Pointless Adventures in Literature-Browsing the NYT 100 Best Books Part 2: RGBIB 424

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  • Опубліковано 6 вер 2024
  • Time for some further travels down the pointlessly yellow brick road! Watch out for potholes!

КОМЕНТАРІ • 44

  • @jobuckley2999
    @jobuckley2999 Місяць тому +6

    Seventeen minutes of I haven't read that or I didn't like that. Perfect.

    • @Scottmbradfield
      @Scottmbradfield  Місяць тому +2

      You mean "Perfectly pointless!" That's our only ambition!

  • @HideAndRead
    @HideAndRead Місяць тому +3

    I was waiting all day for this!
    A list of books I wont read.
    😅
    Edit: Persepolis was good

  • @davidramnero6126
    @davidramnero6126 Місяць тому +3

    Bolaño is fantastic. The books are loong, but the style is very light, you can just pour through it. 2666 is the masterpiece, but Savage Detectives is up there as well.

    • @Scottmbradfield
      @Scottmbradfield  Місяць тому +1

      Lots of Bolano fans have been weighing in, thanks! Stay safe in the bathtub! s

  • @phillipanthony2402
    @phillipanthony2402 Місяць тому +2

    Nothing like a nice aimless adventure in the bathtub. 2666 is a masterpiece, hands-down; the pacing is unmatched. The audiobook is very well done, as well. Cheers my friend.

    • @Scottmbradfield
      @Scottmbradfield  Місяць тому

      We strive to be aimless AND pointless! Bolano rec noted (see above and below!) s

    • @phillipanthony2402
      @phillipanthony2402 Місяць тому +1

      @@Scottmbradfield To be fair, my comment was first, haha -- Anyways, I'm putting together a Rex Stout / Ross Macdonald collection at the moment, and I'm moving away from the postmodern behemoths. But the rec for 2666 remains.
      Now that I mention it, have you read American Tabloid by James Ellroy? Or the other 2 novels in the Underworld Trilogy?
      Those 3 books put him up there with Cormac McCarthy for me as American greats. The Underworld Trilogy blew me away. Had to read the whole thing twice to really get the gist. But yeah, "Transcendent crime fiction on an epic scale." Not to mention his mastery of style, structure and voice.

    • @Scottmbradfield
      @Scottmbradfield  Місяць тому +1

      @@phillipanthony2402 Thanks for all the suds, Philip. I never got into Ellroy but love Stout and MacDonald! Have fun in the tub!

  • @pragjyotishbhuyangogoi8363
    @pragjyotishbhuyangogoi8363 Місяць тому +1

    Hey, Scott. I recently started reading a book of short stories by Kazuo Ishiguro titled 'Nocturnes' and have found the stories okay-ish. There are two movies based on his Novels which I quite like- 'Never let me go' and 'Remains of the day', though I've never read the novels.

    • @Scottmbradfield
      @Scottmbradfield  Місяць тому

      @@pragjyotishbhuyangogoi8363 Hey Prag! Always glad to find you in the bathtub! I love Remains of the Day the movie but couldn't finish the book! I don't get Ishiguro myself, but then it's my stupid bathtub!!! S

  • @aLadNamedNathan
    @aLadNamedNathan Місяць тому +1

    100. Denis Johnson: Tree of Smoke
    99. Ali Smith: How to Be Both
    98. Ann Patchett: Bel Canto
    97. Jesmyn Ward: Men We Reaped
    96. Saidiya Hartman: Wayward Lives Beautiful Experiments
    95. Hilary Mantel: Bring Up the Bodies
    94. Zadie Smith: On Beauty
    93. Emily St. John Mandel: Station Eleven
    92. Elena Ferrante: The Days of Abandonment
    91. Philip Roth: The Human Stain
    90. Viet Thanh Nguyen: The Sympathizer
    89. Hisham Matar: The Return
    88. Lydia Davis: The Collected Stories of Lydia Davis
    87. Torrey Peters: Detransition, Baby
    86. David W. Blight: Frederick Douglass
    85. George Saunders: Pastoralia
    84. Siddhartha Mukherjee: The Emperor of All Maladies
    83. Benjamin Labatut: When We Cease to Understand the World
    82. Fernanda Melchor: Hurricane Season
    81. John Jeremiah Sullivan: Pulphead
    80. Elena Ferrante: The Story of the Lost Child
    79. Lucia Berlin: A Manual for Cleaning Women
    78. Jon Fosse: Septology
    77. Tayari Jones: An American Marriage
    76. Gabrielle Zevin: Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow
    75. Mohsin Hamid: Exit West
    74. Elizabeth Strout: Olive Kitteridge
    73. Robert A. Caro: The Passage of Power
    72. Svetlana Alexievitch: Secondhand Time
    71. Tove Ditlevsen: The Copenhagen Trilogy
    70. Edward P. Jones: All Aunt Hagar’s Children
    69. Michelle Alexander: The New Jim Crow
    68. Sigrid Nunez: The Friend
    67. Andrew Solomon: Far from the Tree
    66. Justin Torres: We the Animals
    65. Philip Roth: The Plot Against America
    64. Rebecca Makkai: The Great Believers
    63. Mary Gaitskill: Veronica
    62. Ben Lerner: 10:04
    61. Barbara Kingsolver: Demon Copperhead
    60. Kiese Laymon: Heavy
    59. Jeffrey Eugenides: Middlesex
    58. Hua Hsu: Stay True
    57. Barbara Ehrenreich: Nickel and Dimed
    56. Rachel Kushner: The Flame Throwers
    55. Lawrence Wright: The Looming Tower
    54. George Saunders: Tenth of December
    53. Alice Munro: Runaway
    52. Denis Johnson: Train Dreams
    51. Kate Atkinson: Life After Life
    50. Hernan Diaz: Trust
    49. Han Kang: The Vegetarian
    48. Marjane Satrapi: Perseopolis
    47. Toni Morrison: A Mercy
    46. Donna Tartt: The Goldfinch
    45. Maggie Nelson: The Argonauts
    44. N. K. Jemisin: The Fifth Season
    43. Tony Judt: Postwar
    42. Marlon James: A Brief History of Seven Killings
    41. Claire Keegan: Small Things Like These
    40. Helen Macdonald: H Is for Hawk
    39. Jennifer Egan: A Visit from the Goon Squad
    38. Roberto Bolano: The Savage Detectives
    37. Annie Ernaux: The Years
    36. Ta-Nehisi Coates: Between the World and Me
    35. Alison Bechdel: Fun Home
    34. Claudia Rankine: Citizen
    33. Jesmyn Ward: Salvage the Bones
    32. Alan Hollinghurst: The Line of Beauty
    31. Zadie Smith: White Teeth
    30. Jesmyn Ward: Sing, Unburied, Sing
    29. Helen DeWitt: The Last Samurai
    28. David Mitchell: Cloud Atlas
    27. Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie: Americanah
    26. Ian McEwan: Atonement
    25. Adrian Nicole LeBlanc: Random Family
    24. Richard Powers: The Overstory
    23. Alice Munro: Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage
    22. Katherine Boo: Behind the Beautiful Forevers
    21. Matthew Desmond: Evicted
    20. Percival Everett: Erasure
    19. Patrick Radden Keefe: Say Nothing
    18. George Saunders: Lincoln in the Bardo
    17. Paul Beatty: The Sellout
    16. Michael Chabon: The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay
    15. Min Jin Lee: Pachinko
    14. Rachael Cusk: Outline
    13. Cormac McCarthy: The Road
    12. Joan Didion: The Year of Magical Thinking
    11. Junot Diaz: The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao
    10. Marilynne Robinson: Gilead
    9. Kazuo Ishiguro: Never Let Me Go
    8. W. G. Sebald: Austerlitz
    7. Colson Whitehead: The Underground Railroad
    6. Roberto Bolano: 2666
    5. Jonathan Franzen: The Corrections
    4. Edward P. Jones: The Known World
    3. Hilary Mantel: Wolf Hall
    2. Isabel Wilkerson: The Warmth of Other Suns
    1. Elena Ferrante: My Brilliant Friend

  • @leolamoon11
    @leolamoon11 Місяць тому +1

    Percival Everett is fantastic! Give him a shot. I won’t complain about publicity stunts to get people to purchase and read books….

    • @Scottmbradfield
      @Scottmbradfield  Місяць тому

      Cool, thanks. What sort of publicity stunts? s

  • @Altranite
    @Altranite Місяць тому +2

    “Number 69 - Stella Maris by Cormac McCarthy. Heard of it, never read it”

    • @Scottmbradfield
      @Scottmbradfield  Місяць тому +1

      Thanks, I must've missed that. Planning to read it soon tho... s

  • @reaganwiles_art
    @reaganwiles_art Місяць тому +1

    Slowly crawling my way through Bovary, caterpillar style, chewing every sentence slowly, gaining sustenance from Flaubert's faultless sensibility-no gimmicks, no cleverness or authorial intrusions; and the deep understanding of these people by their author is so sad and yet endearing. About a 3rd in. A serious author, a serious man to be sure, an artist non pareil.

    • @Scottmbradfield
      @Scottmbradfield  Місяць тому

      @@reaganwiles_art glad you’re enjoying it. One of my favorite rereads. Kind of never lets you go right into the horrors.

  • @redfordgrange3507
    @redfordgrange3507 Місяць тому +2

    The Rings of Saturn is the key Sebald work I reckon. Unoriginally.

  • @nickdolan3741
    @nickdolan3741 Місяць тому +1

    My tip re: Marilynne Robinson is to try some of her essays. She is definitely one of the finest essayists in America today. And I say this as someone who also doesn't love the novels. Her book The Death of Adam is from the 90s but if it were a bit later would definitely deserve a spot here. Also, please read Outline at some point, if only so you can read the other books in the trilogy, Transit and Kudos. You would blaze through each of those very quickly. The end of Kudos is a brilliant gut-punch, which is especially impressive since it's not plot-heavy.

    • @Scottmbradfield
      @Scottmbradfield  Місяць тому +1

      Interesting, ok. I will suspend judgment on her essays until I read them (not that I'm rushing out to get them...) s

  • @redfordgrange3507
    @redfordgrange3507 Місяць тому +1

    Also G, by Berger, although it’s been decades since I read it.

  • @redfordgrange3507
    @redfordgrange3507 Місяць тому +1

    I like the life and times of Michael K by Coetzee - a Booker winner - a lot.

    • @Scottmbradfield
      @Scottmbradfield  Місяць тому +1

      OK! I like what I've read of Coetzee, but not that one. Yet... s

  • @ToddCobler
    @ToddCobler Місяць тому

    Could never get into Gilead, but Housekeeping is one of the few novels I've read multiple times. Beautiful prose. Loved the Bill Forsyth film, as well.

  • @ReadingIDEAS.-uz9xk
    @ReadingIDEAS.-uz9xk Місяць тому +1

    Wow, I've not read any of these. Saw a bit of the film Atonement but not all of it. Watched all of the film The Last Samurai (if it is the same thing). Watch the tv series Wolf Hall. Am I missing out on reading any of these or are they, you know, 'modern?'

    • @Scottmbradfield
      @Scottmbradfield  Місяць тому

      They're all pretty modern but if you like older style books, Hollinghurst's THE LINE OF BEAUTY is quite "Jamesian" and while many don't like him, I think Franzen writes beautifully about modern cities... LAST SAMURAI the movie has nothing to do with the book! (Tho I haven't read the book.) Stay safe in the bathtub! s

  • @samferguson9171
    @samferguson9171 Місяць тому

    Sebald is brilliant - maybe too lugubrious for the bathtub? His understated sense of humor (especially in Rings of Saturn, his best book) alleviates the constant thrum of melancholy.

  • @lukestables708
    @lukestables708 Місяць тому +1

    You've read a lot more than me but I feel like we would agree about a lot. I feel these lists are just for certain types of critics. I read The Known World for a book club and just found it very boring, quite surprised it's so high but there we go. I suspect I'd find a lot of these books very boring too. My favorite would easily be The Road. I feel a lot of these books a usually just very SERIOUS with no sense of humor and terrible dialogue. I'd easily put something by Houellebecq on the list. It might not be GREAT LITERATURE but at least he has a sense of humor. Maybe you could try your own entirely subjective top 10?

    • @Scottmbradfield
      @Scottmbradfield  Місяць тому

      Yeah I think most good books are pretty easy to read and bad ones (however many you've read) aren't, and I couldn't get through na couple stories by the author of KNOWN WORLD. It's amazing how many award winning novels are pretty bad. Just enjoy yourself in the tub is all that matters, screw the NYT taste-masters! s

  • @donaldkelly3983
    @donaldkelly3983 Місяць тому +1

    Robinson isn't Raymond Chandler but I did like Housekeeping.

  • @excelsiorathletic
    @excelsiorathletic Місяць тому +1

    I watched American Fiction, enjoyed it, read, 'Erasure,' liked that too. Will read more of Everitt. Never let me go by Ishiguro is terrible: the whole premise is pointless and doesn't stand up to scrutiny. He gets evisecerated for dabbling in speculative fiction that has no basis in logic. Underground railroad is vastly overrated too: another dabble in SF . Harlem Shuffle was ok but is a Chester Himes rip off.
    Donna Tartt : yawn.
    Milkman, by Anna Burns, isn't on this list, is a book set in N.I. but is excellent. Very original.

    • @Scottmbradfield
      @Scottmbradfield  Місяць тому +1

      Yeah I sort of sympathize with those readings, not that I've read the books (and still don't want to) by Ishiguro/Whitehead...

  • @zanejennings2235
    @zanejennings2235 Місяць тому +1

    no inherent vice!

    • @Scottmbradfield
      @Scottmbradfield  Місяць тому +1

      @@zanejennings2235 I agree that’s idiotic! Or Bleeding Edge!

  • @dennisbento7440
    @dennisbento7440 Місяць тому

    Scott, the movie you were thinking of was Living-a remake of Ikiru. I thought it was good in a Masterpiece Theater sort of way. Ikiru is arguably Kurosawa's best film and one of the greatest movies ever made. Living was not in the same league although I was rooting for Bill Nighy to win the Oscar.

  • @timmclain375
    @timmclain375 Місяць тому

    At last, my status as an old fart is confirmed. I've read an even dozen of the 100. Of those I'd consider returning to The Road, Fun Home, Train Dreams, and Pulphead (fascinating essays by JJ Sullivan.) The rest barely made ripples, though The Goldfinch almost killed me. Three vaunted writers I've tried my best to appreciate -- N.K. Jemisin, David Mitchell, Jennifer Egan -- have been serious disappointments. Two of my faves from this century are story collections, Sidle Creek by Jolene McIlwain and Exhalation by the great Ted Chiang. And Rusty Brown by Chris Ware, a graphic novel that rocked me, however not for all tastes. Thanks for showing me what I've missed, and that's it's all right not to care!

  • @larrycarr4562
    @larrycarr4562 Місяць тому +1

    A less than my brilliant list to the latest century start… and not particularly interested in what’s coming. I have 900 unread books on my kindle to keep me busy in the 🛁. Predominantly cheap, good ebooks gathered in the past 10 years in Bezos bargainville from the 2nd 1/2 of the 20th century… mystery laden but some quality “lit” in the mix. My 🛁 is overflowing. I have read 15 of the NYT 💯 list, ✅ off a dozen more as want to read, but not rushing to get any… the 21st century largely unwanted in my tub, movie releases lack interest, social & comedic topics can get off my lawn, & political-environmental news makes me feel like -Lucky. But life is good, and my kindle shall see me through, cheers Scott & bathers.

    • @Scottmbradfield
      @Scottmbradfield  Місяць тому

      I think I agree-I've had enough of the 21st century to last me a lifetime... s

    • @larrycarr4562
      @larrycarr4562 Місяць тому

      I stay young in the 🛁, at 75 -I’m on the 5 year plan…I hope to re-up my membership at 80… those 900+ and growing unread ebooks in my kindle loom large ….should exceed 100 books read this year, but the mind and body both are dwindling.
      How about Biden? ‘bout time. But haven’t a clue wtf happens next… I think we’re screwed. As Pogo, famously said, we’ve met the enemy & it is us! Stay safe out west, I’m guarding the eastern flank.

    • @Scottmbradfield
      @Scottmbradfield  Місяць тому

      @@larrycarr4562 Yeah we're fucked. The same idiots who stuck us with Hilary (who lost to the worst candidate in the world, Trump,) and stuck us with Biden (who came within a few thousand votes of losing to the worst President of all time, Trump,) have now tossed out Biden so they can stick us with Harris, who can't give a speech to save her life, and she will lose to the biggest criminal in presidential history, Trump. And those idiots keep their jobs into their eighties, jeez. Yeah, build bigger bathtub! s

    • @larrycarr4562
      @larrycarr4562 Місяць тому

      @@Scottmbradfield Kamala gives me the heebie jeebies, won’t happen but I’d go with a Whitmer-Bashear ticket.