Wednesday, November 28, 2012

My Own Personal Book Club

 

book club

A co-worker who occasionally discusses literature with me noticed my dearth of blog posts and suggested this week that I highlight my current reading list for public comment/ridicule. So on that spirit, here’s what I’m reading now:

  • I started but abruptly stopped "Howard's End" by E.M. Forster. I'm not sure what happened -- I probably got distracted -- but I do plan to resume after I finish a few other items in this list. I haven't completed enough of the book to comment on it.
  • "Malgudi Days," a collection of classic short stories by R.K. Narayan that became a popular TV show in India. I wouldn't call it great literature, but The stories provide vivid snapshots of life in India at the time and a cast of characters that seem extraordinary and real at the same time. The short-story format is easily digestible, enabling the reader to put the book down and pick it up later without losing anything.
  • "The Sun Also Rises." Yes, the Ernest Hemingway classic. I know saying this makes me sound like a philistine or – worse -- presumptuous, but I can't say I like his plain, Spartan writing style. While the approach is great for journalism and other nonfiction (Hemingway, like me, was a journalist), it's not as enjoyable in novels, at least so far. Acclimating to an unfamiliar writing style is always the toughest part about getting into a new book, so I'm hoping I'll get used to it and begin enjoying the story for the story's sake.
  • Anna Karenina, the Leo Tolstoy classic, which is being retold in a new movie. I usually stick to English-language novels, but the Maude translation is engaging, and the story is familiar and new at the same time. I have a feeling that this will be the story I finish before returning to the other items in this list.
  • And for a bit a easy-reading nonfiction, "The Power of Habit," by Charles Duhigg. This book looks at how people form and break habits, with an emphasis on using triggers to harness the power of habit to our benefit. The premise seems reasonable -- habits form when we have a trigger, action and reward -- but I haven't yet tested the theory.
And while I'm on the subject of reading, I wanted to mention that I'm really tempted by Amazon's new Kindle Paperwhite. By all accounts, the device's screen is amazing. But I really like the physical buttons on my Nook, so I'm not sure whether the Kindle would be as usable for me. I really hope Barnes&Noble licenses the screen technology but keeps the Nook form factor. Or that Amazon adds physical page-turn buttons to the Kindle. Either way is fine, really.