The Hunter (aka Point Blank) by Richard Stark (Shane’s book 34, 2011)

This is considered a classic of hardboiled crime fiction. It’s also the only book that I’ve continued to search for after I bought a copy. That’s because it took me a long time to realise that The Hunter and Point Blank, two much-recommended crime novels, were in fact the same book. There are also three film versions: Point Blank, Full Contact and Payback.


Point Blank (Parker 1)

Richard Stark
ALLISON & BUSBY 2008, Paperback, 288 pages, £6.99

Published in 1962, the book is the first in a series of more than 20 novels about Parker, a professional crook. Its author, Donald Westlake wrote more than 100 novels under many pseudonyms. The Parker novels were all written as Richard Stark. In summary, both the novel and its author go by many different names.

Take Your Eye Off the Ball – Playbook Edition by Pat Kirwan (Shane’s book 33, 2011)

I don’t re-read books very often, as regular visitors to this site will know, but this is my second reading of Take Your Eye Off the Ball this year. Strictly speaking, it’s somewhere between a re-reading and a new book, since this Playbook Edition updates the original with more than 50 pages of new material.


Take Your Eye Off the Ball [With DVD]

Pat Kirwan
Triumph Books (IL) 2011, Spiral-bound, 288 pages, £15.94

The main changes are in updated examples from last season as well as new sections on this year’s NFL Draft and an added chapter on the special teams game.

All That I Am by Anna Funder (Shane’s book 32, 2011)

Anna Funder’s first book, Stasiland, was a non-fiction work that explored life in East Germany during the Cold War. Her new book is a novel but one based very closely on real events.


All That I Am

Anna Funder
Viking 2011, Hardcover, 370 pages, £16.99

All That I Am tells the story a group of German activists during the 1930s as they try to warn the world of the threat from Adolf Hitler’s Nazi regime.

Afghanistan by Stephen Tanner (Sara’s book 4, 2011)

Just this week, TIME’s Aryn Baker referred to the US’s current entanglement in Afghanistan as “the unwinnable war” (cover article, under the unnecessarily leading headline Why the US will never save Afghanistan). After finishing Stephen Tanner’s very readable military history of the same, I have to agree with her summary: two and a half thousand years’ worth of history would indicate that indeed, no war between Afghanistan and a foreign belligerent is likely to end well for the overseas or overland invader (erm, sorry, ‘liberator’).

Those 2,500 years of history are wrapped up in Afghanistan: A military history from Alexander the Great to the war against the Taliban. Tanner’s book was one of my summer reads, and while it’s not exactly typical beach fare, it was as engrossing as anything else I’ve read this year.


Afghanistan

Stephen Tanner
Da Capo Press Inc 2009, Paperback, 392 pages, £10.99

The Deptford Trilogy by Robertson Davies (Shane’s books 29-31, 2011)

This trilogy was recommended to me about 20 years ago. It’s taken me a while to get around to reading it, clearly. That’s a shame because all three books are excellent and reading them has made me keen to read more by Davies.


The Deptford Trilogy

Robertson Davies
Penguin 2011, Paperback, 832 pages, £15.99

Robertson Davies was one of Canada’s most distinguished authors and most of his novels were grouped in trilogies: the Salterton, Deptford and Cornish trilogies. He died before completing the third book in what his publisher speculates would have become the Toronto Trilogy.

PopCo by Scarlett Thomas (Shane’s book 28, 2011)

Not long after the success of Thomas’s The End of Mr Y, PopCo appeared in the shops, complete with a similar looking cover. I assumed it was her next novel but in fact PopCo was published first.


PopCo

Scarlett Thomas
Canongate Books Ltd 2008, Paperback, 464 pages, £8.99

That shows once you start to read it. PopCo is less sophisticated than Mr Y and Thomas either has trouble marshalling her material or has simply not yet developed a sense of how to balance a novel.

Reading list: five meta-fiction classics

Metafiction – writing that takes fiction itself as one of its subjects – can be playful, thought-provoking and mystifying. Here are five fascinating – and mind-boggling – classics for those who want to explore the genre.

A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan (Shane’s book 27, 2011)

This is one of those books that could be considered to be a novel or as a series of interconnected short stories, in which certain characters drift from key roles into bit parts and back again. I lean slightly towards the former but I can imagine people making the case for it being a short story collection. It doesn’t matter all that much.


A Visit From the Goon Squad

Jennifer Egan
Corsair 2011, Paperback, 368 pages, £7.99

Most of the chapters are connected to Bennie, a record producer, or his assistant, Sasha, but there are some that centre on characters whose connection to the ongoing story is unclear, at least at first.

Chronic City by Jonathan Lethem (Shane’s book 26, 2011)

A tiger roams the streets of Manhattan, destroying entire buildings on its rampage, the whole of Downtown is obscured by an unexplained grey fog and a fad is developing for mysterious vases, called chaldrons, that sell for extraordinary prices on eBay.


Chronic City

Jonathan Lethem
Faber and Faber 2011, Paperback, 560 pages, £7.99

Against this odd background Jonathan Lethem sets the lives of his main characters. Chase Insteadman is a former child actor who still lives off the royalties from the hit sitcom in which he starred. These days he is more famous for his relationship with Janice Trumbull, an astronaut trapped in orbit on a space station.

An Unexpected Light by Jason Elliot (Sara’s book 3, 2011)

Published in 1999, An Unexpected Light is a remarkable piece of travel writing – it won the 2000 Thomas Cook Travel Book Award – and a very interesting memoir of two journeys through Afghanistan at different times in the country’s history. But more than anything it is a love story: a tribute to Jason Elliot’s desperate love for a place he will never truly belong to.


An Unexpected Light

Jason Elliot
Picador 2007, Paperback, 496 pages, £8.99