Sunday, June 11, 2023

Opened Ground by Seamus Heaney

Name: Seamus Heaney

Year Won: 1995

Read: Opened Ground

Original Language: English

Reason: "for works of lyrical beauty and ethical depth, which exalt everyday miracles and the living past"

About: Opened Ground is a collection of poetry. Most of the themes seem to be fairly typical, ordinary things observed around Ireland.

What I liked: I liked the focus on the ordinary and mundane world, explored with unique and unusual insight. I also loved how some of the teim, Heaney blended the past and present, the mythic and the real.

What I Disliked: Not much. I enjoyed Heaney's poetry.

Should it have won a Nobel: I always have a hard time with poetry and it's so difficult for me to judge what makes a poem "good" vs "bad". But I liked these, so sure. Why not?

Next Up: "Map" by Wisława Szymborska

Tuesday, May 30, 2023

The Changeling by Kenzaburō Ōe

Name: Kenzaburō Ōe

Year Won: 1994

Read: The Changeling

Original Language: Japanese

Reason: "who with poetic force creates an imagined world, where life and myth condense to form a disconcerting picture of the human predicament today"

About: The Changeling follows Kogito Choko as he travels around Japan and Germany, trying to figure out why his friend, Goro, killed himself. It dips back and forth between times and places, often barely differentiating one from the other, as the present and future meld together.

What I liked: Lovely, unpretentious writing, interesting characters, and a really fascinating story structure. I found this to be one of the better books on this list.

What I Disliked: Not much. I found this to be a really interesting story about friendship, loss, and memory.

Should it have won a Nobel: Yes. This has been one of my favorites in a while. It's an actually enjoyable book. It does feel a bit un-literary in a lot of ways for a Nobel prize winner, but to me, that's a major advantage. It feels good because it's good rather than good because it used the right length of run on sentence.

Next Up: "Opened Ground" by Seamus Heaney

Monday, May 22, 2023

"Beloved" by Toni Morrison

Name: Toni Morrison

Year Won: 1993

Read: Beloved

Original Language: English

Reason: "who in novels characterized by visionary force and poetic import, gives life to an essential aspect of American reality"

About: Beloved is about a group of escaped slaves who have made it to Ohio from Kentucky. It is now post civil war, but they are haunted by their past lives in slavery, particularly Sethe. Things become even more peculiar when a teenaged girl shows up with a mysterious quality around her and the name "Beloved"...the same name that Sethe gave to her baby daughter who she killed rather than see enslaved again during her escape.

What I liked: Beautiful writing, of course. Also horribly, tragically evocative of the lives the characters spent in slavery as well as the way it continues to torment them. It also does a sublime job of weaving the non-real (Biblical allusions, Beloved being clearly not entirely human) and the mundane.

What I Disliked: At times, it felt like I almost had to stop and parse what was happening, at least if I wanted to figure out the plot. I know, typical literary stuff, but I still find it kind of annoying to go, "okay, so what point is the author trying to make here with all of this poetic language"? It's especially weird as I've read other novels by Morrison that are far more straight forward.

Should it have won a Nobel: Yes. Morrison is taught in classrooms precisely because she's a genius writer. She also brilliantly captured the horrors of slavery, both to the slaves as they live it, but the way it continues to haunt them afterward, beautifully.

Next Up: "The Changeling" by Kenzaburō Ōe

Sunday, May 14, 2023

What the Twilight Says by Derek Walcott

Name: Derek Walcott

Year Won: 1992

Read: What the Twilight Says

Original Language: English

Reason: "for a poetic oeuvre of great luminosity, sustained by a historical vision, the outcome of a multicultural commitment"

About: What the Twilight Says is a book of essays. What are they about? All sorts of topics, although an awful lot regard life in the Carribean and the legacy of colonialism.

In particular, Walcott is known for being the artist who really challenged other artists to "de-colonize" their thought process and create works of art that are less imitative of European art.

What I liked: Beautiful writing, of course. Also many of the essays are quite thought provoking. I particularly love how he entails other artists to think of new modes of expression and not to favor, necessarily, a way of doing things just because that's How It's Been Done. (Or to write stories because those are what have been popular in the past/found approval/been in vogue with the elites.

He also casts some shade on V.S. Naipul which, honestly, gotta applaud.

What I Disliked: Most essays are very academic. Not a surprise, but this is (IMO) more a book to be read for insight and education than pleasure.

Should it have won a Nobel: Yes. Many of the ideas that Walcott originated are still being debated. He is a true luminary.

Next Up: "Beloved" by Toni Morrison

Thursday, May 4, 2023

My Son's Story by Nadine Gordimer

Name: Nadine Gordimer

Year Won: 1991

Read: My Son's Story

Original Language: English

Reason: "who through her magnificent epic writing has – in the words of Alfred Nobel – been of very great benefit to humanity"

About: My Son's Story follows a South African family, in Aparthid, as they realize that their father is...gasp!...dating a white woman. The story veers between each of the family member's lives, as well as how race affects all of them.

What I liked: Beautiful writing, fantastic character building, and and an interesting backdrop. This novel made me think and it was actually pretty enjoyable to read. (I liked seeing how the characters wrapped their minds both around their father's betrayal as well as how it was, in many ways made worse, but the race of the woman he choose to cheat with.)

What I Disliked: Like most books on this list, the plot wasn't praticularly grabby. Also, I wished, at times, that they'd get out of their heads for a bit and do something. Anything. It was like, "argh, enough internal monologue!!!"

Should it have won a Nobel: Yes. It's well written and on an important, contemporary subject.

With that said, it's hard to imagine it winning now as the author is white and was writing about Blacks. I do wonder whether a similar topic would be better (or worse, or just very different) coming from a Black writer. Or maybe it would be exactly the same...

Next Up: "What the Twilight Says" by Derek Walcott

Friday, April 21, 2023

"The Labyrinth of Solitude" by Octavio Paz

Name: Octavio Paz

Year Won: 1990

Read: The Labyrinth of Solitude

Original Language: Spanish

Reason: "for impassioned writing with wide horizons, characterized by sensuous intelligence and humanistic integrity"

About: The Labyrinth of Solitude is a series of essays about what it is like to be a Mexican.

What I liked: The writing was clear and easy to follow.

What I Disliked: Want to read a bunch of essays that read like what a 16 year old edgelord Redditor might right? Step no further! Mexicans are dark, barbaric, crude and superstitious! With inflamed, wild passions! They can't distinguish their own individulity from their culture, history, or religion! Because...duh. And of course Paz speaks for all Mexicans, not just like, him. To read it, yes, we do need a wall. We need it now. And we need with turrets that shoot to kill. *eye roll*

In case you're wondering whether it can really be that bad...yes. It can be. This quote especially stood out, but it's all kind of like that... "'A woman's place is in the home with a broken leg'...Woman is a domesticated wild animal, lecherous and sinful from birth, who must be subdued by a stick and guided by the 'reins of religion'. Therefore Spaniards consider other women - especially of a race or religion different than their own - to be easy game."

Yeah...it's something.

Should it have won a Nobel: I mean...I know it was a different era. And I guess you always get a bit more slack when stereotyping your own people. But still...wow...really?

Next Up: "My Son's Story" by Nadine Gordimer

Sunday, March 5, 2023

"The Family of Pascal Duarte" by Camilo José Cela

Name: Camilo José Cela

Year Won: 1989

Read: The Family of Pascal Duarte

Original Language: Spanish

Reason: ""for a rich and intensive prose, which with restrained compassion forms a challenging vision of man's vulnerability"

About: The Family of Pascal Duarte follows the life of Pascal Duarte as he has a childhood in a ne'er do well family, gets a girl pregnant and marries her, she dies, then he marries someone else and at last is on the run, ready to be garrotted. This all takes place in a scant 150 pages, so it doesn't really linger.

What I liked: The characters in this novel are wonderfully interesting. Each paragraph is practically a new and unique character study of a unique person who is explained so well I feel like I know them.

I also like all of the details of living in a small village in 1930s (I think?) Spain, as well as the interplay of religion and faith.

What I Disliked: Plot? Is there a plot? Of course there's no plot. LOL. It's a Nobel prize winning book. (Or at least no plot in a conventional sense.)

Should it have won a Nobel: Probably. This is the sort of thing that the Nobel committe digs. Religion? Lack of plot? Good writing and character studies? BRING IT ON. (Graham Greene...you were cheated because your novels tended to have plots, LOL.) I also liked this one a lot better than most as the writing really was solid, the characters interesting, and it didn't go on freaking forever. So hey! An improvement over many! (I still like plots, though...)

Next Up: "The Labyrinth of Solitude" by Octavio Paz