I feel like no matter how long my fallow periods in the
writing of this blog last, this one, my annual list of The Best Books What I
Did Read, will always draw me back. I’ll spend most of one day at the end of
every year writing it.
Anyway, if I ever don’t,
it won’t be on a year such as this one, in which I almost doubled the number of
books read in my previous best reading year, and almost tripled what I would
guess my average to be. Because of this, while much of what’s to follow should
be familiar to anyone who has read these lists of mine in the past – these books
are not necessarily listed in an order of preference, until the last few, which
I do consider the third, second, and first best books I read this year, etc. –
you will find a whole new second thing here: the entire list of books I read in
2017. I include this entirely and only out of boastfulness; you’ll notice that
I include no indication, outside of the main list of separated “best” books,
what I thought of any of these, so other than saying to you “Lookit all these
books I read,” what possible purpose could it serve? It should go without
saying that not every book I liked can make the list of “best” books, so many
of the uncommented-upon titles I liked very much, indeed. Others I hated down
to my bones. I’ll let you guess which are which! And if you see a book on there
that you count as one of your favorites, just assume that I despise it, and
you, and all you represent.
All right, let’s get this fucking nonsense rolling! I’d like
to be finished by dinner-time.
Dolores Claiborne by Stephen King – For many years, after Cell,
I was out of the habit of reading Stephen King, and this had been a habit I’d
maintained as avidly as a smoker for many, many years. A few years back I
decided to take it back up again on a limited basis, and it has provided me
with limited, but real, enjoyment. This book, which I skipped even during my
more passionate years due to my callow assumption that it would be dull, has by
far been the most rewarding. The title character tells the entire story, the
book written as though she were speaking to the cops who have arrested her for
the murder of the old woman she worked for, and King finds greater success with
this conceit than I expected. Dolores is a full person, her life and story
equally so, with all the suspense and rural Gothic you could want from a book
like this. That it’s sister novel is the nebulously, mysteriously, but unmistakably,
and thematically, linked Gerald’s Game, also published in 1992,
just makes the whole thing more powerful.
The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith by Thomas Keneally – This year
was supposed to be my big Keneally year, but this, also the first book I read
in 2017, is the only one I got to. Based on the true story of aborigine in 19th
century Australia who after years of being treated unjustly by white
Australians, suddenly embarks on a rampage of violence. Harrowing and at times
genuinely shocking, Keneally doesn’t make the mistake of glorifying what
Blacksmith does. He’s simply saying, if one must simplify this complex novel,
that that led to this.
Cops and Robbers by Donald E. Westlake – I wrote about it,
briefly, here.
The Wardrobe Mistress by Patrick McGrath – One of several
novels I read this year that actually came out in 2017, and one of several by
writers I rank as favorites, McGrath’s unusual pseudo-ghost story about a woman
dealing with the death of her actor husband, a few years after the end of World
War II, and some alarming revelations that follow, may suffer from an ending
that, while perfectly fine as far as what actually happens goes, feels so
rushed that I wondered if McGrath’s manuscript was due later that afternoon.
But that’s ultimately no big deal, because the rest of the novel is so sad, and
so unnerving, and so full of little bits about the English theater at that
time, the environment, and bombed out London. I think it’s McGrath’s best in
years.
Dept. of Speculation by Jenny Offill – The story of a marriage
teetering on the point of collapse, told in a meticulously assembled series of
incidents and digressions and thoughts on whatever subject happens to seem
relevant to the protagonist, even if she’s unable to articulate why all this makes sense
together. I don’t think I could articulate why this all works together myself,
but it does. It’s like being inside the head of a sane person: everybody’s head
is a jumble, even when it all makes sense.
Othello by William Shakespeare – It’s good! Also, I think
Othello being a Moor might actually be relevant.
Dearest by Peter Loughran – Sort of like The Collector by John Fowles, but less ponderous, and written in a way that evokes actual life as it’s lived by some. It’s all the more disturbing for it. Relegated to the genre bin and therefore “disposable.”
Go Tell It On the Mountain by James Baldwin – One of three books written by James Baldwin I read this year (as with Keneally, it was supposed to be more), along with If Beale Street Could Talk and The Fire Next Time. This novel, Baldwin’s first, stands out for me in the way it tells the story of John Grimes, a young boy living in Harlem, by telling the story of his mother, his father, and his step-father, each of whom lives completely here, and each of whom lives to create this heartbreaking little kid. Some knowledge of Baldwin’s life will help tell part of the story that the censors wouldn’t allow Baldwin to tell in 1953, though certain dots are probably not that hard to connect anyway.
Dead Air by Matthew M. Bartlett – I wrote about it briefly here.
Dear Committee Members by Julie Schumacher – An epistolary
novel comprised entirely of letters (and e-mails, etc.) of recommendation
written by one crushed-by-life English professor would seem to promise nothing
but repetition, but Schumacher’s novel, which won awards and everything, is one
of the funniest I’ve read in years. That the bitterness of Jason Fitger, the
central academic, is predictable, because there is a tradition of such novels
in English literature, means nothing because his bitterness is so pointed and
eloquently nasty. I think the ending takes a too-sharp turn into the realm of “emotional
weight” and so forth, but that’s fine. It’s one of the most satisfying and
entertaining novels I read this year.
Satantango by Laszlo Krasznahorkai – Conspiracy, death, animal cruelty, vast emptiness, endless alcohol, loneliness. It’s sort of a comedy. Hungary as the end of the world.
Green River Killer by Jeff Jensen and Jonathan Case – A true
crime comic book about Jensen’s father, the lead detective in the hunt for Gary
Ridgway, and the decades of his life he gave to finding a monster. The
climactic moment between Tom Jensen and Ridgway is more frightening than any cinematic
serial killer you could name.
At Swim-Two-Birds – Flann O’Brien’s famously askance, let’s
say, look at the Irish spirit, as well as Irish myth and stories, is very odd,
and very funny, but at the end it suddenly put me in mind of Wallace’s Infinite
Jest, in the most unexpected way. A dark cloud persists when I think of
it now.
Ill Will by Dan Chaon – The thriller of the year, as far as I’m concerned. Wrote about it here.
An Awfully Big Adventure by Beryl Bainbridge – Speaking of
post-war English theater, this novel, perhaps Bainbridge’s best-known outside
of her masterpiece The Bottle Factory Outing, approaches that world with a touch
more warmth than McGrath did in The Wardrobe Mistress. But just a
touch. Once again, Bainbridge strikes a tone of skepticism regarding people and
the way they go about things, and by the end that skepticism is proved to have
been warranted. It’s good, and fun, until it’s not.
The King in the Golden Mask by Marcel Schwob – One of the key
works of early French surrealism, Schwob’s 1892 collection of stories also
shows how inherently linked that movement is with weird horror fiction. Not
that that’s what Schwob was writing by another name, but he sure did write it
sometimes, and helped mark a path. The title story seems clearly influenced by
Poe, elsewhere there’s devil worship and horrible violence, and there is no
story here that isn’t imbued with the terrible unease felt when nothing feels
right, or when everything is certain to go wrong.
Poor George by Paula Fox – Fox’s first novel is about a
miserably unhappy teacher who meets a troubled kid when that kid breaks into
the teacher’s home. The teacher then, against his wife’s objections, hopes to
take the kid under his wing. Less a comedy of errors than a full-on disaster,
and less a satire than the state of things delivered with a sad, heavy sigh.
The Big Bounce by Elmore Leonard – Wrote about it briefly here.
Point Omega by Don DeLillo – One of four DeLillo novels I read
this year, an easily my (unexpected) favorite. This very short novel is
political in its inspiration, but the power of the story – about a scholar with
government connections being interviewed in the desert by a documentary
filmmaker, about the scholar’s daughter who visits, and what happens then – is in
its ultimate inexplicability. What’s unsettling isn’t what’s
immediate about it, but what’s timeless.
My Friend Dahmer by Derf Backderf – More true crime, more serial killers, more comic books. This approach to the subject is truly unusual, though: Backderf went to high school with Jeffrey Dahmer, and hung out with him, and saw the budding psychopath without realizing what he was seeing. This perspective allows for an element of the everyday that accounts of the lives of serial killers often lack – it’s all nightmare, all horror, either inflicted on the killer as a child, or inflicted by the killer as an adult on others. Which isn’t to suggest that My Friend Dahmer isn’t chilling, because it is. It’s just that for once we, who will hopefully never face something or someone like this in our lives, are forcefully reminded that these things happen in the same world we wake up to every morning.
Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer – The first of VanderMeer’s Souther
Reach trilogy, this short novel is about an expedition of women (not
irrelevant) scientists, both hard and social, sent to explore a section of America
that has been transformed, mysteriously and lethally. What they discover there
is frightening and mystifying, otherworldly but somehow, seemingly, rooted
inside this very planet. Though I have enough faith in VanderMeer to expect the
trilogy to end well (I’ve also read the second book, Authority, which I liked,
though not as much), I think Annihilation could have stood alone,
brilliantly.
Holidays from Hell by Reggie Oliver – This, Oliver’s most recent collection of stories, would be a great place to start for anyone new to his brand of classic, yet nevertheless unique, horror fiction. Oliver is able to take premises that, if you think long enough about them, seem unsupportable, as he does here in the title story, which is about mysterious visitors at a seaside inn (that’s all I’ll say) and infuse the proceedings with puns before casting a genuine pall over the reader. Which isn’t to say this is his only mode, but rather an example of what he can do. My favorite horror book of the year.
Holidays from Hell by Reggie Oliver – This, Oliver’s most recent collection of stories, would be a great place to start for anyone new to his brand of classic, yet nevertheless unique, horror fiction. Oliver is able to take premises that, if you think long enough about them, seem unsupportable, as he does here in the title story, which is about mysterious visitors at a seaside inn (that’s all I’ll say) and infuse the proceedings with puns before casting a genuine pall over the reader. Which isn’t to say this is his only mode, but rather an example of what he can do. My favorite horror book of the year.
Voices in the Night by Steven Millhauser – Wrote about it here.
Play It As It Lays by Joan Didion – Life in California as
existential nightmare spiral. Which was my guess, anyway.
Quake by Rudolph Wurlitzer – Speaking of California,
nightmares, spirals, and so on, Wurlitzer’s novel about a massive earthquake
turning Los Angeles into a fast-evolving Apocalypse really is just one damn
thing after another, told with a lack of affect that seems, well, telling.
The Eighth Dwarf by Ross Thomas – My first Thomas novel, and it’s
a blast. It’s curious to me how this novel, about the kind of men who hunted
Nazis immediately after the war ended, and what the rest of the world did about
that (not that I think this is a work of reportage,
mind you) comes in at under 300 pages, whereas a similar novel written today
would easily crack 500. I’m also interested in the fact that the title
character is literally a dwarf but there really aren’t many jokes about that
fact, nor is he, to be honest, the main character. I’m also interested in books
like this which characters the author chooses to kill off and which he spares.
There is much here to be interested in and amused by.
An Artist of the Floating World by Kazuo Ishiguro – Lots of post-war shit in my 2017 reading, apparently. This, Ishiguro’s second novel, and one of the last two of his books I needed to read (I have The Unconsoled on deck, finally, for 2018), is about a Japanese artist and illustrator who, in the years following his country’s defeat, has to reckon with – or choose not to reckon with – his place in the war effort. It’s a bracing, complicated, and damning novel.
The Juniper Tree by Barbara Comyns – Comyns takes the titular fairy tale and turns it into a story of class, love, friendship, and freak tragedy. Comyns was a genius, seemingly without effort.
In the Heart of the Heart of the Country by William H. Gass – “The
Pedersen Kid,” Gass’s novella about violence, numbing cold, and a particularly
grim sort of freedom, is as good as you’ve heard, and is without question the
centerpiece of this 1968 collection. But everything his is exhilarating in its
way – though Gass’s prose is often very dense, certain passages have a striking
clarity, like this from “Icicles”, about a realtor’s crisis (look, I have to
describe it somehow, and I ain’t got
all day):
So he’d hear Pearson
preach the power of imagination: Fender! think what you’re selling! happiness is
is our commodity! you want to dream for them – dream! But Fender remembered how
a Baby Ruth wrapper had ruined a sale, it had gone through their dreams like a
brick…
Everything is worthwhile, including the preface, which is
long, and reads like a writer’s autobiography.
Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert – Yeah, it’s not bad. I’m not
sure what I can add, other than to say it is, or should be, the model of moral
fiction that neither condemns nor glorifies, and of fiction that creates an
entire community of not just people but buildings, houses, trees. It has also
instilled in me what I expect will be a lifelong distrust of apothecaries.
The Pregnant Widow by Martin Amis – A mad, romping smear of a
kind of autobiographical something,
soaked along the way with a bathtub-full of mortal dread. It’s a very odd book,
in other words, and the comedy may not always lay easy upon it, but God is it
absorbing.
Hell Hound by Ken Greenhall – Finally back in print, thanks to
the good people at Valancourt Books, I’ve wanted to read this book for ages. It
doesn’t disappoint. About a chillingly smart pit bull named Baxter that enters
a suburban neighborhood and takes what it wants. Which is not all Hell
Hound is. This novel is ultimately more disturbing, even sleazy, then I’d
expected, but never dumb or pandering or cheap. It left me feeling very
uncomfortable.
Gilead by Marilynne Robinson – Robinson may be the finest
writer of prose currently alive in America. As all such proclamations are, this
is arguable. But Gilead, about a minister named John Ames as he nears the end of
his life and reflects on his faith, his family, his neighbors, war, the land,
life, and death, written as a long message written by Ames to his young son, is
more full of exquisite language and imagery than any other five contemporary
novels you might choose to squish together into one volume and throw into the
pit with it.
Last Look by Charles Burns – Another comic book (oh yeah, that’s
another difference in the list this year: this one has some comics in it), and
possibly my favorite one. In Black Holes, Burns used horror as
both metaphor and as literal presence in the world of the story. With Last
Look he doesn’t something different, and harder to pin down. Last Look
may seem smaller than Black Holes, but like his magnum
opus it is entirely impossible to shake months, and I suspect years, after
putting it down.
The North Water by Ian McGuire – Wrote about it a little bit
here. Suffice it to say, comparing it (in incident if not in language) to
Cormac McCarthy at his most violent wouldn’t be inaccurate. Truly
blood-drenched and horrifying. It’s a good book!
Nutshell by Ian McEwan – With this strange take Hamlet,
McEwan has written his liveliest, most vivid prose in ages. In terms of tone
and content, it’s like a throwback to his more genre-ish early work, but with
the spark of a great writer who has found new life. Terrific fiction.
Indignation by Philip Roth – This novel, in addition to being a
real honest to God novel, is an
argument. A moral and political argument, more specifically, and, this being
Philip Roth, it’s so mad it spits. The conclusion it ultimately comes to after
considering the events of the novel is not the one I came to as a reader, and I
feel confident that if we ever met, Philip Roth wouldn’t like me. But rarely,
if ever, have I read the side of an argument I myself would have represented
expressed as clearly and as intelligently and as eloquently by someone who
rejects it utterly. Philip Roth is a great writer, and Indignation is a great
novel.
Fiskadoro by Denis Johnson – When Johnson died unexpectedly
earlier this year, this is the novel I immediately wanted to read. Johnson
seemed able to write anything, and seemed to want to. This is his post-Apocalyptic
novel, and is the most believable, authentic-seeming novel of this kind I’ve
ever read. In Fiskadoro Johnson imagines a world that is far away from what
we currently know, but understandable in its primitive struggles toward something
familiar. It is as sad and as beautiful as anything Johnson ever wrote.
Some Came Running by James Jones – Wrote about it here. And
while it may not be the best book I read in 2017, it is certainly the one I
lived with the longest, and will continue to live with probably forever, and
the one I know best. I know it like it’s alive inside my house. (Just don’t,
you know, quiz me about it or anything.)
In the Money by William Carlos Williams – The second, after White
Mule, in Williams’s trilogy of novels about the Stecher family and
their rise (so far) to relative affluence. Set during the early 20th
century, In the Money is ostensibly about how the Stecher patriarch,
Joe, launches his own printing business after snatching from his former employers
a major contract to print money orders for the government (FDR has a cameo!).
But as a novelist, Williams was primarily concerned, as in his famous poem “This
is Just to Say”, with the things that make up someone’s day. Especially if that
someone is a child. No writer I can think of has a better eye or ear for the
way children are, what frustrates and frightens them. One chapter, all about
the two young Stecher girls going to the park with their mother, includes a
moment so heartbreaking that I don’t like to think about it. And though Joe
Stecher’s climb towards success may be difficult, and his wife Gurlie’s
attitude towards it all may seem uncomfortably mercenary, what I’ll remember
most about In the Money, what matters most, is the chapter about the
youngest Stecher, Flossie, and what it’s like, and why it’s so awful, for a
baby to be alone in a dark bedroom.
The Real Cool Killers by Chester Himes – Each of the three
novels about Harlem cops Coffin Ed Johnson and Gravedigger Jones were
absolutely berserk, and, not incidentally, completely wonderful. But nothing I
read in 2017 made my jaw hang open like The Real Cool Killers, Himes’s
second novel in the series. It begins with an insane knife attack in a night
club, the consequences of which spill out into the street and lead to the plot’s
central murder, and climaxes – that is, the beginning
of the novel climaxes – with Gravedigger Jones fatally shooting a teenager
because the kid...well anyway. If I told you, you might decide this is all just
too ridiculous. But somehow it isn’t, and somehow Himes is able to maintain
this pace, and somehow The
Real Cool Killers becomes, by the end, deeply moving, deeply sad and
world-weary, and weirdly open-hearted, given a lot of factors you’ll notice and
think about and bring into the book when you read it. It’s the crime novel as
novel of absurdity. It’s the novel of absurdity as a kind of mourning.
Okay, here's the full list. In reverse chronological order because it would be a pain in the ass to do it any other way.
141. Jizzle by John Wyndham
140. In the Heart of the Heart of the Country
by William H. Gass
139. Samedi the Deafness by Jesse Ball
138. Mayhem by Sarah Pinborough
137. Authority by Jeff VanderMeer
136. In the Money by William Carlos
Williams
135. Dear Committee Members by Julie
Schumacher
134. In the Middle of the Night by Robert
Cormier
133. Who is Rich? by Matthew Klam
132. Matchbox Theater by Michael Frayn
131. Ratman's Notebooks by Stephen
Gilbert
130. The Wardrobe Mistress by Patrick
McGrath
129. Gilead by Marilynne Robinson
128. The Juniper Tree by Barbara Comyns
127. The Eighth Dwarf by Ross Thomas
126. Nothing by Henry Green
125. The Forensic Records Society by
Magnus Mills
124. Nutshell by Ian McEwan
123. Smile by Roddy Doyle
122. An Artist of the Floating World by
Kazuo Ishiguro
121. The Ballad of Typhoid Mary by J.F.
Federspiel
120. The Black Spider by Jeremias Gotthelf
119. Fear is the Rider by Kenneth Cook
118. Cops and Robbers by Donald E.
Westlake
117. The House Next Door by Anne Rivers
Siddons
116. Othello by William Shakespeare
115. Experimental Film by Gemma Files
114. The Castle in the Forest by Norman
Mailer
113. The Snowman by Jo Nesbo
112. The Tragedy of Brady Sims by Ernest
J. Gaines
111. Three Tales by Gustave Flaubert
110. You're All Alone by Fritz Leiber
109. Play Things by Peter Prince
108. Dead Air by Matthew M. Bartlett
107. The Poor Mouth by Flann O'Brien
106. The North Water by Ian McGuire
105. The Big Bounce by Elmore Leonard
104. Voices in the Night by Steven
Millhauser
103. Ill Will by Dan Chaon
102. Some Came Running by James Jones
101. Strange Monsters of the Recent Past
by Howard Waldrop
100. Lunar Follies by Gilbert Sorrentino
099. Young Adolf by Beryl Bainbridge
098. Poor George by Paula Fox
097. Indignation by Philip Roth
096. You Should Have Left by Daniel
Kehlmann
095. Shadowbahn by Steve Erickson
094. Journey of the Dead by Loren D.
Estleman
093. The Crazy Kill by Chester Himes
092. Conscience by John Skipp
091. The Girl With No Hands and Other Tales
by Angela Slatter
090. Idaho Winter by Tony Burgess
089. An Awfully Big Adventure by Beryl
Bainbridge
088. The Changeling by Victor LaValle
087. The Ponder Heart by Eudora Welty
086. Black Mad Wheel by Josh Malerman
085. In a Dark, Dark Wood by Ruth Ware
084. Revenge by Yoko Ogawa
083. Breakfast of Champions by Kurt
Vonnegut
082. The King in the Golden Mask by
Marcel Schwob
081. The Happy Man by Eric C. Higgs
080. The Story of the Eye by Georges
Bataille
079. The Lake by Yasunari Kawabata
078. Backflash by Donald E. Westlake
077. Fully Dressed and in His Right Mind
by Michael Fessier
076. The Monster Club by R.
Chetwynd-Hayes
075. The Silent Gondoliers by William
Goldman
074. Pictures of Fidelman by Bernard
Malamud
073. Since We Fell by Dennis Lehane
072. Kubrick by Michael Herr
071. The Woman Who Walked Into Doors by
Roddy Doyle
070. Fiskadoro by Denis Johnson
069. The Pistol by James Jones
068. So You've Been Publicly Shamed by
Jon Ronson
067. The Magic Barrel by Bernard Malamud
066. The Night Ocean by Paul La Farge
065. Players by Don DeLillo
064. Neonomicon by Alan Moore and Jacen
Burrows
063. Dusk and Other Stories by James
Salter
062. Green River Killer by Jeff Jensen
and Jonathan Case
061. A Month in the Country by J. L. Carr
060. Stranglehold by Jack Ketchum
059. The Fisherman by John Langan
058. My Friend Dahmer by Derf Backderf
057. Red Lights by Georges Simenon
056. Satantango by Laszlo Krasznahorkai
055. Eternal Curse on the Reader of These Pages
by Manuel Puig
054. Devils' Spawn by Charles Birkin
053. Last Look by Charles Burns
052. The Dinner by Herman Koch
051. Devil Take the Blue-Tail Fly by John
Franklin Bardin
050. Junky by William S. Burroughs
049. A Head Full of Ghosts by Paul
Tremblay
048. A Madman Dreams of Turing Machines
by Janna Levin
047. Hell Hound by Ken Greenhall
046. Resurrection Man by Eoin McNamee
045. The Fates by Thomas Tessier
044. Where Furnaces Burn by Joel Lane
043. Dept. of Speculation by Jenny Offill
042. I Should Have Stayed Home by Horace
McCoy
041. The Hero Pony by David Mamet
040. The Pregnant Widow by Martin Amis
039. Shadow of a Broken Man by George C.
Chesbro
038. Death Poems by Thomas Ligotti
037. The Sensitive One by C.H.B. Kitchin
036. Quake by Rudolph Wurlitzer
035. Play It As It Lays by Joan Didion
034. Men at Arms by Terry Pratchett
033. The Man Who Collected Machen and Other Weird
Tales by Mark Samuels
032. Dirty Tricks by Michael Dibdin
031. Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert
030. Project X by Jim Shepard
029. All the Little Animals by Walker
Hamilton
028. The Patriot Game by George V.
Higgins
027. Ray by Barry Hannah
026. Holidays from Hell by Reggie Oliver
025. Lincoln in the Bardo by George
Saunders
024. White Mule by William Carlos
Williams
023. Universal Harvester by John Darnielle
022. The Fire Next Time by James Baldwin
021. The Scarf by Robert Bloch
020. Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer
019. If Beale Street Could Talk by James
Baldwin
018. The Girl on the Train by Paula
Hawkins
017. The Real Cool Killers by Chester
Himes
016. A Rage in Harlem by Chester Himes
015. The Secret of Ventriloquism by Jon
Padgett
014. Go Tell It On the Mountain by James
Baldwin
013. Swift to Chase by Laird Barron
012. Dearest by Peter Loughran
011. Street of No Return by David Goodis
010. I Am Providence by Nick Mamatas
009. Dog Eat Dog by Edward Bunker
008. Chess Story by Stefan Zweig
007. Dolores Claiborne by Stephen King
006. The Body Artist by Don DeLillo
005. Point Omega by Don DeLillo
004. At Swim-Two-Birds by Flann O'Brien
003. Hogg by Samuel R. Delany
002. Running Dog by Don DeLillo
001. The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith by
Thomas Keneally
4 comments:
I always look forward to this column. I've put many of these on my must read pile.
Thanks for this -- Several of those will go on my list for this year. I've just started a Denis Johnson binge. Damn, but Resuscitation of a Hanged Man is a weird book.
cool!
Ah, you read JUNKY this year? The description of the Rio Grande Valley is maybe the best sustained prose Burroughs ever wrote, such a perfect distillation of his voice. But QUEER is probably his best "realistic" novel.
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