Monday, March 23, 2026

The Reading Week Ahead - March 23, 2026

 Despite having seven books going last week, I still found myself in a bit of a reading slump because even though I finished one of the seven, Ben Bova’s Mars Life, I found it tough to get much into any of the other six at all. The only other one that I found consistently engaging was Ron Chernow’s 1100-page biography of Mark Twain - and I’m going to be reading that one for a few more weeks before it’s done. I find it ironic, too, that the title of the one book I abandoned for good was A Passion for Books, the essay compilation edited by Harold Rabinowitz and Rob Kaplan. 

And, I added these two:

Lawn Boy (2018) is the third novel by Jonathan Evison that I’ve read, having previously read The Revised Fundamentals of Caregiving and This Is Your Life, Harriet Chance. I’m near ninety percent of the way through Lawn Boy, but this one is not grabbing me quite the way the previous two did. I’m finding it hard (for reasons I’ll get into later) to buy-into the lawn boy character, and since he’s the main character (as well as narrator) of the book, that tiny bit of disbelief is present on every single page. That’s been a problem.

I expect that just about everyone out there is familiar with the plot of William Peter Blatty’s The Exorcist, but it’s been more than 50 years since I’ve read it or seen the movie version. While the plot is not exactly new to me, I find it interesting to see how Blatty builds the book’s tension so effectively by dropping numerous hints along the way of all the dark evilness to follow; and how explicitly he describes all the horrible things that end up happening to the young victim. I turned up my 1971 Book Club edition a couple of days ago and started turning pages. I’m still turning them.

I stalled on Sherman Alexi’s short story collection, Blasphemy, for a while after reading the fourth story in the book, one so sexually explicit that it managed to offend me even at this age. But I knew I couldn’t give up on Alexi, he’s just too good a writer to make that mistake with. I’ve since read three of the longer of the thirty-two stories in the collection, and they are all truly excellent.

I haven’t read much lately of Mere Christianity by C.S. Lewis or The Mysterious Affair at Styles by Agatha Christie but I still consider them as active reads. And then there’s Chernow’s Mark Twain - that one is starting to seem eternal.

9 comments:

  1. I know the story of The Exorcist but have never read the book or seen the movie. I wouldn't mind trying the book someday, but I think the movie would freak me out too much. ;D

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    1. The story is a shocking one, made all the more so because it’s all happening to a nine-year-old girl whose mother can only helplessly watch while her daughter is violated by a demon. I remember standing outside the theater late at night to get seating for The Exorcist when it first came out. It was quite the hit that year.

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  2. I am not much of a Twain fan but I went to a fun exhibit in NYC last winter that included his typewriter - that gave me a thrill!

    I think The Lincoln Highway was influenced by Twain, just as Towles' other books have been influenced by Fitzgerald and Tolstoy.

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    1. What do you dislike about Twain? I’m curious because I think his work can be very uneven, even within the same novel, but especially when looked at by each decade’s production. He was a real showman, and I think that sometimes had a negative effect on his writing.

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  3. Never read or saw the exorcist but I did read Jaws by Peter Benchley recently which I liked. And the movie Jaws was scary but I saw it many times. What a great cast.

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    1. I just re-watched Jaws a few days ago for the first time since it came out. I was surprised at how well it held up.

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  4. I eagerly await your thoughts about Lawn Boy. I think I might like the other two books you mentioned, The Revised Fundamentals of Caregiving and This Is Your Life, Harriet Chance. I know I looked into Evison before but I never got to the point of getting one of his books.

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    1. I’m about to sit down and write up my thoughts on Lawn Boy - and I still don’t know where I’m heading with it. Its one of those boos that have me teetering on the edge of a positive or negative opinion. Of the other two, The Revised Fundamentals of Caregiving is my favorite.

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  5. William Blatty's books are hard to put down. They will catapult any kind of slump, lol. Did you ever read the sequel to the Exorcist titled Legion? It's pretty good too. But it's been a long while since I've read either. Spooky nail-biting stuff. Keep those pages turning!

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