Book Talk

Oh, no, it’s another meme! No worries, though — this one is pretty short, only five questions about books…

  1. You’’re stuck in Fahrenheit 451. Which book would you be?
    Two things before I answer: first, in case you don’t know, Fahrenheit 451 is a Ray Bradbury novel set in a near-future world where books are illegal and firemen are duty-bound to destroy them whenever any are found. Second, I would guess, given the premise of F451, that this question really ought to be “which book would you save?”, since “which book would you be?” doesn’t make a lot of sense to me. My answer to the question is appropriately high-minded and literary: The Complete Works of William Shakespeare. While I don’t particularly enjoy reading ol’ Wild Bill — his words were intended to be read by actors on stage, not people in wing chairs — I do believe his work addresses just about every major theme there is in an absolutely unique voice, thus giving it the artistic merit a “book-to-be-saved” requires. Also, Shakespeare formed the basis of our modern literature once; it could do so again following the collapse of whatever tiny-brained regime that would be so monumentally ignorant as to declare books illegal.
  2. Have you ever had a crush on a fictional character?
    Assuming this question refers only to literary characters, i.e., someone in a book, no. I have, however, developed crushes on plenty of movie and TV characters. Maybe some afternoon when I’m feeling really exhibitionistic, I’ll do a blog entry on that
  3. What is the last book you bought?
    Not counting a diet book I picked up for my mom, the last thing I bought was the Revenge of the Sith novelization by Matthew Stover. (No, I haven’t read it yet. It is safely locked away until after I see the movie, so as not to reveal any secrets I don’t want to know about.) Prior to that, I bought Public Enemies: America’s Greatest Crime Wave and the Birth of the FBI, 1933-34 by Bryan Burrough.
  4. What are you currently reading?
    Steve Hodel’s Black Dahlia Avenger, a true-crime story that reads much like a Raymond Chandler detective novel. It’s a half-memoir, half-investigation by a former LAPD detective who has come to believe that his own father was responsible for an infamous Hollywood murder that occurred in 1947.
  5. What five books would you take to a deserted island?
    If I was taking this question literally, I’d have to include the U.S. Army Ranger’s Survival Manual. However, I think the idea here is to list my favorite books of all time. This is a tricky one. I consider myself a pretty well-read and literary chap; however, when I think about the books I’ve really, really loved, the ones I’ve read multiple times and suspect I will one day want to pick up again… well, it’s not such a distinguished list:

    • The Anubis Gates by Tim Powers (a really nifty — and literary! — fantasy novel involving time-travel, ancient Egyptian magic, and werewolves, among other things)
    • Han Solo at Star’s End by Brian Daley (one of the first Star Wars spin-offs and still among the best, as far as I’m concerned)
    • Star Wars by George Lucas (yes, I know he didn’t really write the novelization of his own movie — it was actually Alan Dean Foster — but Lucas’ name is on the cover)
    • Christine by Stephen King (admittedly not his best work, but it is my favorite among his canon, for reasons I won’t go into here)
    • The North and South trilogy by John Jakes (sprawling soap-opera set against the backdrop of the Civil War, much better than any of the three TV miniseries based upon it; also long enough to eat up lots of desert island downtime)

With these answers, I guess I’ll never qualify for the International Association of Literary Snobs. Still, it’s not like I never read the good stuff… no, really, it’s not. Really.

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