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Amazon Purchases

Seems like it would be fun and perhaps a bit revealing to check in every so often and see what readers are buying through the Amazon links on this site. So here's the first in what will be an occasional look at what you bought through my links.

I went back to April 1 to compile this list--6 months.

  • By far, the most popular purchase was The Invention of Morel by Adolfo BIoy Casares. These purchases were quite obviously in direct correlation to this post, in which I exhorted everyone to read Morel after writing a short piece on the book for Boldtype. Those of you who took on Morel after my recommendation should read my essay on Bioy for more on this work and others by him.



  • After that, we get into a few books that tied: Senselessness, 2666, The Siege of Krishnapur, and A Rhetoric of Irony are among them. Senselessness I've mentioned a lot, so I'll refer readers back to my previous remarks on that book. Ditto for 2666.

    The Siege of Krishnapur is a novel I read a number of years ago. Its one of my favorite reads of the last few years, but it's fairly neglected (NYRB Classics publishes it in the U.S.). I was inspired to write about it after it became a finalist for the Booker of the Bookers and received a wave of media attention.

    A Rhetoric of Irony I haven't gone out of my way to single out for attention, but I have had reason to mention it in a few posts. It's a great, very readable work of criticism by a great critic.

Comments

Thank you for the Senselessness posts - I enjoyed the book. And, wow! The Siege of Krishnapur is part of a trilogy!! I now need to get the other two..

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Neus Arqués, author of Un hombre de Pago: On Translations or the Pursuit of the Domino Effect
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