Best Books of 2011(ish)

It’s that time of year when people proclaim the best books of 2011.  I’m not exactly a trusty resource for new releases, since I’m perennially catching up on my reading and researching historical fantasy primarily.

But I do have my opinions, and – not surprisingly – they don’t jibe with the New York Times recent 100 Notable Books of 2011.  (I haven’t read any of them, gulp).

I can also sadly report that my reading productivity plunged terribly this year.  In 2010, I read twenty-six books.  This year, with only about a month to go, I’ve read thirteen.  I blame my iPhone and Twitter, the biggest time-sucks while I’m commuting back and forth to work.

Of the thirteen books I’ve read this year, only two were new releases.  And one of those, Neil Gaiman’s AMERICAN GODS, was a ten-year anniversary re-publication.  Eek!

So, here goes what I got around to read that was fairly new, and that I highly recommend.

Annabel Lyon’s THE GOLDEN MEAN

It came out in 2009.  I picked it up in January 2011.  This is my all-time favorite ancient world historical.  It tells the story of Aristotle’s tutoring of young Alexander the Great, and it’s a fascinating portrayal of how the philosopher’s rational and ethical teachings may have influenced the greatest military general of all time.  For the intimidated:  THE GOLDEN MEAN is not all philosophical and heady stuff.  It deals with complex family relationships, the cruelty of childhood, and issues of mental disability and illness – all set within a vivid ancient world.

Neil Gaiman’s AMERICAN GODS

Soon to be an HBO mini-series, AMERICAN GODS is a funny, epic, engrossing adventure in which a down-on-his-luck ex-con gets caught up in a battle between old world gods and the idols of modern times (i.e. materialism, the media).  It’s filled with great retold parables with contemporary twists.

 

 

Gabrielle Burton’s IMPATIENT WITH DESIRE

Imagining the diary of Tamsen Donner, Burton illuminates the infamous story of 19th century American pioneering gone horribly wrong.  Tamsen comes to life as an early feminist faced with impossible choices.  This one is really, truly a 2011 release.

 

 

 

Now for a couple excellent books I read in 2011, just a few decades behind the times…

Shyam Selvadurai’s FUNNY BOY

FUNNY BOY (1997) is a semi-autobiographical story about growing up in Sri Lanka amidst the rising ethnic tensions – Sinhalese vs. Tamil — of the 1970’s and early 80’s.  A compelling gay coming-of-age story within a rich cultural setting.

 

 

 

Ursula LeGuin’s LEFT HAND OF DARKNESS (1969)

Setting aside some sexist and heterosexist undertones, forgiveable for the time of its publication, this book fascinated me.  The premise:  a male, human envoy visits a distant world where there is only one gender, that is essentially hermaphroditic.  The book has provocative things to say about sexuality, and politics.

The Donner Party Re-examined: Gabrielle Burton’s Impatient with Desire

In the spring of 1846, George Donner led his family and eighty pioneers on a trail of opportunity from Illinois to California.  They made it as far as the Sierra Nevada mountains but were trapped by a snow storm.   The mission turned desperate, and a horrifying legend was born.

Gabrielle Burton’s IMPATIENT WITH DESIRE is an intimate re-telling of the journey of the ill-fated Donner Party.   The story is told primarily through the letters and journal entries of Tamsen Donner, a schoolteacher and wife to George Donner, during the time they awaited rescue.

Burton is clear in labeling her work as a fictional account.   But it is based on nearly forty years of her research, a vigorous sideline of the author, which included a family vacation with her husband and five daughters to retrace the steps of the Donner trail.

I grew up with Burton’s youngest daughters Gabrielle and Charity in Amherst, New York, just outside of Buffalo, where the family was a bit of a quirky legend in itself.   While most of us returned from school breaks with tales of mild hijinks, the Burtons typically came back recounting adventures, like hitch-hiking across Alaska, on some journey of rare discovery.   Gabrielle, the mother, was a local literary celebrity, who knew cultural icons—well-beyond our suburban social set—like Gloria Steinem.

Burton, who has garnered praise for her portraits of women (her debut novel Heartbreak Hotel) and contributed extensively to feminist discourse over the past four decades, casts Tamsen Donner as a compelling heroine.   Tamsen is self-assured, well-educated, and an independent thinker.   She prefers collecting botanical specimens for her students to baking pies, she asks her pastor to remove the words “to obey” in her marriage vows, and she has clever observations on gender inequality in the 19th century, which still resonate today.   One of my favorites:

George (Donner) is the most equitable man I have ever met—though sometimes it seems to me that a man who simply acts like a decent human being gets undue praise.

The narrative never strays from Tamsen’s point of view, but she is a circumspect and reliable storyteller.   While stranded with her family at a makeshift camp, she records the daily life and the history.   Given the subject, I found myself squinting ahead to the inevitable conclusion of months of communal starvation.   But there are arresting stories of the hopes and tragedies of the pioneer women and men, before they reached an impasse in the mountains.   They are delivered in simple, haunting detail, such as the story of the Flemish immigrant Hardcoop, who was left behind by a trailing faction of the party when their progress through steep terrain required dismounting the wagons and pulling them along on foot.   Reflecting on the night when her husband tells her the news, Tamsen writes:

No matter how tightly I closed my eyes, all I could see was the same debased image:  an old man crawling toward disappearing wagons.

While Tamsen Donner takes on the role of historian to the party, for example, recording each death in her journal—whether stranger, loved one, or villain—with impartiality, the greater sum of her writings is the elucidation of one woman’s life.

Tamsen was the daughter of a Sea Captain, who encouraged her dream of traveling, at a time when women were expected to stay close to the home.  She was heartbroken by the death of her first husband and one of her sons, but she ventured beyond a life of widowhood to find happiness in a second marriage.  She was fiercely devoted to the promotion of her daughters, accepting the brand of unspeakable inhumanity so that they might survive.  Living under the authority of men, she emerges as much (or more so) as the leader who rallied her counterparts to take the chance to better their lives, and she stewarded morale and comforted them when grief and fear left them broken. Through her painful search for understanding of how a well-intentioned mission could have ended so terribly, she arrives at the conclusion:

I leave it on record that this adventure has gone more horribly wrong than anyone could ever have imagined, and I bear equal blame, as I would have deserved equal credit had it gone right.

IMPATIENT WITH DESIRE is available in hardcover, paperback and Kindle editions at many independent booksellers.