January 21

Decades: Compiling the Ultimate Library with Reshma Ruia

On 20 January 2021 the very first Decades selections were shared here at Grab This Book. I would like to welcome everyone to the Decades Year Two – I can hardly believe it. My heartfelt thanks to all the readers and contributors who have made this weekly reading temptation such a joy to be part of.

A very quick recap. The Decades Library is intended to be a collection of the very best books which a reader may wish to browse. Every week a new guest curator joins me and they add new books to the shelves of the Decades Library. When making their selections I ask they follow two simple rules:

1- Pick Any Five Books
2 – You May Only Select One Book Per Decade From Five Consecutive Decades.

Taking us into year two is Reshma Ruia who kindly volunteered to take on challenge of selecting five favourite books and didn’t grumble about my rules being too difficult or randomly flex the rules….Hello to certain Year One curators – you know who you are!

 

Reshma Ruia is an award winning author and poet. The Sunday Times described her first novel, Something Black in the Lentil Soup, as ‘a gem of straight-faced comedy.’ Her second novel manuscript, A Mouthful of Silence, was shortlisted for the SI Leeds Literary Prize. It will be published as Still Lives in June 2022. Still Lives is a novel about betrayal, belonging and love and is set in Manchester.

Her short stories and poems have appeared in British and International anthologies and magazines and commissioned for BBC Radio 4. Her poetry collection, A Dinner Party in the Home Counties, won the 2019 Debut Word Masala Award. A poem from the collection, Mrs Basu leaves town, will feature in the Edexcel A Level syllabus. Her short story collection, Mrs Pinto Drives to Happiness came out in October 2021. The collection has received praise from Colm Toibin, Irenson Okojie and Catherine Menon among others.

Reshma has a PhD and Masters in Creative Writing from Manchester University (Distinction) as well as a Bachelor, and Masters’ Degree with Distinction from the London School of Economics. She is the co-founder of The Whole Kahani-a writers’ collective of British South Asian writers, fiction editor of Jaggery magazine and book reviewer for Words of Colour. Born in India, brought up in Italy and now living in England, her writing explores the preoccupations of those who possess a multiple sense of belonging.

Website: www.reshmaruia.com

Twitter: @RESHMARUIA

Her books are available on her website, on Amazon, Waterstones, Foyles and Daunt bookshops. Better still, you can order them directly from the publisher.

A Dinner Party in the Home Counties can be ordered on https://www.amazon.co.uk/Dinner-Party-Home-Counties/dp/0956084060/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2E2Y2LM695OBU&keywords=A+Dinner+party+in+the+Home+Counties&qid=1641667365&sprefix=a+dinner+party+in+the+home+counties%2Caps%2C78&sr=8-

Mrs Pinto Drives to Happiness can be ordered from:   http://dahlia-books.kong365.com/en-gb/collections/our-books/products/mrs-pinto-drives-to-happiness

Still Lives will be out in June 2022. It can be pre-ordered on: https://renardpress.com/books/still-lives/

 

DECADES

 

I was born in a small town in India on the border with Nepal called Motihari; incidentally, George Orwell’s birthplace. I spent my early years in Bihar, then Delhi and moved to Rome, Italy when I was eleven. I have lived, studied and worked in London, Paris and now Manchester. My book choices reflect my peripatetic and multicultural upbringing.

 

1950s: Mrs Bridge, the debut novel by American author Evan S. Connell, published in 1959. The novel, set between the two world wars is a searing exploration of suburban domesticity and marriage. Written in pared back language with brief chapters that seem like contemporary vignettes, Connell explores the prejudices and strait-laced morals of a middle class Kentucky housewife. Mrs Bridge’s failure to connect with her husband or her children, and her private anguish at not fulfilling her potential are described without judgement. Ten years later Connell published Mr. Bridge (1969), which relates the same story from the point of view of the husband.

“some people go skimming over the years of existence to sink gently into a placid grave, ignorant of life to the last, without ever having been made to see all it may contain..’’

― Evan S. Connell, Mrs. Bridge

 

 

 

1960s: Stoner, written by another American writer, John Williams, sank into relative obscurity before being re-discovered some years back. The novel is set in a small campus town where Stoner, the eponymous main protagonist of the novel, overcomes his rural, impoverished roots to carve an academic career in a mid-league University. Stoner is quietly dignified in the pursuit of his love of literature and rises above the petty squabbling and rivalries of his colleagues. He marries badly, is estranged from his daughter, experiences love briefly in an extra marital affair and dies, unrecognised and yet his life feels like a Greek tragedy.  It is a deeply melancholic novel.

“You must remember what you are and what you have chosen to become, and the significance of what you are doing. There are wars and defeats and victories of the human race that are not military and that are not recorded in the annals of history.’’

_ John Williams, Stoner

 

1970s: One Hundred Years of Solitude published in English in 1970. Written by the Colombian writer Gabriel García Márquez, it is a multi-generational novel about the Buendía family whose trials and tribulations echo the turbulent history of Latin America. The book is set in the mythical town of Macondo. Over the course of a century, Macondo is the scene of natural catastrophes, civil wars, and magical events; it is ultimately destroyed after the last Buendía is born with a pig’s tail, as prophesied by a manuscript that generations of Buendías tried to decipher. The book is an exciting blend of political satire with magic realism, fantasy and comic interludes.

“…time was not passing…it was turning in a circle…”

― Gabriel García Márquez, One Hundred Years of Solitude

 

 

1980S: Midnight’s Children written by Salman Rushdie and published in 1981. The book is an allegorical novel set in post-colonial India centring on the inextricably linked fates of those who were born in 1947 within the first hour of independence from Great Britain. Saleem Sinai, the central protagonist, is a character with many unusual powers, especially a psychic connection to all the other children born as he was, at the very moment of modern India’s birth. Saleem’s life is a whirlwind of disasters and triumphs that mirror the course of modern India. The novel experiments with the English language, using Indian idioms and vernacular and combining socio-political critique of India with flashes of absurdist magic realism. It went on to win the Booker Prize in 1981 and the Booker of the Booker subsequently.

“I learned: the first lesson of my life: nobody can face the world with his eyes open all the time.”

― Salman Rushdie, Midnight’s Children

 

 

1990s: Interpreter of Maladies is a collection of nine short stories by the Indian/America author of Jhumpa Lahiri published in 1999. Awarded the Pulitzer Prize for fiction, these short stories explore the diasporic life of the Indian immigrant in America as they negotiate ways to assimilate and belong without letting go of the past. Lahiri writes eloquently about the immigrant experience and about the divide between cultures, examining both the difficulties and joys of assimilation. The title story describes an unlikely rapport between an Indian tour guide and an American born Indian woman who is visiting India as a tourist. Each story is a sensitive exploration of loneliness, isolation and loss, set during the Seventies and Eighties- a period when India and Indians were still regarded as ‘exotic’ by mainstream America.

 

“Still, there are times I am bewildered by each mile I have travelled, each meal I have eaten, each person I have known, each room in which I have slept. ‘’

― Jhumpa Lahiri, Interpreter of Maladies

 

I love the sound of Mrs Bridge, particularly in light of the author returning to the story to revisit from a second viewpoint. I’d like to thank Reshma for these brilliant recommendations – discovering new authors, not previously on my radar, has been one of my favourite parts of the Decades Library.

The prospect of someone discovering new books to love keeps this feature running week after week. Before I even publish this post I have achieved my goal – I have made a purchase this morning.

 

DECADES WILL RETURN

 

 

 

 

 

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May 28

Decades: Compliling the Ultimate Library with Nicolás Obregón

This is Decades.  Each week I invite a guest to select five books which they would want to see included in my Ultimate Library – the aim is to curate a new Library from the starting point of zero books and have the shelves bursting with terrific titles.

My guests are given two rules (which are often very well stretched as you will soon see):

Select ANY five books.
You may only select one book per decade pubished over five consecutive decades.

This is the sixteenth Decades post – all the books which have been selected thus far can be seen here: https://grabthisbook.net/?p=5113

If you are wondering why my introduction is shorter than usual it is because my guest this week has done all the heavy lifting for me. An utterly absorbing sequence of selections from Nicolás Obregón – I yield the floor.

DECADES

Right, then. Hello. Who am I? Well, I’m Nicolás—pronounced Nico-lass, but everyone just calls me Nic anyway. I’m a British/Spanish dual-national, born in London, and I grew up between the two capitals. (My father is Spanish, my mother is French). In 2016, I moved to Los Angeles and have been grinning up at palm trees and wearing loud shirts ever since. I recently became an American citizen meaning that my passport draw now looks like it belongs to Jason Bourne.

More importantly, I’m the author of the Inspector Iwata series, a trilogy about a lonely Japanese detective—Blue Light Yokohama (2017), Sins As Scarlet (2018), Unknown Male (2019). Jeffery Deaver has called one of my books a masterpiece, while AJ Finn was left awestruck. A short story I wrote, Colibrí, appeared in the anthology BOTH SIDES: Stories from the Border (2020), which was recently nominated for an Anthony Award. Colibrí was labelled by Publishers Weekly as a poignant standout.

As for what I’m working on now, I’m at the business end of a third draft for my fourth (and first non-Iwata) book for Penguin/Michael Joseph, which I can’t talk too much about. I’m also in negotiations re: a true crime podcast that, you guessed it, I can’t say too much about. Finally, seeing as I live in Los Angeles, I plan to embrace the cliché and write a screenplay at the end of the year. But that’s enough about me, on to the good stuff!

 

Now, initially, I tried to pick favourite books for Decades. But every time I thought I’d whittled my list down to five, I’d suddenly doubt everything—a deer caught in the headlights of all I was overlooking. Instead, I’ve gone for five books that have influenced me. And by that, I mean: books that have shaped me first as a reader, and then as an author. Without them, it’s not that I wouldn’t be half the writer I am today. It’s that I simply wouldn’t be one.

My thanks to Gordon for letting me submit myself to the delicious torture of picking five books across five consecutive decades.

 

Links to social media:

Twitter @NicObregon

Instagram @Obregonbooks

Facebook @Obregonbooks

www.nicolasobregon.com

 

2010s—Patria by Fernando Aramburu

As a young child, I remember sleeping next to my father and being woken by a cataclysmic bang. He pulled me under the bed, swearing under his breath in Spanish: sons of bitches, sons of bitches. One of his friends growing up was murdered by ETA, a car bomb intended for the military father. To my dad, every ETA bomb, every gunshot, every death threat or extortion attempt was like a personal affront. His outrage, perhaps, helped him cope with the dread. But this didn’t make him unique.

Growing up in Spain, spending my summers and winters there, it seemed that almost everyone was touched in some way by the decades-long terror campaign—third degree skin burns of separation. This is the backdrop to Aramburu’s 2016 novel that would become both a literary sensation in Spain and throughout Europe, (35th print run, translated into over 30 languages), as well as the recent well-received HBO adaptation.

Murder, (in the form of a compelling whodunit), friendship, loyalty, grief, ostracism, letting sleeping dogs lie vs staying silent in the face of barbarity—all these things unfurl through the 600+ page Homeric saga that is Patria (Homeland). But Aramburu, who has lived in Germany since the mid 80s, harnesses these broad themes and lion-tames them into two 50s-something women: Bittori and Miren. (Incidentally, their portrayal by Elena Irureta and Ane Gabarain is a work of art, I would urge readers to seek out the HBO series for these two alone). Because while Patria contains terrorists and bombs and gunshots, it’s first and foremost a story about victimhood and the human cost of violence. This is, inexplicably, so often overlooked in fiction, horror and bloodshed favoured over the tricky business of rebuilding lives and trying to exist with trauma. Aramburu’s novel understands that the wounds of this violence are still fresh, and the victims of it were everywhere (alongside ETA’s terror campaign, GAL also operated in Spain and Southern France—a death squad made up of former police officers who are, to this day, officially unofficial).

Now that said, I might have made it sound like Patria is a depressing slog. It’s quite the opposite. The Basque Country is almost a character in its own right, its language and culture showcased beautifully for what it is—one of the most distinctive and unique regions on earth. But like One Hundred Years of Solitude, this novel is also about life itself. There are relationships, betrayals, triumphs, gossiping, and jokes that had me laughing out loud. Milestones in Spanish history are also convincingly overlaid throughout the narrative.

What Aramburu attempts could read like a telenovela on paper. And yet what he pulls is a graceful and heartfelt rendering of the past and the present that, while concerning fictional characters, very much feels like non.

 

2000s—Le Corbeau (The French Film Guides) by Judith Mayne

This is cheating a little because the book is largely an excuse for me to talk about the film. But the rules do state that any book is acceptable so onward we march. Credit where it’s due, Judith Mayne’s work deftly analyses Le Corbeau’s deeply compelling darknesses and guides the reader through its manifold possible interpretations—the film standing, as it does, as one of the most important pieces in the cinema of paradox.

While nominally about a small French town gripped in the hysteria of a spate of poison pen letters (actually based on a true story in 1920s rural France), Henri-Georges Clouzot is not really examining these events. He is, instead, telling a story about the German occupation of France while exploring the mechanics of informing on your neighbour. It’s particularly fascinating considering he produced the movie for Continental Films, founded by Goebbels himself. After the war, Clouzot would be banned for life from the industry as a Nazi collaborator, though this would be overturned in favour of a two-year interdiction after much campaigning by the likes of Sartre.

This despite the fact Goebbels himself would telegram Clouzot after viewing the film, furious that, while Le Corbeau was a work of genius, it was subversive, and it might make France think for itself. You are paid to make empty films, Goebbels pointedly reminded him.

Upon its release, the Catholics would decry it for its sexual themes and open depiction of abortion, while the Communists would reject Le Corbeau for its unheroic characterisation of France. As Bertrand Tavernier would say in a 2002 interview, Clouzot made a film about the truth. But sometimes, some things are too true. Though banned for decades, its cultural impact remains undeniable. To this day, the French word corbeau—raven—is understood to mean someone who writes anonymous letters with intended malfeasance.

I first saw the film with my French grandmother, whose own mother was a member of the French Resistance throughout the war. On her birthday each year she would receive a letter from the President of the Republic in thanks. (“He won’t bloody leave me alone,” she would always say with a wink). They were both from a tiny village near the Dordogne and the politics and cruelties of small-town gossip are absolutely captured in Le Corbeau.

It’s a sumptuous film, full of hypocrisy, intrigue, and sexuality. Each shot is a charcoal sketch, and each character, no matter how minor, feels like a real person. But the reason this story will always stay with me is because it is, I think, my first memory of the figure of a detective.

As the plot races towards its noir-ish (before noir existed) conclusion and the identity of the true author of the poison pen letters is revealed, two doctors size each other up in an empty classroom (next door to where the local prosecutor is testing the handwriting of the 18 remaining suspects).

Doctor Rémy Germain, smooth-talking and handsome, philosophically clashes with the wily and colourful old psychiatrist, Doctor Michel Vorzet, whose young wife the former is having an affair with.

Vile beast?” Vorzet smiles enigmatically. “But I see one in the mirror each morning, alongside an angel. You are amazing—you think that people are all good, or all bad. You think that good is the light, and that evil is the darkness…” Vorzet swings the lightbulb in front of his face, like a pendulum. “But where is the darkness? Where is the light…?” he falls into shadow, then back into light as his knowing smile is illuminated. “And do you know which side you’re on?

This was not the moment I first knew I wanted to write books. But it is certainly the moment that I knew I wanted to write detective stories.

 

1990s—Out by Natsuo Kirino

Sometimes you love something so much it’s hard to elucidate. For me, Out is one such love. Originally published in 1997, the novel was translated in 2004 and promptly nominated for an Edgar (Kirino would lose out to Rankin’s Resurrection Men). While Rebus has obviously stood the test of time, for me, Out is one of the finest mystery novels—not just of 2004/1997—but of the entire modern canon. (Even the title of the book is a work of economical genius).

Sparse, poetic, kinetic, darkly hilarious, and utterly claustrophobic, it’s a masterclass in the crafting of domestic mystery and how one split second can change lives forever. On paper, it’s about four women working nights at a factory, the murder of an abusive husband in self-defence, and divvying up insurance money in exchange for sworn silence. Taken in isolation, that could sound like an episode of The Bill. But through it, Kirino trains her large magnifying glass on jealousy, loneliness, class structure, lust, misogyny, hatred and, ultimately, the desperation of what it is to be a woman in an empty suburban existence — all of it set against a backdrop of Japan’s economic downturn. Of course, these aren’t small themes. Yet one of Kirino’s many gifts is her ability to effortlessly condense the macro to the micro, entire existences understood in two lines:

When stones lying warm in the sun were turned over, they exposed the cold, damp earth underneath; and that was where Masako had burrowed deep. There was no trace of warmth in this earth, yet for a bug curled up tight, it was a peaceful and familiar world.”

As a 19-year-old dreaming about my own novel one day, Kirino lit a fire in the dark for me. Not just in terms of her exquisitely realised Tokyo. But her ability to birth characters with secrets and fears—inner worlds that threaten to spill out into the external.

 

1980s—The Silence of the Lambs by Thomas Harris

This entry was a hair’s breadth from being Gorky Park by Martin Cruz Smith, particularly as a shining exemplar of an author writing outside of their native geography and culture which, later on, would be so important to me.

But in the end, those bloody lambs just won’t shut up. The way I see it, there are crime novels and then there’s the Silence of the Lambs. In Clarice Starling, Harris created one of the most interesting heroes in any genre, with an irresistible character arc that would give rise to a million scriptwriting workshops (and, in the collective psyche, pair liver with a nice Chianti forevermore).

Now, before I go on to glorify the book, I do want to say that I am, of course, aware of the controversy surrounding its depiction of transgenderism. While poorly-equipped to contribute to that conversation, I do feel it’s important Hannibal Lecter explicitly states in the story that Wild Bill is not, in fact, transgender. Still, I absolutely understand that any representation of transgenderism as some kind of vaudevillian freakshow is less than helpful, particularly if platformed by powerful voices. Still, if intent matters at all, I don’t believe Harris ever set out to do such a thing. With all that said, I’m yet to hear of a single detractor of the book for its quality.

It is, simply put, a masterwork. And while this taut, elegant novel spills over with suspense and narrative chicanery, it’s the characters that really set it apart. Unforgettable is an over-used word but the much-loved psychological chess game between Starling and the charming but diabolical archfiend, Hannibal Lecter, will live forever. So gripping is their relationship that it renders the actual antagonist of the story, Buffalo Bill, almost secondary.

As early as page 4, we are being warned about the nightmare to come. After all, Starling first hears of Lecter in the form of a warning:

“…It’s the kind of curiosity that makes a snake look in a bird’s nest… We both know that in interviews you have to back-and-forth a little but tell him no specifics. Starling, you do not want any of your personal facts inside his head.

And, just like that, we know this is precisely what’s going to happen.

For my money, it should be a staple on creative writing courses everywhere. But as a young aspiring writer, what really illuminated me was the way Harris binds together the steadily rising stakes in the external world, with internal one building inside Clarice also.

 

1970s—One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez

Originally published in 1967, Gabo’s magnum opus was translated into English three years later. (I’m aware I’m doing the opposite of what I did with Out—sorry for playing fast and loose with the rules, Gordon!)

Just over a decade on, he’d be receiving the Nobel Prize, firmly established as a living, breathing Latin American Tolstoy or Cervantes. Today, Cien años de soledad stands as The White Album of magical realism, the very paragon of Latin American literature in its entirety, having sold some 45 million copies—almost the entire population of Colombia. Not for nothing does he grace the 50,000-peso bank note.

Studied, adored, and devoured all over the world, so many have written so richly on this magical (wink) book, it almost felt like too obvious a choice. But this being a list of books that influenced me, I simply cannot disregard Cien años. Of course, Gabo’s art for treating the supernatural as mundane is widely-studied but picking this book up at 13 or 14 years of age, I was utterly bewitched. Macondo, no matter what happens there, always feels real and lived in. Omens, curses, prophecies—all of it somehow feels possible in the world García Márquez weaves together. But beyond the what, is the how. Never before had I been so mesmerised by words. His use of language is always elemental, even for a simple background banality. Consider this description of a priest collecting for a new church:

He went everywhere begging alms with a copper dish. They gave him a large amount, but he wanted more, because the church had to have a bell that would raise up the drowned to the surface of the water. He pleaded so much he lost his voice. His bones began to fill with words.”

It’s been said before but this book is life itself. As William Kennedy put it in a New York Times review: This is the first piece of literature since the Book of Genesis that should be required reading for the entire human race.

I encourage anyone reading this, whatever their stance on magical realism, to throw themselves at this book if they’re yet to experience it. I promise you, by the time you get to the end, you’ll scarcely believe it’s over. But long after it is, the words of Márquez will fill your bones too.

 

 

Each of my guests brings something new to the Library but I have been blown away by this contribution.  My thanks to Nic for these wonderul selections.  Every week I run one of these posts I wonder which books missed out – this week I don’t need to wonder as Nic has also shared some titles which narrowly missed out.  These don’t get into the Library this week, maybe they will be selcted by someone else!

Honourable mentions from the cutting room floor:
Richard Yates — Eleven Kinds of Loneliness
Philip K. Dick — Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?
Truman Capote — In Cold Blood

David Mitchell — number9dream

Martin Cruz Smith — Gorky Park
Juan Pablo Villalobos — Down the Rabbit Hole
Anaïs Nin — Delta of Venus
Carson McCullers — The Heart is a Lonely Hunter
Junot Díaz — Drown

Ryu Murakami — In the Miso Soup

Haruki Murakami — Hardboiled Wonderland and the End of the World

John Hersey — Hiroshima
Donna Tartt — The Secret History

DECADES WILL RETURN

 

 

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