Thursday, May 29, 2014

Book 14: Indignation by Philip Roth

Title: Indignation
Author: Philip Roth
Length: 233 pages
Year written: 2005
Why I chose this book: I bought this book on sale when Borders went out of business. It's been laying around for a few years.

Philip Roth is old. Apparently, he's quite the productive author as well. Indignation is third novel Roth released within three consecutive years. He wrote two more in the following two years, and nearly thirty in his entire career. Though this is the first novel of his that I've read, I can bet that many of the book's themes are personal to Roth and appear across his many works.

Indignation takes place in the early 1950s during the Korean War. The main character, college freshman Marcus Messner, is Jewish and overall quite the irritable and indignant (hey!) guy. His father's paranoia about Marcus getting into trouble or getting killed drive him away mentally and eventually physically, when he transfers to an out-of-state college to avoid his dad's overbearing behavior. At his new school, he finds multiple dorm arrangements to be intolerable, and ends up living alone in the worst room on campus. On top of all of this, he goes on a date with the campus nutbag, Olivia (who is a "goddess," but sports a scar on her wrist from an unsuccessful suicide attempt). His strange, stilted relationship with her seems to govern most of his actions thereafter, and for lack of better words (and to avoid revealing too much about the plot), it all spirals downward. I was reminded of the tragic movie The Butterfly Effect (featuring cinematic genius Ashton Kutcher) — as his dad warned him, every small misstep has the potential for tragic consequences.

Roth is funny, disgusting, and powerful as a writer. I'd definitely be interested to read some of his more famed works.

Rating: 8.5/10

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Book 13: Sanshiro by Natsume Soseki

Title: Sanshiro
Author: Natsume Soseki
Length: 228 pages
Year Written: 1908
Why I chose this book: I read somewhere that Haruki Murakami is a big fan of Natsume Soseki, and I was curious to know more about my inspiration's inspiration (in fact, Murakami wrote the introduction to this version of Sanshiro).

I did it again. I read a whole book, only to realize at the end that it is the first of a series. First of all, this book took me just over a month to finish (life has been a bit hectic). Secondly, the plot was so subtle that I can't really remember what happened. This 50 book challenge has really been a challenge of a new kind. Let me try to feel my way through this.

Sanshiro is about a 23-year-old guy who's just left a small community college in his rural hometown for a big university in Tokyo. He is the equivalent of a kid who's spent his whole life in Oklahoma and then heads for NYU. He is confused by the banter, the customs, and especially the women (this was written during a time, apparently, when women were like toy poodles and had to be escorted everywhere). He develops an intense crush on a woman named Mineko, who is coy, reserved, and yet bolder than any chick Sanshiro's ever encountered. The pace of the book is very slow, and really seems to spare no expense on setting the scene of Sanshiro's maiden voyage. Compared to Murakami's writing (which came several decades later), Soseki can seem a bit dry, but it does not deduct from the beauty and elegance of his storytelling technique. This book required a bit of patience, but at the least it was an ethereal experience.

Rating: 8/10