Tuesday, December 11, 2007

stains


This is the second of Roth's book's I've read. Well, actually, I didn't read the other one--i listened to the author read it to me as an audio book while on tour in 2006. This was The Plot Against America, which i thought was quite good.
I picked up The Human Stain at Baltimore Book Thing and started it last week, but in typical Roth style--the story never stops...it's as though he can't take a breath. There's no way to stop reading the story, because i felt as though i was constantly being pounded by the next thing. This is how i read this book: as though i was yelling at myself, through a loud, riotous storm: "Whatever you do, don't stop reading!!!"

I would force myself to a stopping point and finally take a breath. Honestly, I felt as though I were holding it through whole sections. The story is interesting and good--the characters well developed and sympathetic. (Except for the French professor--she was tiresome.) But as I sit here, with only 20 pages to go--and actual work to do today, I realized: I have to stop. I can read the rest during lunch!! But then I wondered--why...why am I so enjoying just getting through this one? I think it's because reading is a true passion and I've been substituting it with movies for the past few years. I abandoned reading because I had read a series of books that were just so disappointing and I got turned off from the act of it.

I want to be turned back on. I used to read like a crazy person. Recommend your favorite book to me. This is reading weather, after all.

4 comments:

Geoff said...

Roth does unless a tsunami of good prose, doesn't he?

I recommend the "Trilogy" Sabbath's Theater, American Pastoral, and I Married a Communist (though I don't remember their precise order). They rule, and have the same compelling force, and at least one character in common.

oylenshpeegul said...

I recommend A Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole, if you haven't read it already (or, even if you have! :). Having lived in New Orleans, you might enjoy it even more than I, although I rather doubt it...I loved it!

Jason R. Tippitt said...

Totally off the subject here: I'd just about give body parts for a chance to play some of your music on my podcast. Are you your record label, or is there someone with your record label I could contact to get permission, if you'd be up for that?

(I first heard you on Baltimore Unsigned's podcast, and loved what I heard. You'd fit in very well with a lot of the other musicians I play.)

Unknown said...

You've probably already read it, but one of my all time favorites is The Secret History by Donna Tartt. I've actually read it more than once and loved it every time.