August 20

Decades: Compiling The Ultimate Library with Steven Kedie

My favourite part of the week is when I get to put together the new Decades post. It is my hope that someone will read the selections my guest has made and will discover a new book which they too will fall in love with.

If you have not encountered Decades before today then let me quickly bring you up to speed.  Each week I invite a guest to join me and I ask them which five books they want to see added to my Decades Library.  I started with zero books back in January and now we have had 150 recommendations – each of which can be seen here: https://uk.bookshop.org/shop/GrabThisBookDecades

Choosing any five books just seemed a bit too easy so I added an extra rule which all my guests need to give a little more thought to – you can only select one book per decade over five consecutive decades.  This week we have the 1970s to 2010’s and a great mix of titles too.

My guest this week is no stranger to the fun which accompanies reaching out to new guests and assembling a weekly blog post. However, Steven Kedie is very much a fan of music and the Eight Albums website sees his guests chatting through their eight favourite albums. It is one of my favourite weekly reads and I have discovered some great music through following recommendations I found there.

Time to hand over to Steven to introduce his selections:

 

Steven Kedie is a writer and co-founder of music website www.eightalbums.co.uk, who lives in Manchester with his wife and two children. He spends far too much time running, writing, talking about albums and trying to complete television. All of which get in the way of his football watching habit.

His debut novel, Suburb, due to be re-released this year, tells the story of Tom Fray, a young man at a crossroads in his life – not a kid anymore, not quite an adult yet – who returns home from university to find no-one has changed but him. When he starts an affair with a neighbour, his simple plan to leave home and travel becomes a lot more complicated.

Steven will release a second novel this autumn. Running and Jumping tells the story of British Olympian Adam Lowe and his rivalry with American athlete Chris Madison. The novel deals with the question: What if you had your greatest ever day and still didn’t win?
Details of his writing can be found at www.stevenkedie.com

 

DECADES

I’m a man of simple pleasures. I like books, music, films and sport. So, when I started thinking about my Decades library choices, I thought I should try and incorporate those things into my selections.
I’ve come up with the below.

All The Presidents Men, Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein — 1974

 

The story of Watergate, told by the men who wrote the stories of Watergate in the Washington Post. The book is more than the source material of the fantastic film that followed. Watergate defined America. And this book – inside account of what it was like to break the biggest political scandal in American history – captures that moment brilliantly.

 

 

 

 

Knots and Crosses, Ian Rankin— 1987

Ian Rankin’s Rebus series has been part of almost my entire reading life. I can remember the first time I picked up a copy of a Rebus novel, Strip Jack (fourth in the series), at a friend’s house. His mum was reading it. I read the first chapter and was hooked. I had to force myself not to read on because I’m someone who has to start a series at the beginning.

My girlfriend (now wife) was working at the Trafford Centre, so that night, I went early to pick her up so I could go to the bookshop and buy the first Rebus book. I bought the first three. I clearly remember being sat in the car reading Knots and Crosses and instantly knowing I was a fan. As I type these words, eighteen or so years later, the book I’m currently reading is A Song for the Dark Times, the latest in the series.

I run a music website called eightalbums.co.uk (along with a friend, Matt) where we ask people to write about eight albums that are important to them and why. Early on in the site’s life, I approached Ian Rankin, thinking, given his well-documented love of music (a thread that runs through the Rebus novels), he would enjoy the site as a reader. He actually offered to take part and submitted his own Eight Albums entry. The day his entry went out was absolutely fantastic for me personally, with one of my heroes taking part in something I’d created. It also opened up the site to a whole new audience of people. I’ll forever be grateful to Ian for that.

Anyway, back to the book. I’ve chosen Knots and Crosses because it’s the first in the series. And you should always start with the first one.

 

Friday Night Lights, H.G. Bissinger — 1990

I love books by people who are embedded within a team. There are some fantastic examples over the years: John Feinstein’s A Season on the Brink and the wonderful The Miracle of St Anthony’s by Adrian Wojnarowski, about basketball coach Bob Hurley and his life-transforming high school team.

Sport can often be a vehicle to tell us about the people involved or the society in which they exist. Friday Night Lights is the best example of this concept. Bissinger, a journalist from Philadelphia, wanted to explore the idea of a high school sports team keeping a town together. When he decided to move to a town and experience life through a team, (to quote the opening page): “… all roads led to West Texas, to a town called Odessa.” The town’s high school American Football team, the Permian Panthers, played in front of 20,000 fans on a Friday night.

Through this lens, Bissinger tells the story of a town whose best years seem behind it, of race and class, of what happens when society makes heroes and celebrities of kids (most players are 17), and what the fall out of that is when they stop playing.

 

The Last Party: Britpop, Blair and the Demise of English Rock, John Harris — 2003

A book from the noughties that is very much the story of the nineties.

I turned 8 thirteen days into 1990 and 18 thirteen days after the decade ended. The ‘90s defines who I am as a person. When it comes to the music I love, no era has influenced me more. Britpop has soundtracked much of my life.

Harris’ book covers a period from ‘94 to ‘98 and looks at Britpop and the rise of Tony Blair and the Labour Party as they went on to win the 1997 General Election. Although the book talks about what a great period it was, it isn’t always a love-in of the era. It doesn’t always look back on it as fondly as my hazy memory does. But it’s a book that documents the merging of music and politics, the change in the country, the excitement and feelings of hope at that time. Definitely (Maybe) one that should be in the Decades library.

 

 

The Force, Don Winslow — 2017

This decade’s choice took a lot of consideration. Eight Albums and my own writing has allowed me into a world of creative people I didn’t ever think possible at the start of the 2010. I’ve got friends who have written fantastic books and I probably should’ve done them solid and picked one and talked about how great they are. But the truth is when I think about my last ten years of reading, there’s only one name I kept coming back to: Don Winslow.

I once joked when I grow up, I want to be Don Winslow. I wasn’t really joking. The man writes powerful, thought provoking, entertaining crime books. His Cartel trilogy is an important work that tells the story of the US’s failed War on Drugs. His Boone Daniels series is one of the most entertaining private detective series I’ve read. I could go on. But don’t worry, I won’t.

I’ve chosen 2017’s The Force because it’s a standalone novel. It tells the story of Denny Malone, a star New York detective, and his crew of men who police the streets of New York with their own rules and style. Denny’s story is one of corruption: his own and that of the city he works. It’s a superb piece of crime fiction. Don Winslow is a unique and interesting voice and if someone came to the Decades library looking for a new crime writer to read, The Force would be a fantastic introduction to Winslow and what he’s all about.

 

I think this week Steven has captured exactly what I love about Decades. There is a “how was this one not mentioned before now?” an “I’ve never heard of that one (but it sounds like something I would love)” and even an “ah yes – that’s a belter, I am glad it was picked.”  Terrific choices.

Eight Albums is one of my favourite reads each week. Just looking at the recent guests I spot Tony Kent, Morgan Cry and Simon Bewick – it is my hope I can also persuade all three to take on Decades one day too!

 

DECADES WILL RETURN

 

 

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April 16

Decades – Compiling the Ultimate Library with “Raven Crime Reads”

Another week and I bring word of a new booklover who is prepared to don the Hat of the Curator and help me select five books which are to be added to my Ulimate Library.

What is this Library?  Back in January I had the thought – if I were to build a library from scratch, no books on any shelves, which books would I need to ensure were included? Clearly this was too much of a challenge to take on personally so I started inviting guests to join me and I asked each of them to select five books to include in the Library.

Two Rules:
1 – Select Five Books
2 – Guests can only pick one book per decade over five consecutive decades.

 

My guest today is Raven from Raven Crime Reads. Raven and I began blogging around the same time and I often find when I am honoured with a review quote inside a book that Raven is also quoted in that same book.  We share a mutual appreciation of many authors.  However, as her selections will reveal, Raven reads a much broader range than I and she has a fabulous eye for choosing a brilliant story. There are many bookbloggers sharing the booklove but Raven’s reviews are ones I will always make time to read – I am thrilled she agreed to join me for this challenge.

I always invite my guests to introduce themselves so I hand over to Raven (who seemingly has another name too) and ask her to introduce her books.

Decades

Hi, this is Jackie aka Raven Crime Reads , a blog that I started 8 years ago following a very inspiring conversation at a crime festival with two excellent crime writers, William Ryan and William Shaw- my favourite type of bills. I’m also known for my poor jokes. I am a judge for the annual Petrona Award for Scandinavian Crime Fiction with the wonderful Kat Hall (Mrs. Peabody Investigates ) and Karen Meek (Euro Crime) focusing on one of the most popular sub genres of crime, and something that sings to the depths of my dark soul. Crikey. And swiftly moving on, although my blog is centred on my love of crime fiction, I read widely from fiction to horror to science to nature to history to whatever…

I’m now based in the South West of England after living up and down the country, and have been a bookseller with Waterstones for almost twenty years, which runs alongside my role as a commercial expert and buyer for stores in my local region. I have a BA in English Literature and an MA in British and American Fiction, and like many other people my love of reading was fostered from an early age. With my particular background, and books having been a bit of a luxury, libraries were an absolute lifeline as a book obsessed little kid. The holy grail of my adult library card at the age of ten, and having a voracious reader for a mum all the way, held me in good stead for my very book-related journey through life.

For more of my bookish ramblings and other nonsense, you can find me on Twitter @ravencrime, and for far more sensible book stuff at GoodReads too.

And so to Gordon’s challenge, and what a challenge, to find five favourite reads in five consecutive decades. I think I severely under-estimated this difficulty of this, as many scribblings, post-its and Googled publication dates later, it has taken some time to get this final five nailed down. But here they are in all their glory, beginning in the 1970’s through to the 2010s…

1970-1979 Maj Sjöwall &  Per Wahlöö – The Abominable Man (1971)

To be honest, I could have picked any one of the ten book series collectively titled The Story Of A Crime by the superb writing partnership of Maj Sjöwall &  Per Wahlöö, but have always loved this one in particular for the amount of peril their chief protagonist, homicide detective Martin Beck finds himself in. Undoubtedly this series of books, aside from influencing generations of Scandinavian crime writers, kickstarted my passion for the genre. With its emphasis on the socio-political climate of the time, the relatively pared down writing style and the accomplished structuring of compelling police procedurals, this series stood above its time, and ignited the passion for Scandinavian crime that has remained with me ever since.

 

 

 

1980- 1989 Mark Timlin- A Good Year For The Roses (1988)

Strongly influenced by Ed McBain, Raymond Chandler and Ross MacDonald, Mark Timlin’s series featuring  Nick Sharman, a former Met police officer turned private investigator in South London, was one I raced through in my late teens- A Good Year For The Roses is the first of the series. Having already read McBain’s 87th Precinct series (which also remains a favourite) I loved the grimy noir feeling of Timlin’s writing, and his maverick protagonist operating outside of the law, and still enjoy the ‘private investigation’ genre for the freedom it gives crime writers to place their characters in more physical and moral danger. Sharman was an exemplar of this, with his fair share of violent encounters , a cynical wit, and his somewhat fluid moral approach to the cases he undertakes. Timlin’s writing style made a big impression for me, and still influences the kind of noir detective/P.I. fiction that I tend to read- real punchy noir. There is also a strong influence of music in his books which has stayed with me, and has led to my love of writers like Doug Johnstone for example who punctuates his books with musical references.

 

 

1990- 1999 Tim O’Brien- The Things They Carried (1990)

My interest in the war genre really started growing up in the naval city of Portsmouth in the 1980’s, where the Falklands conflict was particularly resonant in our consciousness. On the back of this I started to develop an interest in the Vietnam War, as another singularly pointless war, and read books such as Dispatches by Michael Herr and A Rumor Of War by Philip Caputo, and then started looking for fiction, stumbling upon Tim O’Brien, whose books just blew me away, later forming the basis for my MA dissertation. O’Brien’s books based on his own tours in Vietnam, have a layer of sensitivity that underpin his always central theme of the human heart under stress. This book in particular, really emphasises the emotional lives of men in conflict, and the need to hold on to the human connection, be it with their fellow soldiers or those they left behind. He never shirks from the violence and pity of war, but digs down beneath the surface of these soldiers’ lives as they fight to survive, mixing brutal reality with a real sense of poignancy.

 

2000-2009 Don Winslow- The Power Of The Dog (2005)

You know that phrase about never meeting your heroes? Well try writing about them! I absolutely adore Don Winslow’s writing and will only add my still small voice to the overwhelming acclaim that this book has gathered from writers and readers alike. With six years research and being the first instalment of a sweeping trilogy (preceeding The Cartel and The Border) The Power Of The Dog is hands down one of, if not the best, thriller I have ever read. Spanning decades and continents, Winslow’s astute, visceral, authentic, multi-voiced and utterly compelling book focussing on the DEA’S war on drugs, is a masterclass in thriller writing, with no let up of this in the other two books in the trilogy. Rooted in the harsh reality of the international drug trade, with such close adherance to socio-economic and political fact, and peopled with a cast of characters that will anger, enthral or tap your empathy in equal measure, this is an absolute classic.

 

 

2010-2019 Antonin Varenne- Retribution Road (2014)

And the difficulty of this Decades challenge continues trying to pick a standout book from recent years, but this is it. To be quite honest, I could have picked any of Varenne’s books for this as Bed Of Nails, Loser’s Corner, or Equator (the follow up to Retribution Road) are superb too, but Retribution Road it is.  A sprawling 700+ page novel structured in three parts, with a real feeling of a classic quest or odyssey, the book follows Arthur Bowman, a former soldier, an avenging angel and pioneer from conflict in Burma, to Victorian London and finally to the swathes of unconquered territory in America in the grip of the gold rush. A complex and challenging novel it encompasses themes of war, revenge, violence, human connection, religion, compassion and emotional strife, and supported with the beautifully naturalistic writing of landscape (another of my passions) throughout I was just entranced by this. Not an easy read but so, so worth it…

 

 

 

My deepest thanks to Raven for finding time to share her selections. Once again I do feel a degree of guilt over the angst I caused.  But come back in a fortnight when my guest, who will take Decades into the month of May, told me she had found the challenge “EASY” and had no problems making her choices!

As you may have noticed I like to gauge the depth of my reading knowledge by measuring how many of the selections I have previously read.  Raven has left me red-faced this week as I have not read any of her choices but I have since sneakily added two of the five to my TBR.

 

If you want to visit the Library and see all the selections made to date then you need to click here: https://grabthisbook.net/?p=5113

DECADES WILL RETURN

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