Showing posts with label writers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writers. Show all posts

30 Books Worth Adding To Your Reading List

I'll be honest, whenever I see a 'you must read these books to be smart list' I get super annoyed. The list are often filled with the classics that were shoved down our throats in school that were dry, boring and written by cranky old men. Not that I don't love some of them, rather that they seem like too obvious a choice. "Hey you! If you read Mark Twain and Hemingway, you are so smart!"

Except you didn't read it by choice, it was assigned to you, and let's be honest, you hated every minute of it. Yeah, buddy, I'm on to you. To be fair, everyone has a list like this that could and frankly should be shared. After all, the books we read are part of what helps create our many, varied layers.

So what books would I recommend if you wish to feel more learned, well read or just a little more enlightened? Here are some in both the fiction and non-fiction categories. In no particular order:

  1. Consider the Oyster by M.F.K. Fisher
  2. The Mirror Crack'd From Side to Side by Agatha Christie
  3. Bitter is the New Black by Jen Lancaster
  4. Persuasion by Jane Austen
  5. Strange Fruit: the Biography of a Song by David Margolick
  6. Farehenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
  7. The Unfinished Clue by Georgette Heyer
  8. Midnight Robber by Nalo Hopkinson
  9. In the Devil's Garden by Stewart Lee Allen
  10. The Twisted Root by Anne Perry
  11. Passing by Nella Larsen
  12. The Stranger by Albert Camus
  13. In the Time of the Butterflies by Julia Alvarez
  14. Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil by John Berendt
  15. My Life in France by Julia Child
  16. The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupery
  17. Kitchen by Banana Yoshimoto
  18. Faust by Goethe  
  19. The Color Purple by Alice Walker
  20. Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams
  21. Fight Club by Chuck Palahniuk
  22. Oranges are Not the Only Fruit by Jeanette Winterson
  23. Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair by Pablo Neruda
  24. Anansi Boys by Neil Gaiman
  25. The Fire Next Time by James Baldwin
  26. Last Seen Wearing by Colin Dexter
  27. A Streetcar Named Desire by Tenessee Williams
  28. Stranger In A Strange Land by Robert Heinlein
  29. A Midsummer Night's Dream by William Shakespeare
  30. Don't Bet on the Prince edited by Jack Zipes
Happy Reading!


Grief, Fathers, Change, Life

It's 12:52 a.m. and I've been sobbing for a half hour. This Sunday, November 10 2013 is the fourteenth anniversary of my fathers death. It breaks my heart every day because I miss him more than you can know. He was my friend, my mentor, my hero, my dear old dad.

And I let him down.

He had a stroke, two heart attacks and died twice on the operating table during knee surgery. The knee surgery he was having because he wanted to be more mobile for his family. I remember standing in the waiting room at the hospital in my work uniform prepared for the worst. When they brought him back his soul had gone walkabout. I remember realizing that he had very well known that he might never be coming home. I thank the heavens every single day that the last thing I ever said to him was 'I love you, dad.'

But I let him down.

Have you ever seen what a stroke does to someone? It can simply wipe them away. He lived on for three years in the nursing home, this man who looked like my father but wasn't present. His soul roaming the earth while we looked on, waiting day after day for what would come next. For some people death comes too quickly. For us, it changed our lives in the worst way, dragging on while we tried to pretend everything was fine. Daily visits to the hospital. My sisters moving away. Grief counselling, which I am still pissed about because that woman was awful. Awful. The struggle for life to move on, but it couldn't, not really, when our beloved lingered on in such a way.

I stopped going so often to the home.

You see, I couldn't do it. I couldn't bear it. To see the strongest man I ever knew knocked down in such a way. To see my younger brothers observing him in this way, they were so young and everyday after school they went to see him. It was painful to see my mother every day with that hope, that hope that he would come round, that he would come back, that he would be her husband and our Father again. He wasn't on machines, he was just so physically strong that he lived anyway, the very reason we never imagined him gone.


I died a little every time I saw him.

One evening I came in and he looked me in the eye. His hands moved with excitement. He said "aughter! aughter, aughter, aughter!!" Daughter. He knew me, he hadn't known me in a long time.

I died. I just died inside because I knew that it couldn't last. It was a moment, this moment when he was looking at me, his beautiful eyes so clear, my dad, and I knew that the next day all recognition would be gone. As I sat with him he was so happy. I could not rejoice because I was dying a little more knowing my dad was no longer my dad and my dad meant the world to me. I am the worst daughter ever in the history of daughters because I left him alone in that place, because I felt so alone without him, even though I know he would have sat at my bedside every single day for the rest of his life because that is how much he loved me, each of us, really.

I betrayed my father in the worst way.

It's 1:10 am and I cover my mouth my hand so I don't cry out. My pain is this wound that might never heal. I'm getting a headache from typing in the dark. I am guilty of a grievous sin. My brother barely recalls him, being only 8 or 9 when he died. I try to tell him, daddy loved you so much. He wanted the best for you. He thought each of us was a miracle in his life. But they are only words.

I am still alone, the only child he raised from the ground up, the only child who was so devoted to him that still, all these years later, my heart is breaking. This man who worked as a crossing guard so he could be home to help me with my homework. The man who made chicken soup and had dry towels waiting on rainy days, who got up at 3 am when I was sick and who cared for a bunch of motley children that weren't even related to him by blood.

I weep because blood makes no difference to me. He was my father, heart and soul and I can never beg him to forgive me for abandoning him. For all the questions I never asked. For all the days we never got. It is the anniversary of my fathers death and because of his existence in my life, I will never be the same.