Biff's Favorite Books Read in 2025

       


     1)   Second Place by Rachel Cusk
           Few, if any, recent novels has better captured the inner and outer tumult of
           lives in our century. Fierce.

     2)  Cadillac Desert by Marc Reisner
           Cadillac Desert was first published in 1986 and stands as the definitive 
           history of water policy in the American West. A jeremiad against 
           the dam happy Bureau of Reclamation, the book's full force is 
           only being felt now as these marvels of twentieth century 
           technology are being removed from Western rivers. The group think and
           hubris displayed by the Bureau is the main focus of the book: not for
           nothing does Reisner preface this tome with Shelley's Ozymandias
           However, unlike some environmental screeds, Cadillac Desert is a
           balanced book that makes history come alive. There are memorable 
           portraits of such indelible figures as John Wesley Powell, William
           Mulholland, and Floyd Dominy.

    3)   The Blithedale Romance by Nathaniel Hawthorne
           Here is an old chestnut pertinent to our times. Socialistic 
           communes. A ménage à trois. Grifting spiritualists. Sounds like 
           present day Oregon to me.

    4)   Perspective(s) by Laurent Binet
          This is an epistolary novel set in 16th century Florence which centers
          on the (fictional) murder of painter Jacopo da Pontormo. The characters,
          nearly all of them actual historical figures, are a who's who of Renaissance
          Italy: Cosimo de' Medici, Piero Strozzi, Giorgio Vasari, Cellini, Bronzino,
          Plautilla Nelli, Michelangelo, etc.. I have thoroughly enjoyed the three
          previous historical novels by the resourceful French writer and 
          Perspective(s) proved equally memorable. Below is Pontormo's Venus 
          and Cupid which figures prominently in the book. Egads!

     5)    The Last Manager by John W. Miller
             This biography expertly captures the complex makeup of its subject, 
             Baltimore Orioles manager Earl Weaver. Weaver was the premier 
             entertainer of Baltimore during my youth, just eclipsing non-baseball 
             fan John Waters, so one can rightly surmise that I am biased. Weaver 
             was not only a brilliant baseball tactician, but also a great showman. His
             contretemps with the umpires enlivened many a dull game. Miller
             traces the vaudevillian side of Weaver to his childhood in St. Louis where 
             he enjoyed the antic of the Cardinals' Gashouse Gang. Miller also ably 
             outlines the many years Weaver spent in the minor leagues, both as a 
             player and a manager, that helped mold the fiery bantam. The Last
             Manager is a book as wily and compelling as its subject.

    6)     The Prone Gunman by Jean-Patrick Manchette
             This taut 1981 noir sticks everything but the landing.

    7)      Dolly and the Bird of Paradise by Dorothy Dunnett
             One of my favorite writers. I try to dole out my readings of her because
             I'm afraid I'll run out of these treats before I expire. The book is a part of
             her Johnson Johnson mystery thrillers which you could always lend
             to your Aunt Minnie. More Sayers than Christie with modern trappings;
             though Dunnett is way hipper than your Aunt Minnie.

    8)     James by Percival Everett
             No doubt you've heard of this one. I did not like it as much as
             Erasure, but surrendered to it the moment that the character of
             Dan Emmett, author of the song Dixie, was introduced. Belongs on the
             shelf with Ishmael Reed's Mumbo Jumbo, a similar treatment of 
             minstrelsy, cultural cross-pollination and appropriation.

    9)     Radetzky March by Joseph Roth
             Ermanno Olmi's film of The Legend of the Holy Drinker hipped me
             to Roth who died just before the start of World War 2. Radetzky March
             traces the decline of the Austro-Hungarian Empire through three
             fictional generations of military officers. I have a feeling that Emeric 
             Pressburger was making mental notes when he read this.

   10)    In Love With The Movies by Dan Talbot

            I also enjoyed:

            Home Cooking by Laurie Colwin, The Brutalists by Owen Hopkins
            Tecumseh and the Prophet by Peter Cozzens
            The Journey of August King by John Ehle
            Twisted Kicks by Tom Carson, Caravaggio by Andrew Graham-Dixon
            Bing Crosby by Gary Giddins, Kudos by Rachel Cusk
            Malaparte by Maurizio Serra


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