I don’t think I’ve ever published a blog post on my birthday before, so I’ll “celebrate” by listing some novelists I love or like and how old they are. Why? Because it’s easier to make a list than to write a regular blog post of the kind I’ll resume next week. ๐
Anyway, here goes — with a great or very good book by each author included:
Alison Lurie, born September 3, 1926 (93 years old), Foreign Affairs.
Cormac McCarthy, July 20, 1933 (86), Blood Meridian.
Wole Soyinka, July 13, 1934 (85), The Interpreters.
Mario Vargas Llosa, March 28, 1936 (84), Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter.
A.S. Byatt, August 24, 1936 (83), Possession.
Lois Lowry, March 20, 1937 (83), The Giver.
Margaret Drabble, June 5, 1939 (80), The Witch of Exmoor.
Margaret Atwood, November 18, 1939 (80), The Handmaid’s Tale.
J.M.G. Le Clezio, April 13, 1940 (79), Desert.
Anne Tyler, October 25, 1941 (78), The Accidental Tourist.
John Irving, March 2, 1942 (78), The Cider House Rules.
Isabel Allende, August 2, 1942 (77), The House of the Spirits.
Martin Cruz Smith, November 3, 1942 (77), Gorky Park.
Peter Straub, March 2, 1943 (77), Ghost Story.
Janet Evanovich, April 22, 1943 (76), One for the Money.
Michael Ondaatje, September 12, 1943 (76), The English Patient.
Marilynne Robinson, November 26, 1943 (76), Housekeeping.
Alice Walker, February 9, 1944 (76), The Color Purple.
Fannie Flagg, September 21, 1944 (75), Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe.
Rita Mae Brown, November 28, 1944 (75), Rubyfruit Jungle.
Stephen King, September 21, 1947 (72), From a Buick 8.
Richard Russo, July 15, 1949 (70), Empire Falls.
Julia Alvarez, March 27, 1950 (70), In the Time of the Butterflies.
Laura Esquivel, September 30, 1950 (69), Like Water for Chocolate.
Terry McMillan, October 18, 1951 (68), Waiting to Exhale.
Walter Mosley, January 12, 1952 (68), Devil in a Blue Dress.
Amy Tan, February 19, 1952 (68), The Joy Luck Club.
Philippa Gregory, January 9, 1954 (66), Earthly Joys.
Lee Child, October 29, 1954 (65), 61 Hours.
John Grisham, February 8, 1955 (65), The Client.
Barbara Kingsolver, April 8, 1955 (64), The Poisonwood Bible.
Colm Toibin, May 30, 1955 (64), Brooklyn.
Lisa Scottoline, July 1, 1955 (64), The Vendetta Defense.
Geraldine Brooks, September 14, 1955 (64), March.
Peter Hoeg, May 17, 1957 (62), Smilla’s Sense of Snow.
Lionel Shriver, May 18, 1957 (62), So Much for That.
Louise Penny, July 1, 1958 (61), How the Light Gets in.
Jonathan Franzen, August 17, 1959 (60), The Corrections.
Neil Gaiman, November 10, 1960 (59), American Gods.
Arundhati Roy, November 24, 1961 (58), The God of Small Things.
Suzanne Collins, August 10, 1962 (57), The Hunger Games.
Michael Chabon, May 24, 1963 (56), The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay.
Donna Tartt, December 23, 1963 (56), The Goldfinch.
J.K. Rowling, July 31, 1965 (54), Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone.
Liane Moriarty, November 15, 1966 (53), Big Little Lies.
Jhumpa Lahiri, July 11, 1967 (52), The Lowland.
Lisa Genova, November 22, 1970 (49), Still Alice.
Zadie Smith, October 25, 1975 (44), White Teeth.
John Green, August 24, 1977 (42), The Fault in Our Stars.
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, September 15, 1977 (42), Half of a Yellow Sun.
Fredrik Backman, June 2, 1981 (38), A Man Called Ove.
Kate Quinn, November 30, 1981 (38), The Huntress.
Eleanor Catton, September 24, 1985 (34), The Luminaries.
Some favorite living authors you’d like to mention who I didn’t list?
My literary-trivia book is described and can be purchased here: Fascinating Facts About Famous Fiction Authors and the Greatest Novels of All Time.
In addition to this weekly blog, I write the award-winning โMontclairvoyantโ topical-humor column for Baristanet.com. The latest piece — which gives local plots to novels that my town’s residents could read during the coronavirus pandemic — is here.
Belated …very …greetings. Being an author looks like it leads to longevity.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you, Shehanne! A birthday earlier in the pandemic. ๐ ๐ฆ
Yes, many long-lived authors, though of course a number of exceptions who unfortunately died young or relatively young — many of them decades or centuries ago. Jane Austen, Edgar Allan Poe, The Bronte sisters, Stephen Crane, Oscar Wilde, Jack London, Jaroslav Haลกek, Franz Kafka, F. Scott Fitzgerald, George Orwell, Albert Camus, Sylvia Plath, John Kennedy Toole, Stieg Larsson, David Foster Wallace…
LikeLiked by 1 person
I know. Some lived fast died young, others just were not living in the best of conditions.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Exactly! Both of those situations!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Happy belated birthday! โจ
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you, SaaniaSparkle! ๐
LikeLiked by 1 person
My pleasure, Dave!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Dave, I wonder if you or any of the commenters here could help translate something for me? One of the ladies at book club (which of course is entirely online at the moment) asked about reading multiple books at the same time because she wants to be able to read more. I said I get bored if I donโt have two or three on the go, but of course, it takes longer to get through them. She then said something about she goes weeks without reading anything. I have no idea what this means? Weeks? Hours I can understand, but surely she didnโt mean weeks?
LikeLiked by 1 person
LOL, Susan! Great to wake up (here in the U.S.) to a laugh like that. ๐ Yes, weeks without reading feels like it doesn’t compute. Perhaps only America’s “dear leader” Trump — who is of course notoriously averse to looking at the written word — can relate to going weeks without reading. But I’m sure the book club member you mentioned is a MUCH nicer person.
Very glad that your club is continuing, albeit online.
As we’ve discussed before, I’m a one book at a time person. But it’s nice that two or three at a time works for you and many others. ๐
LikeLike
Being that laughs are as rare as toilet paper, Iโm glad I could help ๐
Thereโs definitely no wrong or right to reading. One or more at a time, popular or literary fiction, long books, short books, real books or escapism โ if you like reading, youโll make time.
I found it funny that she started her message by saying she wanted tips to read multiple books so that she could get more reading done. And now I just want to say youโre not going to get any reading done if you donโt read!
But now seems to be a very good time to be kind to people, so Iโll refrain from commenting and just voice my amazement here. Thank you for allowing me to do so ๐
LikeLiked by 1 person
Totally agree, Susan! Whatever way people go about reading is fine with me. ๐
But, yes, if a person who isn’t reading is thinking about reading multiple books at a time, they might possibly consider the intermediate step of…reading one book at a time.
Being kind while venting elsewhere is the perfect combination!
LikeLike
Thanks, Dave. And happy birthday. You share a birthday with my stepson Chris, a special-needs adult who turned 50 today. We had to have the party in the driveway of his group home, keeping socially distant. Sigh. I see no one on your list born on my birth date, Jan. 18. Hmmmm.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you, Bill!
Happy Birthday to Chris! Reaching 50 is definitely a milestone. Sorry it happened at a time of social distancing. ๐ฆ
There MUST be a highly regarded author born on January 18. Got one! You. ๐
LikeLike
Thirty one women ? Ages ? Oscar’s comment ?
Great reading list for lockdown. Thanks
LikeLiked by 1 person
Oops — I went against Oscar Wilde’s dictum. I wonder if he also took Wikipedia to task? ๐
Thank you for the great comment, catonthedovrefell!
LikeLike
Happy birthday, dear Dave! I hope you got lots of books ๐๐๐ฐ
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you for the birthday wishes, Elisabeth!
One book so far, and several others to arrive belatedly. Oddly, none of the belated ones will be Lionel Shriver’s “The Post-Birthday World”… ๐
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thereโs always next year ๐๐
LikeLiked by 1 person
LOL! ๐ I do like Ms. Shriver’s work…
LikeLiked by 1 person
Happy belated Birthday sweetie. Thanks for the list. Geezaloo, what good timing! I’m all read out at home, and trying not to go crazy buying ebooks so I went to Project Gutenberg, thinking I’ll read the entire Oz collection. I could use a trip to the Emerald City, what’s a nasty old witch compared to this pandemic. Stay safe. Hugs and Kisses to everybody, keep your chins up. Susi
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you, Susi! ๐
I hear you about being all read out at home. So many libraries temporarily closed, and some of us don’t have lots of room to buy and shelve more (print) books. L. Frank Baum’s Oz novels (I’ve read the first, classic one) sound like a nice distraction these days. And — ha! ๐ — the wicked witch is indeed small potatoes compared to a pandemic. And has a better hat…
Stay safe, too!
LikeLike
Happy birthday Dave!! ๐ What a great list too. I might add Ruta Sepetys (historical fiction) , and Kate Morton, she writes very vivid mystery books that always pull me in.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you, M.B., for the birthday wishes! Glad you liked the list, and that you added two talented authors to it. ๐ Wikipedia tells me Ruta Sepetys is 52 and Kate Morton is 44.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Happy Birthday! At least cake is something you can enjoy while social distancing. ๐ ๐
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you, kconstantine! Ha — so true about cake! (I waited six minutes before the second slice. ๐ )
LikeLike
Happy Birthday, Dave! I hope that you are following the lockdown and social distancing. Stay safe and healthy.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you, sandomina! We’re definitely following the pandemic rules. Stay safe and healthy as well!
LikeLiked by 1 person
What a coincidence! March 29 is the birthday of one of my favourite writers! His memoir Comic (and Column) Confessional is both touching, and very funny.
Iโm guessing March and April babies arenโt doing much celebrating on their birthdays but I hope that you and your family are keeping safe and healthy.
Sue โค
LikeLiked by 1 person
Ha! Thank you, Susan, for those very kind words! ๐
Yes, kind of a mixed-feelings time to have a birthday. Tried to change it, but the “Bureau of Switching Your Birthday to December” was one of many places closed during this pandemic…
The best of health to you, too! (And thanks again for recommending Eleanor Catton — the youngest author on my list!)
LikeLike
Yes, I spotted her down the bottom there ๐
I was lucky enough to be born on John Lennon’s birthday. A friend of mine, who is a huge Beatles fan demanded that we swap. So I guess I moved my birthday to December, but I’m not sure how successfully as he still calls me each October to wish me a happy birthday ๐
LikeLiked by 1 person
John Lennon’s birthday — nice, Susan! (Not far from my two daughters’ September 30 birthdays.) Ha — funny description of how your Beatles-fan friend sought a swap. Birthdays “Here, There and Everywhere”…
LikeLike
Happy birthday, Dave! If I recall, that makes us “the same age” for a month and a half or so, then I grow older again.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you, lulabelle! That’s a good age, then. ๐
LikeLike
Hope you’re having a fantastic birthday, Dave. You shouldn’t be expected to put full energetic blog force on your birthday but your list reveals that you’ve done some research. I noticed that Colm Toibin is only a couple of weeks younger than me and Peter Hoeg is exactly two years, to the day, younger than me. Lionel Shriver is two years and one day younger. I was trying to think if there are any still active authors any older than the oldest on your list, Alison Lurie. I’m sure there might be but I don’t feel like tracking down that information at the moment. I’m sure there are a few authors younger than your youngest here, Eleanor Catton, but again, I don’t feel like exerting the effort at the moment. I think I’m definitely affected by some isolation apathy.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you, bobess48!
Well, Wikipedia can make basic research go quickly. ๐ And, like you, I particularly noticed which authors were near my age.
I hear you about isolation apathy. I’m not affected so much in terms of work because I write at home anyway, but I know you usually work in a library.
As for oldest authors, YA and children’s writer Beverly Cleary is 103, but doesn’t seem to have been published recently. And I agree that there are probably a good number of fairly well-known novelists in their 20s or early 30s, but I can’t cite any offhand.
LikeLike
Happy Birthday, Dave! Iโm keeping this as treasure trove of names as my reading list for the coming years. And because you know that I love quotes, I will give you the one I have had for my most recent birthdays. And of course, it must come from the great bard: With mirth and laughter let old wrinkles come.โ William Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice
LikeLiked by 2 people
Thank you, Clanmother, for the birthday wishes and for another great/relevant quote! Shakespeare does often come in handy. ๐ And it’s astounding how many famous lines he crafted more than 400 years ago.
LikeLiked by 2 people
I think it was Mary Catherine Bateson who wrote that we are now entering the โage of active wisdom.โ Iโm waiting for my wisdom to become active. I will be discussing the matter with Misty, our resident philosopher!
LikeLiked by 2 people
LOL, Clanmother! I think Misty the cat insisted on reading the British version of the first “Harry Potter” book (“Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone”) rather than the American version (“Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone”). ๐
“Iโm waiting for my wisdom to become active” — ha! ๐ At a time of pandemic-era isolation, it’s harder to be active in anything!
LikeLiked by 2 people
Quite a few of the novelists and books you mentioned are among my favorites. I’ve also been reading many novels since the first of the year, but my go-to authors have been Ruth Ware and Louise Penny. You mentioned Penny on your list, and I’ve just read her latest three Inspector Gamache mysteries; it’s been great to catch up on those after my reading drought. My newest favorite is Ruth Ware and I’ve recently read four of her psychological crime thrillers. I can’t find her birthday anywhere on line, but she was born in 1977. I’m hard pressed to pick just one, but I’ll go with “The Turn of the Key” for the title alone — it’s about a young woman who takes a job in Scotland as a nanny in a house that is half country manor and half technological marvel.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Happy Birthday wishes again, Dave! ๐
LikeLiked by 2 people
Thank you, Kat Lit, for the birthday wishes and for the book comment! I really enjoyed the Louise Penny novel I mentioned in the post after you recommended her work to me, and I just put a note on my reading list to try Ruth Ware. “The Turn of the Key” sounds excellent and intriguing, and it’s great that Ware is a relatively young author!
LikeLike
Dave, I’m feeling somewhat guilty about something, and I know you’d understand. I’m almost out of crime fiction to read, and I don’t feel like rereading those on my shelves. I need to read those kinds of books because they really grab my attention and are comforting to me, especially now going through total isolation (except for some visits from Bill). So, I got an email from Thriftbooks the other day, and it spurred me to order ten used books (mostly paperbacks), by some favorite authors of mysteries/suspense/thrillers. I’m trying to watch what I order online and questioning whether something is absolutely necessary before I do. I worry about exposure to shippers/deliverers and me, but I’m back to thinking that books are essential to my comfort and general wellbeing. Thoughts?
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you for your important comment, Kat Lit. I totally agree that books are essential — nowadays more than ever. There’s always a bit of a risk ordering something these days, and of course when going to the supermarket. ๐ฆ But we all need to live life somewhat. When I asked my wife to get me some books for my recent birthday because the local library was closed, I realized that mailed packages could have some exposure — whether the books inside are used or new. But read we must. ๐ I understand the guilt, and felt it, too.
LikeLike
I’ll consider buying books my guilty pleasure, but I’ll take even more precautions than I have been when Amazon or Acme (Instacart) delivers. Food is essential, as are the hygienic and other necessities I get from Amazon. I refuse to order a mask that is needed by our medical personnel, but I’ve ordered some bandannas in case it becomes mandatory if one’s outside (even while social distancing), as well as some dishwashing gloves, just in case. Thanks, Dave! ๐
LikeLiked by 1 person
A guilty pleasure or two is definitely allowed, Kat Lit! ๐
I admire your thinking about masks. Yes, they’re most needed by medical people, and they don’t have nearly enough. Not enough ventilators for patients, either. Happens when an evil incompetent is president of the country. ๐ฆ ๐ฆ
LikeLike
Ha! So much for trying to be somewhat responsible in ordering ten books– just one big box, I thought. Instead, I’ve been getting email notifications of shipments of just one book from all different cities! So I just ordered a new Nook (mine had died in the past year) even though I much prefer paper over digital. One more box, but it will keep me happily occupied for the duration. ๐ I totally agree with your comment about our so-called leader!
LikeLiked by 1 person
A shame things couldn’t come in one box. I guess that’s the way things often go with online ordering. ๐ฆ Smart idea to order a new eReader. We just got one for our younger daughter. I’ve still never wanted to use one, but if my local library ends up being closed for a couple months or more, I might reconsider.
The coronavirus is of course not Trump’s fault, but his response (minimizing the pandemic for too long, and then all his other ignorant, self-serving, nasty bumbling since then) has increased the number of deaths immeasurably. ๐ฆ )
LikeLike
If you’re in the mood for a fine thriller/mystery novel, I can recommend Tana French’s “In the Woods”. I am currently reading her second, “The Likeness”, and so far, I like it just as well, though I admit I am so distracted by the pandemic here in NYC that I can only read a dozen pages or so at a sitting. Haven’t been outside since last Tuesday!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you for the recommendation(s), jhNY! And I totally hear you about this pandemic being distracting.
Sorry you haven’t been out for six days. ๐ฆ I still take frequent walks, but I realize it’s a lot easier to do social distancing while walking in a suburb like Montclair, NJ, than in New York City.
LikeLike
I plan to go out tomorrow for more food and to mail the rent.. I may even go for a walk, though I can’t shake the feeling that more time I spend with nobody but Mandy, the safer we’ll be. Here, the number of infected just continues to climb, which to me means as time goes by, the more likely I run into somebody sick or asymptomatic. And the longer the crisis lingers, the less likely there’ll be a hospital bed or a ventilator for me or Mandy, as we’re each past 65. I feel as if we’re on our own here, and must do what we think best– I pay some attention to Cuomo. but mostly I’m thinking for myself.
Walked downstairs to fetch my mail yesterday, and told the doorman I hadn’t been out since Tuesday. He thanked me for behaving responsibly, from behind his mask. Strange days, these.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Good luck tomorrow! Yes, food-shopping trips must be made; I do that weekly, and the understandably crowded supermarkets are worrisome. Fortunately, the rent payments in my apartment complex are online-only.
NYC is sadly a real epicenter of the pandemic. So many people living and commuting in close quarters is usually an exciting thing; now it’s a danger. I can totally understand how uneasy you are feeling.
LikeLike
Happy birthday, Dave! I’m in the process of finishing up a review of a phenomenal collection of a debut poet, so I’d like to add him to the list:
Robert Fillman, (Millennial-ish?), November Weather Spell
LikeLiked by 4 people
Thank you, Liz!
And glad to have another younger writer mentioned. ๐ My post was a bit scarce when it came to that age group.
I look forward to seeing your review!
LikeLiked by 3 people
You’re welcome, Dave!
LikeLiked by 4 people
Happy Birthday, Dave!
I note the absence of an author and his age from your list: YOU!
LikeLiked by 4 people
Thank you, jhNY!
Well, I’ve written two nonfiction books but not a published novel, so I don’t qualify. ๐
I’ve almost finished “She,” and it will be prominently mentioned in my April 5 or April 12 post. Intense, memorable novel!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Have acquired its follow-up, a much shorter item, “Ayesha: The Return of She”, but I have not cracked it, for fear of disappointment.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Totally hear you, jhNY — sequels can be disappointing. I finished “She” this morning, and now I’m very curious about how Ayesha manages to return for the second book. ๐ I’m sure H. Rider Haggard came up with something creative.
I’ve written a blog post that includes “She” for April 5, unless it gets bumped a week. A VERY eerie novel, with a haunting take on mortality (and immortality).
LikeLike
Ha ha ๐ Happy Birthday, Dave! I’ll play.
Ian McEwan
J.M. Coetzee
Tom Robbins
Khaled Hosseini
Michael Cunningham
Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni
Amor Towles
Tรฉa Obreht
Lynn Austin
Louise Erdrich
Paul Harding
Karl Ove Knausgรฅrd
Linda Hogan
Kazuo Ishiguro
Joyce Carol Oates
Josรฉ Saramago
Thomas Pynchon
Don DeLillo
LikeLiked by 4 people
Thank you, Mary Jo! ๐ And that’s a GREAT list! I definitely forgot to mention some authors you mentioned: McEwan (I’ve read “Atonement”), Hosseini (“The Kite Runner”), Erdrich (“The Painted Drum”), Ishiguro (“The Remains of the Day”), Oates (“Solstice”), Pynchon (“Inherent Vice”), and DeLillo (“Underworld”).
LikeLiked by 3 people
You’re welcome. I’m too lazy to list their ages and which of their books I’ve read. It was enough work just verifying that some of the more elderly are still with us. For some, I’ve read all their novels, for others just a couple. And I really, really wish David Foster Wallace was still with us. He’s at the top of my list always. Thank you for your list and the titles I haven’t read yet ๐
LikeLiked by 4 people
True, Mary Jo — with some older authors, one isn’t always sure if they’re still alive or not. (Herman Wouk died less than a year ago at 103; I would’ve loved to have included him if I had done this post last March. I really liked “The Caine Mutiny” and “Marjorie Morningstar.”)
I’ve only read one David Foster Wallace book — his nonfiction collection “Consider the Lobster” — and it was pretty darn amazing.
LikeLiked by 4 people
Happy Birthday Dave !!!!!!!!!!!!!
LikeLiked by 3 people
Thank you, bebe! ๐
LikeLiked by 2 people