scorsese by ebert
collection of reviews, essays, interviews spanning from scorsese's first film to the departed. ebert clearly has a great affinity towards scorsese's work, his reviews repeatedly refer to him as the greatest living american filmaker, and relates a lot to the themes that scorsese keeps returning to, like guilt, in particular roman catholic concepts of guilt, and struggles with properly relating to women. this gives his writing a real personal touch that makes his reviews very insightful, especially when it comes to identifying scorsese's own ability to find parts of himself the lives (jesus, jake la motta, henry hill, howard hughes) or work (paul schraders scripts, age of innocence, cape fear) of other people. the centerpiece of the book is a long one on one interview between the two from 1997, printed in full, but it doesn't really work. marty is so passionate his stream of consciousness talking style doesn't translate well to print, nor does not having the clips they refer to in front of you make for fun reading.
reasons to live by amy hempel
short story collection about people struggling in their lives with a very unique and stylish voice that i found spell-binding. her prose is incredibly stripped down and what's there in each story are scatterings of beautifully observed and empathetic moments or feelings linked together by these breaks that say as much as the words do. there are a few weak stories that are a little too brief and cute, but the longer ones, and by longer i mean about fifteen pages, are outstanding. i can easily see someone hating it, but i read the whole book it one go and walked around in a melancholy trance afterwards.
what i talk about when i talk about running by haruki murakami
part autobiography, part diary, part collection of life lessons, part manifesto for the benefits of regular excersise, part answer to millions of people asking for tips about how to become a writer, this is quite a strange book. it's not really cohesive and wanders into the realm of indulgence and inane at times (do we care what running shoes he likes or what he has on his minidisc(!)) but i found learning about how murakami first decided to become a writer - by just doing it - and the detailed descriptions of his marathon and triathlon experiences quite interesting and yes it did make me want to get back into running.