About three weeks ago I posted a short entry detailing
the next six books I wanted to read now that the family is established down in
Texas.
(By the way, things are flowing nicely: the wife is
nearly a month into her new job, the main reason we moved down here; the little
ones are getting used to their new schools and schedules and are starting to
make friends, kicking and screaming; my job hunt is progressing with a
promising second interview tomorrow; and the house is nearly unpacked and fully
operational, for now.)
Since I’m not working and have a full day with other
activities such as walking, weightlifting, ferrying children here and there, and
a daily honey-do list, I allow myself about an hour a day escape: reading. I
have a myriad of interests, but I’ve kept unpacked only the most interesting
books from the move. These include some classic fiction, and a few nonfiction
tomes on the JFK assassination, an old obsession, and World War II, my current
obsession. Six books, to be read in a specific order.
That was what I proposed.
Indeed, of those six books of 3,429 pages, I got
through the first two: one third done. I wanted to get through all six by
Halloween. But now a monkey wrench has been thrown into things, as monkey
wrenches are wont to do, especially when it comes to my reading plans.
Patch, the only one in the family with a reading
appetite as voracious as mine, wanted to get a library card.
So two weeks ago we google’d and Waze’d the town
library and visited it. Housed adjacent to town hall, it’s a modern four-story
appealing reservoir of books. Upon entrance we were greeted with friendly
smiles and easy assistance procuring a pair of new cards. Patch then went off
to find some reading materials (among which, interestingly enough, was an adult
horror novel written by the Goosebumps author R.L. Stine. The little ones are
going through a Goosebumps renaissance, mainly for nostalgia reasons.)
Having a reading plan I did not wish to borrow any
books. So I browsed to get a feel for the quality and quantity of books here.
Man proposes, God disposes.
Immediately, this book jumped off the shelf at me:
Wow! Since childhood I’ve been a Roger Zelazny fan. A strong second-tier SF master who should have been more widely read outside the genre, Zelazny was prolific from the mid-60s until his death in 1995. He specialized in series where classical mythology – Greek, Egyptian, and Indian, for example – are translated into a science fiction setting, but also wrote a score of stand-alone novels. I first read To Die in Italbar (1973) as a kid of twelve (Patch’s age right now, interestingly enough), and re-read it twice over the years as an adult. Additionally, I’ve read:
This
Immortal (1966)
Lord
of Light (1967), twice
Damnation
Alley (1969)
The
Doors of His Face, the Lamps of His Mouth (1971)
The
Guns of Avalon (1972)
A
Dark Traveling (1987)
But nothing since summer 2015.
His output numbered at least fifty books, which
includes numerous collaborations with other famous SF writers (including one
with Philip K. Dick, on my Acquisitions List), but does not include works of
poetry and short story collections and anthologies.
So imagine my surprise when this book leapt out at me –
the Chronicles of Amber, ten books in one twelve-hundred-plus page omnibus. Now, Guns of Avalon, Book Two of the Amber
series, I did read back in 2012. Unfortunately, that was around four hundred
books ago, so I do not recall the plot, but I do note that I ranked it as an “A”
in my reading log.
This really appeals to me. The past year I’ve
generally been reading doorstops nonstop. The average length of these books is
probably around 450 pages, and the average weight of each book is about four
pounds. So although this Amber anthology might weigh a bit more than that, each
book clocks in at less than a third the amount of pages, so I can put some mileage
on the brain reading-wise.
On the old Reading Plan I’ve read The Witnesses, the Warren Commission testimonies, and Little Big Man, a classic Western, which
I’ll review in the next few days. I think later today I’ll crack the first of
the Amber books. I’m always on the lookout to fall into new worlds Should be
enjoyable, and I’m anticipating the re-read of Book Two especially.
Oh, and unpacking I came across a small book on naval
warfare by one of the masters of the field, John Keegan. It’s basically divided
into four long segments. The third is on the Battle of Midway and the fourth on
two caravans sunk during the Battle of the Atlantic. I think I’ll read the
Midway section concurrent with the first Amber novel, as I’m missing the daily
fiction/nonfiction reading balance the past five weeks of sticking to one book
at a time.
Happy reading!
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