Archive for January 16th, 2007

Publishing, Opinion

Canadian books communicate real good

In an entry on his Macleans blog from earlier this month, Brian Bethune laments the lapses of grammar in a number of recent Canadian books, using the multiple mistakes found in the Giller-nominated DeNiro’s Game by Rawi Hage as an example. He also references mistakes in Wikinomics by Don Tapscott and Anthony Williams, and Rodrigo Bascunan and Christian Pearce’s Enter the Babylon System. Proving that the issue is not limited to one poor editing team, Bethune’s three examples are published by different companies: House of Anansi, Penguin Canada, and Random House Canada respectively. (It should be noted that Bethune would have read Wikinomics and Babylon System from advance reading copies, so his criticisms may be premature.)

While Quillblog agrees with Bethune’s assertion that grammar matters, many general readers may just say that they know what the authors mean. The line between the relaxed grammar of conversation and formal grammar of the printed word is blurring. As far as Bethune’s distinction between the sliding scale of grammatical correctness for fiction and non-fiction, Quillblog would like to argue for the emotional impact of non-fiction texts. The power of a book on climate change, AIDS, or American foreign policy, to name a few hot topic examples, may be based on grammatically sound, clearly communicated statistics, but meaning and emotion outweigh any dangling modifier.

Douglas Coupland, Reading, Authors

Peeking at authors’ bookshelves

When trying to expand a personal library or find a few books for the winter months, lists help narrow down the endless possibilities. But, as Lev Grossman points out in an article for TIME, there are inherent problems with creating “a best of” list. “Literature is the realm of the ineffable and the unquantifiable; lists are the realm of menus and laundry and rotisserie baseball,” he writes. Grossman actually calls literary lists “an obscenity” but even he could not resist J. Peder Zane’s book, The Top 10.

Zane asked 125 prominent authors, from Douglas Coupland to Norman Mailer, for their personal top 10 lists of favourite books. Zane’s book includes the individual lists as well as the ultimate top 10, made up of the most frequently mentioned works from the authors’ lists combined. While The Top 10 will not help narrow down the choices for reading, Quillblog agrees with Grossman that the results are bound to be interesting.

Curious about the final count? Here’s the top, top 10 list:

1. Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy
2. Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert
3. War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy
4. Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov
5. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain
6. Hamlet by William Shakespeare
7. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
8. In Search of Lost Time by Marcel Proust
9. The Stories of Anton Chekhov by Anton Chekhov
10. Middlemarch by George Eliot



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