3. The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky. I've written about this book before within the confines of this blog, so I'll keep the description to a minimal nothing. Read this book. It's a breeze, and if you're a regular reader, you'll probably burn through this banned, young adult book in a maximum of three days. It'll take you back to your high school days, make you sympathize with your "problems" from another, simpler, time, and maybe even jerk a few tears from the ducts. Coming to a big screen near you in 2012. (Its release date in Norway is September 28, 2012, so that would make the American release date...ah, I don't know. But the movie does star Emma Watson, whom you may remember from such films as "Harry Potter 1," "Harry Potter 2," and so on.) Anyway. Read it. You shan't regret it, and if you do, I'll totally buy you a coke.
2. The Visible Man by Chuck Klosterman. Dude. OK, so Klosterman is by far my favorite modern author, and perhaps my favorite writer to read, ever. I just love his takes on pop culture and reflections on human perception and semantics. I'm a semantic person, and Klosterman might very well be the mack-daddy of semantics in pop culture. His first novel, Downtown Owl, was, putting it nicely, a worthy first effort at a novel. It had some decent characters, interesting setting, and something reminiscent of a plot. The Visible Man shatters the notion that Klosterman can't pull off fiction. Set in Texas and alluding to the Sopranos "bad guy goes to the therapist" story line, this is a psychological head-fucker that starts out as entertaining and turns into "Holy crap." Contrary to the title, it's actually about a guy with the power to be unseen. (don't worry, anti-Harry Potter fans...it's nothing like an invisibility cloak. OK, well, it is, but there's really no magic involved. It's all scientific.) This man's observations and perceptions on people's solitary reality will seriously make you think, and this book definitely felt more in-line with Klosterman's favorite niche, human behaviors and perceptions of reality. Definitely a page-turner, and one of my favorite books of 2011 that was actually published in 2011.
Sweet beard, Fyodor. |
2011 Honorable Mentions: The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay by Michael Chabon, The Hunger Games Trilogy by Suzanne Collins, How to be Good by Nick Hornby, Half Broke Horses by Jeanette Walls, and Everybody Loves You When You're Dead by Neil Strauss.
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