Posts Tagged ‘sheila heti’

Authors’ and Editors’ Favorite Reads from 2011

Thursday, December 15th, 2011

Jesse Bering's Bookshelf

With more and more books published every year, it’s increasingly difficult to separate the wheat from the chaff. Does this increase the usefulness of all the annual “Best of” lists? Perhaps. It’s irresistible when a critic distills a year of reading into a simple hierarchy, especially if her tastes match your own. It’s just so efficient. I tend to eschew those books awarded the most (or loudest) hosannas in favor of the previously unknown novels that slipped past me at publication. (This year it’s Ben Lerner’s excellent Leaving the Atocha Station.)

Sites like Salon, The Millions, and The Guardian go straight to the authors for their recommendations. I decided to do the same, canvassing our writers and editors. With a couple caveats: First, the editors couldn’t choose their own titles; Second, one’s choices didn’t need to be published in 2011, just read in 2011. Old classics and novels from 2010 and 2009 are all welcome.

Some submitted a straightforward list, while others penned brief summaries. (The Spanish-Argentinian novelist Andrés Neuman even separated his list by language.) I hope you’ll find your next favorite book among them.

Favorite Reads from 2011: (more…)

Sheila Heti’s Favorite Reads from 2011

Thursday, December 15th, 2011

Sheila Heti is the author of three books of fiction: The Middle Stories, Ticknor, and How Should a Person Be? In July 2011 Faber and Faber published her nonfiction book The Chairs Are Where the People Go: How to Live, Work, and Play in the City, co-written with Misha Glouberman. Her writing has appeared in The New York Times, McSweeney’s, n + 1, and The Guardian. She regularly conducts interviews for The Believer. You can follow her on Twitter @sheilaheti.

There were some wonderful books in my hands this year. My favorites from those published in 2011 were Ben Lerner’s Leaving the Atocha Station, Miranda July’s It Chooses You, and Helen DeWitt’s Lightning Rods. Each was gutsy in its own way; each gave us a unique, complete world.

Lightning Rods reminded me how fun following a narrative can be. It’s a great joke about sex and America, like a 1960s Playboy comic come to life. For It Chooses You, Miranda July went out into Los Angeles, into the world of people selling their used things, and returned with photographs of the people and their homes, and her hilarious and touching transcribed conversations with them. The whole thing is tied together with a searching narrative about her attempt to finish her second film. Leaving the Atocha Station is a brilliant first novel from the poet, Ben Lerner. He takes us into the world of a young poet on a fellowship in Spain, as he thinks about art, romantic love, and the love (and loathing) of oneself.

Some other books I loved this year, not published in 2011:

Lucinella by Lore Segal. For me, the most memorable scene was her depiction of a literary party, which highlights the pain of seeing the self one was, and then the pain of the self one becomes. I hope to read everything she’s written.

Schulz and Peanuts by David Michaelis is a brilliant biography that reads like Michaelis was there, standing by Charles Schulz his whole life. It’s a compelling and beautifully written narrative of a singular artist.

Parts of Books Copied Without Permission by Anonymous is a chapbook someone gave to me at a reading in Montreal. No permissions were sought or granted; the guy just reproduced his favorite stories and poems. “It is as if I dragged a photocopier through my bookshelves, glued it all together, and gave you what I made.” The best poetry I read this year came from here.

The Ghost Writer by Philip Roth. I don’t know how it took me so long to get to this. I then quickly read all of the Zuckerman books, but loved The Ghost Writer best.

Finally, as great as any book I read this year was Louis C.K.’s series, Louie. He plays a version of himself (a divorced comic with two daughters living in New York). Each episode has its own original structure. He wrote, produced, and edited the series. He really understands and sees people, and some of the episodes (like the Iraq episode, and the one where his friend is planning to commit suicide) contain scenes so richly and sensitively imagined they’re not only hilarious, but also profound and unforgettable.

All Authors’ and Editors’ Favorite Reads of 2011

The Introduction

Misha Glouberman: The Happiness Class

Thursday, July 14th, 2011

Misha Glouberman is the co-author of The Chairs Are Where the People Go: How to Live, Work, and Play in the City. He is a is a performer, facilitator, and artist who lives in Toronto.

As told to Sheila Heti.

I taught a class on happiness to my friends, and one thing that came up was that the topic was seen as sort of trivial. I found that really weird. It was seen as some sort of sickness of Western consumerist individualism. Happiness seems to me the most untrivial thing to talk about or think about. I think it’s really worthy of investigation. Pretty much everything that people do, in one way or another, is done in the interest of trying to be happy. So it doesn’t seem like a bad idea to spend a bit of one’s time thinking about it. (more…)