
Franz De Waal
My Top Ten Booklist (In no particular order)
#1 Ishi in Two Worlds: A Biography of the Last Wild Indian in North America by Theodora Kroeber
…so far as any record shows or any story relates, no member of the United States Army ever shot a single Yana Indian, whose multiple murder remained a home and civilian and strictly extralegal operation. (62) There’s a line in the song Sun City by Steven Van Zandt reminding us that Apartheid “ain’t that far away.” Episodes in Extermination, the fourth chapter of Ishi, written in a beautifully plain and sober tone, makes our own proximity to the horrors of genocide painfully clear.
#2 Primates and Philosophers by Franz De Waal
Chimpanzees think by feeling, just like we do:
In my own experience, chimpanzees pursue power as relentlessly as some in Washington and keep track of given and received services in a marketplace of exchange. Their feelings may range from gratitude for political support to outrage if one of them violates a social rule. All of this goes far beyond mere fear, pain, and anger: the emotional life of these animals is much closer to ours than once held possible. (76)
#3 War is a Force that Gives us Meaning by Chris Hedges
This indispensable book, which came out when our society was still very sick with war fever, tells us that war
Is peddled by mythmakers–historians, war correspondents, filmmakers, novelists and the state–all of whom endow it with qualities it often does possess: excitement, exoticism, power, chances to rise above our small stations in life, and a bizarre and fantastic universe that has grotesque and dark beauty. It dominates culture, distorts memory, corrupts language, and infects everything around it, even humor, which becomes preoccupied with the grim perversities of smut and death. Fundamental questions about the meaning, or meaninglessness, of our place on the planet are laid bare when we watch those around us sink to the lowest depths. War exposes the capacity for evil that lurks not far below the surface within all of us. And this is why for many war is so hard to discuss once it’s over (3)
#4 United States: Essays 1952-1992 by Gore Vidal
This collection of essays proves that in addition to being a damn fine novelist, Vidal is simply our finest living essayist. From his essay Theodore Roosevelt: An American Sissy:
Give a sissy a gun and he will shoot everything in sight….There is something strangely infantile in this obsession with dice-loaded physical courage when the only courage that matters in political or even “real” life is moral. Although TR was often reckless and always domineering in politics, he never showed much real courage, and despite some trust-busting, he never took on the great ring of corruption that ruled and rules in this republic. But then, he was born part of it. (733)
#5 Love Medicine by Louise Erdrich
A much underappreciated masterpiece. An earlier post demonstrated that Erdrich is a master of the simile. Some more examples:
Then the vest plunged down against her, so slick and plush that it was like being rubbed by an enormous tongue. (5)
My mother held out a heavy tin one (spoon) from the drawer and screwed her lips up like a coin purse to kiss me. (12)
On the much traveled, evil Sister Leopolda: Perhaps she was just sent around to test her Sisters’ faith, like a spot checker in a factory.(45)
She thought of everything so hard that her mind felt warped and sodden as a door that swells up in spring. (107)
Dot was a diligent producer of milk, however. Her breasts, like overfilled inner tubes, strained at her nylon blouses. (210)
#6 Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut
The greatest and most important American novel published during the second half of the twentieth century. So it goes.
#7 The Quiet American by Graham Greene
Here’s Greene on innocence, which, as Arnold Rampersad wryly noted, is a famed American virtue:
Innocence always calls mutely for protection when it would be so much wiser to guard ourselves against it: innocence is like a dumb leper who has lost his bell, wandering the world, meaning no harm.(29)
#8 The Collected Poems of W. H Auden
The only artists who have made a comparable impression on my consciousness are Vonnegut, Sarah Vaughan and Ella Fitzgerald. And I shall continue to revere Auden until the day when I surrender my smidge of nitrogen to the World Fund. (690) (btw, the collected poems are not the complete poems because Auden left out many with which he later became unsatisfied. A notable omission is September 1, 1939 which was excised because Auden eventually decided that the line We must love one another or die constitutes a false alternative.)
#9 The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson
Perhaps foolishly, in the spirit of Ernest Hemingway’s notoriously silly aspiration to knock Mr. Shakespeare on his ass, I would argue that Dickinson is the first, and quite possibly the only, American poet capable of going toe-to-toe with the Bard.
#10 The Complete Poems of Dorothy Parker
I recoil somewhat at the realization that there exists a profound kindred empathy in the deepest recesses of my psyche for this sad, sad, angry, witty woman.
by Richard W. Bray
Tags: Arnold Rampersad, Chris Hedges, Dorothy Parker, Emily Dickinson, Franz De Waal, gore vidal, Graham Greene, Ishi in Two Worlds, Kurt Vonnegut, lists, literature, Louise Erdrich, Love Medicine, Primates and Philosophers, Slaughterhouse-Five, The Collected Poems of W. H Auden, The Complete Poems of Dorothy Parker, The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson, The Quiet American, Theodora Kroeber, Top Ten Book List, top ten lists, United States: Essays 1952-1992, W.H. Auden, War is a Force that Gives us Meaning