Recommend Me A Good, Short Book

A month or so ago, I read Claire DeWitt and the City of the Dead by Sara Gran, a tough, compelling short book that contains almost everything I want out of a literary mystery novel.  Then I tore through The Long Goodbye, a mid-to-long Raymond Chandler, and moved on to Brimstone, a longish Preston / Child thriller which I set aside during a hurricane to start David Foster Wallace’s mammoth chaotic sprawl, Infinite Jest.  Reamde, Neal Stephenson’s new technothriller, hits stores this Monday, at the now-typical Stephenson length of “large enough to be classified as a deadly weapon in most states.”

I’m psyched for a new Stephenson book, but I need an intermezzo between it and IJ, something short and economical and fun, something that’s not going to twist my spine as I carry it on the subway.  Based on the progression above, though, if I chose a book for myself it’d probably be about 1200 pages in font so small I’d need a magnifying glass to tell the lines apart, old-school OED style.  I could re-read The Hero and the Crown or The Westing Game or A Night in the Lonesome October, but why not expand my horizons?  Recommend me a good, short book.  I’ll thank you for it.

8 Responses to “Recommend Me A Good, Short Book”

  1. scott gf bailey

    Albert Camus “The Stranger”
    William Faulkner “As I Lay Dying”
    Virginia Woolf “Mrs Dalloway”
    Hanna Pittard “The Fates Will Find Their Way”
    Anton Chekhov “The Duel”
    John Gardner “Grendel”

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  2. max

    Thanks for the recommendations, Scott! I’ve read The Stranger and Grendel, but the other four I haven’t, and the Pittard I haven’t even heard of before. I thought you were crazy for recommending Mrs. Dalloway as a short book, but checking at Amazon I see it’s only a little over 200 pages. I’ve heard it mentioned in the same breath as Ulysses so often that I assumed it was the same length.

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  3. scott gf bailey

    The Woolf shares some High Modernist traits with the Joyce, but length ain’t one of them! The Pittard pubbed in February, I think. It’s written in first-person plural, which you’d think would be weird and self-consciously clever but it’s not. The Faulkner is a classic, with the POV switching every chapter. First instance in American literature of a one-sentence chapter. “The Duel” is a classic from the man who invented the modern short story. I need to re-read “Ulysses” soon. Maybe this winter.

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  4. max

    A book in the first-person plural that *doesn’t* come off as weird and self-consciously clever? This I gotta see… I’ll add that to the list, for sure! I’ve heard a ton of great things about As I Lay Dying, and I loved Absalom, Absalom! – maybe I’ll pack it for my trip to Tennessee this weekend.

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  5. scott gf bailey

    “As I Lay Dying” is to “Absalom/Absalom” what a four-minute pop tune is to Wagner’s Ring cycle. But it still rocks the house!

    “Fates” sounds really gimmicky but it’s not. It’s also got a cool structure based on uncertainty of plot.

    “The Martian Chronicles” is short and a classic, too, if you’ve never read it. The first truly poetic, melancholy SF I ever read.

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  6. James Aach

    If the recent Fukushima event is of interest, the novel “Rad Decision”, available in serial form free online (just google the title) or at Amazon (roughly 93K words) might be of interest. It is a technothriller about a US nuke plant written by a longtime industry engineer. If not, I find Cat’s Crade can be read repeatedly.

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  7. Gen

    Some of my favorite classic sci-fi fits:

    Alfred Bester “The Stars My Destination” (aka “Tiger Tiger”)
    John Varley “The Ophiuchi Hotline”

    Not as well-known, but very fun and I think to your taste:
    Alfred Bester “The Computer Connection”

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  8. max

    @James – Thanks for the rec – I’ll check your book out.

    @Gen – SO MUCH LOVE for “Stars My Destination.” One of my favorite SF books. Just when you think it can’t get any better, Gully Foyle goes all Count of Monte Cristo on you… I’ll definitely hunt down the Varley and the other Bester, though I haven’t seen him in bookstores much (outside of “Stars”).

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