Monday, Jan. 07, 1980
THE BEST OF THE SEVENTIES
FICTION Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon: technology and slapstick raised to the nth power.
Humboldt's Gift by Saul Bellow: a saline picaresque of American literary life.
Look at the Harlequins! by Vladimir Nabokov: the master's valedictory novel, with his customary flourishes and optical allusions.
One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez: a South American village transformed by magic and time.
Ragtime by E.L. Doctorow: the past imperfect, done with syncopation and high style.
Shosha by Isaac Bashevis Singer: the most recent novel by America's 1978 Nobel laureate for Literature.
The Stories of John Cheever by John Cheever: elegies by a master of the short form.
The World According to Garp by John Irving: an explosive tragicomedy about feminism and fatherly love.
NONFICTION Dispatches by Michael Herr: highly evocative reporting about the Viet Nam War and its aftermath.
Nixon Agonistes by Garry Wills: a prescient analysis of the pre Watergate President.
The Great War and Modern Memory by Paul Fussell: the rise of modernism from the trenches of World War I.
The Gulag Archipelago by Alexander Solzhenitsyn: a harrowing documentary of Stalinist terror and oppression.
The Lives of a Cell by Lewis Thomas: essays that raise science writing to an art.
The Right Stuff by Tom Wolfe: the lives and lively times of the first U.S. astronauts.
The Woman Warrior by Maxine Hong Kingston: musings about growing up Chinese and female in America.
Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance by Robert M, Pirsig: a cross-country search for enlightenment.
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