A Year in Reading: Rumaan Alam

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  • December 19, 2022

I didn’t accomplish much in 2022. I didn’t publish a book, or really very much at all—the only thing I can think of is a single book review. But I did reach my goal of reading 100 books this year, an arbitrary number that appealed for its solid roundness.

I had the great fortune of spending much of my summer by the shore, in a little town with no real diversion to speak of; we didn’t even have a television. Packing for this sojourn was fraught, the place isolated enough that if you run out of books your only recourse is a Little Free Library stuffed with waterlogged Robin Cooks.

covercovercoverAny book is a beach read if you read it at the beach. I began with Elena Ferrante’s electric The Days of Abandonment, and Gabriel Bump’s warm and funny debut Everywhere You Don’t Belong. I read Gwendoline Riley’s taut and discomfiting First Love and so loved it that I then read My Phantoms, which is probably the best contemporary novel I read in 2022.

covercovercovercovercovercovercovercovercovercovercovercoverWhen I say there was nothing to do in this little place, I’m not kidding. I tried to make each book last two days but I often failed: J. Robert Lennon’s unsettling Subdivision, Mat Johnson’s space parable Invisible Things, Yoko Tawada’s end times fable Scattered All Over the Earth, Danzy Senna’s memoir Where Did You Sleep Last Night? I read Cormac McCarthy’s The Orchard Keeper, testing my own assertion that any book can be a beach read, and Ravi Mangla’s suspenseful The Observant, and Liska Jacobs’s hilariously grotesque The Pink Hotel, Dani Shapiro’s Signal Fires, Helen Garner’s Cosmo Cosmolino, and three books by Patrick Modiano: Out of the Dark, In the Café of Lost Youth, and The Occupation Trilogy.

covercovercovercoverIt wasn’t all play and no work. Or maybe it was—I read four books because I had agreed to blurb them but that hardly counts as work: Ore Agbaje-Williams’s forthcoming novel The Three of Us, De’Shawn Charles Winslow’s forthcoming novel Decent People, a new translation of Thomas Mann’s stories by Damion Searls, and Patrick Bringley’s lovely memoir of his time as a museum guard, All the Beauty in the World: The Metropolitan Museum of Art and Me. All were superb.

covercovercovercovercovercovercovercovercoverIt’s a good thing I packed so much: Daisy Johnson’s Sisters, Percival Everett’s Wounded, Thea Astley’s Drylands, Claire Keegan’s Small Things Like These, Anita Brookner’s Altered States, Jane Smiley’s A Dangerous Business, Julia May Jonas’s Vladimir, Mark Prins’s The Latinist, Jennifer Egan’s The Invisible Circus.

covercovercovercovercovercoverI somewhat arbitrarily decided, at the start of the summer, to read more Philip Roth and so I did: The Anatomy Lesson, Nemesis, My Life as a Man, Zuckerman Unbound, and Operation Shylock, which was my favorite of the lot, playful and funny. But Roth wasn’t my summer romance; that distinction belongs to Karl Ove Knausgaard, as I listened to the entirety of My Struggle—all six deranged volumes of it. It’s a superb audiobook experience, beautifully read, very well paced, and the intimacy of that medium (a story whispered into your ear!) suits Knausgaard’s project. I listened every morning, while making beds and sweeping up sand; I listened in the afternoon, strolling along the water and listening to Karl Ove’s misadventures at a child’s birthday party, or his thoughts on Paul Celan. It’s winter now, my least favorite time of year, and I find myself wistful for the sun and the quiet of that place, all connected, in some complex way, with thoughts of Karl Ove himself, so that when I see his name, I feel a warmth on my skin, I hear the ocean in the distance.

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