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Current (2004): THE NEW LIFE Orhan Pamuk
BEYOND BELIEF Elaine Pagels
Recent (2003) THE WINTER QUEEN Boris Akunin
THE CAVE Jose Saramago
SENTIMENTAL EDUCATION Gustave Flaubert
GATHERING THE NEXT GENERATION Essays on the Formation and Ministry of GenX Priests Nathan Humphrey, Ed.
DISGRACE J. M. Coetzee
THE ROAD TO SAN GIOVANNI Italo Calvino (re-reading)
THE DA VINCI CODE Dan Brown
GOD'S BANQUET: Food in Classical Arabic Literature Geert Jan Van Gelder
BRANCHING STREAMS FLOW IN THE DARKNESS Shunryu Suzuki
LIVING BUDDHA, LIVING CHRIST Thich Naht Hanh
THE COURAGE TO BE Paul Tillich
PICASSO AND MATISSE Francoise Gilot
MATISSE AND PICASSO Yves-Alain Bois
PICASSO: LITHOGRAPHS Felix Reuse, Henri Duchamps, Erich Franz, Ulrike Gauss
THE NEW CHINESE PAINTING Joan Lebold Cohen
ANIL'S GHOST Michael Ondaatje
50 POEMS Boris Pasternak
Polish Poetry: ELEGY FOR THE DEPARTURE and other poems REPORT FROM THE BESIEGED CITY SELECTED POEMS THE BARBARIAN IN THE GARDEN Zbigniew Herbert
THEY CAME TO SEE A POET Tadeusz Rozewicz
VIEW WITH A GRAIN OF SAND, Selected Poems Wislawa Szymborska
NEW AND COLLECTED POEMS 1931-2001 THE CAPTIVE MIND (essays) Czeslaw Milosz
TWO CITIES MYSTICISM FOR BEGINNERS Adam Zagajewski
TALKING TO MY BODY Anna Swir (Swirszcynska)
THE MATURE LAUREL: Essays on Modern Polish Poetry Adam Czerniawski, editor
MAGNETIC POLES: Essays on Modern polish and Comparative Literature George Gomori
POLISH POETRY OF THE LAST TWO DECADES OF COMMUNIST RULE An anthology edited by Stanislaw Baranczek and Clare Cavanaugh
2003 MORAL GRANDEUR AND SPIRITUAL AUDACITY Abraham Joshua Heschel
FLOWER HERDING ON MOUNT MONADNOCK Galway Kinnell
RECITATIVE James Merrill
BEGIN AGAIN, New and Collected Poems Grace Paley
CONJECTURES OF A GUILTY BYSTANDER Thomas Merton
CRESCENT Diana Abu-Jaber
PORTS OF CALL BALTHAZAR'S ODYSSEY THE ROCK OF TANIOS Amin Maalouf
TAKING RESPONSIBILITY: Comparative Perspectives Winston Davis, ed.
An academic but enlightening series of essays by different authors that look at the origins of the concept of responsibility (response – ability) in Western democracy, and how responsibility is interpreted, or not, in non-Western societies.
PORTRAIT IN SEPIA Isabel Allende
I keep waiting for her to write a book that is up to the stature of House of the Spirits; this one doesn’t make it – Allende is so deft it feels like she’s just tossing off page after page -- but it’s entertaining and has an occasional beautiful descriptive passage.
WHAT DO WE KNOW: Poems and Prose Poems Mary Oliver
I generally admire Oliver very much, and if that’s like admitting you like a modern-day Frost, well, OK. There are some gems here; I like the prose poems less than the others.
SILK DRAGON (Chinese poetry) Arthur Sze (trans.)
Wonderful poems, an overview of the tradition.
Drinking Wine (II) T’ao Ch’ien
I built my house near where others live but without noise of horse or carriage. You ask, how can this be? A distant mind leaves the earth around it. I pick chrysanthemums below the eastern fence, then gaze at mountains to the south. The mountain air is fine at sunset, flying birds go back in flocks. In this there is a truth; I wish to tell you, but lose the words.
BAROMETER RISING Hugh MacLennan
A romance set against WWI and the Halifax explosion of December 6, 1917. I’m trying to read more Canadian fiction… was more fascinated by the history in the book than by the novel’s storyline, which was a little too pat; MacLennan’s style, though, is impressive for a first novel.
RAY OF DARKNESS Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury
Dense essays that reveal Willams’ complicated thinking and theology; often very moving and profound. I’m banking on him to help rescue the Anglican church and mainline Christianity from the conservatives and from a long period of attrition due to the failure to speak to modernity, and was happy with what I found here.
THE MANTLE OF THE PROPHET: RELIGION AND POLITICS IN IRAN Roy Mottahedeh
Amazing book that weaves together an inside look at the rigorous education of Shiite clerics and the history of Iran. One of my top choices for this year.
THE NOISE OF TIME Osip Mandelstam
Mandelstam was one of the greatest Russian poets of the early 20th centuty; he died in one of Stalin’s death camps. This is a book of his luminous and sometimes difficult prose, of which the best are the title essay, a memoir of childhood in St. Petersburg; and Journey to Armenia.
THE RAFT IS NOT THE SHORE Conversations with Thich Naht Hahn and Daniel Berrigan
ONE, NO ONE & ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND Luigi Pirandello
The Italian existentialist proves he is everyone in the title…
HAMLET William Shakespeare
Well, it’s something to read this again. A different book now -- and it has to be the source of more quotations in the English language than anything escept the Bible. About one per page. I was dumbfounded.
MALLOY, MALONE DIES (parts 1&2 of Beckett’s Trilogy) Samuel Beckett
Strangely comforting. Yikes, what does that say about me? Beckett rises to the top of my esteem.
HENRY IV PART 1 RICHARD I RICHARD II William Shakespeare
I haven’t read all the histories and after re-reading Richard II thought I’d start back at the beginning. Immediately bailed on King John, loved Richard I and Bolingbroke’s ascent to the throne, then got bogged down – bored? -- in Henry IV Part II. But the above are compelling and fresh: how little has changed in the lives of kings.
ISRAEL/PALESTINE: HOW TO END THE WAR OF 1948 Tanya Reinhart
Reinhart is right. Is anybody listening?
ULYSSES James Joyce
No, I didn’t finish but I want to list it so I can whine. Bailed out for the second time in my life, this time on page 247, and on the recommendation of a friend picked up Beckett’s Trilogy and the Pirandello instead. A good move, in my estimation, but you can argue of course…
COOKBOOKS! A friend asked, "What do you read for fun?" Well, actually, I read all of the above for pleasure, if not exactly "fun". But to relax, I read (and use)... cookbooks. The best new acquisitions of 2003:
A TASTE OF PERSIA: An Introduction to Persian Cooking Najmieh K. Batmanglij
Everything I've made out of this book so far has been delicious, and has even met with the approval of my Iranian friend who is the best cook on the planet. Especially good are the many recipes for khoresh, or various Persian stews with vegetables and meat.
THE MOROCCAN COLLECTION Hilaire Walden
Beautiful pictures and easy-to-follow recipes for tagines, couscous, chermoula...
AUTHENTIC VIETNAMESE COOKING Corinne Trang
Authentic means not only terrific recipes for lemongrass chicken and summer rolls, but also for frogs legs, snails, and a treatise on dogs...
THE BOOK OF JEWISH FOOD: An Odyssey from Samarkand to New York Claudia Roden
An astounding book, divided into Ashkenazi and Sephardic sections, that not only gives family recipes with many variations, but tells the story of the people and their migrations. Winner of the James Beard cookbook of the year award, deservedly so. This is really a history of the Jewish people told through food.
FLATBREADS AND FLAVORS Jeffrey Alford and Naomi Duguid
Wonderful book with recipes for breads and stews and other foods to go with them, as well as stories of the couple's world travels. The recipe for Afghani bread is worth the price of the whole book.
A NEW BOOK OF MIDDLE EASTERN FOOD Claudia Roden
An update of Claudia Roden's previous Penguin classic; the indispensible "Joy of Cooking" for Middle Eastern food.
2002 (notes to come)
THE CAIRO TRILOGY Naguib Mahfouz
RELIGION AND COMMUNITY Keith Ward
SEASON OF MIGRATION TO THE NORTH Tayib Saleh
THE NAUTICAL CHART THE FENCING MASTER Arturo Perez-Reverte
ZEN AND THE ART OF KNITTING Bernadette Murphy
NINE PARTS OF DESIRE: The Hidden World of Islamic Women Geraldine Brooks
MY NAME IS RED Orhan Pamuk
ARABY Eric Ormsby
INTERPRETER OF MALADIES Jhumpa Lahiri
WHY CHRISTIANITY MUST CHANGE OR DIE John Shelby Spong
THE COST OF DISCIPLESHIP Dietrich Bonhoeffer
WE BELONG TO THE LAND Elias Chacour
GRANTA 77 / SPRING 2002 What We Think of America
A CONFESSION AND OTHER RELIGIOUS WRITINGS Leo Tolstoy
WAITING Ha Jin
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