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Tony Miksak's
Words on Books
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Nothing to Read

To order any of the books mentioned in this article, see the links at the bottom of this page.

It's the end of the seventh year, post millennium. This somehow should be a big deal, and it feels like we're waiting for something, we don't know what, but whatever is coming may not be all that good.

And I've got nothing to read.

Well, in fact I have dozens of books to read, but I don't want to finish any of them. People in this state of mind wander into bookstores looking for something, they don't know what. Nothing satisfies.

On a different day, perhaps a Saturday in spring with fresh air flowing and new birds singing, any book would be irresistible.

Today it's dead of winter, end of year, and the mind will not be amused.

Why did I think Gunpowder would be interesting? Did I hope to get a bang out of The History of the Explosive that Changed the World? Why aren't I reading it? I should be reading it.

By the bedside I've nurtured a growing pile of unfinished books. On top is the book I mentioned last week, Richard Dawkins The God Delusion, and on the bottom is Mark Twain, The Eight Wilderness-Discovery Books, all 1,026 pages of them. The cover is tucked in at page 19. Apparently, I didn't get very far into the wilderness.

There he is, waiting for me, John Muir in the high Sierras, with his dog and his blanket and his old-fashioned boots.

Practicing: A Musician's Return to Music by Glenn Kurtz. I stopped reading this one on page 34: "Music seemed to offer me an irresistible exchange. If I worked, if I practiced and practiced, then ever-new worlds of sound, of feeling, would open, worlds that made visceral sense to me, though they seemed closed to others." Too much work. Next?

Far Afield: A Sportswriting Odyssey by S. L. Price sits in the pile with an old note on the cover reading "Tony?"

A friendly sales person handed it to me with the explanation, "I carried this around because I thought you might like to read it. You like sports, don't you?"

Fair Play for Frogs by Jerome R. Waldie and Nestle J. Frobish. I bought this book because I heard one of the authors interviewed by Barry Vogel on Radio Curious. I got as far as the Introduction on that one, too.

Words Without Borders: The World Through the Eyes of Writers, An Anthology sounded interesting at the time. Sacred Hunger by Barry Unsworth is here because the book group from which I have resigned planned to discuss it. Stanley by Tim Jeal, The Impossible Life of Africa's Greatest Explorer safaried me as far as page 27: "While at Brynford, John had read Robert Browning's recently published poem 'Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came' and had been overwhelmed by it."

I fell asleep right there.

Hack: How I Stopped Worrying About What To Do with My Life and Started Driving a Yellow Cab by Melissa Plaut found its way bedside many months ago. I never opened it. One day, one day...

A friend of mine loaned me Linked by Albert-Laslo Barabasi, How Everything Is Connected to Everything Else and What It Means for Business, Science, and Everyday Life.

Linked is a sleeping pill. It has graphs and tables and mathematical formulae. Yes, it is interesting, especially all that stuff about degrees of separation. Hard science puts me to sleep. Am I a bad person?

Indeed, I have nothing to read, even though I have lots to read, if you know what I mean. Suggestions would be welcome at this point. Let me know what you've enjoyed reading this year. Maybe I can share your suggestions with other readers. Maybe I'll try to read your book.

You never know.

Aired Sunday December 30, 2007 at 10:55 am and Wednesday January 2, 2008 at 1:00 pm


Orders/Information:

Gunpowder: Alchemy, Bombards, and Pyrotechnics: The History of the Explosive That Changed the World by Jack Kelly. Basic Books paperback $14.95. ISBN 0465037224.

The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins. Mariner Books paperback $15.95. ISBN 0618918248.

The Eight Wilderness-Discovery Books by Mark Twain. Mountaineers Press hardcover $38.00. ISBN 089886335X.

Practicing: A Musician's Return to Music by Glenn Kurtz. Knopf hardcover $23.00. ISBN 030726615X. (Paperback due August, 2008.)

Far Afield: A Sportswriting Odyssey by S. L. Price. Lyons Press hardcover $24.95. ISBN 1599211440.

Out of print but available on the Internet: Fair Play for Frogs: The Waldie-Frobish Papers by Jerome R. Waldie and Nestle J. Frobish. Harcourt hardcover $7.95 (original price in 1977). ISBN 0151299617.

Words Without Borders: The World Through the Eyes of Writers: An Anthology edited by Samantha Schnee et al., Anchor Books paperback $14.95. ISBN 1400079756.

Sacred Hunger by Barry Unsworth. Norton paperback $14.95. ISBN 0393311147.

Stanley: The Impossible Life of Africa's Greatest Explorerby Tim Jeal. Yale University Press hardcover $38.00. ISBN 0300126255.

Hack: How I Stopped Worrying about What to Do with My Life and Started Driving a Yellow Cab by Melissa Plaut. Villard Books hardcover $21.95. ISBN 1400066042. (Paperback due June, 2008.)

Linked: How Everything Is Connected to Everything Else and What It Means for Business, Science, and Everyday Life by Albert-Laszlo Barabasi. Plume Books paperback $15.00. ISBN 0452284392.

(Your book suggestion here?)


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