During the last couple of months, I’ve liked these books.
The Apprenticeship of Duddy Karvitz: Mordecai Richler
Duddy is a young Jew in Montreal – not yet of a legal age to
enter into contracts. He is mean, arrogant, determined and without any
scruples. An entrepreneur, he is always networking and turning chance meetings
into opportunities, and using everyone to push ahead to fulfill his dream of
buying land near a lake, because “a man without land is nothing.”

Malcolm Bradbury published his first novel Eating People is
Wrong and Jack Kerouac had a particularly productive year with two books (Dr.
Sax, and Maggie Cassidy) and a collection of poems (Mexico City Blues).
The non-fiction list includes The Rum Diary by Hunter S. Thompson; The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany by
William L. Shirer; and The Second World War by Winston S.
Churchill.
However, few, if any, books published in that year would be relevant
today thematically or stylistically. Duddu Karvitz does, and that is the importance
of Richler.
Pressure to Sing: Brandon Pitts

Living Will
Marksman aims but cannot hit
The inept stumbles upon the gold mine
The dead are revived through television
Vitality given to the couch
A living
will, turn off the coma
The karmic debtors are now rich
She was once young and beautiful
He was once old and fat.
Translating Partition: Editors Ravikant & Tarun K. Saint

“You know there was a poet in our Kashmir, Ghani, who was
well known as “Ghani Kashmiri.” A poet from Iran had come to visit him. The
doors of his house were always open. He used to say, “What is there in my house
that I should keep the doors locked? Well, I keep the doors closed when I am
inside the house because I am its only asset.” The poet from Iran left his
poetry notebook in the vacant house. One couplet in that notebook was
incomplete. He had composed the second line, but could not do the first one.
The second line ran this: “The smell of kebab is wafting from your clothes.”
When the Iranian poet returned and looked in his notebook, he found the first
line written there, “Has the hand of a blighted soul touched your daman?
Panditji, I am also a blighted soul. I’ve taken issue with
you, because I am dedicating this book to you.”