Most of the best books I read this year I was reading for at
least the second time. Among them: Tristram
Shandy, Max Beerbohm’s And Even Now,
the essays and letters of Johnson and Lamb, the stories of Bellow and Cheever, among others. Judging from most of the books mentioned in the Wall Street Journal poll, I made the right decisions. Little sounds
interesting, though I do want to read Oliver Sacks’ Hallucinations and Artemis Cooper’s Patrick
Leigh Fermor: An Adventure. I don’t
need to know anything more about Lyndon Johnson. What
books published in 2012 did I read and enjoy? In no particular order:
Olives, A.E. Stallings.
What Happened to Sophie
Wilder, Christopher Beha.
Iron Curtain: The Crushing of
Eastern Europe 1944-1956, Anne Applebaum.
Bewilderment, David
Ferry.
When I Was a Child I Read Books, Marilynne
Robinson.
The Fortunes of Permanence: Culture and
Anarchy in an Age of Amnesia, Roger Kimball.
John Keats: A New Life, Nicholas
Roe.
And best of all, Essays
in Biography by Joseph Epstein, an
admirer of William Hazlitt, who writes in “On Reading Old Books”:
“When I take up a work that I have read before (the oftener the better) I
know what I have to expect. The satisfaction is not lessened by being
anticipated. When the entertainment is altogether new, I sit down to it as I
should to a strange dish, -- turn and pick out a bit here and there, and am in
doubt what to think of the composition.”
2 comments:
Today is Beethoven's birthday, and the local radio station has been playing his music all day. I have heard all of it before, many, many times. Yet the music still delights me with its freshness, its emotion, its art.
Why is it that the old--the tried and true--continues to inform, to inspire and to infuse one with joy? As with music, books that are written by old masters continue to bring me pleasure each time I read or reread them. It's not that I am opposed to the new, but often enough, the new music and the new art and the new books leave me cold.
TJG
Patrick,
I, too, read the Wall Street Journal's list of books in 2012 and was appalled by most of the choices. To conclude the year with some sanity remaining I reread for about the fifth time Edith Wharton's Age of Innocence. LIke a good poem it bears repeating, or should I say reliving.
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