The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 
Books  |  Comedy  |  Dance  |  Museum And Gallery  |  Theater
Nominate-best-2010

Sweet reads

Books: 2007 in review
By JON GARELICK  |  December 17, 2007


TREE OF SMOKE: Even if you think you're done with Vietnam novels, Johnson's book could change your mind

Here, listed alphabetically by author, are 10 of the best works of fiction, non-fiction, and poetry the Phoenix wrote about in 2007.

Vikram Chandra | Sacred Games
Chandra, now a teacher at UC-Berkeley, takes us on a 900-plus-page portrayal of contemporary Mumbai (formerly Bombay), following the stories of, among others, a gangster whose life could be right out of the Bollywood films he loves and a divorced Sikh police detective in his mid 40s. Sacred Games alternates first-person chapters from the gangster’s point of view with third-person narratives of the detective’s investigation. But as you’d expect in a book of this length, the author is prone to digressions, and the Dickensian epic sprawl could make you feel at times that you’re holding the entire teeming city in your hands.

Mike Dash | Satan’s Circus: Murder, Vice, Police Corruption, And New York’s Trial Of The Century
“Trial of the century” might be going a bit far, and yet the 1912 murder conviction of a New York City police lieutenant deserves its innings. For one thing, he didn’t do it. But this tale of judicial miscarriage is merely the tantalizing underpinning for historian Mike Dash’s portrait of turn-of-the-century New York’s demi-monde, and the Lower West Side neighborhood known as Satan’s Circus, where gambling, prostitution, graft, and a host of ethnic rivalries worked hand-in-glove with the city’s elected establishment. Dash’s account is a tour de force of scholarship and entertaining storytelling that lets the 21st century in on the lawless details of how the 20th began. This is what history writing should be.

Denis Johnson | Tree of Smoke
Denis Johnson has given us so many maimed and suffering souls in the past 25 years, he could fill a trauma ward. Now, with this National Book Award winner, he gives us his “apocalypse now”: a big, slow-motion epic about America’s experience in Vietnam. Even if you think you’re done with Vietnam novels, Tree of Smoke could change your mind. Not only does it re-create the jungle’s ooze and the paranoid warble of a war being micro-managed by the CIA, it encapsulates the long horrible fallout in prose as good as any Johnson has written.

Norman Mailer | The Castle in the Forest
Having taken on such larger-than-life figures as Marilyn Monroe, Gary Gilmore, Pablo Picasso, and Jesus Christ, Norman Mailer, in his last published book before his death at 84 on November 10, turned to Adolf Hitler. But he takes his subject only up to the age of 13. We learn how Hitler’s beloved mother cleaned his asshole, how he organized war games with the local kids, how he was initiated into something dank and demonic by a hermit in the woods, how his experiments in masturbation inspired his toothbrush moustache. The theories of Good and Evil, God and Satan, history and fiction, don’t always convince, but the Mittel-Europäisch melodrama, with its Grimm-like uncanniness and the author’s rollicking, ribald, grave-reeking voice, does. Would that he had lived to write the sequel.

1  |  2  |  3  |   next >
Related: Holy spirit of the saxophone, Denis Johnson’s war, Mixed book bag, More more >
  Topics: Books , Media, Jesus Christ, Books,  More more >
  • Share:
  • Share this entry with Facebook
  • Share this entry with Digg
  • Share this entry with Delicious
  • RSS feed
  • Email this article to a friend
  • Print this article
HTML Prohibited
Add Comment

ARTICLES BY JON GARELICK
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   MYRA MELFORD’S BE BREAD | THE WHOLE TREE GONE  |  February 02, 2010
    Few jazz players and composers can bring as broad a vocabulary to a single piece as pianist Myra Melford.
  •   REVIEW: CAROLINA CHOCOLATE DROPS AT SOMERVILLE THEATRE  |  January 29, 2010
    The Carolina Chocolate Drops introduced the penultimate song of their Saturday night Somerville Theatre show as from 2001, "which is about 100 years ago in pop music."
  •   NO IDENTITY CRISIS  |  January 25, 2010
    If great art and great artists are supposed to contain multitudes, then in music, at least, pianists have the edge: 10 fingers theoretically capable of 10 different simultaneous paths for the music to take. Of course, it's not that simple.
  •   MOSTLY OTHER PEOPLE DO THE KILLING | FORTY FORT  |  January 21, 2010
    On their fourth CD, the celebrated young jazz quartet with the indie-rock name continue their audacious updating of the genre's old-school avant-garde.
  •   FUSIONISTS  |  January 12, 2010
    Nobody likes labels — except maybe critics. And we all want to live by Duke Ellington's measure of quality: beyond category. Beyond names and borders, that is, in a post-racial society. And yet, the word "fusion" — at least in music — has a pejorative connotation, suggesting bland pastiche and commercial opportunism.

 See all articles by: JON GARELICK

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed 



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2010 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group