The Novel Cure: From Abandonment to Zestlessness: 751 Books to Cure What Ails You (57 page)

BOOK: The Novel Cure: From Abandonment to Zestlessness: 751 Books to Cure What Ails You
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Next time you’re woken by next door’s teenager playing the drums, think about how soulless it would be if they weren’t there. Bring the fence down—metaphorically, if not literally—and feel the warm breeze blow through.

See also:
City fatigue

Misanthropy

Noise, too much

NEIGHBORS, NOT HAVING

See:
Loneliness

READING AILMENT   
New books, seduced by

CURE   
Learn the art of rereading

I
t’s tempting to see books the way we see gadgets: that we need the very latest, most up-to-date version. But just because a novel is new doesn’t mean it’s any good; indeed, with a new novel being published every three minutes,
*
the chances that it’s good are actually rather low. Far better to wait and see if a novel stands
the test of time, and in the meantime read one that’s already proved itself to be worth reading. Because the art of rereading is a neglected one, and arguably even more important than the act of reading the first time around.

Sometimes a novel operates only at the level of the story; in this case a second reading will be a watered-down experience of the first. But the best novels converse with the reader on many different levels, and in our rush to find out what happens we swim over things. A second reading nets those fish. No longer so blinded by the whats, we can appreciate the hows and the whys. We’re more likely to notice the ominous foreshadowing of events before they happen, for instance, and smile with the author at how a character deceives himself or herself—and at how the author first deceived us. We’re more likely to have a clearer taste of the philosophy underscoring the book by the end. And we’ll certainly be more alert to the author’s skill at steering the narrative—what was held back, what was told—and how language, dialogue, themes, and imagery were used to achieve the atmosphere, momentum, and tone.

The revisiting of an especially admired or loved book can become, perhaps, a five-year ritual, marking the passage of time in your life, helping you to see how you have changed, and how you have remained the same. Do not go always rushing after the new. Like the best friendships and wine, the best novels get better over the years.

NIGHTMARES

I
f you’re prone to being disturbed by bad dreams in the lonesome early hours, a soothing novel will help to reset your psyche. Keep a stash of these river reads by your bed and drift back to sleep in their current.

THE TEN BEST NOVELS FOR AFTER A NIGHTMARE

The River Why
DAVID JAMES DUNCAN

Deep River
SHUSAKU ENDO

The Wind in the Willows
KENNETH GRAHAME

The River King
ALICE HOFFMAN

Three Men in a Boat
JEROME K. JEROME

A River Runs Through It
NORMAN MACLEAN

A River Sutra
GITA MEHTA

The Guide
R. K. NARAYAN

Waterland
GRAHAM SWIFT

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
MARK TWAIN

NINETYSOMETHING, BEING
THE TEN BEST NOVELS FOR NINETYSOMETHINGS

The Secret Scripture
SEBASTIAN BARRY

Through the Looking-Glass
LEWIS CARROLL

Bleak House
CHARLES DICKENS

Benediction
KENT HARUF

The Old Man and the Sea
ERNEST HEMINGWAY

The Book of Laughter and Forgetting
MILAN KUNDERA

The Stone Angel
MARGARET LAURENCE

Nightmare Abbey
THOMAS LOVE PEACOCK

The Grapes of Wrath
JOHN STEINBECK

The Mating Season
P. G. WODEHOUSE

NOBODY LIKES YOU

See:
Unpopular, being

NOISE, TOO MUCH

W
hen your surroundings are too noisy—maybe the TV is always on, or your fellow commuters are shouting into their phones, or the guy on the treadmill is grunting—seal yourself off in a world of your own with an audiobook and a good pair of headphones. You’ll find that to be read to is a treat—and, with these readers, an unforgettable experience.

THE TEN BEST AUDIOBOOKS

Middlemarch
GEORGE ELIOT, READ BY JULIET STEVENSON

The Great Gatsby
F. SCOTT FITZGERALD, READ BY FRANK MULLER

The Corrections
JONATHAN FRANZEN, READ BY DYLAN BAKER

The Return of the Native
THOMAS HARDY, READ BY ALAN RICKMAN

The Old Man and the
Sea
ERNEST HEMINGWAY, READ BY

DONALD SUTHERLAND

Ulysses
JAMES JOYCE, READ BY JIM NORTON

Motherless Brooklyn
JONATHAN LETHEM, READ BY STEVE BUSCEMI

Wolf Hall
HILARY MANTEL, READ BY SIMON SLATER

His Dark Materials trilogy
PHILIP PULLMAN, READ BY

PHILIP PULLMAN AND OTHERS

Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone
J. K. ROWLING, READ BY

STEPHEN FRY

READING AILMENT   
Non-reading partner, having a

CURE   
Convert or desert

I
f you live with someone who doesn’t read books, it can be hard to carve out and protect reading time for yourself—especially if your partner prefers to watch TV, talk to you, or position him- or herself between you and your book when you’re reading in bed. You have two choices: convert or desert.

To convert, browse this book for some ideas, then take your partner to a cozy bookshop and treat him or her to a new book. If you can’t persuade your partner to read what you buy, try reading aloud to each other. This is a wonderful way to share the experience of a book together, and spend time strengthening your bond with books as the glue. See our lists of Ten Best Novels to Turn Your Partner On to Fiction (male and female) for ideas.

If that doesn’t work, acquire some audiobooks to play on long car journeys or while you’re involved in domestic chores together—something that both of you will enjoy (see our list of Ten Best Audiobooks, above). If your partner gets into a particular novelist, you can give him or her a physical copy of another book by the same author to follow up.

If your partner still refuses to join in, you’ll need to set some parameters to protect your reading time. Decide how many hours you’d like to read per week, and negotiate when these hours will be—Saturday afternoons, perhaps, and the half hour before you go to sleep. Find a place in the house to read where you will not be disturbed—perhaps in your reading nook (see: Household chores, distracted by). If you read in bed, retire half an hour before your partner does. If your partner is lost without you (no one likes to be ignored), work out together what he or she could do while you’re reading: Grow tomatoes? Learn to play the banjo? Make some bookshelves for you?

If none of these things work, and you can see that life with your partner means a life without books, then you have no option. Desert him or her and find someone else. See: Mr./Mrs. Right, looking for.

THE TEN BEST NOVELS TO TURN YOUR PARTNER (MALE) ON TO FICTION

For mysterious reasons, men don’t read as much fiction as women. If you’re saddled with a man who hasn’t touched a novel since school, give him one of these. (Tell him it’s nonfiction in disguise.)

The Wasp Factory
IAIN BANKS

City of Thieves
DAVID BENIOFF

Any Human Heart
WILLIAM BOYD

The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay
MICHAEL CHABON

Microserfs
DOUGLAS COUPLAND

The Name of the Rose
UMBERTO ECO

Catch-22
JOSEPH HELLER

A Prayer for Owen Meany
JOHN IRVING

Galatea 2.2
RICHARD POWERS

Breath
TIM WINTON

THE TEN BEST NOVELS TO TURN YOUR PARTNER (FEMALE) ON TO FICTION

For equally mysterious reasons, some women don’t read novels. If your partner lacks the fiction gene, seduce her with a really good story. Engrossing, engaging, entertaining, these are by some of the best storytellers of modern times.

Alias Grace
MARGARET ATWOOD

Persuasion
JANE AUSTEN

A Visit from the Goon Squad
JENNIFER EGAN

A Room with a View
E. M. FORSTER

To the End of the Land
DAVID GROSSMAN

A Thousand Splendid Suns
KHALED HOSSEINI

The Hotel New Hampshire
JOHN IRVING

The Piano Tuner
DANIEL MASON

White Teeth
ZADIE SMITH

Beautiful Ruins
JESSE WALTERS

NOSE, HATING YOUR

Perfume: The Story of a Murderer

PATRICK SÜSKIND

S
o you hate your nose.

All noses are pretty weird, if you gaze at them long enough. Some are big, some are dainty, some are ski jumps, some are craggy outcrops complete with craters—but none, we can probably agree, are particularly lovely. What dictates how others perceive our nose is our own opinion of it, and those with high self-esteem carry their noses off whatever shape and size they are. To learn to love your nose, start not with the organ, but with yourself. See: Self-esteem, low.

On the other hand, if you really do have an ugly honker—and, wow, have we seen some misshapen disasters
*
—bury it immediately in
Perfume: The Story of a Murderer
by Patrick Süskind. Within a page, you’ll be plunged into a time (the eighteenth century) when there reigned in the streets a stench “barely conceivable” to us today—a noxious mix of manure, urine, and “spoiled cabbage,” of “greasy sheets” and chamber pots, of blood, foul breath, and “tumorous disease.” Here, in the most putrid corner of the stinkiest of cities (Paris), is born Jean-Baptiste Grenouille, on the hottest day of
the year, his mother squatting among the fish guts under a table on which she’d just been scaling a (stinking) fish. He’s passed into the hands of a wet nurse, and thence to a cloister of monks—because, the wet nurse complains, the baby has no smell. There follows a description of how baby
should
smell—their feet are like “warm stone,” or “curds,” or “fresh butter,” the wet nurse says, feeling her way; their bodies “like a pancake that’s been soaked in milk,” and the back of their heads, the little bald spot left by the cowlick, that bit smells “best of all . . . like caramel.”

And so, within a few pages, we are vicariously exposed—because good writing succeeds in reproducing the whiffs themselves, or at least the reception of them in our brains—to smells at both ends of the olfactory repertoire. Jean-Baptiste himself, of course, though devoid of personal odor, has the most acute sense of smell in Paris and an indiscriminate, dangerous appetite for procuring new scents, especially those of young virgins. But, on the positive side, he earns a good living from his nose as a perfumer. And if, like him, you make full use of your nose, educating it with full-bodied red wines and freshly ground coffee beans, with subtle
parfums
and jasmine and a few drops of lemongrass essence on the sponge in your morning shower—if you fully appreciate its sensual input in your life—then, we guarantee, you’ll learn to love and appreciate your nose.

Even if it really is grotesque.

See also:
Vanity

O
OBESITY

A Far Cry from Kensington

MURIEL SPARK

•   •   •

Pereira Maintains

ANTONIO TABUCCHI

•   •   •

The No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency

ALEXANDER MCCALL SMITH

F
or a beautifully simple cure for obesity, follow the advice of Mrs. Hawkins, the double-chinned heroine of Muriel Spark’s mischievous satire of the publishing industry in postwar London. Mrs. Hawkins is liberal with her advice and doles it out on such far-ranging topics as finding a job, writing a book, improving your concentration, getting married, how to say no, where to go if you’ve had a lot of trouble,
*
and how to deal with too much casual correspondence. But her tip for losing weight is the best: eat half of what you would normally eat. “I offer this advice without fee,” she says. “It is included in the price of this book.” We bought her novel, and are now including the advice free in the price of ours.
*

Obesity often has a psychological cause, however, and no amount of dieting will help if the psychological cause remains untreated. So it is with Antonio Tabucchi’s Dr. Pereira, the portly, widowed editor of the culture page
of the
Lisboa
, Lisbon’s evening rag. It’s 1938, and under the shadow of war-torn, Fascist Spain, Lisbon “reeks of death.” Nobody has the courage to print the real news, and Pereira fills his page with translations of nineteenth-century French literature instead. Each day he cheers himself up by talking to a photo of his dead wife and tucking into an
omelette
aux fines herbes
and several glasses of lemonade at the Café Orquídea, washed down with coffee and a cigar.

That the omelets are having a deleterious effect on his waistline is clear to Pereira, but he finds himself unable to resist. It’s only when he meets Dr. Cardoso at an out-of-town spa that he begins to understand his need for fatty foods and sugary drinks. General Franco is making a mockery of his job, and therefore of him. Salvation arrives in the form of a young couple he meets at the Café Orquídea, who, Pereira eventually realizes, are involved in underground activities. Here is a way to fight Franco, and recover the “chieftanship” of his soul. It’s not long before Dr. Pereira is ordering seafood salads and mineral water instead.

If you’re overweight because you’re unhappy, don’t padlock the fridge or put yourself on a rigid diet; the diet will fail and you’ll only make yourself unhappier still. Try to discover why you are seeking consolation—this book may give you some ideas (for starters, try: Stuck in a rut, or Career, being in the wrong). Once you’ve ironed out your relationship with yourself, your relationship with food will self-correct.

And if you’re large and you like it, embrace the big-is-beautiful world of “traditionally built” (size twenty-two, to be precise) Mma Precious Ramotswe, star of Alexander McCall Smith’s famous detective series set in Botswana. Precious Ramotswe will show you how to be bold and break the rules, to carry your weight with dignity and aplomb, and win the heart of a good man (if you want one) just by being your witty and wise abundant self. They’re best read in order, beginning with
The No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency.

See also:
Gluttony

High blood pressure

Lethargy

Self-esteem, low

Snoring

Sweating

OBSESSION

Death in Venice

THOMAS MANN

•   •   •

Moby-Dick

HERMAN MELVILLE

T
he truth is that the obsessed do not want to be cured. What they fear most is an end to their obsession, and to this heightened experience of life. For Aschenbach in
Death in Venice
, the three or four hours he spends each day sitting on the beach watching Tadzio at play—and then stalking the boy and his sisters through the increasingly fetid streets of cholera-ridden Venice—are “far too dear to him” to give up. He goes to bed at nine o’clock because, once Tadzio has left the scene, there’s nothing to stay awake for; indeed he can no longer imagine life without this gray-eyed boy with his captivating smile. He knows that the responsible thing to do would be to warn Tadzio’s mother about the “sickness” invading Venice, then lay his hand for the first and last time on Tadzio’s head and say good-bye. For by not warning her, he is risking Tadzio’s death from the cholera epidemic, as well as his own. But he knows that such an act would break the spell, “restore him” to himself, the reasonable Aschenbach of old. And he will not do it.

Part of what keeps the obsession alive is that Tadzio is Polish and Aschenbach can’t understand anything he says. So that what might be the “sheerest commonplace” is elevated, in Aschenbach’s ear, to the realms of music. When Tadzio emerges from the sea, his wet curls lit by the sun, nothing that he shouts out to his siblings on the beach can ruin it. In Aschenbach’s eyes he’s the real thing: a “tender young god.”

Moby-Dick assumes mythological proportions too. The crew have heard the rumors and seen how the whale possesses their own tormented Captain Ahab for a long time before they encounter the great Leviathan himself. When they finally glimpse him, they see only parts—a hump or a tail, a hot jet of vapor blasted into the sky—while the “full terrors” of his vast, shadowy bulk remain submerged. Moby-Dick’s inscrutability gives him power over the crew of the
Pequod
, and Ahab’s inscrutability gives him power over them too. Ishmael doesn’t even set eyes on the captain until several days into the voyage, and even then it’s a “moody stricken Ahab” he sees, so caught up in his own interior claims as to be unapproachable. But how else other than with sheer charisma could Ahab persuade his crew to pursue Moby-Dick, even when the boat was full to capacity with blubber—enough to make
them all rich—and when to carry on meant almost certain death? For they are compelled by one that is himself compelled; such is the power of obsession.

To the reader of
Death in Venice
,
Tadzio is just a boy. But Moby-Dick is never just a whale, and Captain Ahab is never just a man. When Ahab and Moby-Dick disappear together beneath the “great shroud” of the sea, their mutual charisma doesn’t die—something vast, tantalizing, terrible still remains, just out of reach. And so the power to obsess is transferred from the whale to the novel. Because perhaps more than any other novel in literary history,
Moby-Dick
has the ability to hook readers in a way that keeps them coming back throughout their lives. If Aschenbach had been able to know Tadzio, if Ahab had been able to know his whale, if the crew of the
Pequod
had been able to know Ahab, if the reader of
Moby-Dick
were able to
know
Moby-Dick, if Herman Melville . . .

Oh, what’s the use? You don’t want to know how to overcome an obsession. Being obsessed, you don’t want to be cured.

See also
:
Control freak, being a

Infatuation

Loneliness, reading induced

Love, unrequited

Read instead of live, tendency to

Reverence of books, excessive

Sci-fi, stuck on

OLD AGE, HORROR OF

Old Filth

JANE GARDAM

•   •   •

The Skeleton in the Cupboard

ALICE THOMAS ELLIS

O
ld age has its pleasures, which, though different, are not less than the pleasures of youth.” So said wise old Somerset Maugham, who enjoyed his latter years so much he clung on into his nineties. But most of us can’t quite see the appeal, even as we’re forced to let old age creep slowly up. In order to inspire you to embrace the swan song years that lie ahead in a more positive way, we prescribe two novels to show you that just because you’re on in years doesn’t mean you’re past it.

Judge Feathers in Jane Gardam’s
Old Filth
is a supremely dignified and still strikingly handsome man with a powerful presence. And despite being given the nickname of the title, he’s also very clean—ostentatiously so. His shoes shine “like conkers” and his clothes have a 1920s elegance, complete
with a silk handkerchief in his pocket and yellow socks from Harrods. There is no smell of old age in his house—he is rich and long used to having “staff” do things for him. It is not for any lack of personal or domestic hygiene, then, that Judge Feathers is known as Filth, but because, in a phrase he self-deprecatingly coined himself, he “Failed in London, Tried Hong Kong.”

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