Friday, November 1, 2024

Non-Fiction November: My Year (so far)

 

Time to look over my year in non-fiction! It's hosted by Based on a True Story. My non-fiction reading was about 20% of what I've read, which is a fairly normal number for me, maybe a little on the high side.

Themes and Highlights

Mostly books about books, which is pretty common for me. Some standouts:
 
Brian Dillon. Dillon is a contempoary Irish writer. I read two by him this year: Objects in This Mirror and Affinities. Affinities is his most recent (2023); Objects in This Mirror is from ten years ago. Dillon, in addition to writing about books, was the editor at an art magazine, and both these books have a lot of art criticism.
 
Guy Davenport. Davenport was a poet and classicist who died in 2005. His book The Geography of the Imagination, which first came out in 1981, was reissued earlier this year with an introduction by John Jeremiah Sullivan. It was pretty great.

Carlo Levi. An Italian writer and painter. Christ Stopped at Eboli is his memoir of internal exile during the Fascist era. After protesting against Mussolini, he was sent to live among the peasants in Basilicata. I read it just before going to Italy in the spring. (Yay!)

Konstantin Stanislavski. My Life in Art is the autobiography of the great Russian theatre director from 1924. It was my spin book for the first Classics Club spin of the year.

Mary Wisniewski. Algren: A Life is a biography of the great (but depressing!) Chicago writer best known for The Man With a Golden Arm, made into a movie with Frank Sinatra in the title role. A well-done biography.
 
A link to all the non-fiction that made it on to the blog this year.

Upcoming

Well, I have several books from the library which I hope to read soon, but the next non-fiction book will be Nelson Algren's Chicago: City on the Make, which I managed to find while on a recent trip to Chicago. It's also novella-length. 😉

Which look fun to you?

9 comments:

  1. Adding the Carlo Levi to my wishlist - thanks - maybe not fun as such, but it certainly sounds fascinating (although I won't be able to finish it off with a trip to Italy at this time).

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  2. I've been trying to read at least one nonfiction book a month this year, because I do really enjoy it. Happy Nonfiction November. :D

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    1. I never manage to read as much non-fiction as I do fiction, but I usually enjoy them when I do.

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  3. Thanks for sharing your nonfiction reading with us, Reese. I just finished the Carlo Levi title---I finally found a library copy. I will look for Chicago: City on the Make, too.

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    1. Hope you enjoyed the Levi. Not sure I want to be thinking about fascism this morning...

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  4. Hmmmm, I'd like to choose Irish authors more often, so I would take a peek at Dillon's writing, even though I don't read a lot about art really (it seems more prominent in some of the films I watch than in books, which I guess makes ense?). So that's my pick. Curious to see if your other library loans tend towards biography too.

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    1. My non-fiction tends to be biography or history as a rule. Especially just now I can't bear to think about anything contemporary...

      If you haven't read Dillon, I really think you'd like him. You'd probably want to try Suppose A Sentence or Essayism, though, which are fascinatingly engaged with the personal essay tradition--Francis Bacon or Montaigne through Elizabeth Hardwick or Susan Sontag, and up to the present.

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  5. I hope you enjoy Chicago: City on the Make. I will add it to my pile!

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    1. I just finished it. It was pretty good! Blog post coming soon.

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