I've always loved to read, a proverbial bookworm.
When I was young, I was a voracious reader, consuming several books a week.
(Over one memorable weekend, I read 7 books.
All light novels, admittedly, but full novels nonetheless.)
Then came marriage, children and a demanding career.
My reading tapered off until all I could manage was much closer to 7 books for an entire year.
I donated the several hundreds of books I had accumulated to the local library,
keeping one small bookcase of favorites.
(This description excludes my three-plus bookcases of technical material,
most of it tied to my profession,
some of it leftover texts from university courses,
but with a substantial contribution reflecting my overall interests in mathematics and science.)
Several years ago, I started writing again, and this rekindled my love of reading.
What follows is a list of what I have been reading recently, seasons in chronological order by year and season, starting from that summer.
The current season is at the bottom.
Summer 2001 / Fall 2001
D.H. LawrenceLady Chatterley's Lover
J.D. SalingerThe Catcher in the Rye
Orson Scott CardEnder's Game
Jane AustenPride and Prejudice
Emily BronteWuthering Heights
Anais NinHenry & June
Nathaniel HawthorneThe Scarlet Letter
D.H. LawrenceSons and Lovers
Nathaniel HawthorneThe House of the Seven Gables
Henry JamesThe Wings of the Dove
Myla GoldbergBee Season
Melissa EtheridgeThe Truth Is...
Henry MillerTropic of Cancer
Stephen KingOn Writing
Betsy LernerThe Forest for the Trees
Anais NinLittle Birds
I started writing Unpack My Heart in the late spring of 2001.
In making time for my writing, I also again found time for reading; I read more books in those
following two seasons than I had in the previous two years.
A pair of the books was directly related to my
new interest in writing. One was the autobiography of my favorite musical artist.
Beyond the serendipitous element that I enjoy in my selections, there were two themes
manifest in my choices.
The first theme was a consequence of my catching Henry & June on some movie channel or other.
I had somehow or other neglected to read these notorious works in my younger years and felt I needed to "catch up".
Subsequently, I read a number of the "classic" erotic novels, including works by Miller and Nin.
These selections were interspersed with a second theme: 19th century classics by women or by men with sensitivity to the feminine.
Winter 2001 / Spring 2002
Alan S. KesslerNight Screams
Alison BechdelThe Complete Dykes To Watch Out For, Volume 1
Nanci LittleFirst Resort
John UpdikeGertrude and Claudius
Nanci LittleThin Fire
Nanci LittleThe Grass Widow
Rita Mae BrownSix of One
Anne Lamottbird by bird
Patricia T. O'ConnerWords Fail Me
Anne Kent RushThe Back Rub Book
Steve Capelli and Michel Van WeldenMassage for Dummies
Tom ClancySubmarine
Lucinda LidellThe Book of Massage
Claire Maxwell-HudsonThe Complete Book of Massage
Stephan BodianMeditation for Dummies
Kate BornsteinGender Outlaw
Pema ChodonThe Places That Scare You
Joan Budilovsky and Eve AdamsonThe Complete Idiot's Guide to Massage
Joan Budilovsky and Eve AdamsonThe Complete Idiot's Guide to Meditation
Three themes dominated that winter and into the following spring: more books on writing, stories touching on broader views of sexuality, and massage/meditation.
The lesnovs and the book on gender issues were all suggestions from my dear friend Carol,
with whom I had reconnected with after a lapse of some 25 years.
She suggested several because they are good books in their own right (including one of her favorite authors) but also because of the characters in my novel, a mixture of gay, bi & trans folk.
My interest in back rubs lead to massage and from there to meditation and Buddhism.
The continued interest in writing should be self-evident.
Summer 2002 / Fall 2002
Sharon SalzbergLovingkindness
James RogersThe Dictionary of Clichés
Ernest HemingwayThe Sun Also Rises
Jean KleinThe Ease of Being
Constance HaleSin and Syntax
Helen Hunt JacksonRamona
Ernest HemingwayA Farewell to Arms
Carl G. Jung (Ed.) Man And His Symbols
Eugen HerrigelZen in the Art of Archery
A.E. Van VogtThe War Against the Rull
Lloyd Biggle, JrAll the Colors of Darkness
Poul AndersonThe Enemy Stars
Poul AndersonThe Star Fox
John Keir CrossThe Angry Planet
Carl SaganContact
Isaac AsimovThe Naked Sun
Arthur C. ClarkeA Fall of Moondust
Michael ChrichtonThe Andromeda Strain
Daniel GolemanEmotional Intelligence
Robert A. HeinleinThe Cat Who Walked Through Walls
Sue MillerThe World Below
I was on sabbatical from work for the summer (eight full weeks) and I had two objectives: type up what novel material I had into
a manuscript (it had been written strictly in longhand) and to completely unwind and enjoy my first summer off since college.
Toward that latter end, I indulged in some nostalgia. I read a box full of musty and yellowing science fiction books that I had
bought for $0.25 a-piece at a clearance sale held by my home-time library.
The two minor themes otherwise in play were philosophy and psychology.
And, of course, more about writing.
Winter 2002 / Spring 2003
Stephanie MarstonIf Not Now, When?
Martha BeckFinding Your Own North Star
Antoine De Saint ExuperyNight Flight
Bertolt BrechtGalileo
Robert BoltA Man For All Seasons
Renni Browne & Dave KingSelf-Editing for Fiction Writers
Tom StoppardRosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead
Carol GilliganIn A Different Voice
Shunryu SuzukiNot Always So
Gail SheehyPassages
Daniel J. LevinsonThe Season's of a Man's Life
Gail SheehyUnderstanding Men's Passages
I rather more consciously was reading about life-transitions and adult psychological development.
I had realized that I was, and had been for some time, in the midst of what is commonly termed a mid-life crisis.
Several of the selections were recommendations from another friend of mine from college whom I
had also reconnected with; he was having a similar experience.
Summer 2003
Miguel de Cervantes SaavedraDon Quixote
Bill WalshLapsing Into a Comma
John SteinbeckOf Mice and Men
Nicholas EvansThe Horse Whisperer
Thomas MooreCare of the Soul
D.H. LawrenceWomen in Love
Hermann HesseThe Glass Bead Game
Immanuel KantProlegomena to Any Future Metaphysics
Bertrand RussellThe Problems of Philosophy
Zane GreyBetty Zane
Zane GreyThe Spirit of the Border
Zane GreyThe Last Trail
Jack KerouacOn the Road
Robert A. HeinleinThe Worlds of Robert A. Heinlein
Stephen HawkingA Brief History of Time
Nicholas SparksNights in Rodanthe
Jude DeverauxThe Summerhouse
Dorothea Benton FrankSullivan's Island
Alexei PanshinHeinlein in Dimension
William GibsonNeuromancer
William GibsonCount Zero
William GibsonBurning Chrome
William GibsonMona Lisa Overdrive
William GibsonIdoru
I started the summer by forcing myself to sit down and read Don
Quixote, a book I had bought in college but never read, and
discovered that I rather liked it! At the midpoint, I took time-out
for the guilty pleasure of re-reading the only Zane Grey I owned, a gift from my mother.
This was as relief from the heavier philosophy that immediately preceded.
I ended the summer by stuffing myself with Gibson:
that should do me for a decade, or two.
Most of the rest was a mix of literature and what's called "summer reading".
Fall 2003
Charles H. Kepner & Benjamin B. TregoeThe New Rational Manager
Thomas GordonLeader Effectiveness Training
Ithiel de Sola PoolForecasting the Telephone: A Retrospective Technology Assessment
Michael J. C. MartinManaging Technological Innovation & Entrepreneurship
H. Skip WeitzenInfopreneurs
Tom DeMarco & Timothy ListerPeopleware
James M. Kouzes & Barry Z. PosnerCredibility
Karen Elizabeth GordonThe Deluxe Transitive Vampire
Herbert A. SimonThe Sciences of the Artificial (2nd ed.)
Billie LettsWhere the Heart Is
G. PolyaHow To Solve It
Cassandra KingThe Sunday Wife
I started the autumn revisiting books from the courses I have taken on management or technology.
I ended the season with lighter fare.
The Deluxe Transitive Vampire is a book on grammar, by the way.
Winter 2003 / Spring 2004
Ann PackerThe Dive From Clausen's Pier
John GuaspariThe Customer Connection
Sharon SalsbergFaith
Karen Elizabeth GordonThe New Well-Tempered Sentence
Joseph GoldsteinOne Dharma
Alfie KohnThe Schools Our Children Deserve
Ian McEwanAtonement
David LowenthalThe Past is a Foreign Country
Svetlana BoymThe Future of Nostalgia
John SteinbeckCannery Row
AristophanesLysistrata
I do less reading inside than outside and therefore the list for winter and early spring tends to be short.
In the mix of what I did manage, there were more books on writing and on Buddhist thought, of course.
Cannery Row was a delight!
The new themes were nostalgia and our view of the past.
The Lowentahl book I enjoyed but Boym's disappointed me.
I'd like to find a book exploring the past's view of the future.
Summer 2004
William E. BurrowsThis New Ocean
A. G. HamiltonLogic for Mathematicians
Milan KunderaThe Unbearable Lightness of Being
Thomas F. Mader & Diane C. MaderUnderstanding One Another
Ernest HemingwayThe Complete Short Stories of Ernest Hemingway
Alan Dean FosterThe Chronicles of Riddick
Mihaly CsikszentmihalyiFlow
Robert Silverberg, Ed.Invaders From Space
Lee SmithThe Last Girls
James PattersonSam's Letters to Jennifer
Rebecca WellsDivine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood
Rebecca WellsLittle Altars Everywhere
Robin LippincottOur Arcadia
Fall 2004
Peter Senge, et aliaThe Fifth Discipline Fieldbook
G. Wilson KnightThe Wheel of Fire
David BohmOn Dialogue
Janette RainwaterYou're in Charge
Robert FritzThe Path of Least Resistance
Robert FritzCreating
Daniel QuinnIshmael
Fredrich NietzscheThus Spake Zarathustra
Senge's book, yet another management guidebook, surprised me.
It was on the basis of its recommendations that I ended up reading the sequence of Bohm, Rainwater, Fritz and Quinn.
Unlike most books on management, Senge's did not automatically subscribe to the view that corporate profits were the be-all and end-all of human existence.
Ishmael is only superficially a novel, being a political/socialogical tract is its raison d'etre.
He makes for an interesting opposition to Postrel (below).
Winter 2004 / Spring 2005
Jody SeayThe Second Coming of Curly Red
Masaru EmotoThe Hidden Messages in Water
David Michaels Tom Clancey's Splinter Cell
Nevil ShuteA Town Like Alice
Virginia PostrelThe Future and Its Enemies
Fredrich NietzscheBeyond Good and Evil
Larry Downes & Chunka MuiUnleashing the Killer App
Mihaly CsikszentmihalyiThe Evolving Self
William IsaacsDialogue
James L. Framo, Timothy T. Weber, Felise B. LevineComing Home Again
What's the point of reading only authors with whom one agrees?
Occasionally, I'll read a book where, midchapter, I must put the tome down, leap to my feet and sputter awhile.
Nietzsche is such a read.
I don't like Nietzsche: he was misogynistic, racist, nationalistic, and anti-democratic.
For these attitudes, I can not -- will not -- forgive him.
Importantly, and curiously, he was not anti-Semitic.
What I do respect about the man was his courage in even attempting to forge a modern ethical philosophy.
(Of course, his modern is over a century past now, but hey...)
And the connections between Objectivists, Dynamists (The Future and Its Enemies) and Nietzschians make for interesting musings!
I also frequently sputtered about when reading The Hidden Messages in Water.
Emoto-san doesn't understand science, not deeply, and is clearly unable to see that he is crafting his own mythology rather than a more carefully objective theory.
But I admire him for his kind spirit, which shines through in his prescriptions.
(He sees them as the consequences of this theory and not as they are, the antecedents of the theories.)
With regard to Splinter Cell, let us just say that Michaels is no better a character author than Clancey.
Jody Seay's first outing, in contrast, shows much promise.