Dr. Metablog

Dr. Metablog is the nom de blague of Vivian de St. Vrain, the pen name of a resident of the mountain west who writes about language, books, politics, or whatever else comes to mind. Under the name Otto Onions (Oh NIGH uns), Vivian de St. Vrain is the author of “The Big Book of False Etymologies” (Oxford, 1978) and, writing as Amber Feldhammer, is editor of the classic anthology of confessional poetry, “My Underwear” (Virago, 1997).

What I Read: 2021

I decided to keep a record of the books that I read this past 2021. It's in roughly chronological order, starting just about a year ago. It's an eclectic bunch; after years of being forced to be a specialist I've reverted to my natural dilettantism. I've probably forgotten some books, both my record-keeping and my memory not so good as before.

Here they come (long drumroll):  three novels by Lewis Grassic Gibbon: Sunset Song, Cloud Howe, and Grey Granite (the first is a masterpiece); Derek Wilson,  Charlemagne: a Biography; Park Honan, Christopher Marlowe, Poet and Spy; John Heisey, A Checklist of American Coverlet Weavers; H. L. Allen, American Coverlets of the Nineteenth Century (taught me a lot about Jacquard coverlets); Eric Sloane, Museum of Early American Tools and A Reverence for Wood; Rinker Buck, The Oregon Trail, Edna O'Brien, In the Forest (a forceful novel); Evelyn Piper, Bunny Lake is Missing (which I read because I was curious about the film of the same name); Patrick Svensson, The Book of Eels; Isabel Wilkerson, The Warmth of Other Suns (a long important book which would have been even better if it had been edited to 2/3's its size); Benjamin Kilham, In the Company of Bears (a fascinating book set just south of us in Lyme, NH); James Essinger, Jacquard's Web, Steven Vogel, Why the Wheel is Round (which it isn't; it's circular); Elizabeth Barber, Women's Work, the First 20,000 Years; J D Schein, Coverlets and the Spirit of America; Anne Tyler, A Spool of Blue Thread (by one of the most reliable of contemporary novelists); Elizabeth Barber, Prehistoric Textiles (a fascinating story); Thomas Stumpf, South St. Louis Boy, v. ii, by my graduate school classmate and friend; William Dean Howells, The Rise of Silas Lapham, Andy Horowitz, Katrina (sad story of governmental and bureaucratic incompetence in New Orleans); Sarah M. Broom, The Yellow House; George Eliot, Middlemarch (what, fifth time?  or sixth?); Kathryn Hughes, George Eliot, the Last Victorian; Shakespeare, The Winter's Tale; Charles Dickens, Great Expectations (another perennial favorite); John Le Carre, The Mission Song; Jane Austen, Persuasion;  Klyza and Trombulak, The Story of Vermont (summer reading); Harry Reed, Harry, Scenes from my Life (another autobiography by a friend); Shaun O'Connell, Assembled Pieces, Selected Writings; Alice Munro, Carried Away; David Lee, Chainsaws, A History; Seymour Gitin, The Road Taken (reminiscences of one of Lynn's relatives-in-law); Louis Menand, Cold War (all 800 pages!); Lisa Genova, Remember;  Mark Harris, Mike Nichols; H. L. Gates, The Black Church; Thomas Hardy, The Woodlanders (twice); Madalaine Bohme, Ancient Bones; Simon Schama, The Story of the Jews (to 1492); John McWhorter, Nine Nasty Words; two remarkable novels by Shirley Hazzard: The Transit of Venus, and The Great Fire (read twice); Valerie Trouet, Tree Story; James Shapiro, Shakespeare in a Divided America; Betty Smith, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn; Joshua Hammer, The Bad-Ass Librarians of Timbuktu; Jacqueline Woodson, Another Brooklyn; Paule Marshall, Brown Girl, Brownstones; Paula Fox, Desperate Characters.

I've started on a reading project for 2022: books about Brooklyn. Will I persist? The crowd is in an uproar, waiting to see how it goes. Look for a report same time, same station, next year.

One response to “What I Read: 2021”

  1. Books about Brooklyn: Give Elizabeth Strout a try, Pulitzer Prize author of MY NAME IS LUCY BARTON, OLIVE KITTERIDGE, THE BURGESS BOYS, etc.

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