David Auerbach’s Books of the Year 2017

While the world went mad this year, I retreated a bit and did more reading than I had in some time. I have seen the pendulum of public sentiment cycle from complacency to hysteria and back twice now, and I am more fatalistic than ever about such cycles having to take their course. (My description of Thomas Pynchon’s “decoherence events” applies just as well to the Trump presidency as it does to September 11, 2001.) Being part of the collective public discourse this year was unhealthier than in any time I have ever seen.

I believe all the titles below deserve attention. The top books have been chosen based on personal significance and relevance. Appiah’s As If is a plea for a cosmopolitan pluralism (of provisional viewpoints, not of truths) based on a reading of the great Hans Vaihinger. It is a theoretical work that has far more relevance to technology than it first appears, as I try to explain in my forthcoming Bitwise: A Life in Code. Földényi’s Melancholy is a Burton-inspired chronicle that bests a thousand other intellectual histories of its kind. It spoke to me of what it is to be the sort of person who feels the need and drive to read all these books in the first place, and of the intangible benefits I gain from them. And the purportedly final version of Tom Phillips’ A Humument is a thing of beauty, drastically different from its previous editions in many regards, and one of the deepest texts of our time, fifty years after its first publication.

The greatest novel I read this year was Thomas Pynchon’s Mason & Dixon, the right novel for the right moment, but not one published in 2017.

In an attempt to provide a bit more apparent order, I have created a few subcategories for nonfiction. These are quite approximate; some books could have easily gone under a different heading. They are there to break the lists down into more manageable chunks.

When it comes to books, my eyes are bigger than my…eyes. Books under “Of Interest” are there either because (1) they are too out of my areas of knowledge for me to feel comfortable recommending them, (2) I have sufficient reservations about their content but feel they are too significant to ignore, or (3) I just haven’t read enough of them. I would feel terrible not noting Slezkine’s The House of Government, but I did not have time to read most of its 1100 pages.

Be well, read much, take care.

BOOKS OF MY YEAR

As If: Idealization and Ideals
Kwame Anthony Appiah
Harvard University Press

Melancholy (The Margellos World Republic of Letters)
László F. Földényi (Foldenyi)
Yale University Press

 

LITERATURE

Into the Cyclorama
Annie Kim
Southern Indiana Review Press

Symphony for Human Transport
Lisa Samuels
Shearsman Books

The Golden Cockerel & Other Writings
Juan Rulfo
Deep Vellum Publishing

Homesick for Another World: Stories
Ottessa Moshfegh
Penguin Press

The World Goes On
László Krasznahorkai
New Directions

The Manhattan Project
László Krasznahorkai
Sylph Editions

So Much Blue: A Novel
Percival Everett
Graywolf Press

Blackass: A Novel
A. Igoni Barrett
Graywolf Press

The Essential Fictions
Isaac Babel
Northwestern University Press

Ka: Dar Oakley in the Ruin of Ymr
John Crowley
Saga Press

Gap Gardening: Selected Poems
Rosmarie Waldrop
New Directions

Judgment: A Novel (Northwestern World Classics)
David Bergelson, Sasha Senderovich, Harriet Murav
Northwestern University Press

Nest in the Bones: Stories by Antonio Benedetto
Antonio Di Benedetto
Archipelago

Newcomers: Book One
Lojze Kovacic
Archipelago

Sisters of the Cross (Russian Library)
Alexei Remizov
Columbia University Press

Frontier
Can Xue
Open Letter

The Construction of the Tower of Babel
Juan Benet
Wakefield Press

The War Nerd Iliad

Feral House

Go, Went, Gone
Jenny Erpenbeck
New Directions

The Collected Poems of Li He (Calligrams)
Li He
New York Review Books

Chinese Poetic Writing (Calligrams)
Francois Cheng
New York Review Books

The Book of Disquiet: The Complete Edition
Fernando Pessoa
New Directions

 

HUMANITIES

Melancholic Habits: Burton’s Anatomy & the Mind Sciences
Jennifer Radden
Oxford University Press

Dystopia: A Natural History
Gregory Claeys
Oxford University Press

The Rift in The Lute: Attuning Poetry and Philosophy
Maximilian de Gaynesford
Oxford University Press

David Jones: Engraver, Soldier, Painter, Poet
Thomas Dilworth
Jonathan Cape Ltd

The Messages We Send: Social Signals and Storytelling
G. R. F. Ferrari
Oxford University Press

The Mind of the Book: Pictorial Title-Pages
Alastair Fowler
Oxford University Press

Changing the Subject: Philosophy from Socrates to Adorno
Raymond Geuss
Harvard University Press

The Epic Distilled: Studies in the Composition of the Aeneid
Nicholas Horsfall
Oxford University Press

I, Me, Mine: Back to Kant, and Back Again
Beatrice Longuenesse
Oxford University Press

Art and Myth of the Ancient Maya
Oswaldo Chinchilla Mazariegos
Yale University Press

The Subject of Experience
Galen Strawson
OUP Oxford

 

SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY

After Digital: Computation as Done by Brains and Machines
James A. Anderson
Oxford University Press

The Lazy Universe: An Introduction to the Principle of Least Action
Jennifer Coopersmith
Oxford University Press

 

THE SOCIAL SCIENCES

The Sum of Small Things: A Theory of the Aspirational Class
Elizabeth Currid-Halkett
Princeton University Press

Marx’s Inferno: The Political Theory of Capital
William Clare Roberts
Princeton University Press

A Brief History of Economic Thought
Alessandro Roncaglia
Cambridge University Press

Paths to Fulfillment: Women’s Search for Meaning and Identity
Ruthellen Josselson
Oxford University Press

The Timeliness of George Herbert Mead

University of Chicago Press

The Enigma of Reason
Hugo Mercier, Dan Sperber
Harvard University Press

Shame: A Brief History (History of Emotions)
Peter N. Stearns
University of Illinois Press

The Truth about Language: What It Is and Where It Came From
Michael C. Corballis
University Of Chicago Press

 

HISTORY AND POLITICS

Cuz: The Life and Times of Michael A.
Danielle S. Allen
Liveright

The Water Kingdom
PHILIP BALL
Vintage

The Evangelicals: The Struggle to Shape America
Frances FitzGerald
Simon & Schuster

A History of Judaism
Martin Goodman
Penguin Press

One Long Night: A Global History of Concentration Camps
Andrea Pitzer
Little, Brown and Company

The Habsburg Empire
Pieter M. Judson
Harvard University Press

The Transformation of American Liberalism
George Klosko
Oxford University Press

Politics in the Roman Republic (Key Themes in Ancient History)
Henrik Mouritsen
Cambridge University Press

Sold People: Traffickers and Family Life in North China
Johanna S. Ransmeier
Harvard University Press

Classical Greek Oligarchy: A Political History
Matthew Simonton
Princeton University Press

The Cold War: A World History
Odd Arne Westad
Basic Books

 

COMICS

Poppies of Iraq
Brigitte Findakly, Lewis Trondheim
Drawn and Quarterly

Satania
Fabien Vehlmann
NBM Publishing

It Don’t Come Easy
Philippe Dupuy, Charles Berberian
Drawn and Quarterly

The Green Hand and Other Stories
Nicole Claveloux
New York Review Comics

Voices in the Dark
Ulli Lust
New York Review Comics

My Favorite Thing Is Monsters
Emil Ferris
Fantagraphics

Pascin
Joann Sfar
Uncivilized Books

The Interview
Manuele Fior
Fantagraphics

Yvain: The Knight of the Lion
M.T. Anderson
Candlewick

Olympians: Artemis: Wild Goddess of the Hunt
George O’Connor
First Second

The Customer is Always Wrong
Mimi Pond
Drawn and Quarterly

 

OF INTEREST

Herder’s Hermeneutics: History, Poetry, Enlightenment
Kristin Gjesdal
Cambridge University Press

Capitalism without Capital: The Rise of the Intangible Economy
Jonathan Haskel, Stian Westlake
Princeton University Press

The Quantum Revolution in Philosophy
Richard Healey
Oxford University Press

Stalin: Waiting for Hitler, 1929-1941
Stephen Kotkin
Penguin Press

Pompey, Cato, and the Governance of the Roman Empire
Kit Morrell
Oxford University Press

The House of Government: A Saga of the Russian Revolution
Yuri Slezkine
Princeton University Press

No Future: Punk, Politics and British Youth Culture, 1976-1984
Matthew Worley
Cambridge University Press