David Hebblethwaite has been playing a fun game over at Follow the Thread today: pick a favourite book for every letter of the alphabet. Irresistible for list junkies like myself, and his post made me smile especially because I have been using this game (and its many variants) for years as my personal cure for insomnia. I’m not a good sleeper, never have been, but when I find myself lying awake at 3 am, I’ve discovered that challenging myself to name three SF novels – or writers – for every letter of the alphabet can work wonders. I usually make it to around ‘m’ before I lose consciousness. Pieces of classical music for every key signature is another good one.
Anyway, here’s my list of books, A-Z, and employing my own particular rule that no author can be named more than once. Like David, I’ve named favourites as opposed to definitive favourites (which can change daily), but unlike him I haven’t managed to fill every spot. I have nothing for ‘x’ or ‘z’. If I were doing this in Russian (another variant – guaranteed to send you into a coma after about six letters) I could elect Yuri Olesha’s bizarre and unique novel Zavist’, but that’s ‘e’ for Envy in English and so would be cheating. I’ve cheated a bit in any case: Pavane is my favourite novel by Keith Roberts, but I needed something for ‘k’ and so Kite World usurped it. Similarly my favourite Iris Murdoch is The Sea, The Sea, but I can’t not have a book by Bolano, and so I plumped for A Word Child instead.
It occurs to me that The Sea, The Sea might be one of those books where the ‘the’ is properly part of the title in any case. How these things are fraught with issues. The list goes on….
The Affirmation – Christopher Priest
Bellefleur – Joyce Carol Oates
The Course of the Heart – M. John Harrison
Darkmans – Nicola Barker
Eustace and Hilda – L. P. Hartley
From Blue to Black – Joel Lane
Ghost Story – Peter Straub
Hearts in Atlantis – Stephen King
The Iron Dragon’s Daughter – Michael Swanwick
Jane Eyre – Charlotte Bronte
Kite World – Keith Roberts
Look at the Harlequins – Vladimir Nabokov
Martin Dressler – Stephen Millhauser
The Newton Letter – John Banville
Oracle Night – Paul Auster
Picnic at Hanging Rock – Joan Lindsay
The Queen’s Gambit – Walter Tevis
Roadside Picnic – Arkady and Boris Strugatsky
The Savage Detectives – Roberto Bolano
The Talented Mr Ripley – Patricia Highsmith
Up Above the World – Paul Bowles
The Voices of Time – J. G. Ballard
A Word Child – Iris Murdoch
The Year of Magical Thinking – Joan Didion