"Love follows knowledge."
"Beauty above all beauty!"
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Showing posts with label General Literature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label General Literature. Show all posts

Thursday, May 2, 2019

2019 Reads, Update #1

My first quarter update is running a month behind, which is not unusual.  I was waiting to complete the major read of this quarter, Dante Alighieri’s Paradiso, the third canticle from his epic Divine Comedy before I posted this.  I just finished it.  You can probably see I’m still posting my summaries and comments.  I’m spreading them out, so they’ll be coming out for the next few weeks.  I’ve actually read Paradiso twice in that I’m reading two translations in parallel, which has been my method for the other canticles.  I’ve been reading the outstanding Hollander and Hollander translation and the equally good Anthony Esolen translation.  The way I would compare the translations is in this way: the Hollander and Hollander has outstanding commentary and bibliography, so that’s more geared for graduate students.  The Esolen is just a fine, clean translation with less commentary, so that’s more geared for undergraduate students. 

I’ve also read seven short stories and two essays.  “Mother” by Sherwood Anderson is an excellent story and well worth reading.  You can find it for free on the internet.  “The Background” (Saki) and “Poldi” (McCullers), “A Sin Confessed” (Guareschi), and "Why Bugsy Siegel Was a Friend of Mine” (Burke) were good stories, and I’d recommend them.  The others were not worth it.  The two essays, one on how to mark up a book you are reading by the great academic, Mortimer J. Adler, and the other by Joshua Wren (published in Dappled Things, Vol 13, Issue 4) on the French Catholic writer Léon Bloy and his contribution to the Catholic literary tradition are both excellent reads.  The Adler essay you can find for free on-line.

I’m also reading the Old Testament’s Book of Jeremiah.  I finished the modern English translation and about half way through the King James Version.

I have to say I am reader who juggles many books at the same time.  For our parish Bible class, we are reading Mike Aquilina’s The Fathers of the Church, and we’re about thirty pages from the end.  I’m about forty pages from the end of The Life of Saint Dominic.  I’m reading the Narnia series with my son, and we are a third of the way into The Horse and His Boy, which I think is excellent.  And our Catholic Thought Book Club at Goodreads has just started reading Thomas à Kempis’ The Imitation of Christ.  We just started the first week of a planned five week read.  You can still join us, and you can find the work for free on-line.  Here’s one site.  

So here’s a listing of the first quarter activity. 


Completed First Quarter:

“The Background,” a short story by Saki (H. H. Munro).
“How to Mark a Book,” an essay by Mortimer J. Adler.
“In the Snow,” a short story by Stefan Zweig, translated by Anathea Bell.
“Poldi,” a short story by Carson McCullers.
“Mother,” a short story by Sherwood Anderson. 
“A Sin Confessed,” a short story by Giovanni Guareschi, translated by Adam Elgar.
“A Fire-Stained Cathedral Gargoyle: Léon Bloy and the Catholic Literary Tradition,” an essay by Joshua Wren.
“Gibberish,” a short story by Thomas Berger. 
Book of Jeremiah, a book of the Old Testament, NIV Translation.
"Why Bugsy Siegel Was a Friend of Mine," a short story by James Lee Burke.
Paradisio, 3rd part of the epic poem, The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri, translated and annotated by Robert and Jean Hollander.
Paradisio, 3rd part of the epic poem, The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri, translated and annotated by Anthony Esolen.


Currently Reading:
The Fathers of the Church: An Introduction to the First Christian Teachers, 3rd Edition, a non-fiction work by Mike Aquilina.
The Life of Saint Dominic, a biography by Augusta Theodosia Drane.
Book of Jeremiah, a book of the Old Testament, KJV Translation.
The Horse and His Boy, a novel from the The Chronicles of Narnia series by C. S. Lewis.
The Imitation of Christ, a non-fiction devotional by Thomas à Kempis.


Upcoming Plans:
“The Light of the World,” a short story by Ernest Hemingway.
“God Rest You Merry Gentleman,” a short story by Ernest Hemingway.
“The Sea Change,” a short story by Ernest Hemingway.
“A Matter of Chance,” a short story by Vladimir Nabokov.
 “The Manager of ‘The Kremlin,’” a short story by Evelyn Waugh.



I has been a very busy quarter.

Sunday, January 13, 2019

My 2018 Reads

Typically I have an initial post at the beginning of the year on the upcoming plans for the year, and then I post an update at the end of each quarter with the fourth quarter being the conclusion of the year’s reads.  This year I had that initial post in January and a first quarter update, and then I abandoned my poor blog readers without an update the rest of the year.  I apologize, and if you thought I had given up on reading, you were mistaken.  Anyway, you can tell by my posts throughout the year I was certainly reading.  Here is the final quarter’s update which summarizes my reads for 2018.  First a listing of what I read by quarter, and then I’ll break it down in a summary.


Completed First Quarter:

From Islam to Christ: One Woman’s Path through the Riddles of God, a confessional memoir by Derya Little.
The Inferno, 1st part of the epic poem, The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri, translated and annotated by Robert and Jean Hollander.
The Inferno, 1st part of the epic poem, The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri, translated and annotated by Anthony Esloen.
"Behind the Veil," a short story by Dhu'l Nun Ayyoub, translated by S. Al-Bazzazz. 
The Way of the Cross, a non-fiction devotional by Caryll Houselander.
A Man Could Stand Up, the 3rd novel of the Parade’s End Tetralogy by Ford Madox Ford.
The Magician’s Nephew, a novel from the The Chronicles of Narnia series by C. S. Lewis.
“The Call of the Cthulhu,” a short story by H. P. Lovecraft.
“Hard Times,” a short story by Ron Rash.


 Completed Second Quarter:

“The Dead,” a short story by James Joyce.
“Arrangement in Black and White,” a short story by Dorothy Parker.
Humanae Vitae, a Papal Encyclical by Pope Paul VI.
The Book of Isaiah, a book of the Old Testament, KJV translation.
The Power of Silence: Against the Dictatorship of Noise, a non-fiction work of theology by Robert Cardinal Sarah.
  

Completed Third Quarter:

The Everlasting Man, a non-fiction book of Christian apologetics by G. K. Chesterton.
 “Flowering Judas,” a short story by Katherine Ann Porter. 
Purgatorio, 2nd part of the epic poem, The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri, translated and annotated by Robert and Jean Hollander.
Purgatorio, 2nd part of the epic poem, The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri, translated and annotated by Anthony Esolen.


Completed Fourth Quarter:

“Letter to the Corinthians,” a papal epistle from Pope Clement I.
The Book of Isaiah, a book of the Old Testament, RSV (Catholic Edition) Translations.
Inside Islam: A Guide for Catholics, a non-fiction book by Daniel Ali and Robert Spencer.
Confessions of a Convert, a non-fiction memoir by Robert Hugh Benson.
Not All of Me is Dust, a novel by Frances Maureen Richardson.
Blood Pressure Down: The-10 Step to Lower Your Blood Pressure in 10 Weeks—Without Prescription Drugs, a self-help, non-fiction book by Dr. Janet Bond Brill. 
The Gospel of Luke, a book of the New Testament, Revised Standard Version, Catholic Edition.
The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, a novel from the The Chronicles of Narnia series by C. S. Lewis.
The Letter to the Hebrews, an epistle in the New Testament attributed to St. Paul, KJV and RSV (Ignatius) translations.
Joy to the World: How Christ's Coming Changed Everything (and Still Does), a non-fiction work on Christian theology by Scott Hahn.
Vol 4 of Les Misérables, “Saint-Denis, the Idyll in the Rue Plumet, and the Epic in the Rue Saint-Denis” a novel by Victor Hugo.


Currently Reading:

Julius Caesar: Life of a Colossus, a biography by Adrian Goldsworthy.
The Virgin and the Gipsy, a short novel by D. H. Lawrence.
Hildegard of Bingen: Selected Writings, a collection translated and edited by Mark Atherton.
Fra Angelico (Metropolitan Museum of Art Series), a non-fiction work on art by Laurence Kanter, Pia Palladino, and others.
The Life of Saint Dominic, a biography by Augusta Theodosia Drane.
The Fathers of the Church: An Introduction to the First Christian Teachers, 3rd Edition, a non-fiction work by Mike Aquilina.



As you can see, being the moderator of the Catholic Thought Book Club at Goodreads shapes my reading list.  I would say that more than half—perhaps three quarters—is determined by the book club selection, and since I’m moderator I can’t really opt out of a read.  The readings break down in the following manner.  Nine works of fiction, eight works of non-fiction, only six short stories, five books from the Bible, and two papal documents.  Let’s take the categories individually. 

In the nine works of fiction, I include two individual canticles of Dante’s Divine Comedy separately.  It is a poetic epic, but I count it as fiction because it is narrative in nature, and I count the canticles (Inferno and Purgatorio) as separate works.  Each are book length.  Also I count the two different translations (Hollander and Hollander and Esolen) separately since I read them both.  In all four of the nine works stemmed from Dante.  As you may know I’ve been reading Ford Madox Ford’s tetralogy of novels set during World War I collected under the title Parade’s End.  This year I read the third of the four, A Man Could Stand Up.  One more to go.  In that vein, the last few years I’ve been reading the over 1200 page epic Les Misérables by Victor Hugo.  Because of its length I’ve been reading annually one of the five volumes and counting each as a novel.  This year I read the fourth volume, “Saint-Denis, the Idyll in the Rue Plumet, and the Epic in the Rue Saint-Denis.”  One more year to go on this too.  I’ve been reading C. S. Lewis The Chronicles of Narnia series with my son.  This year we read the first two, The Magician’s Nephew and The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.  They are delightful and frankly not just for children.  Finally, I read Not All of Me is Dust, a novel written by an incredibly nice woman I met in my Catholic Thought Book Club at Goodreads, Frances Maureen Richardson.  I would classify this as a Catholic novel since the faith of the characters is at the center of each of their lives, but it is way more than that.  It’s a journey through the second half of the 20th century with its declining faith and one person whose example stands against it.  I haven’t posted on this novel here yet, but I intend to do so.

Seven of the eight non-fiction works have a theological element to them.  Two of the books I would classify as confessional memoirs.  They are autobiographic and focus on a particular element of their lives.  Both books were religious conversion stories.  Derya Little’s From Islam to Christ tells of her conversion from growing up with Islam in Turkey and becoming Roman Catholic.  Robert Hugh Benson’s Confessions of a Convert also speaks of a conversion to Roman Catholicism, he being an Anglican priest and son of an Anglican Archbishop at the turn of the end of the 19th century.  Both took the reader through their theological reasoning and personal emotions.  Four of the non-fiction books were theological discourses.  Robert Cardinal Sarah’s The Power of Silence discussed the need for silence as a means to communicate and understand God.  G. K. Chesterton’s The Everlasting Man identified the importance of man and Christ in the shaping of human and salvation history.  In Inside Islam: A Guide for Catholics, Daniel Ali—also a convert to Catholicism—provided a handbook of the differences between the two religions.  Scott Hahn’s Joy to the World provided a wonderful exegesis to the Christmas narrative.  The final non-fiction was a self-help book by Dr. Janet Bond Brill, Blood Pressure Down on how to lower one’s blood pressure, as the title states.  It’s becoming an issue for me.

I only read five short stories this past year as opposed to my usual twenty-four.  Actually last year I only read eighteen, so my trend is toward fewer short stories.  That’s a shame because I get so much diversity from reading so many different writers.  I need to try to do better on that.  With only six, I won’t go through a whole lot on what I thought of them.  I’ll just rate them as exceptional, good, ordinary, and duds.  “Behind the Veil” by Iraqi writer Dhu’l Nun Ayyoub, was ordinary.  “The Call of the Cthulhu” by H. P. Lovecraft was also ordinary.  “Hard Times” by Ron Rash was good.  “The Dead” by James Joyce was exceptional.  “Arrangement in Black and White” by Dorothy Parker was a dud.  “Flowering Judas” by Katherine Ann Parker was good.  So the winner of the best of the short stories read this year is James Joyce’s “The Dead,” a classic and one of the best works Joyce wrote.

I read five books out of the Bible this year.  I am counting The Book of Isaiah and The Letter to the Hebrews twice each because of two different translations.  As those who have read my blog may know, I am trying to read through the Bible both in King James Translation (to get a feel for the English language of the time) and a contemporary Catholic translation (to get the most comprehension of the work).  The fifth work from the Bible read this year was The Gospel of Luke and since I had read this before I only read it in RSV translation.  We are in the C lectionary year for readings at Mass, which means the predominant Gospel readings will come from Luke.  So the book club read the entire Gospel up front as a way to prepare us for this year’s readings.  We did this last year with the Gospel of Mark.

The book club also read two papal documents.  We read Humanae Vitae, a papal encyclical which had reached its fifty year anniversary, from Pope Paul VI.  The book club also read the Letter to the Corinthians by church father Pope Clement I.  Pope Clement I was the fourth Bishop of Rome and held office from 88 to 99 AD.  

On the list of currently reading but unfinished are three reads from the past I have not gone back to this year: Goldworthy’s Julius Caesar, Lawrence’s The Virgin and the Gypsy, and the selected writings of Hildgard of Bingen.  The art book on Fra Angelico’s work and the biography of St. Dominic were added this year, and every so often I will read a few pages.  Also added was Mike Aquilina’s The Fathers of the Church, which is a survey book of good portion of the church fathers.  This is a book we’re reading at my parish Bible study this year.

As you can see, almost everything I read these days is related to Catholicism in some way. 


Tuesday, January 30, 2018

My 2017 Reads

Completed First Quarter:

The Book of Ecclesiastes, a book of the Old Testament, KJV Translation.
The Book of Song of Songs, a book of the Old Testament, KJV Translation.
The Iman’s Daughter: My Desperate Flight to Freedom, a confessional memoir by Hannah Shah.
The Future Church: How Ten Trends are Revolutionizing the Catholic Church, a non-fiction book by John L. Allen Jr.
The Book of Proverbs, a book of the Old Testament, KJV Translation.
Compassionate Blood: Catherine of Siena on the Passion, a non-fiction devotional by Romanus Cessario, O.P.
What Jesus Saw from the Cross, a non-fiction devotional by Antonin Gilbert Sertillanges, O.P.
The Wife of Pilate, a short novel by Gertrude von Le Fort.


Completed Second Quarter:

“The Magic Barrel,” a short story by Bernard Malamud.
The Book of Wisdom, a book of the Old Testament, Ignatius Translation.
“The Secret Sharer,” a short story by Joseph Conrad.
The Hunger Angel, a novel by Herta Müller.
The Book of Sirach, a book of the Old Testament, Ignatius Translation.
Vision of Fatima, a non-fiction book on his sculptures of Our Lady of Fatima by Fr. Thomas McGlynn.
“God’s World,” a short story by Najib Mahfuz. 
“Vitamins,” a short story by Raymond Carver.
“Bobcat,” a short story by Rebecca Lee.
Vol 3 of Les Misérables, “Marius,” a novel by Victor Hugo.
“A Clean, Well-Lighted Place,” a short story by Ernest Hemingway.


Completed Third Quarter:

Letter to the Galatians, an epistle from the New Testament by St. Paul, KJV and Ignatius RSV translations.
Letter to the Ephesians, an epistle from the New Testament by St. Paul, KJV and Ignatius RSV translations.
Letter to the Philippians, an epistle from the New Testament by St. Paul, KJV and Ignatius RSV translations.
Letter to the Colossians, an epistle from the New Testament by St. Paul, KJV and Ignatius RSV translations.
“Assisted Living,” a short story by Edith Pearlman.
“The Chosen Husband,” a short story by Mavis Gallant.
101 Places to Pray Before You Die: A Roman Catholic’s Guide, a non-fictional travel guide by Thomas J. Craughwell.
“Barn Burning,” a short story by William Faulkner.
Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc, a historical novel by Mark Twain.
Heart of Joy: The Transforming Power of Self-Giving, a collection of speeches from Mother Teresa, edited by José Luis González-Balado. 
First Letter to the Thessalonians, an epistle from the New Testament by St. Paul, KJV and Ignatius RSV translations.
“The Music on the Hill,” a short story by Saki (H. H. Munro).
Gospel According to Mark, a book of the New Testament, Ignatius RSV translation.
“Zone of Quiet,” a short story by Ring Larsen.
Second Letter to the Thessalonians, an epistle from the New Testament by St. Paul, KJV and Ignatius RSV translations.


Completed Fourth Quarter:

First Letter to the Timothy, an epistle from the New Testament by St. Paul, KJV and Ignatius RSV translations.
“Saint Ursula and Her Maidens,” a short story by Mary O’Connell.
Some Desperate Glory: The First World War the Poets Knew, a book of history and collected poetry by Max Egremont.
Second Letter to the Timothy, an epistle from the New Testament by St. Paul, KJV and Ignatius RSV translations.
“The Diary of an African Nun,” a short story by Alice Walker.
A Room with a View, a novel by E. M. Forster.
Letter to Titus, an epistle from the New Testament by St. Paul, KJV and Ignatius RSV translations.
Letter to Philemon, an epistle from the New Testament by St. Paul, KJV  and Ignatius RSV translations.
“Wunderkind,” a short story by Carson McCullers.
The Confessions, an autobiography by St. Augustine of Hippo, translated by Phillip Burton.
“What World is This? A short story by Gloria Whelan. 
“Achates McNeil,” a short story by T. C. Boyle.
“Gimpel the Fool,” a short story by Isaac Bashevis Singer.
Henry VI, Part 1, a play by William Shakespeare.
Rock Crystal, a novella by Adalbert Stifter, Translated by Elizabeth Mayer and Marianne Moore.

“The Match-Maker,” a short story by Saki (H. H. Munro).

Unfinished Reads:

Julius Caesar: Life of a Colossus, a biography by Adrian Goldsworthy.
The Virgin and the Gipsy, a short novel by D. H. Lawrence.
Hildegard of Bingen: Selected Writings, a collection translated and edited by Mark Atherton.

It's been a very good year for reading.  Eight books of non-fiction, sixteen books from the Bible (some of them short though), six works of long fiction (four novels, two novellas), a book of poetry, a Shakespearean play, and eighteen short stories.  That's more than a book a month.  I didn't quite keep up with two short stories per month, but all those Epistles from St. Paul, which in most cases were read in two different translations, more than made up for the six short stories off pace.

First you can track back to my Plans for 2017, here, my 2017 first quarterly update, here, my second quarterly update here, and my third quarterly update here.  

Quite a bit of the longer works were selected as part of the Catholic Thought book club at Goodreads, which I've mentioned that I'm now moderator.  As moderator I can't quite skip reads I'm not interested in.  But I can't say I hated any of the reads.  Through the nominating system and the vote, we seem to pick interesting reads.  Of the eight non-fiction works, three I would categorize as memoirs (The Iman's Daughter, Vision of Fatima, and St. Augustine of Hippo's The Confessions), three I would categorize as devotionals (Compassionate Blood, What Jesus Saw from the Cross, and Heart of Joy), one I would categorize as a travel book (101 Places to Pray Before You Die), and one a book of information on Catholic Church trends, (The Future Church).  Hannah Shaw's The Iman's Daughter was a powerful testimonial, McGlynn's Vision of Fatima was wonderful reflection of how he came to sculpt the Our Lady of Fatima statue based on his conversations with Sr. Lúcia de Jesus dos Santos, at the time the remaining survivor of the Fatima apparitions.  See my blog post for pictures of the statue.  Antonin Sertillanges' What Jesus Saw from the Cross is the absolute best book for a Lenten devotional I have ever read.  I highly recommend it.

As you can see I continue to make progress reading through Bible.  Five books (Ecclesiastes, Song of Songs, Proverbs, Wisdom, and Sirach) were read from the Old Testament, books from the wisdom literature section.  Ten of St Paul's epistles were read, which now completes my reading of his letters.  (Actually the Letter to the Hebrews remains unread, but as some quip, it's neither a letter, nor written by Paul, nor written to the Hebrews; I'll be reading that this year.)  The book club read the Gospel of Mark, since we're in the B liturgical year, and so that was a re-read.  Of the works I read for the first time, I read it in the King James Version (KJV), and to repeat myself, I read in the KJV not because I enjoy it or think it a good translation (actually I think it's terrible) but because the language of the KJV was important to the development of English, I want to get one full reading in it.  Because the New Testament books are so important to understanding Christianity, I augmented my reading with the Ignatius RSV translation, which I think is one of the best translations.  The Books of Wisdom and Sirach are not in the KJV since Protestants threw them out of the cannon, and so I read them in the Ignatius.  Too bad, their loss.

With all the non-fiction books, I didn't get to read as many novels as I would have liked.  I'm continuing through the huge opus of Hugo's Les Misérables, reading one volume per year.  It is a great novel, and there are two more volumes to go.  Mark Twain's Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc was an excellent fictionalized account of St. Joan of Arc's life.  Though fictionalized, it was very close to the actual history.  A Room with a View was a good novel, though not up to the great novels E. M. Forster has written.  Nobel Prize winner Herta Müller's The Hunger Angel was a disturbing novel of Romanian ethnic Germans struggling to live in a post WWII Russian concentration camp.  Extremely well written, poetic, and very well translated by Phillip Boehm.  Le Fort's The Wife of Pilate and Stifter's Rock Crystal were both excellent novellas and highly recommended.  Interestingly, Le Fort's makes a great read around Lent and Stifter's makes a great read around Christmas.

I completed Max Egremont's Some Desperate Glory, which I had started last year and spilled over.  It was a collection of the WWI poets that fought in the war on the English side.  The book was uniquely structured to be both a collection of the poetry and biographical information on the poets.  I highly recommend it.  Because the historical events concerning Twain's Joan of Arc novel were fresh in my mind, I read Shakespeare's Henry VI, Part I, since it covered the same events, only from a different perspective.  It may have been Shakespeare's first play he wrote, so it had rough spots and not up to his great works. It was still worth reading if you are a Shakespeare aficionado.  It was one of the plays I had not read yet.  With it I've now read 29 of the authentic Shakespeare plays.  As I said in my blog post on this play, https://ashesfromburntroses.blogspot.com/2017/12/the-first-part-henry-vi-by-william.html "Some people have bucket lists of traveling across the world; my bucket list consists of reading all of Shakespeare."

Finally to the short stories.  As I’ve done in recent years, I’ll categorize the short stories between exceptional, good, ordinary, and duds.  If you see some unknown authors in the list, it’s because I made a conscious effort to seek out stories of contemporary writers.  I was not exactly overwhelmed with those.  Only two stories (Gloria Whelan’s and T.C. Boyle’s) made it above ordinary.  I rated Saki’s “The Match-Maker” and Edith Pearlman’s “assisted Living” as duds.  That’s the first Saki short story I was disappointed with.  I rated six stories as ordinary, the Egytian writer,  Najib Mafuz’s “God’s World,” Raymond Carver’s “Vitamins,” Rebecca Lee’s “Bobcat,” Ring Larsen’s “Zone of Quiet,” Mary O’Connell’s “Saint Ursula and Her Maidens,” and Alice Walker’s “Diary of an African Nun.”

Five stories were rated as good.  “The Chosen Husband” was about a young man who is sort of roped in to be the husband of one of the daughters of a declining Montreal family and had the usual Mavis Gallant subtlety in language and psychology.  Saki made up for the dud with a really fine story about a woman who killed in the woods by mysterious, horned beast.  “Wunderkind” was my first story I’ve read by Carson McCullers, and I was really impressed.  It was about a young girl who as a child was a prodigy on the piano but now entering puberty has lost her brilliance.  I nearly put this in the exceptional category.  Gloria Whelan’s “What World is This?” about a pair of girls who play a hoax about seeing an apparition of the Virgin Mary, was well written, and T.C. Boyle’s “Achetes McNeil,” about a young man in college who is estranged from his self-centered, though famous novelist father was hilarious.  I don’t think I’ve read a T.C. Boyle story yet that I didn’t find interesting and fun.

As it turns out, the five stories rated as exceptional are all classic short stories by preeminent short story writers.  There’s something to be said for sticking with the classics.  Bernard Malamud’s “The Magic Barrel” was about a young, shy rabbi who hires a matchmaker to find him a wife.  It was funny, theologically penetrating, and psychologically insightful.  Great short stories work on many levels, and that’s the difference between an exceptional rating and a good.  Joseph Conrad’s “The Secret Sharer” is about a young, inexperienced captain who secretly takes into his cabin a castaway who was swimming alongside his ship.  The castaway turns out to have been escaping another vessel where he was suspected of murder.  Hemingway’s “A Clean-Lighted Place” is about an old man who frequents a bar and keeps the waiters from closing down late one night because he insists on drinking.  The waiters speculate on why the old man drinks alone and why he has attempted suicide.  William Faulkner’s “Barn Burning” is about a young boy, Sarty, trying to understand his Civil War veteran and arsonist father, Abner Snopes, through the final events of Abner’s life, the events that led him to be shot and killed.  “Gimpel the Fool” by Isaac Bashevis Singer is about a man who throughout his life is taken advantage of, especially by his wife, because of his simplicity and willingness to believe other people.  It’s also a very funny story, but filled with the love of life and God that Gimpel exudes. 

As always I give a prize to the best short story I have read during the year, and this year it is nearly impossible to distinguish between the exceptionals.  But I need to pick and I must pick.  This is based on my impulse today, but tomorrow I could have changed to another.  First the runner-up will be “Gimpel the Fool” by Isaac Bashevis Singer.  The central theme of the story is overwhelming, and placed in the mouth of the rabbi Gimpel one day brings his problems.  The rabbi says, “It is written, better to be a fool all your days than for one hour to be evil.  You are not a fool.  They are the fools.  For he who causes his neighbor to feel shame loses Paradise himself.”  And the winner for the best short story read this year…drum roll please…though difficult to choose, I have chosen William Faulkner’s “Barn Burning.”  In a swirl of history, symbolism, local Mississippian dialect, class consciousness, and family bonds, we see the inner nature of Abner Snopes, a combustible dysfunctionality.  He is pricked by his sense of lower class status to the point of outrage, and fire is a perfect symbol for his outrage and belligerence.  He retaliates through arson, as if that will reset the power struggle that has belittled him.  His being an arsonist is an outward expression of his inner combustible dysfunctionality.  It’s a powerful story, powerfully told. 

If you wish, you can probably read something within the blog on most of these books and stories I’ve read.  I haven’t blogged on all of them but I’ve blogged on most.  Just do a search in the upper left hand corner at the top of the blog page.  Also, I found listing the works by genre was easier to absorb.  I list it in this form below. 


Non-Fiction:

1.      The Iman's Daughter: My Desperate Flight to Freedom, a confessional memoir by Hannah Shah.
2.      The Future Church: How Ten Trends are Revolutionizing the Catholic Church, a non-fiction book by John L. Allen Jr.
3.      Compassionate Blood: Catherine of Siena on the Passion, a non-fiction devotional by Romanus Cessario, O.P.
4.      What Jesus Saw from the Cross, a non-fiction devotional by Antonin Gilbert Sertillanges, O.P.
5.      Vision of Fatima, a non-fiction book on his sculptures of Our Lady of Fatima by Fr. Thomas McGlynn.
6.      101 Places to Pray Before You Die: A Roman Catholic's Guide, a non-fictional travel guide by Thomas J. Craughwell.
7.      Heart of Joy: The Transforming Power of Self-Giving, a collection of speeches from Mother Teresa, edited by José Luis González-Balado. 
8.      The Confessions, an autobiography by St. Augustine of Hippo, translated by Phillip Burton.

Bible:

1.        The Book of Ecclesiastes, a book of the Old Testament, KJV Translation.
2.        The Book of Song of Songs, a book of the Old Testament, KJV Translation.
3.        The Book of Proverbs, a book of the Old Testament, KJV Translation.
4.        The Book of Wisdom, a book of the Old Testament, Ignatius Translation.
5.        The Book of Sirach, a book of the Old Testament, Ignatius Translation.
6.        Letter to the Galatians, an epistle from the New Testament by St. Paul, KJV and Ignatius RSV translations.
7.        Letter to the Ephesians, an epistle from the New Testament by St. Paul, KJV and Ignatius RSV translations.
8.        Letter to the Philippians, an epistle from the New Testament by St. Paul, KJV and Ignatius RSV translations.
9.        Letter to the Colossians, an epistle from the New Testament by St. Paul, KJV and Ignatius RSV translations.
10.    First Letter to the Thessalonians, an epistle from the New Testament by St. Paul, KJV and Ignatius RSV translations.
11.    Gospel According to Mark, a book of the New Testament, Ignatius RSV translation.
12.    Second Letter to the Thessalonians, an epistle from the New Testament by St. Paul, KJV and Ignatius RSV translations.
13.    First Letter to the Timothy, an epistle from the New Testament by St. Paul, KJV and Ignatius RSV translations.
14.    Second Letter to the Timothy, an epistle from the New Testament by St. Paul, KJV and Ignatius RSV translations.
15.    Letter to Titus, an epistle from the New Testament by St. Paul, KJV and Ignatius RSV translations.
16.    Letter to Philemon, an epistle from the New Testament by St. Paul, KJV  and Ignatius RSV translations.

Novels:

1.        The Wife of Pilate, a short novel by Gertrude von Le Fort.
2.        The Hunger Angel, a novel by Herta Müller.
3.        Vol 3 of Les Misérables, "Marius," a novel by Victor Hugo.
4.        Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc, a historical novel by Mark Twain.
5.        A Room with a View, a novel by E. M. Forster.
6.        Rock Crystal, a novella by Adalbert Stifter, Translated by Elizabeth Mayer and Marianne Moore.

Poetry:

1.        Some Desperate Glory: The First World War the Poets Knew, a book of history and collected poetry by Max Egremont.

Drama:

1.        Henry VI, Part 1, a play by William Shakespeare.

Short Stories:

1.        "The Magic Barrel," a short story by Bernard Malamud.
2.        "The Secret Sharer," a short story by Joseph Conrad.
3.        "God's World," a short story by Najib Mahfuz. 
4.        "Vitamins," a short story by Raymond Carver.
5.        "Bobcat," a short story by Rebecca Lee.
6.        "A Clean, Well-Lighted Place," a short story by Ernest Hemingway.
7.        "Assisted Living," a short story by Edith Pearlman.
8.        "The Chosen Husband," a short story by Mavis Gallant.
9.        "Barn Burning," a short story by William Faulkner.
10.    "The Music on the Hill," a short story by Saki (H. H. Munro).
11.    "Zone of Quiet," a short story by Ring Larsen.
12.    "Saint Ursula and Her Maidens," a short story by Mary O'Connell.
13.    "The Diary of an African Nun," a short story by Alice Walker.
14.    "Wunderkind," a short story by Carson McCullers.
15.    "What World is This? A short story by Gloria Whelan. 
16.    "Achates McNeil," a short story by T. C. Boyle.
17.    "Gimpel the Fool," a short story by Isaac Bashevis Singer.
18.    "The Match-Maker," a short story by Saki (H. H. Munro).