Maud Casey, University of Maryland associate professor of English whose latest novel is Genealogy, recommends The Moviegoer by Walker Percy: “This was my first favorite book, one of those life-changing reads. It’s a wickedly funny novel about existential angst, and it’s also full of summery things: malaise, sultry climes, and the cool, magical relief of the movies.”
Matt Labash,Weekly Standard senior writer, likes A Fan’s Notes by Frederick Exley: “Read this mordantly funny, crushingly sad ‘fictional memoir’ only if you want to be moved. It’s the best book I’ve read about failure, alcoholism, insanity, football, Frank Gifford, and obsession. If you’re not obsessed with it on a first reading, read it again, like the obsessive it will transform you into.”
Linda Pastan, a former National Book Award finalist in Potomac whose books of poetry include Traveling Light, suggests A Far Cry From Kensington by Muriel Spark: “Coming across a Muriel Spark novel I hadn’t read was like finding a bottle of cold Champagne hidden among the six-packs of beer. This story of post–World War II Londoners is quirky, articulate, and sly.”
Christopher Farnsworth, author most recently of The President’s Vampire, likes Thirteen by Richard K. Morgan: “Set in a near future in which the US has divided into several red and blue nations, this story sets a genetically enhanced soldier in the middle of a sharply plotted murder mystery. But the real draw is in the clues on just how America collapsed, which seem almost spookily prescient.”
The Deep Blue Good-By George Pelecanos, whose latest DC crime novel is The Cut, recommends John D. MacDonald’s Travis McGee books: “This series features ‘salvage recovery expert’ Travis McGee, a tarnished knight/stone-cold stud who lives on a Florida houseboat and takes his retirement check out early, one job at a time. MacDonald could write the hell out of a crime novel. Of the 21 books in the series, start with the first, The Deep Blue Good-By.”
Nothing Daunted: The Unexpected Education of Two Society Girls in the West Thomas Mallon, author of Fellow Travelers and other novels and director of George Washington University’s writing program, likes Nothing Daunted, nonfiction by Dorothy Wickenden: “Rooted in the letters of the author’s grandmother, it tells the lively story of two Smith graduates who in 1916 go off to rugged, barely settled Colorado to teach school. It’s crisp and bracing, like the experience acquired by the women themselves.”
This article appears in the August 2011 issue of The Washingtonian.
What Do Authors Read at the Beach?
We asked six local writers for vacation reading recommendations
The Moviegoer
Maud Casey, University of Maryland associate professor of English whose latest novel is Genealogy, recommends The Moviegoer by Walker Percy: “This was my first favorite book, one of those life-changing reads. It’s a wickedly funny novel about existential angst, and it’s also full of summery things: malaise, sultry climes, and the cool, magical relief of the movies.”
A Fan’s Notes
Matt Labash, Weekly Standard senior writer, likes A Fan’s Notes by Frederick Exley: “Read this mordantly funny, crushingly sad ‘fictional memoir’ only if you want to be moved. It’s the best book I’ve read about failure, alcoholism, insanity, football, Frank Gifford, and obsession. If you’re not obsessed with it on a first reading, read it again, like the obsessive it will transform you into.”
A Far Cry From Kensington
Linda Pastan, a former National Book Award finalist in Potomac whose books of poetry include Traveling Light, suggests A Far Cry From Kensington by Muriel Spark: “Coming across a Muriel Spark novel I hadn’t read was like finding a bottle of cold Champagne hidden among the six-packs of beer. This story of post–World War II Londoners is quirky, articulate, and sly.”
Thirteen
Christopher Farnsworth, author most recently of The President’s Vampire, likes Thirteen by Richard K. Morgan: “Set in a near future in which the US has divided into several red and blue nations, this story sets a genetically enhanced soldier in the middle of a sharply plotted murder mystery. But the real draw is in the clues on just how America collapsed, which seem almost spookily prescient.”
The Deep Blue Good-By
George Pelecanos, whose latest DC crime novel is The Cut, recommends John D. MacDonald’s Travis McGee books: “This series features ‘salvage recovery expert’ Travis McGee, a tarnished knight/stone-cold stud who lives on a Florida houseboat and takes his retirement check out early, one job at a time. MacDonald could write the hell out of a crime novel. Of the 21 books in the series, start with the first, The Deep Blue Good-By.”
Nothing Daunted: The Unexpected Education of Two Society Girls in the West
Thomas Mallon, author of Fellow Travelers and other novels and director of George Washington University’s writing program, likes Nothing Daunted, nonfiction by Dorothy Wickenden: “Rooted in the letters of the author’s grandmother, it tells the lively story of two Smith graduates who in 1916 go off to rugged, barely settled Colorado to teach school. It’s crisp and bracing, like the experience acquired by the women themselves.”
This article appears in the August 2011 issue of The Washingtonian.
Subscribe to Washingtonian
Follow Washingtonian on Twitter
Most Popular in News & Politics
See a Spotted Lanternfly? Here’s What to Do.
Meet DC’s 2025 Tech Titans
What Happens After We Die? These UVA Researchers Are Investigating It.
GOP Candidate Quits Virginia Race After Losing Federal Contracting Job, Trump Plans Crackdown on Left Following Kirk’s Death, and Theatre Week Starts Thursday
USDA Spent $16,400 on Banners to Honor Trump and Lincoln
Washingtonian Magazine
September Issue: Style Setters
View IssueSubscribe
Follow Us on Social
Follow Us on Social
Related
Why Can You Swim in the Seine but Not the Potomac River?
This DC Woman Might Owe You Money
Why a Lost DC Novel Is Getting New Attention
These Confusing Bands Aren’t Actually From DC
More from News & Politics
How to Pick a Good Title-and-Settlement Company in the DC Area
Weird Press Conference Ends Trump’s Vacation From Offering Medical Advice, Kimmel Goes Back to Work Tonight, and DC Man Arrested for Shining Laser Pointer at Marine One
Why Can You Swim in the Seine but Not the Potomac River?
Nominations Are Now Open for 500 Most Influential People List
Trump and Musk Reunite, Administration Will Claim Link Between Tylenol and Autism, and Foo Fighters Play Surprise Show in DC
This DC Woman Might Owe You Money
A New Exhibition Near the White House Takes a High-Tech Approach to a Fundamental Question: What Is the American Dream?
Want to See What Could Be Ovechkin’s Last Game in DC? It’s Going to Cost You.