believing that either our memories are better than they ever were or that we are better people than we actually are. Either way, we are drunk, dazed, "duped," as he puts it. This is our Truth; and though we may dream of escaping the Truth through our concocted memories, escape is finally impossible. 

Memory is our regret, Proust says. Memory is our self-imposed exile. Memory is our fate.

[Aside: It would take the great French author a multi-volumed masterpiece detailing one madeleine cake dipped in tea, spread out over the length of seven long novels (all totaling nearly 1.5 million words), to say what contemporary American singer/songwriter-turned-novelist Josh Ritter sums up in the span of two short, poetic paragraphs from his recent novel The Great Glorious Goddamn of It All (look for it in my list below):

"I know how memory works. I know what happens to it. Some people pine for the past so bad that if you give them even a glimpse of an ear they'll grab hold of it and hang on, telling you stories about the past as if the present were drowning them.... Memory has a way of growing things, of improving them. The hardships get harder, the good times get better and the whole damn arc of a life takes on a mystic glow that only memory can give it.... I will say this because there are some things that defy memory's special magic. There are the things that get stuck in our heads that for some goddamn reason don't improve or grow out of all proportion. Nothing sticks to these memories, nothing accrues to them. Maybe the first time you saw your lover's face is one. Maybe the night you caught the winning touchdown is another, or the cold afternoon you buried your father. You can't figure out just why, but they remain crystal clear when everything else in life is clouding over, turning to long shadows and receding into the mist of fucking unreality and tall tale. I know how memory works. I know how wily it is." (49-50)]

** The following books are ordered alphabetically by the authors' last names.

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Musical Tables: Poems (2022) -- Billy Collins

I've said before that I would read anything Billy Collins sees fit to publish--even his grocery list, if it comes to that. And I suppose his latest book of poems puts my words to the test. I wasn't sure I would enjoy this new collection of poetry, seeing as how the poems in it are all, in his own terminology, "short poems."

But I gave the new book a try, of course, because...well, it's Billy Collins. And what do you know?

(Why was I doubtful?....)

In Collins' own words, from the Afterword, he explains it better than I can:

"Small poems are drastic examples of poetry's way of squeezing large content into tight spaces.... Its length, or lack of it, is its only formal requirement.... The small poem is a flash, a gesture, a gambit without the game that follows. There's no room for landscape here, or easeful reflection, but there is the opportunity for humor and poignancy." (139-40)



Rock Springs: Stories
(1987) -- Richard Ford

As an art form, the short story holds a unique and distinctly important place in American literature.

Depending on whichever critic or reader you ask, it could be possible that no writer has yet, still, penned the supposedly fabled "Great American Novel." But our canon is replete with one finely crafted, impeccable, perfect short story after the next. And yet the short story--despite its role in the history of writing--is a dying art form. It perhaps doesn't hold the status it used to. Still, it can be a delight to pick up a book of stories and be carried away to that special place where great writing takes you.

This collection of short stories from Ford appeared at the height of his powers in the mid-1980s and early-1990s--falling between his heralded novel, The Sportswriter (1986) and his Pulitzer Prize-winner, Independence Day (1995). 

There is not one false, weak, disingenuous moment in this great little book of stories. Taken as a whole, it is a contemporary masterpiece.



Crossroads
(2021) -- Jonathan Franzen

With only his second novel, 2001's The Corrections (cited already by some critics as one of the great novels of the 21st century), Jonathan Franzen exploded the zeitgeist of the contemporary literary scene. And of course it would have been easy for him to stop there with his career and to rest on such well-earned laurels.

Undoubtedly, many readers did stop there with Franzen. But if they did, they have missed one of America's great, living "Gen X" authors, consistently feeling for--and finding--the pulse of this country and its culture. This, his sixth novel, is the first volume of what Franzen plans as a trilogy (tentatively titled A Key to All Mythologies), in which, in his own words, he hopes "to span three generations and trace the inner life of our culture through the present day". 

In this first volume of the trilogy, we meet the typically  Franzenesque dysfunctional family, the Hildebrandts, in 1970's suburban Chicago.

And I can't wait to see where he goes next with his twisted tale.



Sticky Fingers: The Life and Times of Jann Wenner and Rolling Stone Magazine
(2017) -- Joe Hagan

Reportedly, Rolling Stone Magazine founder-and-publisher Jann Wenner is not a fan of Joe Hagan's 2017 fully licensed, in-depth, tell-all biography--so much so that Wenner saw fit just this past year to publish his own autobiography, Like a Rolling Stone: A Memoir. (To set his own story straight, I guess...as straight as his story can be set.)

It is no surprise that Wenner was ultimately upset with Hagan's book. The portrait painted of Wenner here is--on the whole, I must confess--that of a bloated, belligerent, bullying, coke-fueled, sexually-fluid, narcissistic man-child...who also happens (it is equally fair to say) to have been a genius in the world of publishing and pop-culture. 

In his own way, Wenner set about to change the world. And so he did just that.

Love him or hate him, Jann Wenner's story is a distinctively American one. And despite his subject's after-the-fact objections, Hagan tells it well.



84, Charing Cross Road
(1970) -- Helene Hanff

In 1949, New York City author Helene Hanff was searching for British classics and hard-to-find titles in English literature when she first reached out to Marks & Co. Antiquarian Booksellers, at the eponymous address, in London, England.

From her first correspondence--an overseas letter in the mail--she was introduced to Frank Doel, the store's quiet, unassuming, and brilliant book-buyer and dealer. Proving himself more than apt he wrote Hanff back, promising to help her. And so the two's long-distance letter-writing friendship was born.

While their relationship began as strictly business--and would remain so for the next 20 years, completely platonic and virtuous--their correspondence continued in a delightfully gentle, lovely, charming way. They got to know one another as bibliophiles, certainly, but also as complex people leading complicated lives. They would remain long-distance friends and "pen-pals" (a concept alien in today's world) until Doel's sad, untimely death in 1968.

I needed to read this book in 2022--a short, inspired, beautiful reminder that people are basically kind and good. How refreshing.



Fairy Tale: A Novel
(2022) -- Stephen King

In regards to new novels by Stephen King (still churned out at least once per year--an admittedly amazing output, by any measure) I feel somewhat like weakened, forlorn, haunted Michael Corleone in The Godfather: Part III: "Just when I think I'm out, they pull me back in!"

Whenever I say to myself I'm done with him, another year goes by, and a new Stephen King novel appears. And so I stubbornly read it, beginning it--each time--with the hope of seeing glimpses of the old King in fine form. Does that happen here this time? Yes, in large amounts throughout the story.

And what of the story this time? What is the plot?

Are you kidding? Does it matter? Look at the book's cover: His name looms large over the title. You are reading, after all, Stephen King. The plot, characters, conflicts, resolutions are all secondary. Almost interchangeable at this point

Is it still fun, though? Is this book worth it? Yes. I liked it. Is it great? No. But it's damned entertaining. How could it be better? Well...we'll have to wait 'til next year.



The Nineties: A Book
(2022) -- Chuck Klosterman

If you are a reader and a writer, it is inevitable, I suppose, to form a list of other writers you enjoy reading, other voices you enjoy "hearing" on the page, other styles, other ways of doing this writing thing.

One of those writers for me is Chuck Klosterman.

Put simply: I wish I could do what he does. 

I've read everything I can get my hands on of Klosterman's. I have taught some of his essays in my college classes  over the years. He is so good. He is incredibly good, in fact, at doing his "Chuck Klosterman" thing, which is on full display here. (It's fair to say that I wish I thought and wrote like him, in fact.)

From politics, to music, to sports, to movies, to popular culture, to the news headlines of the 1990s, Klosterman dissects the eponymous decade like no one could. (And, let's be honest, it is, ironically, a decade known for its embrace of irony that would give a book like this a tossed-off shrug, and a "Whatever" eye-roll, and a sarcastic shrug. As if to say, "What's the big deal? Get over yourself.")

Which, after all, is the point, goddammit. And which makes this book as perfect as it is.



Immortality
(1990) -- Milan Kundera

In 1988 I saw Philip Kaufman's wonderful film adaptation of famed Czech writer/dissident Milan Kundera's 1984 novel The Unbearable Lightness of Being. And immediately after seeing the movie four things happened in succession: 1.) I became convinced that Kaufman's movie is one of my favorite films of all time; 2.) I became convinced that Juliette Binoche is not only one of the most luminous, graceful, beautiful creatures on our planet, she also happens to be one of our greatest actors; 3.) I became convinced that Daniel Day-Lewis is one of our greatest actors, as well; and 4.) I searched out the 1984 source-novel of Kundera's--having never even heard of him before or never having read a word of his--and I read it, and I quickly became convinced he is one of our greatest writers of the 20th century.

(34 years later, by the way, I still stand by those four convictions.)

And yet I'd never read Immortality, published only two years after I first became introduced to Kundera's work. I remember the book when it first came out. I bought it, brand new, hardback, and I put it on my bookshelf....where it has sat, for some inexplicable reason. So this past summer I decided to dust it off and re-enter the magical, ephemeral, tragic, existentially dense yet poetically light-as-a-feather prose of one of the world's great masters of the craft.

It was like revisiting an old friend. I still love Kundera's writing. And I love this book.



Alright, Alright, Alright: The Oral History of Richard Linklater's Dazed and Confused
(2020) -- Melissa Maerz

If all one knows of contemporary American filmmaker Richard Linklater is his 1993 breakout hit, Dazed and Confused, which follows the graduating class of 1976 on the last day of school in Austin, Texas, that would probably be okay. But then you would be missing out on Linklater's amazing catalog of filmwork--a catalog of movies ranging from his indie-defining debut three years earlier, Slacker (1990), filmed on a 16 mm Arriflex camera with a budget of only $23,000, to his "Before" Trilogy (1995-2013), starring Ethan Hawke and Julia Delpy, to his ambitious, 12-years-in-the-making intimate epic Boyhood (2014), etc.

Linklater is a chameleon of a filmmaker; he is comfortable in various genres, exploring different types of films, and expanding his already expansive oeuvre. As a result, then, he is often misunderstood. He has--from the beginning--been a film artist concerned with profound things: the notion of time, the passage of time, and our perception--unfixed and changing--of our passing through time, as well as our memories of it.

Melissa Maerz (the wife of Chuck Klosterman, by the way, for trivia's sake) is exploring young Linklater, immediately following his impressive/confounding breakout indie debut and suddenly feeling pressure from a studio to now make something more accessible, more comfortable for more people in theater seats, something more broadly popular. A portrait of the artist as a young man, indeed, Maerz traces Linklater's attempts to "make a hit" while still staying true to his artistic ideals. It's a fun read.



The Passenger
(2022) -- Cormac McCarthy

Cormac McCarthy has always been a bit of an outlier in the stratified air of those living writers shortlisted as "the greats." His writing has always been a bit of an acquired taste, in a way. (And I would imagine he does not care.)

From Blood Meridian (1985)--a novel mystifying and under-the-radar at the time of its publication but which has grown in estimation with many critics now embracing it as one of the greatest American novels of the 20th century--to his National Book Award-winning All the Pretty Horses (1992), to No Country For Old Men (2005), made into the Oscar-winning Best Picture by brothers Joel and Ethan Coen, and to his Pulitzer Prize-winning The Road (2006), regarded by many as his career's dark, apocalyptic magnum opus.

And then...nothing, for the past 16 years. Until 2022, to be more specific, and the sudden surprise appearance of not one but two new novels (or more fittingly a single novel--sort of--published in two parts).

The first part--The Passenger--traces the plight of Bobby Western and, in short interstitial chapters, his younger sister Alicia. The two are the troubled, grown children of their father, a contributing scientist/engineer on the American team that developed the atomic bomb. Bobby is a salvage diver investigating an airplane crash as the novel opens, while his sister Alicia (a math prodigy from an early age struggling now with schizophrenia and haunting hallucinations) is visited by deformed, nightmarish personages who appear to her and converse with her in the days, weeks, and months before her eventual suicide.

This is a thoughtful and tricky novel. To be honest, there is much to think about within its pages, and I'm still thinking about it. I don't know that I can fully explain all of the novel yet, let alone understand all of it yet. (Call it a "work in progress.") But this is a thought-provoking and brilliant late-career surprise by a master.....



Stella Maris
(2022) -- Cormac McCarthy

....followed a month later, of course, by the equally surprising publication of Stella Maris, the "sister novel" (pun intended, I guess) of The Passenger.

This short novella focuses solely on Alicia Western, told in true McCarthyesque style from the supposed transcriptions of Alicia's therapy sessions at a private psychiatric clinic in Wisconsin. It is 1972. She is a troubled young woman, struggling with her past as an astonishing math prodigy--a young genius, to put a fine point on it--her deteriorating mental state, her conflicted feelings for her father and his life's work, and her guilt-ridden feelings for the troubling relationship (to put a fine point on it) with her beloved brother Bobby.

This book is loaded end-to-end with dense discussions between Alicia and her therapist as they probe her haunted life and turn, often, to talk about quantum physics and top-shelf mathematics (well beyond my reach, to be honest).

This book is slim, but what it lacks in page-count it more than makes up for with its deep philosophical discourse, and its fast-paced turns-of-phrase, and its quick-witted wordplay, and its forensic autopsy into Alicia's tragic young life and her tortured soul. It is a sad book, haunted and haunting. 



The Tender Bar: A Memoir
(2005) -- J.R. Moehringer

Despite the "tender" in the book's title, this is a tough book, a nonfiction bildungsroman tracing young John Joseph Moehringer (shortened to J.R. by his family) and his growth along his own "road of trials" into the world of men and learning to navigate the cultural minefield of masculinity and what it really means to be a man.

The precocious son of a single mother, young J.R. soon finds himself spending his days in Manhassett, New York, whiling away his time at his uncle's local bar. He befriends all the bar's regulars--grown men with distended bellies and bellowing voices, telling jokes, reveling in one another's company, arguing, bickering, challenging one other, forgiving one another, helping one another, giving of themselves to one another, and all the while shaping young J.R.'s consciousness and awareness of not only what a man is but also what a man should be.

All of this is charming and reads like a dream. But Moehringer's early life-lessons are put to the test as he grows up, goes off to college, falls in love, has his heart broken, and finds his life's passion in the world of journalism and the lure of the written word, struggling with his first jobs as a cub newspaper reporter, and growing into his own type of man first laid out for him in those days of his youth at his uncle's bar.

This is a lovely and loving tribute to family, friendship, and faith in one's self. It's a wonderful read.



Comedy Comedy Comedy Drama: A Memoir
(2022) -- Bob Odenkirk

Bob Odenkirk's memoir is slim, tightly written, honest, humble, snarky, funny (as you would expect), and joyous. He details his beginnings as a stand-up comedian, his early days cutting his teeth as a staff writer on such big shows as The Ben Stiller Show, Late Night with Conan O'Brien, and Saturday Night Live (the latter a gig most comedy writers would kill for but one which Odenkirk generally despised). He doubled as a comic actor during these days, as well, making the occasional appearance on Garry Shandling's great The Larry Sanders Show during its run in the 1990s. 

It was around this time he and fellow comedian-and-muse David Cross joined forces to form HBO's underground cult-favorite sketch show Mr. Show with Bob and David (1995-98). Odenkirk would, of course, go on to land the plum role of his career when showrunners Vince Gilligan and Peter Gould offered him the opportunity to play smarmy/loveable criminal lawyer Saul Goodman on Breaking Bad. This would pay off even bigger when in 2015 Gilligan and Gould created a spin-off prequel of the character, Better Call Saul, featuring Odenkirk in the titular role, of course.

If you are a fan of the Breaking Bad/Better Call Saul universe, then you already know all of this, and if you're not a fan, then it probably doesn't matter. Suffice to say, though, Odenkirk comes across in his book as a genuinely affable, likeable sort of guy (albeit with the occasional tough, homegrown, Chicago-style prickliness to his nature maybe). He is someone who has not forgotten his Midwest roots. He is someone who is lucky, and talented, and humble enough and smart enough to be able, still, to recognize the difference between those two things.



A Tale for the Time Being (2013) -- Ruth Ozeki

This is the first book of Ruth Ozeki's I've read, and it won't be the last. She first came to my attention, I must admit, with her 2021 novel, The Book of Form and Emptiness. Before diving into her newer writing, though, I chose to first read this earlier novel.

Consisting of two seemingly disparate narratives (that of course begin to mirror one another and play off one another in a hinted multiverse/metafictional sort of way) there is the novelist Ruth Ozeki living with her husband in British Columbia, c.a. 2011, who discovers a book washed ashore on the beach outside their house. The book turns out to be the diary of a young teenage girl, Nao Yasutani--a Japanese-American transplant from California to Tokyo, where her father moved her family in a return back to the homeland, where he sinks into a crippling depression, leaving Nao to embrace her memories, her imagination, and her will to survive.

Assuming the diary is an artifact of the destructive 2011 tsunami which wiped out much of coastal Japan, the novel's Ruth Ozeki--a writer herself--sets off on a personal interior-journey of her own, researching the girl's story as she reads it, and reflecting on her own life, her own identity as an Asian immigrant herself, a transplanted writer--like Nao--searching for the sense of her own life's story, for the sense of her own Asian-ness, for her own sense of who she is.



V.
(1963) -- Thomas Pynchon

Where does one begin to talk about a novel by Thomas Pynchon? (I've tried this before when writing an essay about my experience reading the infamous Gravity's Rainbow, and it turned out to be a monumental undertaking--both the reading of the novel and the writing about the reading of it.)

Pynchon is--I think it's fair to say--possibly one of those writers who people say they've read, or they say they have his book(s) on their bookshelves, or they say they fully intend to one day get to reading him, but the number of people who actually read his book(s) is woefully small. In fact it may even be fair to say that he--like James Joyce, like Marcel Proust (see above), et al.--is one of the most unread "great" authors that we've ever had.

It's not hard to understand why. Pynchon's books are an undeniably difficult and challenging read. It's a workout. But, like the best of workouts, ultimately worth the effort.

This is his debut novel, and I find that fact extraordinary. The level of sheer confidence he demonstrates here--confidence in himself as a young writer, as a storyteller, as a player with words and ideas, as a sculptor, as a weaver weaving all the various strands of characters and plots and subplots and images and themes into a singular thing--is impressive, to say the least. V. is an amazing accomplishment by a young genius-author just getting started.



The Great Glorious Goddamn of It All
(2021) -- Josh Ritter

American singer/songwriter Josh Ritter is also a novelist (see, as well, his 2011 debut novel Bright's Passage). As a songwriter, his narrative/poetic gifts have earned him accolades from critics and audiences over the years. Possibly one of my favorite examples is from his 2006 album The Animal Years and its mesmerizing song, "Girl in the War."  https://youtu.be/kqLssKusGzM

Ritter as a novelist--and with this his sophomore effort--is equally impressive. In the spirit of full disclosure, though, I suppose I should admit that at first, through the beginning of this book, I wasn't so sure how I felt about it. But gradually, through Ritter's firm vision and astute control of voice--that of 99-year-old Weldon Applegate recounting his rough-and-tumble life as a lumberjack in the remote mountain landscape of Cordella, Idaho--I began to fall into the book's rhythms, its patterns, its manners, its vulgarity, its roughness, its toughness, its beauty, its poetry.



Happy-Go-Lucky: Essays
(2022) -- David Sedaris

If you're having a bad day, I suggest you pick up a book by David Sedaris, turn to any of his essays about the angst-driven absurdities of contemporary life, and begin reading. Any combination of the following three things (or all of them) will more than likely happen: 1.) You will find yourself smiling, nodding your head, and laughing out loud; 2.) You will turn the page and find yourself still smiling, nodding, and laughing; 3.) You will finish reading the book and begin looking for more by Mr. Sedaris.

As time goes on, it becomes blissfully apparent that David Sedaris is the preeminent humorous voice for our existentially absurd 21st-century existence. His observations (though obviously tinted through the lens of his millionaire/humorist/famous-writer/celebrity sort of life) are always grounded in reality. Yes, his life is obviously different from mine in too many ways to count. And yet the things that happen to him, his reactions to those things, the thoughts that occur to him in the wake of those things that happen are all relatable, and insightful, and sometimes moving, and almost always ridiculously funny. 

This, his latest book of essays detailing his life during the COVID-19 pandemic (among other things), does not disappoint.



Is This Anything?
(2020) -- Jerry Seinfeld

Though I read a lot, I have to confess that I find most praise heaped upon a book in the midst of garnering its "15 minutes of fame" to be just another case of unjustified overhype. If I'm told that a book will scare me, I doubt it; I can only recall one (maybe two) instances of actually being frightened by an author's prose--the example that comes to mind most clearly is Shirley Jackson's The Haunting of Hill House.

Similarly, when I'm told that a book is funny or that I will "laugh out loud" (you know...literally LOL), I have my doubts. (The only instances I can recall of laughing out loud while reading a book was--at many points--deep into Bill Watterson's beloved Calvin and Hobbes collections.)

Anyway...all of that is to say that this book by Jerry Seinfeld--a collection of his stand-up bits and routines from his early days up to the present--as well as Sedaris' latest book (see directly above), made me laugh out loud on more than one occasion.

You hear Seinfeld's voice as you read these comedic gems; you hear his inflections, his timing, his signature Seinfeldian delivery, and that is clearly a huge part of his "act." His simple, dry observations of daily life--with all its inherent, insipid stupidities--are so spot-on and insightful. He is obviously a living legend in the world of comedy. And this is a masterful little primer showing how a great comedic mind thinks and how it first works its humor out onto the blank page.



Led Zeppelin: The Biography
(2021) -- Bob Spitz

It is probably prudent to address the proverbial "elephant in the room" right from the start: Why would you want to read a "biography" of the band Led Zeppelin?

I can only tell you why I read it: 1.) I am a longtime fan of the band's music (although I know it is not particularly fashionable to admit such a thing nowadays considering the band's legendarily reprehensible and allegedly criminal behavior throughout its history); and 2.) I am a fan of pop-culture historian/journalist/biographer Bob Spitz.

I became familiar with Spitz through his great little 1979 10th-anniversary in-depth history Barefoot in Babylon: The Creation of the Woodstock Music Festival, 1969, as well as his massive The Beatles: The Biography (2005).

I mean, who has the balls to write a "biography" on a band--particularly a constellation-sized band like The Beatles? And then to not even subtitle the book "A Biography" but "The Biography"?

Well...Bob Spitz has the balls, obviously. And so he's done it again. This time the band in question is (arguably, depending on who you ask) of equal constellation-size as his earlier subject. Love them or hate them, though, the Zeppelin inarguably changed the popular music landscape--they helped to usher in the age of "album rock" instead of simply selling singles/hits for the studios; they were instrumental in leading the way for the creation of the "hard rock/heavy metal" movement in pop music; they helped to evolve the rock 'n roll live concert tour and stage performance; and they helped to launch the role of FM radio throughout its heyday-decade of the 1970s.

And, oh yes, there were drugs. And women (sometimes, reportedly, underage girls, to be exact). And there was abundant abhorrent "bad-boy" behavior from a bunch of grown adults who obviously should have known better. And there were more drugs. And there was alcohol. And binge-drinking. And vomitus. And in-fighting. And out-fighting. And dust-ups, and breakups, and patch-ups. And there were more drugs. And there was more drinking. And trashed hotel rooms. And mudsharks...sadly. And good times, and bad times, and stairways to heaven paved with good intentions but destroyed with bad choices.

Yes, but the legends, the myths.... Did it really all happen the way we've heard? Is the band's legend deserving of its music, and vice versa? And finding the answer to an inquiry like that is exactly why someone might want to read this book. I recommend doing so. It's brilliant.



Bourdain: The Definitive Oral Biography
(2021) -- Laurie Woolever

Like the rest of the world, I always felt as if I knew Anthony Bourdain. I mean, I felt like I really knew him. Like we were friends, in fact, and like he was someone I could call or text and hang out with over a beer, and talk to him, and hear that inimitable, nasally, sarcastic voice rant and rave about his favorite travels, his favorite meals, his favorite memories of the days working the line in New York City....

I didn't know Anthony Bourdain, but I felt that I did. ("Ahhh, celebrity," he might say.) He was beloved around the country, around the world. And though we all felt we owned a little piece of him, which gave us the right to feel that we knew him, of course we didn't. No one did. Not really.

Woolever's book is undoubtedly a celebration of the icon--his joyousness, his exuberance, his mythic lust for the perfect meal, the perfect drink, the perfect turn-of-phrase, the perfect wording to perfectly record the perfect moment in life.

But life is not perfect. Life is messy, and perfection is not real. And Woolever's book pulls no punches in taking, at times, a critical look at her subject--the man's imperfections; his inability to really, truly "live in the moment" and to enjoy life; his sadnesses; his disappointments; his mood swings; his regrets; his depression....

Anthony Bourdain was a giant in the world of cooking, and writing, and travel, and television journalism. (Notice I use the word "journalism" instead of "entertainment." This is a fine point raised throughout the book and one I particularly agree with: Bourdain was one of the finest--if not in fact the finest--cultural chroniclers/journalists of our time, even though he sadly never saw himself that way.)

In the end, he was as beloved and as well-known a popular celebrity as we've had. And yet in a crowded room he felt alone, unloved, and unknown. And finally, in the end, his anger, his sadness, his loneliness, his desperation, his despair took control of his carefully controlled life.

A joyous read throughout, it is a loving remembrance of a highly respected and much-celebrated public figure. And by its closing pages it is probably the most crushingly sad thing I've read in quite some time. 

Now, this is a book.... 


Wednesday, April 6, 2022

...Except After C: a song

  

    (1)

She held her daddy's hand

walking slow the first day of school.

New faces, new friends, a new world.

Hug through tears, kiss goodbye.

She hung back by the wall,

afraid to climb, afraid to fall,

until a warm smile let her in,

and she played, danced, and sang.

Laughing stories to her daddy,

skipping brightly all the way home.


    (Chorus)

It's A leads to Z.

One plus two equals three.

Things are greater-than, less-than, or equal.

Recess games that you choose,

though it hurts when you lose,

it's better than hurting for real.

Names in order all the time.

Know your place in the line.

Take turns, be nice, and play fair.

"Mine," "yours," "you," and "me."

And the truth sets you free.

Still, it's "i before e, except after c."

And hear the piper, to lead you as one.


    (2)

She always knew she felt different inside somehow.

though words never came close to her heart.

So she kept to herself, 

through smiles and the fears,

hanging back by the wall,

afraid to climb, afraid to fall.

Growing up is hard enough on its own.

Days went by, one by one.

Loneliness part of her skin.

Dreaming dreams at night far from her home.


    (Chorus)

And it's A leads to Z.

One plus two equals three.

Things are greater-than, less-than, or equal.

Recess games that you choose,

though it hurts when you lose,

it's better than hurting for real.

Names in order all the time.

Know your place in the line.

Take turns, be nice, and play fair.

"Mine," "yours," "you," and "me."

And the truth sets you free.

Still, it's "i before e, except after c."

And hear the piper, to lead you as one.


    (Bridge)

Who would you be if you could only be someone?

What would you do if no one told you "No"?

How would you love if love truly were free?

All the rules you've learned fall away

(blown away, float away, fly away, faraway).

Let the wind in your flags guide you home....


    (3)

She holds her father's hand,

walking slow down the street with a smile.

New faces, new friends, a new world.

Parade washed in a bright glow of colors.

Letting go of the wall,

she might climb, she might fall.

And a warm smile lets her in.

Music plays, and she dances, and sings.

Loneliness sheds from her skin.

Feeling love, and she's here, and she's home.


    (Chorus)

It's always A leads to Z.

One plus two equals three.

Things are greater-than, less-than, or equal.

Recess games that you choose,

though it hurts when you lose,

it's better than hurting for real.

Names in order all the time.

Know your place in the line.

Take turns, be nice, and play fair.

"Mine," "yours," "you," and "me."

And the truth sets you free.

Still, it's "i before e, except after c."

And hear the piper, to lead you as one.

Saturday, January 29, 2022

The World Divided in Two: 2021 and Another Splintered Year Spent Reading

 

"It felt like the world had divided into two different types of people, those who had felt pain and those who had yet to."

            -- Michelle Zauner, Crying in H Mart

______________________________


We are living in splintered times.

[Aside: Just saying such a sentiment makes the sentiment seem untrue, makes it seem too overtly obvious, too meaninglessly trite, too flat-out sentimental. But it's true: the times we are living in--the times that we have been living in for quite some time now--are beyond the pale in their ability to hurt us, and to lash out at us, and to cause us to feel isolated, and to cause us to feel anxiety, and sadness, and maybe even despair.]

We have all possibly felt it from time to time recently. I am not describing anything new for any of us. I know that.

In such times, though, we can seek out the company and the comfort of others. Friends. Family. Loved ones. The calm found in the presence of someone else. Succor. Solace. Call it whatever you want; it is "strength in numbers" sort of stuff. And it is real. But you could alternatively choose the opposite reaction and purposely seek, instead, to be alone.

The comfort of yourself--there is nothing quite like it; there is also nothing wrong with it. 

There can be, and is, great medicinal benefit to securing for yourself a little quiet time every now and then, a little alone time, a little time in which you allow yourself to simply be yourself. Time in which you give yourself permission to enjoy the silence. Time in which you grant yourself the freedom to admit--if only to yourself--that it is okay to spend some time alone.

In such quiet times over this past year, I enjoyed the quiet company of books (words, authors, story-presence), and so I was never quite alone. It helped the time to pass, all the days and weeks and months of another year in pandemic-mode. We all have our own ways of dealing with it; we all do what we can. I like to read. And so I read a lot over the past year. I had some time to spare in 2021--alone and yet not alone--and I enjoyed my time spent with some great books.

Below is a selection, listed alphabetically, of some of the better books I read last year--a form of healing, of sorts, in these broken, wounded, divisive times.


FAVORITE READS OF THE PAST YEAR -- 2021:



Crying in H Mart: A Memoir
(2021) -- Michelle Zauner

 Zauner--a young musician hailing from the northwestern music scene of Oregon and Seattle--is best known today as the singer/songwriter/guitarist of the indie rock/pop band, Japanese Breakfast. Before that she served a brief stint in the band Little Big League. Now she can add bestselling, award-winning author to her CV with this, her first book, evolved from a 2018 essay she originally published in The New Yorker. Born half-Caucasian (her father) and half Korean (her mother), Zauner's book is part grief-memoir, part identity-discovery testimony, part love story, part lyrical ode to her growing up a part of two cultures, and part introduction to Asian/Korean cuisine. A graduate of Bryn Mawr College's school of creative writing, Zauner is the real deal as a writer. She knows what she's doing here. Poetic. Confessional. Hilarious. Moving. Insightful. Wise beyond her years. And unforgettable.



Fleishman Is in Trouble (2019) -- Taffy Brodesser-Akner

New York City power-couple Toby Flieshman (a successful, young doctor) and his beautiful wife, Rachel (a successful, young talent agent) find themselves locked in a bitter divorce. Told in the 2nd-person, Toby is the novel's central character (at first), while the book's narrator is a woman who has been close friends with Toby since college, and who--we learn later in the novel--has a troubled marriage of her own. The novel is an interesting take on the relationship between men and women, gender roles, and domestic nightmares in various forms. (The Fleishman "in trouble," according to the book's title, might be Toby, as we are led to assume. Or it might be Rachel....) As soon as you think you have the characters and the story figured out, Brodesser-Akner--a staff writer at The New York Times, in this, her debut novel--pulls the rug out from under your expectations; you find yourself suddenly uncomfortable and unsure of all you thought you knew.



Horror Stories: A Memoir (2019) -- Liz Phair

It should come as no surprise that Liz Phair can write her ass off. The indie-auteur phenom of the early1990s music scene (indelibly linked with a genre of "alternative rock" of the day, blending in-your-face confessional poetry with in-your-face guitar-hooked pop-rock, which she helped to usher in) is most well known for her flat-out masterpiece, the 1993 album Exile in Guyville. And now (like Michelle Zauner above) we have Phair's first book, proving something her fans have already always known: Phair is a wonderful storyteller. Her individual chapters are all standalone stories pulled from various incidents in her life. At times these stories read more like a collection of contemporary fiction, and you find yourself thinking, This surely couldn't have happened like this.... But then of course she reminds you, through her art, that this is exactly how life is, and this is exactly how it all went down.



Interior Chinatown (2020) -- Charles Yu

This 2020 National Book Award-winner is a gem. Only the second novel from Charles Yu, Interior Chinatown tells an (at times) epic story of the Chinese-American immigrant experience while all the while telling the intimately personal story of young Willis Wu, "Generic Asian Man" and occasional "Delivery Guy" in a fictional TV cop-show Black and White, where he dreams--always in the background, typecast as the "model minority"--to someday take the spotlight and play the coveted role of "Kung Fu Guy." Written in a deceptively playful postmodern manner--including being formatted as a motion picture screenplay--this is a funny, harrowing, and ultimately moving experiment in both fact and fiction. I love this book.




Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell (2004) -- Susanna Clarke

A brief story about this book:

In the long-ago days of my separation and eventual divorce (beginning way back in the dim year of 2004), I remember initially taking only a few things with me as I left the house. Essentials--the usual day-to-stuff one needs to get by, if only for a short while (or what would turn out to be another lifetime). Among the things I took with me at that time was a hardback copy of this book, just recently published. I tried to start reading it then, in the early days of my exiled solitude and loneliness. Susanna Clarke's dense, immense alternative-history fantasy (set in 19th-century, Napoleonic-war era England) was just a bit too much for my addled brain then. And I gave it up, only about 1/4 of the way through. Fast-forward (but not too fast) 17 years later, and I pulled the book from my shelves again, blew the dust from it, and cracked it open to the first page.... 

Long story short: I could not turn the pages fast enough this time. And it occurred to me, as I read it in earnest at this point in my life {with all that has happened to me since I first took the book with me as solace, to help me get lost in another world so long ago) that the person I was way back when wasn't ready to tackle the novel. I wasn't in the right place in my life. But I was ready now for Clarke's amazingly clever and unique tale, so much its own creation. Books will wait for us, I realized. They will choose their readers carefully. (Even though we think we choose them.) And when the time is right, they will select us. And they will carefully read us--all the while teaching us how, and when, to finally fully read them.

This book is a contemporary literary masterpiece of speculative/fantasy fiction. It deserves to be remembered, and read, and revered for ages.



Klara and the Sun (2021) -- Kazuo Ishiguro

No one--and I mean no one--writes a novel like Nobel Prize-winner, Kazuo Ishiguro. It is not easy to pinpoint exactly what it is he does that is so damned special. But it is there, in between the words almost, lodged in the characters and their plight--so fraught with longing, and desperation, and their dream of happiness, and the awareness of the almost impossible gulf between them and what it is they most desire. No one writing today comes close to Ishiguro for touching--every single time--upon just what it means to be human. Almost in parallel lines with his masterful 2005 dystopian science fiction novel, Never Let Me Go, Ishiguro's latest novel exists as a sort of "spiritual" sequel, in line with that earlier novel's themes. 

One by one, Ishiguro's books can break your heart. And this one--in its shimmering, impassioned, sad longing--is no exception.



Life Itself: A Memoir (2011) -- Roger Ebert

I wish I could have met Roger Ebert. I wish I could have gotten his autograph. I wish I could have talked to him, asked him some questions--about his life, his art, about writing (of course), about movies (of course). I wish I could have listened to his answers, his anecdotes, his stories of life as an early reporter for the Chicago Sun-Times, and then assigned the job as the Sun-Times' film critic, and then the winner of the coveted Pulitzer Prize, and then the popular co-host of the television show(s) he shared (in all its iterations) with beloved rival Chicago Tribune film critic, Gene Siskel. Ebert obviously never knew what he meant to me; growing up as a young boy, a film buff in isolated western Kansas, I first learned about something called "cinema" from this film critic in Chicago. His gift to me was priceless; I feel I owe him a "thank you," at the very least.

This book was his closing gift to all of us. And it is enough.



The Plot Against America (2004) -- Philip Roth

Leave it to Philip Roth to tell us where we would be in 2021. Chilling. Breathtaking. Heartbreaking. Eerie in its prescient, metaphorical glimpse at an all-too-real alternative reality of a fascist America--where Franklin Delano Roosevelt loses the presidential election to famed celebrity aviator/anti-semitic/Nazi-sympathizer Charles Lindbergh. And the rest is...well...history. (Sort of.)

Roth is an American master, and here he was writing at the top of his late-career powers. The Plot Against America is pretty much an undisputed contemporary masterpiece.





Space Odyssey: Stanley Kubrick, Arthur C. Clarke, and the Making of a Masterpiece (2018) -- Michael Benson

I am an admitted cinephile (in the correct parlance, I suppose). As such, I am also a confessed devotee of the master American filmmaker, Stanley Kubrick. I am a fan of his films; I enjoy them. I like to re-watch them, to think about them, to ponder them, to discuss them, to read about them. I have always liked his groundbreaking 1969 science fiction film 2001: A Space Odyssey, made in mythic collaboration with legendary science fiction author Arthur C. Clarke. I have always liked the movie. I have always admired it and its place in film history. But it's never been a movie that I could honestly say I embraced warmly. That is, maybe...until I read this book. Benson's deep-dive into this strange, wonderful, masterful, one-of-a-kind work of groundbreaking cinematic art made me see Kubrick's classic film, at long last (as if for the first time), as the genuine masterpiece of "human cinema" that it is.



This Isn't Happening: Radiohead's "Kid A" and the Beginning of the 21st Century (2020) -- Steven Hyden

In 1997, the British alternative rock band Radiohead released their third album to the world, OK Computer, and it would quickly become one of those rock albums--arty, thematically conceptual, moody, with guitar and "noise" hooks, and dark, brooding, mysterious lyrics--that is heralded into the rarefied air of the Great Rock Albums of All Time. Three years later appeared their fourth album, their follow-up to a masterpiece that by all rights could not be followed up. And yet...the band did it. Not with a repeat performance of all that worked before, but with the exact opposite, almost. The appearance of Kid A in 2000 (just one year before the paradigm-shifting events of 9-11-01) was perhaps even more thematically, socially, artistically "important" than its predecessor--in fact, maybe one of the most important rock albums ever.

I have always loved Radiohead. And I have always loved the album Kid A. I could not put Hyden's book down.



HONORABLE MENTIONS:



Best. Movie. Year. Ever: How 1999 Blew Up the Big Screen
(2019) -- Brian Raftery

Raftery's book may seem like a required textbook for "film-nerds" and cinephiles everywhere to dig into, to hash out, to argue over, to pick apart, to agree with, to think about, to come to terms with. His argument's thesis could not be more simply stated than it is in his book's title, and while I'm not sure I (still) entirely agree with him, his argument is fun. I enjoyed revisiting some of the movies from 1999: It was a good year (not to sound too much like Sinatra, but...). It was a very good year.

But the best ever? The GOAT of movie years? I don't know about that. Still, a good argument is a good argument, whether I completely agree with it or not. And this was a good argument and an entertaining read.



Billy Summers (2021) -- Stephen King

Let me fill in some background a bit:

Ever since I was in high school and my Algebra teacher, the wonderful Ms. Kris Waldren (a veritable saint in disguise as a math teacher) loaned me her copy of the classic 1978 novel The Stand, I have been a devoted fan of Stephen King. And this was back in the early-to-mid-'80s, when King was in his cocaine-and-alcohol fueled heyday as a masterful storyteller and craftsman of popular (and in several instances very, very good) novels with a largely supernatural bent: Carrie (1974), 'Salem's Lot (1975), The Shining (1977), The Stand (1978), The Dead Zone (1979), Firestarter (1980), Cujo (1981), Different Seasons (1982), Pet Sematary (1982), Christine (1983), The Talisman [with Peter Straub] (1984), It (1986), Misery (1987).... Do I seriously need to keep going? Classics, I would argue. Great American popular novels. All of them.

And then...as is wont to happen over time, something happened. Granted, the man has nothing left to prove anymore. But for at least the past 20 years (or more) he hasn't really proven anything so much, other than that he has kind of run out of ideas and has merely coasted on his reputation and on a working man's devotion to churning out novel after novel after novel, all sadly reading more like caricatured, well-crafted fan fiction. (Which is too bad, because--as the above roll call of titles indicates--when King was in his prime he was on fire and could not be touched. No one was even close. But those days are gone.) And then a funny thing happened last year: He published a good novel. (No, not a great one. I don't think so, anyway. But a strong one. A good one.) Billy Summers hearkens back to his best art of slow, methodical, carefully layered character-building and plot construction. One thing that holds this book back, however, is its tired, cliche' story-type of the good-hearted hired-killer making careful plans to get out of the business, just one last job, a big one, and then he's gone. We've seen it just one too many times before, maybe. (As we have, of course, the young girl who gets thrown into the killer's life, giving him something pure to believe in, something and someone to help redeem him before the inevitable, telegraphed end.) We've seen all of this before. And yet what makes this book good is that King calls back some of his old, latent talent, and he does some of his old tricks, and he shows that he still knows how to do it all and do it very well. Faults and all, the book still does what it is supposed to do. And it kept me turning pages. Which is one of the most basic things you can ask of a writer, I suppose.



July, July (2002) -- Tim O'Brien

Tim O'Brien is easily one of the greatest living contemporary American authors we have. He is a genuine treasure. His unproclaimed "trilogy" (of sorts) of Vietnam War novels--the National Book Award-winning Going After Cacciato (1978), his masterpiece The Things They Carried (1990), followed by the award-winning In The Lake of the Woods (1994)--are, each of them, unmatched, unparalleled, and untouched in the canon of American Literature. This 2002 effort by O'Brien reads just like that, unfortunately--an effort that for some reason or other just never comes together and never quite works in the manner of his greatest writing. I don't know if he wanted this to be some sort of "Part 4," the last "chapter" of a great tetralogy of his Vietnam War. (If he did, it doesn't read like it. Overall, it reads like what it is: A tired retread of material he has done before and done exceptionally better.) Still...all that being said, there are a few scenes--Vietnam War scenes, particularly--that read just as powerfully as anything he has written. The problem is, those scenes are too few and scattered between longer passages of "present-day" material at a college reunion (The Big Chill sort of vibe), peopled largely by characters who are not particularly interesting or likeable. And yet those great moments linger in your memory, like the sun somehow catching the glint of gold lying in the silt at the bottom of a river. Those moments are very fine.

As it turns out, though--at least to me, anyway--even "lesser" Tim O'Brien (and, let's face it, maybe even "not good" Tim O'Brien) is still worth reading, and maybe even better reading than 90% of what is often out there to read.



Moonglow: A Novel
(2016) -- Michael Chabon

Michael Chabon exploded to fame with the 1988 publication of his first novel, The Mysteries of Pittsburgh--which, amazingly, he began writing as an undergrad in college and would eventually publish as his MFA graduate thesis. (Who does that?) He would follow this out-of-the-gate success with Wonder Boys (1995), and then the Pulitzer Prize-winning The Adventures of Kavalier and Clay (2000), as well as 2007's The Yiddish Policeman's Union.

Chabon is a chameleon with his talent. I honestly believe there is nothing he can't do as a writer. And while Moonglow may not be "top-shelf" Michael Chabon--maybe high "middle-shelf," after all--it is still very good. Some postmodern fireworks here in the form of a pseudo-memoir by a writer named Michael Chabon, whose grandfather--dying after a long, full life--begins recounting his charmed life to his grandson, the writer. This is a funny, moving, deeply rich reading experience--kind of like every Chabon novel, in other words.



The Splendid and the Vile: A Saga of Churchill, Family, and Defiance During the Blitz (2020) -- Erik Larson

Like so many of the writers and their books on my list this year, I could say of Erik Larson what I have mentioned previously: He can seemingly do anything he wants. As a nonfiction historical writer, his subjects are wide and varied: Isaac's Storm (1999), Devil and the White City (2003), Thunderstruck (2006), In the Garden of Beasts (2011), Dead Wake (2015), and now this one, his latest, about England during W.W. II, about London, specifically, during the Blitz, and about the great British leader Winston Churchill, as he painstakingly struggles to hold the literal structures and the spirits of his country together while patiently trying to urge America (represented by his great friend and ally, President FDR) to come to England's aid. Winston Churchill is so great a character, I am convinced he exists in a world all his own: Had he been created by the greatest English novelist, no one would have ever believed it.


Saturday, January 22, 2022

"It's supposed to be charming...": Watching Movies in 2021

 

Arthur Howitzer, Jr.: [reading aloud from a news story] "Pick-pockets, dead bodies, prisons, urinals." You don't want to add a flower shop or an art museum?

Herbsaint Sazerac: No, I don't.

Arthur Howitzer, Jr.: A pretty place of some kind?

Herbsaint Sazerac: I hate flowers.

Arthur Howitzer, Jr.: [reading aloud again from a news story] "Rats, vermin, gigolos, streetwalkers." You don't think it's almost too seedy this time?

Herbsaint Sazerac: No, I don't.

Arthur Howitzer, Jr.: For decent people?

Herbsaint Sazerac: It's supposed to be charming.

______________________________

We can say what we want about the year 2021. There would undoubtedly be a lot to say. If years had sequels, then--true to the notion that most sequels don't quite live up to the film that preceded them (rare and famous instances excluded, of course, like the often-mentioned exceptions, The Godfather Part II and The Empire Strikes Back)--2021 sucked as a sequel to the already historically dismal year 2020. I believe that's fair to say.

On most fronts--public, political, social, private--we couldn't seem to collectively or independently catch a break in 2021.

Just when things seemed to have gotten "better" as the year progressed, things soon took a nosedive again. We all know it. There isn't any sense in rehashing what we have all spent the past two years experiencing, again, collectively and independently, over and over.

In the world of film/movies/cinema, though, I have to say that I think this was an exceptionally good year. It was a challenging year for filmmakers and for their films, certainly--as artists making art, not to mention as workers in an industry. But we have discovered, through the fires of this ongoing pandemic, new ways of doing old things. In such a forge, the current struggles have seemed to strengthen some aspects of the film industry while simultaneously weakening others. We have accustomed ourselves, rather quickly--through necessity and because of a shared love of watching films--to a different, evolved way of "watching" movies. Cinemaplexes opened up again, with required social restrictions. Online streaming services flourished. Highly anticipated "big" movies--with big budgets, promising big-screen spectacle, or "smaller" new titles from big-name filmmakers--were given calendar-date releases, only to be stalled, or bumped back, or re-scheduled over, and over, and over, and over....

Again, I'm reporting on news that all of us already know.

And yet, all things considered--2021 being the terrible year that it was--we were treated to some really fine movies over the past year. One way or another, whether it was venturing out to the movie theaters again or staying home and catching up with films on streaming services like Netlix, Hulu, Prime, etc., I enjoyed a great year of movie-watching. 

Below are two different lists comprising my choices for some of the best movies I saw over the past year. The first list of ten titles are all "new" films that were released, one way or another, in 2021. The second list of ten titles includes some more "new" 2021 films, as well as a few "older" films from recent years that, through streaming at home, I was only now seeing for the first time. Regardless, these are all great films in my opinion. There is no system of valuation here, no ranking order--descending or ascending--of "greatness" to my lists. I didn't do that. Such valuation seems pointless right now, in light of the year that was.

Both of the lists below, then, are ordered alphabetically.


FAVORITE MOVIES -- 2021 FILMS:



Annette (2021) -- dir. Leos Carax

It isn't often that I find myself saying these days, as a film's end-credits begin to roll, "Well, I've never seen anything quite like that before." But such was my response to French filmmaker Leos Carax's latest project. With the exception of its dazzling self-aware opening musical number, "So May We Start," right at the film's outset, I found myself (in the movie's first 30 minutes or so) seriously questioning if I had the fortitude to make it through its looming 140-minute runtime. But by the end of it all, Carax's strange, haunting rock-opera/dark parable of the vampiric entertainment industry had completely won me over. I immediately started urging anyone who would listen to me to give this offbeat, dark, strange, moving, lovely little film the chance it deserves.

Annette is in a category all its own this year.



Dune (2021) -- dir. Denis Villenueve 

A lot can be said about a movie that makes you forget just how awful David Lynch's 1984 big-screen Dune debacle was. Anyone who's read Frank Herbert's dauntingly dense 1965 epic sci-fi novel knows how notoriously unfilmmable the book supposedly is. (To which Lynch's contribution nearly proved correct, I might add.) Fortunately for us, though, time has passed. Visual and sound effects have leaped light-years ahead in regards to what can believably be accomplished on a grand scale. And we have a filmmaker in Canada's Denis Villenueve who understands the intricacies of Herbert's original world-building and has the patience and the vision to successfully bring it to the screen.

A new sci-fi epic-in-the-making; I look forward to its "Part II."




The French Dispatch (2021) -- dir. Wes Anderson

You either love a Wes Anderson film, or you hate it. If you hate one of his movies--for whatever particular reason(s)--odds are high that you will more than likely hate all of them. Conversely, if you love one of his movies, the chances of you serving as an acolyte to the vaunted "Wes Anderson style" are exponentially (and probably annoyingly) increased.

I unreservedly and unabashedly fall in the acolyte camp. No apologies. No explanations. I just think his films are extraordinary explorations into the world of filmmaking (and art) itself, and into the nature of whimsy, and loneliness, and joy, and melancholy, and the people whom we love, and the people who don't love us back, and our need for acceptance, and our need for family--even if that family is made up, finally, of a "family" we make for ourselves. 



The Green Knight (2021) -- dir. David Lowery

For years my high school English classes--seniors who are bored, and tired of school, and simply wanting a passing grade so they can graduate--have read the 14th-century chivalric romance, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. Originally written (anonymously) in Middle English dialect nearly 700 years ago, its 101 stanzas still manage to work their magic. Nine times out of ten my classes will begin the reading with the typical grumbling, moaning, griping, and complaining. And nine times out of ten my classes will come to the end of the poem surprised at how much they enjoyed it.

David Lowery is a daring artist, and his take on this old poem is everything you would hope a film adaptation would be in 2021. I couldn't take my eyes off the screen--right up until the movie's last line of dialogue (maybe one of the great film-closers of all time).



Licorice Pizza (2021) -- dir. Paul Thomas Anderson

I honestly think I had a smile pasted on my dopey face during the entire running time of this film. I couldn't help it. It is just pure delight. Funny, nostalgic (in the best sense), heartwarming (without being needlessly saccharine), and genuinely good-hearted. It is almost hard to believe that those adjectives are describing a P.T. Anderson film. Although he is easily on the shortlist of great contemporary American filmmakers, his movies are not usually described as "funny, nostalgic, heartwarming, and genuinely good-hearted" smile-busters. But this one seems to be that rare outlier.

Headed by first-timers Cooper Hoffman (son of Philip Seymour Hoffman) and Alana Haim (one-third of the band, HAIM, with her sisters, who also make brief appearances in the film), this thing has charm, charisma, and chemistry to spare. I loved every minute of it.



Pig (2021) -- dir. Michael Sarnoski

Imagine this elevator pitch for a new movie idea: A "retired" Portland chef, Rob Feld, now living off-the-grid in the outlying woods, wakes to find his truffle-hunting pig stolen from him. He goes on a journey to find his beloved pig and discovers, in the process, the dark underground of the urban restaurant scene--a world of drug addicts, and shady fight clubs, and desperate, lonely misfits who don't understand Rob's simple life-code: "We don't get a lot of things to really care about."

Imagine a first-time director at the helm. Now imagine Nicolas Cage being cast in the lead role as Rob....

No, by all calculus, this thing should not have worked. But against all odds it does. Beautifully. This is a stunningly good movie.



The Power of the Dog (2021) -- dir. Jane Campion

Set in 1925 Montana, yet filmed in New Zealand by renowned New Zealand filmmaker Jane Campion (her first feature since 2009's Bright Star) with a script she adapted from the 1967 western novel of the same name by closeted-gay author Thomas Savage about Old Testament-style brotherly resentment, grief, love, jealousy, anger, memory, fear, and sexuality.

Real Jane Campion sort of stuff, in other words.

Not your father's western, maybe. But this thing is going to have some staying power. While maybe not up to the level of Campion's masterpiece, 1993's The Piano, this is still a film that will be remembered over time, not only as one of her best (which is saying a lot) but also as simply a great movie. I think it is masterful.




Spencer (2021) -- dir. Pablo Larrain

What is a human life worth--in monetary value, I suppose (if that can even be definitively determined) but also in more metaphorical, emotional values? What is the cost of a human life? I don't know. But Larrain's movie made me ask such questions. And, granted, it also made me think of such current terms as "white privilege" and "first-world problems," etc. (Is it possible, after all, to feel sorry for a white, wealthy, privileged British princess suffering from depression, and bulimia, and existential despair? Fair questions, I guess. But the answer is simple: Yes.)

Kristen Stewart has come into her own as a fine young actress. And this is a stirring, strong, unforgettable performance as the late Princess Diana. Along with her recent films with French filmmaker, Olivier Assayas, this is some of Stewart's best work.



Summer of Soul (2021) -- dir. Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson

I had never heard of this six-week 1969 concert held in Harlem's Mount Morris Park, featuring some of the greatest black musical acts of the time. And chances are neither had you, I'm guessing.

And that, I suppose, is largely the point behind Questlove's absolutely mesmerizing work of archival documentary filmmaking. From original footage of the event, to interviews with older attendees looking back at the great concert and wondering why no one had ever documented it before, this movie soars.

"I thought I had dreamed it," one grown attendee says in the film.

This is a great musical documentary that deserves to be seen. And to be remembered.



West Side Story (2021) -- dir. Steven Spielberg

Steven Spielberg has nothing left to prove, really. He's done it. But he decided to prove himself again this past year, anyway, with his film remake of the great (and by "the" I mean maybe the), classic American musical.

Does it get any better than West Side Story as far as stage musicals? I don't know. I'm not an expert on the art. I just know what I like. With a classic score by the great Leonard Bernstein, and lyrics by the equally great Stephen Sondheim, as well as original dance choreography by the great Jerome Robbins (updated in 2021 by Justin Peck), Spielberg's retelling of the classic stage-to-film musical not only updates Robert Wise's tired 1961 movie-version but also ups the ante. And it does so with great urgency and with great style. We needed a movie like this during a year like 2021.



2021 MOVIE-WATCHING -- HONORABLE MENTIONS:



About Endlessness (2019) -- dir. Roy Andersson

This past year I quietly discovered Sweden's Roy Andersson. (Which is the best way, I suppose, to become familiar with an artist like Andersson and his work.) Though certainly not to everyone's taste, his minimalist, offbeat, often off-putting films--made up of short, individual scenes carefully pieced together in a thematic montage--inexorably begin to work their spell on you. I look forward to making up for lost time and working my way through his film-backlog.

Upon finishing this movie, I immediately started it over again and watched it straight through, beginning to end. (I imagine someone else could watch this movie and wonder what's wrong with me; but, honestly, this is the thoughtful, explorative, philosophical sort of film that I want to savor and to spend time with.) Great stuff.



Get Back (2021) -- dir. Peter Jackson

Never one to do anything in a small way, Middle-Earth visionary Peter Jackson is on a roll these days with back-to-back breathtaking documentaries, both pieced together with archival footage run through the best film technology of his New Zealand-based Weta Workshop. First there was Jackson's 2018 W.W. I documentary, They Shall Not Grow Old, blowing our minds with its stunning use of film-colorization done right. And now, this past year, we were treated to his nearly 8-hour behind-the-scenes glimpse at the inner-workings of the last days of The Beatles, holed up together (for the most part) in a London sound-studio, working feverishly for 21 days on the material that would make up the band's legendary final two albums, Abbey Road and Let It Be. The resulting film is unbelievably watchable.



Gunda (2020) -- dir. Viktor Kossakovsky

Filmed in glorious black-and-white by auteur Russian documentarian Viktor Kossakovsky on various farms and animal shelters in Norway, England, and Spain, and "starring" a sow and her scene-stealing piglets, and some cows, and some sheep, and a one-legged chicken, this is a film that follows the daily life of a simple mother and her children. Pieced together in deliberately slow, long takes (oh, the patience of the film crew here), the movie beautifully weaves a picture of pastoral life slowed down to a four-legged pace, a life lived on a farm by a pig and her litter of little piglets snuffling for a place at the dinner line, snorting behind her on the daily walks around the yard, tracing an existence of no small consequence lived from birth in the barn to...the film's jaw-dropping denoument of a mother's agonizing incomprehension turned to slow, painful realization of a pig's sad fate on a farm. 



I'm Thinking of Ending Things (2020) -- dir. Charlie Kaufman

I've noticed several online discussion threads dedicated to deciphering the supposed confusing and confounding nature of this film, with viewers seeking answers to what it's all about and what it's all supposed to mean. I streamed this movie on Netflix and so had the luxury of re-watching it quickly and yet at my leisure. It is a movie that certainly benefits from at least a repeated watch--if not more (taste willing). And although Kaufman is notorious for his elliptical, existential, postmodern touches as a writer/filmmaker, I actually found this movie to be fairly decipherable on the first (and second) viewing. You just have to pay attention, and be a cognizant watcher, and notice the subtle intricacies of what's going on--a dreamlike reverie (or nightmare) on loneliness, and love, and isolation, and dreams, and despair. Heavy stuff, maybe, but a work of art from a genuine artist.



The Killing of Two Lovers (2020) -- dir. Robert Machoian

I caught up with this movie on Hulu this past year, and it blew me away. It shook me. The gut-wrenching honesty of its indie-style exploration into the pain, and the confusion, and the awkwardness, and the sadness, and the rage, and the heartbreak, and the helplessness of a young husband/father going through a separation/impending divorce from his wife/mother of his children is visceral. I felt it under my skin. And it made me shiver with memory. Writer/Producer/Director Robert Machoian is fantastic here, from the film's startling opening shot, to its use of non-diagetic sound--a thunderous, repetitive clicking (the cocking of a gun?)--that works to unnerve you, to unsettle you, and to keep you wondering, right up to the movie's last scene, just what is going to come of all this agony.




The Lost Daughter (2021) -- dir. Maggie Gyllenhaal

Seasoned actress and first-time writer/director Maggie Gyllenhaal seems to have intuitively absorbed, over the course of her acting career, just what it takes to make a damn good movie. She has obviously watched, and listened, and paid attention. With her script adapted from the 2006 novel of the same name by Italian writer, Elena Ferrante, Gyllenhaal enlists the aid of some top-shelf acting talent here to tell this tightly-wound examination of a middle-aged woman on the verge of coming unraveled. Olivia Colman, Jessie Buckley, Ed Harris, Dakota Johnson... It's a heady brew. 

(Not that movie-awards season technically means anything--I get that. But still...it is recognition. And I hope Colman and Buckley, at least, are remembered and recognized for the great work they do in this film.)



No Time to Die (2021) -- dir. Cary Joji Fukunaga

All right.... Calm down. Calm down. I know. I know....

I feel fairly safe in assuming I am probably one of the few people anywhere mentioning this film on any sort of 2021-End-of-Year-Best-List. But....

I make no excuses: I enjoyed this movie. It made me smile. It was entertaining. While certainly not a "perfect" film, I liked the closure it brought to the arc of Daniel Craig's five-film run as 007.

(Side note: The film-stealing action sequence reuniting Craig with his 2019 Knives Out co-star, Ana de Armas, was worth the price of admission itself. It made me hungry for the rumored Knives Out sequel... We'll see.)



Raya and the Last Dragon (2021) -- dir. Carlos Lopez Estrada and Don Hall

Another "guilty pleasure" from the past year, I suppose. (Although I have never been entirely clear why we are supposedly hardwired to intuitively feel guilt over something that brings us pleasure. Oh well...I'm not going to tackle that conundrum here.)

I saw this movie in the theater with my daughter. It was one of the first movies we saw together, venturing back with one another into the sparsely populated movie theaters--like dipping a toe into the uncertain COVID waters--and we enjoyed it thoroughly. So much so, we returned together to the theaters to enjoy it a second time....

I think it is a good "guilty pleasure." I remember the movie, largely, for those shared experiences, the two of us. It is a great memory.



The Sparks Brothers (2021) -- dir. Edgar Wright

It is entirely possible that I enjoyed this movie more than any other single film on my lists. Edgar Wright's documentary about the 50-year career from the pop-music act of brothers Ron and Russell Mael (the creative duo behind the band they call Sparks). Like most viewers--I'm assuming--I had never heard of the band Sparks. (I find that fact almost impossible to believe, considering I am a music buff, and the brothers' career has spanned a large part of what could only be called my "growing up" years. But I'd never heard of them until this film. Not even once.)

Which, much like Questlove's documentary, Summer of Soul (see above), Wright attempts to correct. And he does so. Wonderfully.

(Side note: Sparks wrote the music/story for the film, Annette.)



Thelma (2017) -- dir. Joachim Trier

Like Sweden's Roy Andersson, I stumbled upon the Danish-Norwegian filmmaker, Joachim Trier, during the past year. And I'm glad I did. His 2021 film, The Worst Person in the World, has earned a lot of high praise and acclaim, to date; and, to date, I have yet to see it.

In the meantime, though, I came across this earlier film from Trier on Hulu, and I felt--while watching it--as if the wind had been knocked out of me. What a great movie-watching experience. From its shattering opening scene (some of the most impressive first 5 minutes of any film I've ever seen, perhaps) to its provocative closing scene, I never quite knew where this film was leading me.

Thought-provoking, disturbing, visually exciting: I love this movie.

The People We Stumble Upon in This Portable Magic: Reading in 2023

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