Signs of Life 2007 : Best Books
(page 2) Writer: Paste StaffReviews, Issue 38, Published online on 29 Nov 2007 Page 2 of 2 < Previous
Jack Pendarvis
Mario Bava: All the Colors of the Dark
by Tim Lucas
[Video Watchdog] 2007
Sundays with Walt and Skeezix
by Frank O. King (Ed. by Peter Maresca and Chris Ware)
[Sunday Press] 2007
It was a big year for big books. I’m still savoring All the Colors of the Dark, Tim Lucas’ 12-pound magnum opus on Italian horror director Mario Bava. Meanwhile, Sundays with Walt and Skeezix collects Frank King’s earliest Gasoline Alley Sunday strips in a full-color 22 x 16-inch edition that mimics the spread of a 1920s funny paper. It’s an eye-popping way to be introduced to a humane, generous work of American narrative art.
Jack Pendarvis’ most recent book is Your Body Is Changing, a collection of stories. He is the visiting writer-in-residence at the University of Mississippi.
Kenny Leon
Guess Who's Coming to Dinner
Stage adaptation by Todd Kreidler
[2007]
I am reading the stage adaptation of Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner by Todd Kreidler. Todd is an amazing playwright who was commissioned to write this adaptation (from the screenplay) to be mounted on Broadway in Fall 2008. I will direct the production. Guess is a universal American story, and Todd’s play expands on the poetry and humor in the screenplay. The stage allows more in-depth, detailed character development and Todd’s genius in translating the film experience into a rich, theatrical one is going to make for a moving night of theatre.
Kenny Leon—Founding Artistic Director of the True Colors Theatre Company, based in Atlanta—is a director whose experience covers classic theater, drama, comedy, musicals, musical revues and film.
Junot Diaz
Chance In Hell
by Gilbert Hernandze
[Fantagraphics] 2007
This is one of the scariest books I’ve ever read. It’s about the horrific childhood of a young orphan girl growing up in a hellish otherworldly landfill where rape and murder are quotidian—in other words, this is a story of a young girl growing up in our world, and the consequences that such a childhood has on her mature, civilized, ‘saved’ future self. Everybody claims everything is a classic—but believe you me: This is one of them. A full-on stunner.
Junot Diaz wrote the short story collection Drown and the novel The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao.
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Burning the Days
by James Salter
[Vintage] 1998
There is something old-worldly and honest and unself-conscious about this memoir. It made me nostalgic and sad; it made me nod often in recognition. I believed him. The sentences are stark, uncluttered, elegant. I saw in Salter a man who loves literature, who has a strange sort of humility and a need to lionize others, who loves Paris and New York, and who, most of all, writes of a world permeated, wonderfully, by loss.
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie is the author, most recently, of Half of a Yellow Sun, now available in paperback.
Naomi Klein
Blackwater: The Rise of the World's Most Powerful Mercenary Army
by Jeremy Scahill
[Nation Books] 2007
Jeremy Scahill’s book is the utterly gripping story of how the Bush Administration spent tens of millions of public dollars building a parallel corporate army that functions in Iraq entirely outside the law. The company is so deeply linked to far-right causes that it constitutes nothing less than a Republican Guard. When Blackwater first came out, it was barely reviewed. Fast forward a few months and suddenly the book looks prescient.
Naomi Klein is the New York Times bestselling author of The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism.
Tom Junod
What We Believe But Cannot Prove: Today's Leading Thinkers on Science in the Age of Certainty
by John Brockman
[Harper Perennial] 2006
Books lumped together in the informal genre of ‘bathroom reading’ occupy, by definition, an uncomfortable place in our literature. A book’s place next to the throne means, generally, that it is no more than the court jester of reading: not meant to be taken seriously, and not meant to be read through. But what of the bathroom book that inspires fealty, the bathroom book that one actually returns to every damned day? Such a book is What We Believe But Cannot Prove, a paperback original with a title that does absolute justice to its contents: It’s a compendium of opinions from the leading scientists and mathematicians of our day, who were asked to venture outside experimental and geometric certainties into the realms of hunch and speculation. The results are at once rigorous, exquisitely reasoned, untainted by mysticism, somewhat useless, and altogether mindblowing. No other book captures so well the inherent comedy of the life of the mind—which makes it a perfect complement to the ritual that captures the inescapable comedy of the life of the body. I read What We Believe every day, if I’m lucky, and if I’ve had my morning cup of coffee.
Tom Junod writes for Esquire.
Charles McNair
Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows
by J.K. Rowling
[Scholastic] 2007
For my page-turning pleasure, nothing else this year matched the final book of the Potter septet. Rowling never blinked with the spotlight of literary history bright in her face; she delivered a book of great heart and intelligence, and turned her 784 page block of a blockbuster’s release date into a hallowed holiday of words for... what now? Tens of millions? Hundreds? I personally declare that July 21 at my house each year shall now be Reading & Rowling Day. No work. No visitors. No baseball on TV. Just a soft chair and humankind’s greatest creation—a good book.
Charles McNair is Paste’s Books Editor, and author of Land O’ Goshen, a novel.
Dave Eggers
Life Laid Bare: The Survivors in Rwanda Speak
by Jean Hatzfeld
[Other Press] 2007
I know this sounds like hopelessly depressing material, and of course it is. But it’s also very readable, and elegantly edited, and it humanizes the witnesses to the genocide in Rwanda in a way that almost no book or film has yet. Hundreds of thousands of people read Ishmael Beah’s wonderful A Long Way Gone, which brought us into the mind and soul of a child soldier in Sierra Leone, and if you made it through that book, you will make it through Life Laid Bare, a collection of oral histories from Rwanda’s survivors. I truly believe there is no better way to understand those unspeakable months in 1994 than by hearing from the Rwandans themselves.
Dave Eggers writes, teaches, edits and publishes in San Francisco. He is co-founder of 826 Valencia, a nonprofit tutoring center and writing school for kids. His most recent novel is What Is The What: The Autobiography of Valentino Achak Deng.
