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---
title: 'Advance Reading'
date: '2003-01-21T15:53:35-05:00'
permalink: /advance-reading/
tags:
- novels
---
Its the first day of classes here at the College Just South of the Hill, and were all settling down with piles of books and crisp new notebooks. Im hoping, this semester, to get some mileage out of those classes here in the land of Obsolescence; you can keep up with the readings yourself by checking out the Academic Belatedness link over there on the right.
So the good news is that weve got a clean slate, a new semester, and were all pretty caffeinated and rarin to go. The downside, however, is that for the foreseeable future, all the reading Im going to be doing will be re-reading. Honestly, when folks hear I teach contemporary fiction, they inevitably ask me whether Ive read something I invariably havent, because they just dont realize that I spend the bulk of my career reading the same 50 books over and over and over. (And over.)
This re-reading feels like a particular loss right now, as Ive spent the last couple of months both catching up on some things that came out last year and even reading a few things that have yet to be released. [One](http://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/isbnInquiry.asp?isbn=0374277826 "The Time of Our Singing") will hit the shelves tomorrow, as it turns out. [One](http://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/isbnInquiry.asp?isbn=0399149864 "Pattern Recognition") will be released next month. [One](http://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/isbnInquiry.asp?isbn=0743244249 "Cosmopolis") not until April. Ive resisted writing about them to this point, being uncertain about the possible reviewerly embargoes on the texts. For the moment, however, Ill bid my new reading adieu by making these few (ever-so-veiled) comments:
Each is in differing respects a departure from the novelists earlier work.
One brings to fruition two strains visible in the background of much of that earlier work, resulting in a novel of a scope and a sensitivity and a lyricism that one might be tempted to call transcendent.
One shows its author leaving aside the whiz-bang concerns of the past — or the future — in favor of a real engagement with the present.
One recapitulates the process of its authors career, redeploying many of his earlier works set pieces and tropes, but does so with the effect of dismantling that earlier work, suggesting the very different world we live in now.