Friday, September 21, 2007

I have finished reading An Interpretation of Murder, a murder mystery novel. It revolves around Sigmund Freud's visit to the US in 1909. Good writing. Ambitious because the author is also a Shakespeare nut and so tries to weave many extras into the plot. But still, it made me turn the pages and that is the only qualification of a good book. No prizes for guessing where Joyce ranks on my scale. Eliot does not count in it because he's a poet. The only exception is Malcolm Lowry and if you ever read Under the Volcano, you will know why.

Lately, I have begun to read and like historical fiction. Bernard Cornwell's literary merit is trash, the history is suspect because his sources are usually another book (it's called a secondary source). But he makes the period easy to imagine. I liked his King Alfred books but his Sharpe series, which made him all his money, are an embarrassment. Robert Harris, an ex-political editor of a UK broadsheet, has written a book called Imperium, a biographical novel of Cicero, Rome's greatest orator and politician. Fantastic book. Couldn't put it down.

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