2019年6月30日 星期日

Makes the Whole World Kin

One touch of nature makes the whole world kin. 輕輕一碰大自然,整個世界就親暱起來。 (自然情感的流露,使人們更親近)( Shakespeare : Troilus and Cressida , iii. 3.).



Free text of Makes the Whole World Kin  或譯 同病相憐

The burglar stepped inside the window quickly, and then he took his time.
A burglar who respects his art always takes his time before taking
anything else.

The house was a private residence. By its boarded front door and
untrimmed Boston ivy the burglar knew that the mistress of it was sitting
on some oceanside piazza telling a sympathetic man in a yachting cap that
no one had ever understood her sensitive, lonely heart. He knew by the
light in the third-story front windows, and by the lateness of the season,
that the master of the house had come home, and would soon extinguish his
light and retire. For it was September of the year and of the soul, in
which season the house's good man comes to consider roof gardens and
stenographers as vanities, and to desire the return of his mate and the
more durable blessings of decorum and the moral excellencies.

The burglar lighted a cigarette. The guarded glow of the match
illuminated his salient points for a moment. He belonged to the third
type of burglars.

This third type has not yet been recognized and accepted. The police have
made us familiar with the first and second. Their classification is
simple. The collar is the distinguishing mark.

When a burglar is caught who does not wear a collar he is described as a
degenerate of the lowest type, singularly vicious and depraved, and is
suspected of being the desperate criminal who stole the handcuffs out of
Patrolman Hennessy's pocket in 1878 and walked away to escape arrest.

The other well-known type is the burglar who wears a collar. He is always
referred to as a Raffles in real life. He is invariably a gentleman by
daylight, breakfasting in a dress suit, and posing as a paperhanger, while
after dark he plies his nefarious occupation of burglary. His mother is
an extremely wealthy and respected resident of Ocean Grove, and when he is
conducted to his cell he asks at once for a nail file and the Police
Gazette. He always has a wife in every State in the Union and fiancees in
all the Territories, and the newspapers print his matrimonial gallery out
of their stock of cuts of the ladies who were cured by only one bottle
after having been given up by five doctors, experiencing great relief
after the first dose.

The burglar wore a blue sweater. He was neither a Raffles nor one of the
chefs from Hell's Kitchen. The police would have been baffled had they
attempted to classify him. They have not yet heard of the respectable,
unassuming burglar who is neither above nor below his station.

This burglar of the third class began to prowl. He wore no masks, dark
lanterns, or gum shoes. He carried a 88-calibre revolver in his pocket,
and he chewed peppermint gum thoughtfully.

The furniture of the house was swathed in its summer dust protectors. The
silver was far away in safe-deposit vaults. The burglar expected no
remarkable "haul." His objective point was that dimly lighted room where
the master of the house should be sleeping heavily after whatever solace
he had sought to lighten the burden of his loneliness. A "touch" might be
made there to the extent of legitimate, fair professional profits -- loose
money, a watch, a jewelled stick-pin -- nothing exorbitant or beyond rea
son. He had seen the window left open and had taken the chance.

The burglar softly opened the door of the lighted room. The gas was
turned low. A man lay in the bed asleep. On the dresser lay many things
in confusion -- a crumpled roll of bills, a watch, keys, three poker
chips, crushed cigars, a pink silk hair bow, and an unopened bottle of
bromo-seltzer for a bulwark in the morning.

The burglar took three steps toward the dresser. The man in the bed
suddenly uttered a squeaky groan and opened his eyes. His right hand slid
under his pillow, but remained there.

"Lay still," said the burglar in conversational tone. Burglars of the
third type do not hiss. The citizen in the bed looked at the round end of
the burglar's pistol and lay still.

"Now hold up both your hands," commanded the burglar.

The citizen had a little, pointed, brown-and-gray beard, like that of a
painless dentist. He looked solid, esteemed, irritable, and disgusted.
He sat up in bed and raised his right hand above his head.

"Up with the other one," ordered the burglar. "You might be amphibious
and shoot with your left. You can count two, can't you? Hurry up, now."

"Can't raise the other one," said the citizen, with a contortion of his
lineaments.

"What's the matter with it?"

"Rheumatism in the shoulder."

"Inflammatory?"

"Was. The inflammation has gone down." The burglar stood for a moment or
two, holding his gun on the afflicted one. He glanced at the plunder on
the dresser and then, with a half-embarrassed air, back at the man in the
bed. Then he, too, made a sudden grimace.

"Don't stand there making faces," snapped the citizen, bad-humouredly.
"If you've come to burgle why don't you do it? There's some stuff lying
around."

"'Scuse me," said the burglar, with a grin; "but it just socked me one,
too. It's good for you that rheumatism and me happens to be old pals. I
got it in my left arm, too. Most anybody but me would have popped you
when you wouldn't hoist that left claw of yours."

"How long have you had it?" inquired the citizen.

"Four years. I guess that ain't all. Once you've got it, it's you for a
rheumatic life -- that's my judgment."

"Ever try rattlesnake oil?" asked the citizen, interestedly.

"Gallons," said the burglar. "If all the snakes I've used the oil of was
strung out in a row they'd reach eight times as far as Saturn, and the
rattles could be heard at Valparaiso, Indiana, and back."

"Some use Chiselum's Pills," remarked the citizen.

"Fudge!" said the burglar. "Took 'em five months. No good. I had some
relief the year I tried Finkelham's Extract, Balm of Gilead poultices and
Potts's Pain Pulverizer; but I think it was the buckeye I carried in my
pocket what done the trick."

"Is yours worse in the morning or at night?" asked the citizen.

"Night," said the burglar; "just when I'm busiest. Say, take down that
arm of yours -- I guess you won't -- Say! did you ever try Blickerstaff's
Blood Builder?"

"I never did. Does yours come in paroxysms or is it a steady pain?"

The burglar sat down on the foot of the bed and rested his gun on his
crossed knee.

"It jumps," said he. "It strikes me when I ain't looking for it. I had
to give up second-story work because I got stuck sometimes half-way up.
Tell you what -- I don't believe the bloomin' doctors know what is good
for it."

"Same here. I've spent a thousand dollars without getting any relief.
Yours swell any?"

"Of mornings. And when it's goin' to rain -- great Christopher!"

"Me, too," said the citizen. "I can tell when a streak of humidity the
size of a table-cloth starts from Florida on its way to New York. And if
I pass a theatre where there's an 'East Lynne' matinee going on, the
moisture starts my left arm jumping like a toothache."

"It's undiluted -- hades!" said the burglar.

"You're dead right," said the citizen.

The burglar looked down at his pistol and thrust it into his pocket with
an awkward attempt at ease.

"Say, old man," he said, constrainedly, "ever try opodeldoc?"

"Slop!" said the citizen angrily. "Might as well rub on restaurant
butter."

"Sure," concurred the burglar. "It's a salve suitable for little Minnie
when the kitty scratches her finger. I'll tell you what! We're up against
it. I only find one thing that eases her up. Hey? Little old sanitary,
ameliorating, lest-we-forget Booze. Say -- this job's off -- 'scuse me --
get on your clothes and let's go out and have some. 'Scuse the liberty,
but -- ouch! There she goes again!"

"For a week," said the citizen. "I haven't been able to dress myself
without help. I'm afraid Thomas is in bed, and --"

"Climb out," said the burglar, "I'll help you get into your duds."

The conventional returned as a tidal wave and flooded the citizen. He
stroked his brown-and-gray beard.

"It's very unusual --" he began.

"Here's your shirt," said the burglar, "fall out. I knew a man who said
Omberry's Ointment fixed him in two weeks so he could use both hands in
tying his four-in-hand."

As they were going out the door the citizen turned and started back.

"Liked to forgot my money," he explained; "laid it on the dresser last
night."

The burglar caught him by the right sleeve.

"Come on," he said bluffly. "I ask you. Leave it alone. I've got the
price. Ever try witch hazel and oil of wintergreen?"

2019年6月29日 星期六

給後來者言 | Unto This Last: Four Essays on the First Principles of Political Economy

There is no wealth but life. Life, including all its powers of love, of joy, and of admiration. That country is the richest which nourishes the greatest number of noble and happy human beings; that man is richest who, having perfected the function of his own life to the utmost, has always the widest helpful influence, both personal, and by means of his possessions, over the lives of others.
John Ruskin, Unto This Last: Cook and Wedderburn, 17.105




From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Unto This Last is an essay and book on economy by John Ruskin, first published in December 1860 in the monthly journal Cornhill Magazine in four articles. Ruskin says himself that these articles were "very violently criticized", forcing the publisher to stop the publication after four months. Subscribers sent protest letters. But Ruskin countered the attack and published the four articles in a book in May 1862.
The title is a quotation from the Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard.
I will give unto this last, even as unto thee. Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own? Is thine eye evil, because I am good? So the last shall be first, and the first last: for many be called, but few chosen.
— Matthew 20 (King James Version)

第二十章

僱工的比喻 
  1. 天國好像一個家主,清晨出去為自己的葡萄園僱工人。
  2. 他與工人議定一天一個「德納」,就派他們到葡萄園裡去了。
  3. 約在第三時辰,又出去,看見另有些人在街上閒立著,
  4. 就對他們說:你們也到我的葡萄園裏去吧! 凡照公義該給的,我必給你們。
  5. 他們就去了。約在第六和第九時辰,他又出去,也照樣做了。
  6. 約在第十一時辰,他又出去,看見還有些人站在那裏,就對他們說:為什麼你們站在這裏整天閒著?
  7. 他們對他說: 因為沒有人僱我們。他給他們說:你們也到我的葡萄園裏去吧!
  8. 到了晚上, 葡萄園的主人對他的管事人說:你叫他們來,分給他們工資,由最後的開始,直到最先的。
  9. 那些約在第十一時辰來的人,每人領了一個「德納」。
  10. 那些最先僱的前來,心想自己必會多領,但他們也只領了一個「德納」。
  11. 他們一領了,就抱怨家主,
  12. 說:這些最後僱的人,不過工作了一個時辰,而你竟把他們與我們這整天受苦受熱的,同等看待。
  13. 他答覆其中的一個說:朋友! 我並沒有虧負你,你不是和我議定了一個「德納」嗎?
  14. 拿你的走吧! 我願意給這最後來的和給你的一樣
  15. 難道不許我拿我所有的財物,行我所願意的嗎? 或是因為我好,你就眼紅嗎?
  16. 這樣,最後的,將成為最先的,最先的將成為最後的。 」

The "last" are the eleventh hour labourers, who are paid as if they had worked the entire day. Rather than discuss the religious meaning of the parable, whereby the eleventh hour labourers would be death-bed converts, or the peoples of the world who come late to religion, Ruskin looks at the social and economic implications, discussing issues such as who should receive a living wage. This essay is very critical of capitalist economists of the 18th and 19th centuries. In this sense, Ruskin is a precursor of social economy. Because the essay also attacks the destructive effects of industrialism upon the natural world, some historians have seen it as anticipating the Green Movement.[1]

The eleventh hour labourers, etching by Jan Luyken based on the Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard
The essay begins with the following verse:[2]
“Friend, I do thee no wrong.
Didst not thou agree with me for a penny?
Take that thine is, and go thy way.
I will give unto this last even as unto thee.”
“If ye think good, give me my price;
And if not, forbear.
So they weighed for my price thirty pieces of silver.”

Gandhi's paraphrase[edit]

Unto This Last had a very important impact on Gandhi's philosophy.[3] He discovered the book in March 1904 through Henry Polak, whom he had met in a vegetarian restaurant in South Africa. Polak was sub-editor of the Johannesburg paper The Critic. Gandhi decided immediately not only to change his own life according to Ruskin's teaching, but also to publish his own newspaper, Indian Opinion, from a farm where everybody would get the same salary, without distinction of function, race or nationality, which for that time, was quite revolutionary. Thus Gandhi created Phoenix Settlement.
Gandhi translated Unto This Last into Gujarati in 1908 under the title of Sarvodaya (Well Being of All). Valji Govindji Desai translated it back to English in 1951 under the title of Unto This Last: A Paraphrase.[4] This last essay can be considered his program on economics, as in Unto This Last, Gandhi found an important part of his social and economic ideas.

References[edit]


Jump up Wall, Derek (1994), Green History: A Reader. London: Routledge, pp. 117, 122, 207.
Jump up^ Unto This Last by John Ruskin
Jump up^ Gandhi's Human Touch
Jump up^ Gandhi, M. K. Unto this Last: A paraphrase (PDF). Ahmedabad: Navajivan Publishing House. ISBN 81-7229-076-4.
External links[edit]
Complete original text



<變動時代裡可以相信的事情>
 
很多工作,需要為一種理念而奉獻,甚至不惜性命的堅定。譬如要革命的政治人物,戰場上的軍人等等。
但是商人呢?商人對自己的理念,到底應該堅持到哪個地步呢?有段時間,我很好奇。
 
商人的目的不就是營利嗎?一個追求營利的人,到底有什麼理念好堅持?這種堅持會不會算是食古不化?
後來,沒想到因為看甘地的一本書而找到答案。
 
一次大戰之前,甘地在南非的那段時間,有天要從約翰尼斯堡搭火車去德班。在火車站,一位來送行的朋友,塞給他一本書,好在二十四小時車程的旅途中閱讀。後來,甘地在他的自傳中,有一章名之為<一本書的神奇魔力>,專門談這本書對他的影響。
 
甘地從拿起書就放不下。火車在傍晚時分到站,可是他那天夜裡根本無法入睡。
 
甘地在回憶錄裡說,他不是閱讀很多的人。在他上學的時候,除了教科書之外,他幾乎什麼也不碰。出社會工作後,也很少時間閱讀。不過也正因為如此,他讀到一本書,就會大力消化。而他在火車上讀到的這一本書,則立刻給他帶來了鉅大的衝擊。
 
「我決心根據這本書的理念,改變我的人生。」甘地說,從而開啟了他日後的人生之路。
 
這本書名叫《給後來者言》(Unto This Last),十九世紀末的英國人約翰.拉斯金(John Ruskin)的作品。而甘地因為太過重視這本書,後來將此書局部濃縮,以印度文改寫,之後,再由印度文翻譯成英文,是為《萬福之書》(Sarvodaya: A Paraphrase of Unto this Last)。我最先看到的是甘地的濃縮版,後來再看《給後來者言》。
 
約翰.拉斯金是一百多年前英國一位兼有藝術家、文學家等多重身分的人,但是他寫的《給後來者言》,卻可以說是一本給商人和企業經營者看的書。
 
甘地說他特別感動的,是拉斯金談論個人與群體的關係,以及工作的價值,尤其是是體力勞動的價值。而我,則是沒想到羅斯金回答了我這篇文章一開始所提出的那個問題。
 
拉斯金認為,雖然商業的發展,使大家認為商人的本質就是要為自己打算的(selfish),並且為了追求利潤,無商不奸(cheat)也是可接受的,但他覺得這是必須揚棄的想法。
 
所以他說:「人們從未聽過誰清清楚楚解釋商人與其他人一樣負有的真正職責。我要為讀者把這一點講清楚。」
 
拉斯金認為:
 
軍人的職業是保衛國家。
牧師的職業是教導國家。
醫生的職業是維護國家健康。
律師的職業是實施國家中的公義。
商人的職業是供給國家所需。
 
而這些人都有各自以身相殉的原則:
 
軍人寧死也不擅離戰場上的崗位。
醫生寧死也不拋下救治瘟疫病患的職守。
牧師寧死也不宣講謬誤謊言。
律師寧死也不支持不公不義。
 
那商人寧死也不背棄的原則又是什麼?
 
拉斯金認為有兩點:
第一,身為商人,他供應的商品與服務的「完善與純淨」(the perfectness and purity);
第二,身為商人,需要和上中下游這麼多環節的人相互交易、工作,他不能只為一己之利著想,而必須透過產品的製造,貨品的交易,而「有益」(beneficial)於所有參與的人。
 
從這「有益」的角度出發,拉斯金提出一個商人種種該有的作為與堅持。尤其是對一些公正法則的堅持。
為什麼公正法則這麼重要?
 
拉斯金的說法很幽默:「根據供需法則,生存是魚類、鼠類和狼的特權,而人類的殊榮則是根據公正法則生存。」
 
所以,商人對這些公正法則的堅持,也要到不惜以身殉道的地步。
 
至於商人為國而死的「適時」是什麼時候?
 
拉斯金的回答是:
「這是商人該自問的,也是我們都該問的主要問題。因為,說實話,人若不知道什麼時候應當赴死,也就不會知道該怎麼活。」
在這本書出版的一百多年後,沒有人會否認今天是個變動的時代。世界各地,以及各個行業與領域,都如此。商業世界,更是。
 
各種商業遊戲的體系被破壞,各種熟悉的環境不再,各種過去幹練的經歷不足恃,各種拿手的工作方法失去作用。
在重重的生存壓力下,商人很容易什麼都可以堅持,就是原則不必堅持。
 
但是《給後來者言》顯然不是這麼說的。
 
當然,拉斯金寫這本書的時空背景,畢竟和今天不同。所以書裡談的一些細節,也和今天有差異。但是這本書告訴我們商業與財富中所存在的榮譽、道德與公義的脈絡,為什麼有些原則是應該堅持到以身相殉,又可以如何從其中享受到快樂與幸福,則是在今天聽來仍然清越明亮。
 
這是變動時代裡可以相信的事情。

宋楚瑜 從威權邁向開放民主:臺灣民主化關鍵歷程(1988-1993); 作者: 宋楚瑜口述歷史

經國先生為臺灣擘劃「厚植經濟」和「民主開放」兩大戰略,並且以「家長的權力」來結束「家長統治」,李登輝承繼經國先生之後,再致力於民主憲政改革,才達成臺灣不流血的「寧靜革命」。

本書憶述1988年至1993年臺灣民主化過程各個關鍵事件,並首次將第一手原始資料公開解密。臺灣經驗已歷經不同層次的淬鍊與改革,但政治整合與政治認同等仍是有待持續探討解決的難題。

改革比革命還難,必須面臨「兩面作戰」,而政治成敗主要是妥慎處理三事:「掌握政策方向」、「資源分配」與「用人」。

宋楚瑜以「向心力(centripetal)」與「離心力」(centrifugal)兩個概念,來統整開發中國家民主化的關鍵因素。他深切期許當今主要政黨和政壇人物多做有益民生的「實事」,不妨也再回味一下過去臺灣「一步一腳印」的路程,這應該對重新找回臺灣向上提升的動力與向心力會有助益。

作者介紹
作者簡介

宋楚瑜口述歷史
學 歷 及 榮 譽
國立政治大學外交系畢業(1964年)
美國加州大學柏克萊分校政治學碩士(1967年)
美國天主教大學圖書館學碩士(1971年)
美國喬治城大學政治學博士(1974年)
美國艾森豪獎金得主(1982年)
美國天主教大學榮譽博士(1995年)
澳洲國立南澳大學榮譽博士(1995年)
美國加州大學柏克萊分校哈斯國際獎章(1996年)
美國亞洲基金會龐克傑出訪問學者(1999年)
美國馬里蘭大學榮譽博士(2000年)
韓國漢城淑明女子大學榮譽博士(2003年)
美國加州大學柏克萊分校東亞區十大傑出校友(2018年)

現 任
親民黨主席

經 歷
行政院院長祕書(1974-1977年)
總統祕書(1978-1989年)
行政院新聞局局長兼政府發言人(1979-1984年)
中國國民黨中央委員(1981-1999年)
中國國民黨文化工作會主任(1984-1987年)
中國國民黨中央委員會副祕書長(1987-1989年)
中國國民黨中央常務委員(1988-1999年)
中國國民黨中央委員會祕書長(1989-1993年)
臺灣省省政府主席(1993年3月-1994年12月)
臺灣省省長(1994年12月-1998年12月)

方鵬程採訪整理
學 經 歷
臺灣師範大學法學博士。
曾任記者、採訪編輯、編審、編譯室主任、臺灣新生報副社長、臺北市報業同業公會理事、國防大學政戰學院新聞學系副教授兼系主任。現專任國防大學政戰學院新聞學系副教授。

著 作
《寧為劉銘傳:宋楚瑜的僕人領導哲學》(2006年10月,商周;金石堂非文學類排行榜第一名)
《如瑜得水:影響宋楚瑜一生的人》(2013年7月,商周;誠品人文科學類排行榜第一名,博客來人文史地類排行榜第一名)
《蔣經國祕書報告》(2018年1月,商周;誠品人文科學類排行榜第七名,博客來社會科學類排行榜第二名)



目錄
目次

序/宋楚瑜
導讀:臺灣為何能邁向政治民主化的基礎與條件/宋楚瑜

第一章 經國先生開啟臺灣邁向民主化的動力機
第二章 「臨門一腳」:李登輝代理國民黨主席
第三章 國民黨十三全大會:「雙李關係」變化
第四章 宋楚瑜接任國民黨祕書長
第五章 1989年底三項公職選舉:「宋關情結」肇始
第六章 二度「臨門一腳」:二月政爭始末
第七章 召開國是會議
第八章 郝柏村組閣
第九章 國民黨流派之爭
第十章 化解民進黨417大遊行
第十一章 《刑法》第一百條修正vs.臺獨條款
第十二章 民進黨加入國統會
第十三章 一機關兩階段修憲
第十四章 難搞的第二屆立委選舉及國發會後的凍省效應
第十五章 政黨外交
第十六章 總結:向心力或離心力的政治整合

後記/方鵬程




這是一本由我接受採訪,經整理寫成的憶述紀錄,主述內容起自1988年1月中華民國總統(亦是中國國民黨主席)蔣經國先生逝世,止於1993年3月我出任臺灣省政府主席,前後歷5年有餘,也就是臺灣民主發展中,可稱為不流血「寧靜革命」的過程。

雖然是短短的幾年,足可稱之為臺灣版的「春秋戰國時代」。因為這正是臺灣經濟起飛之後,繼之以政治民主化,政壇躍躍然動,國民黨內本土勢力崛起,主流派和非主流派相互角力,又加上民進黨草創後力圖生存發展與派系較勁等,共構成一部情節複雜、經緯多端的臺灣政治現代史。

在這段5年餘時間,我以國民黨副祕書長、祕書長的身分,親身參與經歷或見證諸多歷史事件。包括經國先生逝世;李登輝先生繼任第7任總統前在國民黨臨時中常會向會議輪值主席俞國華先生作重要建議;國民黨推舉李登輝先生代理主席會議中的「臨門一腳」;國民黨第13屆臨中全會「二月政爭」的「臨門再一腳」;1990年全力協調朝野召開國是會議;協助郝柏村先生組閣;民進黨417大遊行徹夜和民進黨協商,促使該遊行和平落幕;為和平修憲尊重朝野溝通奠定基礎,推動《刑法》第一百條的修訂,終結因思想意念而被判為政治犯;勸說民進黨不宜冒然強力推動「臺獨」,以化解臺獨急獨衝擊,使臺灣政局得以穩定;勸退資深中央民意代表;促請民進黨加入國統會;和李元簇副總統合力推動二屆國代修憲與黨內外溝通,終結「萬年國會」,推動總統直選;協助連戰先生通過閣揆任命等,以上列舉事件無一不關係並影響臺灣後來重大政治發展,在本書均有第一手的敘述,也大多是第一次對社會全盤公開解密。

中國歷朝歷代都思改革,關鍵在設定目標、精心規劃、耐心溝通、化解岐見,建立民眾對執政者的信任與信心。經國先生主政臺灣多年,雖自認是凡人,卻做出不平凡事業,迄今仍令大多數臺灣人給予極高評價與肯定態度。我曾在1992年秋季號《世界事務》(World Affairs)季刊,發表〈中華民國臺灣的政治發展(1985至1992年):一個局內人的觀點〉,提出以下一段相關論述,這即是揭開李登輝時代,賡續民主化改革,得以維繫的根本要件:

雖然蔣經國總統於1988年元月遽然崩逝,但他已啟動了臺灣努力邁向民主化的動力機。蔣經國先生也藉著實施這些歷史性的改革,來確定執政的國民黨能保持作為一個不斷做自我調適的政團,具有持續地吸收並因應「現代化」所激發的種種需求的能力,並減輕了其過程中所可能爆發的衝突和損害。

以中共改革開放為例,美國哈佛大學榮譽教授傅高義(Ezra F. Vogel)於2011年出版《鄧小平改變中國》(Deng Xiaoping and the Transformation of China)(天下文化,2014年中譯本),其中菁華之一即是鄧小平和中共黨人如何「總結」毛澤東時代和毛澤東路線。

1977年鄧小平視察廣東,有人談起令人頭痛的問題:「每年有上萬年輕人偷渡香港」,這當然只是反應著當年中國大陸整體經濟落後的一面而已。鄧堅決表示,解決之道不在於更多的鐵絲網和管制哨,「生產生活搞好了,才可以解決逃港問題」。但該如何搞好生產生活呢?中國共產黨和鄧小平是從「歷史論斷」開始的。

在中共的官方歷史紀錄中,1978年12月18日至21日的第11屆三中全會被稱為開始實行鄧小平「改革開放」政策的會議,從此鄧小平路線取代了毛路線。務須理解的,中共11大三中全會實質上是一個向中國民眾和外部世界宣布鄧小平路線得到「正式批准」的重要會議,更重要的是此前11月10日至12月15日,召開了由210名中共最高層幹部總計為期46天的「中央工作會議」。他們運用了46天會期,進行了數不清的會議,以及史無前例的綿密發言、溝通與討論,坦率地檢討以往中國兩次大災難——生產大躍進和文化大革命——的錯誤,擺脫了「凡是毛主席作出的決策,我們都堅決維護」與「凡是毛主席的指示,我們都始終不渝地遵循」的「兩個凡是」教條約束,並揚棄「以階級鬥爭為綱」的左傾教條。中國共產黨認真地思考,梳理出未來「實踐是檢驗真理的唯一標準」的新路線,終於「撥亂反正」,開創出後來40年「改革開放」的榮景。

在1978年12月13日下午中央工作會議的閉幕會上,鄧小平一開口就說:「今天我主要講一個問題,就是解放思想,開動腦筋,實事求是,團結一致向前看。」接下來,鄧小平沒有批毛,沒有否定毛,反而重複說明:「毛澤東犯過錯誤,本人也犯過錯誤,任何想做事的領導人都會犯錯。」美國學者傅高義的書中還描繪鄧小平苦苦思索的「用心良苦」,包括:如何鼓勵新思想,同時盡量減少保守派幹部的抵制;如何既尊重毛澤東的群眾路線,又擺脫他的極端社會主義經濟路線;如何既保持樂觀,又要避免之後的失望;如何既維持政治穩定,又開放經濟;如何既給予地方幹部靈活空間,又能維護國家發展的總路線;重點不放在清算毛澤東、林彪和「四人幫」,而是務實地「平反」被「整肅」的老幹部,並恢復其名譽及權益。

鄧小平何其務實,又何其審慎,「全盤否定毛澤東,共產黨不是什麼都沒有了!」我所要表達的是:「沒有李登輝時代的民主改革,國民黨如何轉型?臺灣又如何和平地民主發展?」踵繼蔣故總統經國先生之後,李登輝先生執政臺灣12年餘,愛之者譽為「民主先生」,疑之者批其竊占中華民國,以行臺獨之實。

我則有這麼簡單的一句話:「各是其是,各非其非,糾纏至今,實無助於事,走不出過去恩怨情結,臺灣見不到未來。」對蔣中正先生也好、對李登輝先生也好,都應以「既非全盤否定、也不全盤接受」的態度,就事論事地務實重新加以認知與檢驗。畢竟俱往矣,重點不在糾結於「加害者」的負面情緒,而是找出平反「受害者」的積極作為,藍綠和解共生、記取教訓,不要重覆過去的錯誤,包容共謀體認經國先生經營臺灣兩大政略的主張,臺灣才能找回昔日的驕傲。

鄧小平總結毛澤東的功過,以「七、三開」定調毛主席「建國有功、治國有罪」,擺脫過去「以階級鬥爭為綱」的政略,打破「兩個凡是」的神主牌位,因此才能放開手腳、大破大立,推動以民生經濟為綱的改革開放路線,40年來的努力,終於奠定中國大陸崛起成為世界第二大經濟體的進程。

反觀臺灣,特別是自2000年以來,國、民兩黨糾結於所謂的藍綠對決,進行政治上的選票與社會動員,藉著無益民生的統獨意識各自綁架基本群眾,進行族群鬥爭、互貼標籤,推動兩個政治對決「新的凡是」,也就是把臺灣內部的複雜政治問題,簡化成「凡是藍的,就是親中;凡是綠的,就是愛臺。」所以,「外省人多是藍的;本省人多是綠的。」以此手段粗糙地進行「以省籍鬥爭為綱」。因此,藍軍將2000年國民黨失去政權的責任,一股腦地推給李前總統;而綠軍為了鞏固其政治版圖,緊抓「反核」、「臺獨」兩塊神主牌,樂此不疲地進行族群動員。

自此,臺灣完全背離了經國先生經營臺灣的兩大政略—也就是「在政治制度上,鞏固民主、推行法治;在經濟制度上,強化經濟、照顧民生。」短短18年,臺灣付出了沉重巨大的代價,不僅僅是在經濟表現上已完全退出亞洲四小龍之列,臺灣引以為傲的人才養成、技職教育幾已崩解,過去自1945年來近50年、臺灣社會族群融合的努力更付諸東流。

總而言之,鄧小平對中國大陸最重要的貢獻,就是「解放思想」,掙脫「兩個凡是」桎梏,放棄「階級鬥爭」講究根正苗紅、工農出身的謬思;今日臺灣要想重振,也必須嚴肅面對臺灣政治對決兩個「新的凡是」,揚棄以「挑弄族群、鞏固選票」的政治算計,「放下藍綠對決、照顧民生經濟」,務實地面對未來。

我必須再次強調,在1988至1993年這段期間內,我作為其中一位協助李登輝先生執政前一階段推動憲政改革的執行者,我看見李登輝先生與許多早期襄助他的戰友如李元簇等都是務實主義的改革者,而且都是「經國學校」畢業的,沒有偏離經國先生走向開放民主的路線。但是遺憾的是,後李時期識人不明,用人出了問題,逐漸出現國家認同、大陸政策和黑金橫行等種種問題,對後來產生不少且不良的影響。

我絕對尊重每個人的不同見解,但是有責任為這段過去做個綜合整理,陳述我所知道而不為外人知的歷史事實,供歷史作公評,但更重要的是提供以後政治社會改革者參考。

1992年10月2日,「國際民主聯盟」(International Democrat Union, IDU)第5屆黨魁年會在西班牙馬德里召開,由我以祕書長的身分代表國民黨率團前往參加,除簽署聯盟憲章,正式讓國民黨加入IDU成為會員外,並在大會以〈寧靜革命〉為題發表入會演說,介紹中國國民黨在臺灣推動民主的成就,以及中華民國進步的現況,此即是「寧靜革命」一詞的濫觴。善哉,緊接著《亞洲華爾街日報》(Asian Wall Street Journal)於1992年11月11日社論,以〈臺灣的寧靜革命〉(Taiwan’s Quiet Revolution)為題,稱譽臺灣奠基於經濟技術和循序漸進的民主制度,和其他國家鮮血淋漓的暴力行徑顯然不同,允為另一個恰當的評論。

胡適曾說:「歷史進化有兩種,一種是完全自然的演化,一種是順著自然的趨勢,加上人力的督促。前者可叫做演進,後者可叫做革命。」本書訴說所及,當然是上述分類的「第二種歷史」。但革命也有兩種,一是流血革命,另一是不流血革命,發生於17世紀的英國光榮革命(Glorious Revolution)就是屬於後者。臺灣這段民主化過程值得驕傲之處,在於權鬥而不流血,只希望沒有留下歷史遺憾,而為未來開展出一條憲政坦途。

在李登輝先生承繼大統開始前幾年,政治上扮演「人力督促」的重量級人物,除李登輝本人外,主要有謝東閔、李元簇、俞國華、李煥、蔣彥士、林洋港、蔣緯國、郝柏村、馬樹禮、邱創煥、余紀忠、王惕吾、錢復、連戰、陳履安、徐立德、梁肅戎、關中、林棟、洪玉欽、黃信介、康寧祥、張俊宏、許信良、施明德、陳水扁、馬英九、王建煊、趙少康諸先生等,而我也是其中的一位,這些人各占據本書裡不同的位置與不同的光譜。由於其間翻天覆地的權鬥、對峙、較勁,或公開的與關起門來的溝通、對話和謀劃,都是獻替國是的智力折衝,卻未曾流過任何一滴血,這確實也是值得慶幸之事。

北宋賢臣歐陽修〈朋黨論〉有云:「治亂興亡之跡,為人君者,可以鑑矣。」歷史在國人眼裡,不止於對君王治術有益,一向有鑑往知來、增進解決問題的參酌功用。我更以為,對某些與某段歷史有檢討、有省思、有比較可以接受的綜合共識結論後,才可能有下一步的大開大闔向前邁進,否則只會自綁手腳,停留在過去歷史的恩怨糾纏裡,一籌莫展,徒然自怨自艾而已。

還可以交代的,本書所述內容雖事隔30年,但絕非我一人的主觀口述而已,全部內容均有佐證資料,所有事件梗概與細節均可供驗證與反覆論證,亦可開放與公眾對話。

我希望本書能盡到告知的義務與責任,也能因身在歷史中,對這一段我們是如何創造臺灣開放民主的經過,起拋磚引玉的作用!

宋楚瑜 寫於 2019年元月















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從威權邁向開放民主:臺灣民主化關鍵歷程(1988-1993)


作者: 宋楚瑜口述歷史, 方鵬程採訪整理 追蹤作者 新功能介紹
出版社:商周出版 訂閱出版社新書快訊 新功能介紹
出版日期:2019/03/21
語言:繁體中文

2019年6月27日 星期四

The 50 Best Memoirs of the Past 50 Years ( The New York Times’s book critics )



The New York Times
BOOKS




The 50 Best Memoirs of the Past 50 Years
The New York Times’s book critics select the most outstanding memoirs published since 1969.



Fierce Attachments
Vivian Gornick
Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1987


“I remember only the women,” Vivian Gornick writes near the start of her memoir of growing up in the Bronx tenements in the 1940s, surrounded by the blunt, brawling, yearning women of the neighborhood, chief among them her indomitable mother. “I absorbed them as I would chloroform on a cloth laid against my face. It has taken me 30 years to understand how much of them I understood.”

When Gornick’s father died suddenly, she looked in the coffin for so long that she had to be pulled away. That fearlessness suffuses this book; she stares unflinchingly at all that is hidden, difficult, strange, unresolvable in herself and others — at loneliness, sexual malice and the devouring, claustral closeness of mothers and daughters. The book is propelled by Gornick’s attempts to extricate herself from the stifling sorrow of her home — first through sex and marriage, but later, and more reliably, through the life of the mind, the “glamorous company” of ideas. It’s a portrait of the artist as she finds a language — original, allergic to euphemism and therapeutic banalities — worthy of the women that raised her. — Parul Sehgal

I love this book — even during those moments when I want to scream at Gornick, which are the times when she becomes the hypercritical, constantly disappointed woman that her mother, through her words and example, taught the author to be. There’s a clarity to this memoir that’s so brilliant it's unsettling; Gornick finds a measure of freedom in her writing and her feminist activism, but even then, she and her mother can never let each other go. — Jennifer Szalai

Gornick’s language is so fresh and so blunt; it’s a quintessentially American voice, and a beautiful one. The confidence of her tone in “Fierce Attachments” reminds me of the Saul Bellow who wrote, in the opening lines of “The Adventures of Augie March,” “I have taught myself, free-style, and will make the record in my own way.” — Dwight Garner


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1


The Woman Warrior
Maxine Hong Kingston
Alfred A. Knopf, 1976


This book is more than four decades old, but I can’t think of another memoir quite like it that has been published since. True stories, ghost stories, “talk stories” — Maxine Hong Kingston whirs them all together to produce something wild and astonishing that still asserts itself with a ruthless precision.

The American-born daughter of Chinese immigrants, Kingston navigates a bewildering journey between worlds, each one stifling yet perforated by inconsistencies. There’s the Chinese village of Kingston’s ancestors, where girls learn the song of the warrior woman while being told they are destined to become a wife and a slave. There’s the postwar California of her childhood, where she has to unlearn the “strong and bossy” voices of the Chinese women in her family in favor of an “American-feminine” whisper. There’s Mao’s revolution, which is supposed to upend the old feudal system that kept her female ancestors trapped in servitude (if they weren’t victims of infanticides as unwanted baby girls) but also imposes its own deadly cruelty, preventing her parents from returning home.

The narrative undulates, shifting between ghost world, real world and family lore. It can be deadpan and funny, too. The young Kingston resolves to become a lumberjack and a newspaper reporter. Both worthy ambitions, but I’m thankful she wrote this indelible memoir instead. — Jennifer Szalai


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2


Fun Home
Alison Bechdel
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2006


Alison Bechdel’s beloved graphic novel is an elaborately layered account of life and artifice, family silence and revelation, springing from her father’s suicide. He was a distant man who devoted himself to the refurbishment of his sprawling Victorian home — and to a hidden erotic life involving young men. The title comes from the abbreviation of the family business — a funeral home — but it also refers to the dual funhouse portrait of father and daughter, of the author’s own queerness.

It’s a sexual and intellectual coming-of-age story that swims along literary lines, honoring the books that nourished Bechdel and her parents and seemed to speak for them: Kate Millet, Proust, Oscar Wilde, theory, poetry and literature. “Fun Home” joins that lineage, an original, mournful, intricate work of art. — Parul Sehgal


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3



The Liars’ Club
Mary Karr
Viking, 1995


This incendiary memoir, about the author’s childhood in the 1960s in a small industrial town in Southeast Texas, was published in 1995 and helped start the modern memoir boom. The book deserves its reputation. You can almost say about Mary Karr’s agile prose what she says about herself at the age of 7: “I was small-boned and skinny, but more than able to make up for that with sheer meanness.”

As a girl, Karr was a serious settler of scores, willing to bite anyone who had wronged her or to climb a tree with a BB gun to take aim at an entire family. Her mother, who “fancied herself a kind of bohemian Scarlett O’Hara,” had a wild streak. She was married seven times, and was subject to psychotic episodes. Her father was an oil refinery worker, a brawling yet taciturn man who came most fully alive when telling tall stories, often in the back room of a bait shop, with a group of men called “The Liars’ Club.”

This is one of the best books ever written about growing up in America. Karr evokes the contours of her preadolescent mind — the fears, fights and petty jealousies — with extraordinary and often comic vividness. This memoir, packed with eccentrics, is beautifully eccentric in its own right. — Dwight Garner


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4



For generations my ancestors had been strapping skillets onto their oxen and walking west. It turned out to be impossible for me to “run away” in the sense other American teenagers did. Any movement at all was taken for progress in my family.

—Mary Karr, “The Liar’s Club”

Hitch-22
Christopher Hitchens
Twelve, 2010


This high-spirited memoir traces the life and times of this inimitable public intellectual, who is much missed, from his childhood in Portsmouth, England, where his father was a navy man, through boarding school, his studies at Oxford and his subsequent career as a writer both in England and the United States.

Christopher Hitchens was a man of the left but unpredictable (and sometimes inscrutable) politically. “Hitch-22” demonstrates how seriously he took the things that really matter: social justice, learning, direct language, the free play of the mind, loyalty and holding public figures to high standards.

This is a vibrant book about friendships, and it will make you want to take your own more seriously. Hitchens recounts moments with friends that include Martin Amis, Salman Rushdie and the poet James Fenton. There is a lot of wit here, and bawdy wordplay, and accounts of long nights spent drinking and smoking. Hitchens decided to become a student of history and politics, he writes, after the Cuban missile crisis. “If politics could force its way into my life in such a vicious and chilling manner, I felt, then I had better find out a bit more about it.” He was a force to contend with from the time he was in short pants. “I was probably insufferable,” he concedes. — Dwight Garner


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5



Read the critics discuss the process of putting together the list.

Men We Reaped
Jesmyn Ward
Bloomsbury, 2013


“Men’s bodies litter my family history,” the novelist Jesmyn Ward writes in this torrential, sorrowing tribute to five young black men she knew, including her brother, who died in the span of four years, lost to suicide, drugs or accidents. These men were devoured by her hometown, DeLisle, Miss. — called Wolf Town by its first settlers — “pinioned beneath poverty and history and racism.”

Ward tells their stories with tenderness and reverence; they live again in these pages. Their fates twine with her own — her dislocation and anguish, and later, the complicated story of her own survival, and isolation, as she is recruited to elite all-white schools. She is a writer who has metabolized the Greeks and Faulkner — their themes course through her work — and the stories of the deaths of these men join larger national narratives about rural poverty and racism. But Ward never allows her subjects to become symbolic. This work of great grief and beauty renders them individual and irreplaceable. — Parul Sehgal


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6



Palimpsest
Gore Vidal
Random House, 1995


It’s Vidal, so you know the gossip will be abundant, and top shelf. Scores will be settled (with Anaïs Nin, Charlton Heston, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, his mother), conquests enumerated (Jack Kerouac), choice quips dispensed. “At least I have a style,” Truman Capote once sniped at him. “Of course you do,” Vidal responded soothingly. “You stole it from Carson McCullers.”

It was a rangy life — one that took him into the military, politics, Hollywood, Broadway — and he depicts it with the silky urbanity you expect. What comes as a shock is the book’s directness and deep feeling — its innocence.

It’s a love story, at the end of the day. Vidal had a lifelong companion but remained passionately compelled by a beautiful classmate, his first paramour, Jimmie, who died at 19, shot and bayoneted while sleeping in a foxhole on Iwo Jima. He is the phantom that has haunted Vidal’s long, eventful life. “Palimpsest” is a book full of revelations.

“By choice and luck, my life has been spent reading other people’s books and making sentences for my own,” Vidal writes. Our great luck, too. — Parul Sehgal


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7


Giving Up the Ghost
Hilary Mantel
A John Macrae Book/Henry Holt & Company, 2003


As a poor Catholic girl growing up in the north of England, Hilary Mantel was an exuberant child of improbable ambition, deciding early on that she was destined to become a knight errant and would change into a boy when she turned 4.

Her mesmerizing memoir reads like an attempt to recover the girl she once was, before others began to dictate her story for her. At the age of 7, looking about the garden, she saw an apparition, perhaps the Devil. She thought it was her fault, for allowing her greedy gaze to wander. Her stepfather was bullying, judgmental, condescending; anything Mantel did seemed to anger him. As a young woman, she started to get headaches, vision problems, pains that coursed through her body, bleeding that no longer confined itself to that time of the month. The doctors told her she was insane.

The ghost she is giving up in the title isn’t her life but that of the child she might have had but never will. Years of misdiagnoses culminated in the removal of her reproductive organs, barnacled by scar tissue caused by endometriosis. Her body changed from very thin to very fat. Mantel, perhaps best known for her novels “Wolf Hall” and “Bring Up the Bodies,” writes about all of this with a fine ear and a furious intelligence, as she resurrects phantoms who “shiver between the lines.” — Jennifer Szalai


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8



I used to think that autobiography was a form of weakness, and perhaps I still do. But I also think that, if you’re weak, it’s childish to pretend to be strong.

—Hilary Mantel, “Giving Up the Ghost”

A Childhood
Harry Crews
Harper & Row, 1978


This taut, powerful and deeply original memoir covers just the first six years of this gifted novelist’s life, but it is a nearly Dickensian anthology of physical and mental intensities.

Harry Crews grew up in southern Georgia, not far from the Okefenokee Swamp. His father, a tenant farmer, died of a heart attack before Crews was 2. His stepfather was a violent drunk. When Crews was 5, he fell into a boiler of water that was being used to scald pigs. His own skin came off, he writes, “like a wet glove.” When he recovered from this long and painful ordeal, he contracted polio so severely that his heels drew back tightly until they touched the backs of his thighs. He was told, incorrectly, that he would never walk again. “The world that circumscribed the people I come from,” he writes, “had so little margin for error, for bad luck, that when something went wrong, it almost always brought something else down with it.”

Crews sought solace in the Sears, Roebuck catalog, the only book in his house besides the Bible. He began his career as a writer by making up stories about the people he saw there. These humans didn’t have scars and blemishes like everyone he knew. “On their faces were looks of happiness, even joy, looks that I never saw much of in the faces of the people around me.” — Dwight Garner


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9


Dreams From My Father
Barack Obama
Times Books/Random House, 1995


Barack Obama’s first book was published a year before he was elected to the Illinois senate and long before his eight years in the White House under the unrelenting gaze of the public eye. “Dreams From My Father” is a moving and frank work of self-excavation — mercifully free of the kind of virtue-signaling and cheerful moralizing that makes so many politicians’ memoirs read like notes to a stump speech.

Obama recounts an upbringing that set him apart, with a tangle of roots that didn’t give him an obvious map to who he was. His father was from Kenya; his mother from Kansas. Obama himself was born in Hawaii, lived in Indonesia for a time, and was largely raised by his mother and maternal grandparents, after his father left for Harvard when Obama was 2.

“I learned to slip back and forth between my black and white worlds,” he writes, “understanding that each possessed its own language and customs and structures of meaning, convinced that with a bit of translation on my part the two worlds would eventually cohere.” To see what held his worlds together was also to learn what kept them apart. This is a book about the uses of disenchantment; the revelations are all the more astonishing for being modest and hard-won. — Jennifer Szalai


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10



Patrimony
Philip Roth
Simon & Schuster, 1991


Philip Roth’s book is a Kaddish to his father, Herman Roth, who developed a benign brain tumor at 86. Surgery was not an option, and Herman became immured in his body, which “had become a terrifying escape-proof enclosure, the holding pen in a slaughterhouse.”

“Patrimony,” which won the National Book Critics Circle Award, is written plainly, without any flourishes — just the unbearable facts of a father’s decline, the body weakening, the vigorous mind dimming. It’s the rough stuff of devotion. Roth adopts care of his increasingly difficult father and witnesses his rapid decline, admonishing himself: “You must not forget anything.”

“He was always teaching me something,” Roth recalls of his father. He never stopped. In this book, Roth offers a moving tribute to the man but also a portrait almost breathtaking in its honesty and lack of sentimentalism, so truthful and exact that it is as much a portrait of living as dying, son as father. “He could be a pitiless realist,” Roth writes of Herman, proudly. “But I wasn’t his offspring for nothing.” — Parul Sehgal


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11



I had seen my father’s brain, and everything and nothing was revealed. A mystery scarcely short of divine, the brain, even in the case of a retired insurance man with an eighth-grade education from Newark’s Thirteenth Avenue School.

—Philip Roth, “Patrimony”

All God’s Dangers: The Life of Nate Shaw
Theodore Rosengarten
Alfred A. Knopf, 1974


This indelible book, an oral history from an illiterate black Alabama sharecropper, won the National Book Award in 1975, beating a lineup of instant classics that included “The Power Broker,” Robert Caro’s biography of Robert Moses; Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein’s “All the President’s Men”; Studs Terkel’s “Working”; and Robert M. Pirsig’s “Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance.” Unlike these other books, “All God’s Dangers” has largely been forgotten. It’s time for that to change.

This book’s author, Theodore Rosengarten, was a Harvard graduate student who went to Alabama in 1968 while researching a defunct labor organization. Someone suggested he speak with Shaw, whose real name was Ned Cobb. What emerged from Cobb’s mouth was dense and tangled social history, a narrative that essentially takes us from slavery to Selma from the point of view of an unprosperous but eloquent and unbroken black man.

Reading it, you will learn more about wheat, guano, farm implements, bugs, cattle killing and mule handling than you would think possible. This is also a dense catalog of the ways that whites tricked and mistreated blacks in the first half of the 20th century. “Years ago I heard that Abraham Lincoln freed the colored people,” Cobb says, “but it didn’t amount to a hill of beans.” About his white neighbors, he declares, “Any way they could deprive a Negro was a celebration to ’em.” This book is not always easy reading, but it is the real deal, an essential American document. — Dwight Garner


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12


Lives Other Than My Own
Emmanuel Carrère. Translated from the French by Linda Coverdale.
Metropolitan Books/Henry Holt & Company, 2011


You begin this memoir thinking it will be about one thing, and it turns into something else altogether — a book at once more ordinary and more extraordinary than any first impressions might allow.

Emmanuel Carrère starts with the 2004 tsunami in Sri Lanka — he was there, vacationing with his girlfriend. But that’s just the first 50 pages. Then he turns to the story of his girlfriend’s sister, a small-town judge who’s dying of cancer, and her friendship with another judge, who also has cancer. Carrère’s girlfriend chides him for thinking that such unpromising material offers him some sort of golden storytelling opportunity: “They don’t even sleep together — and at the end, she dies,” she says to him. “Have I got that straight? That’s your story?”

She does have it straight, but there’s so much more to it. Carrère weaves in his own experiences, coming up against his own limitations, his own prejudices, his own understanding of what defines a meaningful life. His sentences are clean, never showy; he writes about himself through others in a way that feels both necessarily generous and candidly — which is to say appropriately — narcissistic.

Whenever I try to describe this memoir — and I do that often, since it’s a book I don’t just recommend but implore people to read — I feel like I’m trying to parse a magic trick. — Jennifer Szalai


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13



A Tale of Love and Darkness
Amos Oz. Translated from the Hebrew by Nicholas de Lange.
Harcourt, 2004


This memoir was born from a long silence, written 50 years after Amos Oz’s mother killed herself with sleeping pills, when he was 12, three months before his bar mitzvah. The resulting book is both brutal and generous, filled with meandering reflections on a life’s journey in politics and literature.

The only child of European Jews who settled in the Promised Land, Oz grew up alongside the new state of Israel, initially enamored of a fierce nationalism before becoming furiously (and in one memorable scene, rather hilariously) disillusioned. As a lonely boy, Oz felt unseen by his awkward father and confounded by his brilliant and deeply unhappy mother. She taught him that people were a constant source of betrayal and disappointment. Books, though, would never let him down. Hearing about what happened to those Jews who stayed in Europe, the young Oz wanted to become a book, because no matter how many books were destroyed there was a decent chance that one copy could survive.

Oz says he essentially killed his father by moving to a kibbutz at 15 and changing his name. But his father lives on in this memoir, along with Oz’s mother — not just in his recollections of her, but in the very existence of this book. She was the one who captivated him with stories that “amazed you, sent shivers up your spine, then disappeared back into the darkness before you had time to see what was in front of your eyes.” — Jennifer Szalai


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14


This Boy’s Life
Tobias Wolff
The Atlantic Monthly Press, 1989


“Our car boiled over again just after my mother and I crossed the Continental Divide.” So begins Tobias Wolff’s powerful and impeccably written memoir of his childhood in the 1950s, a classic of the genre that has lost none of its power.

Divorced mother and son had hit the road together, fleeing a bad man, trying to change their luck and maybe get rich as uranium prospectors. The author’s wealthy and estranged father was absent. Soon his mother linked up with a man named Dwight (never trust a man named Dwight) who beat young Wolff, stole his paper route money and forced him to shuck horse chestnuts after school for hours, until his hands were “crazed with cuts and scratches” from their sharply spined husks. Wolff became wild in high school, a delinquent and a petty thief, before escaping to a prep school in Pennsylvania. His prose lights up the experience of growing up in America during this era. He describes going to confession and trying to articulate an individual sin this way: “It was like fishing a swamp, where you feel the tug of something that at first seems promising and then resistant and finally hopeless as you realize that you’ve snagged the bottom, that you have the whole planet on the other end of your line.” — Dwight Garner


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15


A Life’s Work
Rachel Cusk
Picador, 2002


Rachel Cusk writes about new motherhood with an honesty and clarity that makes this memoir feel almost illicit. Sleepless nights, yes; colic, yes; but also a raw, frantic love for her firstborn daughter that she depicts and dissects with both rigor and amazement.

As many readers as there are who love “A Life’s Work” as much as I do, I know others who have been put off by its steely register, finding it too denuded, shorn of warmth and giddiness — those very things that help make motherhood such an enormous experience, and not just a grueling one. But whenever I read Cusk’s book, I am irrevocably pulled along in its thrall, constantly startled by her observations — milk running “in untasted rivulets” down her baby’s “affronted cheek”; pregnancy literature that “bristles with threats and the promise of reprisal” — and her willingness to see her experience cold.

Or, at least, to try to, because what becomes clear is that it’s impossible for Cusk to hold on to her old self. The childless writer who could compartmentalize with ease and take boundaries for granted has to learn an entirely new way of being. Embedded in Cusk’s chiseled sentences are her attempts to engage with a roiling vulnerability. None of the chipper, treacly stuff here; motherhood deserves more respect than that. — Jennifer Szalai


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16


Boyhood
J.M. Coetzee
Viking, 1997


The Nobel Prize-winning J.M. Coetzee is one of those novelists who rarely give interviews, and when he does, he’s like the Robert Mueller of the literary world — reticent, discreet and quietly insistent that his books should speak for themselves.

Coetzee, in other words, is taciturn in the extreme. Yet he has also written three revealing volumes about his life — “Boyhood,” “Youth” and “Summertime.” The first, “Boyhood,” is most explicitly and conventionally a memoir, covering his years growing up in a provincial village outside of Cape Town. The child of Afrikaner parents who had pretensions to English gentility, he was buttoned-up and sensitive, desperate to fit into the “normal” world around him but also confounded and repulsed by it. He noticed how his indolent relatives clung to their privileged position in South Africa’s brutal racial hierarchy through cruelty and a raw assertion of power. Out in the world, he lived in constant fear of violence and humiliation; at home he was cosseted by his mother and presided like a king.

The memoir is told in the third-person present tense, which lends it a peculiar immediacy. Coetzee is free to observe the boy he once was without the interpretive intrusions that come with age; he can remain true to what he felt then, rather than what he knows now. His recollections are stark and painfully intimate: “He feels like a crab pulled out of its shell, pink and wounded and obscene.” — Jennifer Szalai


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17



Conundrum
Jan Morris
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1974


“The book is already a period piece,” the legendary travel writer Jan Morris opens her memoir. “It was written in the 1970s, and is decidedly of the 1970s.” It might be of its time but it is also ardent, musical, poetic and full of warm humor — a chronicle of ecstasies. Best remembered as one of the first accounts of gender transition, “Conundrum” is a study of home in all its forms — of finding home in one’s body, of Morris’s native Wales, of all the cities she possesses by dint of loving them so fiercely.

We are carried from her childhood, in the lap of a family militantly opposed to conformity, to her long career as a reporter in England and Egypt. She went everywhere, met everyone: Che Guevara (“sharp as a cat in Cuba”), Guy Burgess (“swollen with drink and self-reproach in Moscow”). It’s an enviably full life, with a long marriage, four children and Morris’s determinedly sunny disposition and ability to regard every second of her life, however difficult — especially if difficult — as a species of grand adventure.

She chafes at the notion of “identity” (“a trendy word I have long distrusted, masking as it often does befuddled ideas and lazy thinking”). It is thrilling to watch her arrive at an understanding of a sense of self and language that is her own, bespoke. “To me gender is not physical at all, but is altogether insubstantial,” she writes. “It was a melody that I heard within myself.” — Parul Sehgal


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18



I did not query my condition, or seek reasons for it. I knew very well that it was an irrational conviction — I was in no way psychotic, and perhaps not much more neurotic than most of us; but there it was, I knew it to be true, and if it was impossible then the definition of possibility was inadequate.

—Jan Morris, “Conundrum”

Wave
Sonali Deraniyagala
Alfred A. Knopf, 2013


Sonali Deraniyagala was searching the internet for ways to kill herself when one click led to another and she was staring at a news article featuring pictures of her two young sons. The boys had died not long before — victims of the 2004 tsunami in Sri Lanka, which also killed Deraniyagala’s husband and her parents. She herself survived by clinging to a branch.

“Wave” is a meticulous account of derangement — of being so undone by grief that life becomes not just impossible but terrifying. She recalls stabbing herself with a butter knife. She couldn’t look at a flower or a blade of grass without feeling a sickening sense of panic. Reading this book is like staring into the abyss, only instead of staring back it might just swallow you whole.

This, believe it or not, is why you should read it — for Deraniyagala’s unflinching account of the horror that took away her family, and for her willingness to lay bare how it made her not only more vulnerable but also, at times, more cruel. Her return to life was gradual, tentative and difficult; she learned the only way out of her unbearable anguish was to remember what had happened and to keep it close. — Jennifer Szalai


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19


Always Unreliable: Unreliable Memoirs, Falling Towards England and May Week Was in June
Clive James
Picador, 2004


The Australian-born critic, poet, memoirist, novelist, travel writer and translator Clive James isn’t as well known in America as he is in England, where he’s lived most of his adult life. Over there, cabdrivers know who James is: the ebullient man who hosted many comic and erudite television programs over the years. We have no one quite like him over here: Think Johnny Carson combined with Edmund Wilson.

James is the author of five memoirs, to which many readers have a cultlike devotion. The first three — “Unreliable Memoirs,” “Falling Towards England” and “May Week Was in June” — have been collected into one volume, “Always Unreliable,” and they are especially incisive and comic. In a preface to the first book, James dealt a truth few memoirists will admit: “Most first novels are disguised autobiographies. This autobiography is a disguised novel.” He’s an admitted exaggerator, but nonetheless he’s led a big life.

He was born in 1939 and grew up with an absent father, a Japanese prisoner of war. Released, his father died in a plane crash on his way home when James was 5. The author fully relives his adolescent agonies (“you can die of envy for cratered faces weeping with yellow pus”) and his rowdy troublemaking years. Later volumes take him to London and then to Cambridge University, where he edits Granta, the literary magazine, dabbles in theater (“It was my first, cruel exposure to the awkward fact that the arts attract the insane”) and gets married. He is never less than good company. — Dwight Garner


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20



Travels With Lizbeth
Lars Eighner
St. Martin’s Press, 1993


Lars Eighner’s memoir contains the finest first-person writing we have about the experience of being homeless in America. Yet it’s not a dirge or a Bukowski-like scratching of the groin but an offbeat and plaintive hymn to life. It’s the sort of book that releases the emergency brake on your soul. Eighner spent three years on the streets (mostly in Austin, Tex.) and on the road in the late 1980s and early 1990s, after suffering from migraines and losing a series of jobs. The book he wrote is a literate and exceedingly humane document.

On the streets, he clung to a kind of dignity. He refused to beg or steal. He didn’t care for drugs; he barely drank. “Being suddenly intoxicated in a public place in the early afternoon,” he writes, “is not my idea of a good time.” He foraged for books and magazines as much as food, but an especially fine portion of this book is his writing about dumpster-diving. There’s the jarring impression that every grain of rice is a maggot. About botulism, he writes: “Often the first symptom is death.” There is something strangely Emersonian, capable and self-reliant, in his scavenging. “I live from the refuse of others,” he declares. “I think it a sound and honorable niche.” — Dwight Garner


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21



Day after day I could aspire, within reason, to nothing more than survival. Although the planets wandered among the stars and the moon waxed and waned, the identical naked barrenness of existence was exposed to me, day in and day out.

—Lars Eighner, “Travels With Lizbeth”

Hold Still
Sally Mann
Little, Brown & Company, 2015


The photographer Sally Mann’s memoir is weird, intense and uncommonly beautiful. She has real literary gifts, and she’s led a big Southern-bohemian life, rich with incident. Or maybe it only seems rich with incident because of an old maxim that still holds: Stories happen only to people who can tell them.

Like Mary Karr, Mann as a child was a scrappy, troublemaking tomboy, one who grew into a scrappy, troublemaking, impossible-to-ignore young woman and artist. She was raised in Virginia by sophisticated, lettered parents. When she grew too wild, they sent her away to a prep school in Vermont where, she writes, “I smoked, I drank, I skipped classes, I snuck out, I took drugs, I stole quarts of ice cream for my dorm by breaking into the kitchen storerooms, I made out with my boyfriends in the library basement, I hitchhiked into town and down I-91, and when caught, I weaseled out of all of it.”

This memoir recounts some of the Southern gothic elements of her parents’ lives. This book is heavily illustrated, and traces her growth as an artist. It recounts friendships with Southern artists and writers such as Cy Twombly and Reynolds Price. Her anecdotes have snap. About his advanced old age, in a line that is hard to forget, Twombly tells the author that he is “closing down the bodega for real.” But this story is entirely her own. — Dwight Garner


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22


Country Girl
Edna O’Brien
Little, Brown and Company, 2013


The enormously gifted Irish writer Edna O’Brien was near the red-hot center of the Swinging ’60s in London. She dropped acid with her psychiatrist, R.D. Laing. Among those who came to her parties were Marianne Faithfull, Sean Connery, Princess Margaret and Jane Fonda. Richard Burton and Marlon Brando tried to get her into bed. Robert Mitchum succeeded after wooing her with this pickup line: “I bet you wish I was Robert Taylor, and I bet you never tasted white peaches.”

O’Brien was born in a village in County Clare, in the west of Ireland, in 1930. This earthy and evocative book also traces her youth and her development as a writer. Her small family was religious. Her father was a farmer who drank and gambled; her mother was a former maid. She has described her village, Tuamgraney, as “enclosed, fervid and bigoted.” O’Brien didn’t attend college. She moved to Dublin, where she worked in a drugstore while studying at the Pharmaceutical College at night. She began to read literature, and she wondered: “Why could life not be lived at that same pitch? Why was it only in books that I could find the utter outlet for my emotions?” This memoir has perfect pitch.— Dwight Garner


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23



Persepolis
Marjane Satrapi. Translated from the French by Mattias Ripa and Blake Ferris.
Pantheon, 2003


At the age of 6, Marjane Satrapi privately declared herself the last prophet of Islam. At 14, she left Iran for a boarding school in Austria, sent away by parents terrified of their outspoken daughter’s penchant for challenging her teachers (and hypocrisy wherever she sniffed it out). At 31, she published “Persepolis,” in French (it was later translated into English by Mattias Ripa and Blake Ferris), a stunning graphic memoir hailed as a wholly original achievement in the form.

There’s still a startling freshness to the book. It won’t age. In inky shadows and simple, expressive lines — reminiscent of Ludwig Bemelmans’s “Madeline” — Satrapi evokes herself and her schoolmates coming of age in a world of protests and disappearances (and scoring punk rock cassettes on the black market).

The revolution, the rise of fundamentalism, a brutal family history of torture, imprisonment and exile are conveyed from a child’s perspective and achieve a stark, shocking impact. — Parul Sehgal


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24


Negroland
Margo Jefferson
Pantheon, 2015


The motto was simple in Margo Jefferson’s childhood home: “Achievement. Invulnerability. Comportment.” Her family was part of Chicago’s black elite. Her father was the head pediatrician at Provident, America’s oldest black hospital; her mother was a socialite. They saw themselves as a “Third Race, poised between the masses of Negroes and all classes of Caucasians.” Life was navigated according to strict standards of behavior and femininity. Jefferson writes of the punishing psychic burden of growing up feeling that she was a representative for her race and, later, of nagging, terrifying suicidal impulses.

Jefferson won a Pulitzer Prize in 1995 for her book reviews in The New York Times. “Negroland” is an extended form of criticism that dances between a history of social class to a close reading of her mother’s expressions; the information calibrated in a brow arched “three to four millimeters.”

The prose is blunt and evasive, sensuous and ascetic, doubting and resolute — and above all beautifully skeptical of the genre, of the memoir’s conventions, clichés and limits. “How do you adapt your singular, willful self to so much history and myth? So much glory, banality, honor and betrayal?” she asks. This shape-shifting, form-shattering book carves one path forward. — Parul Sehgal


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25


25 More Great Memoirs

Presented in Alphabetical Order by Author



Clothes, Clothes, Clothes. Music, Music, Music. Boys, Boys, Boys.
Viv Albertine
Thomas Dunne Books/St. Martin’s Press, 2014

Viv Albertine participated in the birth of punk in the mid-1970s. She was in a band with Sid Vicious before he joined the Sex Pistols. She dated Mick Jones while he was putting together his new band, the Clash. She could barely play guitar, yet she became the lead guitarist for the Slits. Her memoir is wiry and fearless. It contains story after story about men who told her she couldn’t do things that she did anyway. Her life up to the breakup of the Slits occupies only half of the book. There’s a lot of pain in the second section: loneliness, doubt, a bad marriage, cancer, depression. Throughout, this account has an honest, lo-fi grace.


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Experience
Martin Amis
Talk Miramax Books/Hyperion, 2000

In this memoir, the acclaimed author of “London Fields,” “Money” and other novels decided, he writes, “to speak, for once, without artifice.” The entertaining, loosely structured result is movingly earnest and wickedly funny. It includes a portrait, both cleareyed and affectionate, of the author’s father, the comic novelist and poet Kingsley Amis. In addition, “Experience” offers more vivid and harrowing writing about dental problems than you might have thought one person capable of producing.


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Slow Days, Fast Company
Eve Babitz
Alfred A. Knopf, 1977

The Los Angeles-born glamour girl, bohemian, artist, muse, sensualist, wit and pioneering foodie Eve Babitz writes prose that reads like Nora Ephron by way of Joan Didion, albeit with more lust and drugs and tequila. “Slow Days, Fast Company” and “Eve’s Hollywood,” the book that preceded it, are officially billed as fiction, but they are mostly undisguised dispatches from her own experiences in 1970s California. Reading her is like being out on the warm open road at sundown, with what she called “4/60 air-conditioning” — that is, going 60 miles per hour with all four windows down. You can feel the wind in your hair.


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Growing Up
Russell Baker
Congdon & Weed, 1982

Russell Baker’s warm and disarmingly funny account of his life growing up in Depression-era America has garnered comparisons to the work of Mark Twain. The book quickly became a beloved best seller when it was published, and went on to win the Pulitzer Prize for biography. Baker was born into poverty in Virginia in 1925. He was 5 years old when his father, then 33, fell into a diabetic coma and died. The author’s strong, affectionate mother is a major presence in the book. Baker, a longtime humorist and columnist for The New York Times, died in January at 93.


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Kafka Was the Rage
Anatole Broyard
Carol Southern Books/Crown Publishers, 1993

Anatole Broyard, a longtime book critic and essayist for The New York Times, died in 1990 of prostate cancer. What he had finished of this memoir before his death mostly concerned his time living in the West Village after World War II. “A war is like an illness,” he writes, “and when it’s over you think you’ve never felt so well.” He writes about the vogue for psychoanalysis, his experience opening a used-book store and, primarily, his formative relationship with the artist Sheri Martinelli (her pseudonym in the book is Sheri Donatti). The book was truncated, but the writing in it is brilliant and often epigrammatic: “I just want love to live up to its publicity.”


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Between the World and Me
Ta-Nehisi Coates
Spiegel & Grau, 2015

Ta-Nehisi Coates’s book, in the form of a letter to his son, is a scalding examination of his own experience as a black man in America, and of how much of American history has been systemically built on exploiting and committing violence against black bodies. Inspired by a section of James Baldwin’s “The Fire Next Time” that was addressed to the author’s nephew, Coates’s book is a powerful testimony that will continue to have a profound impact on discussions about race in America.


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The Year of Magical Thinking
Joan Didion
Alfred A. Knopf, 2005

Joan Didion, so long an exemplar of cool, of brilliant aloofness, showed us her unraveling in this memoir about the sudden death of her husband of 40 years, the writer John Gregory Dunne, and the frightening illness of her daughter, Quintana. It’s a troubled, meditative book, in which Didion writes of what it feels like to have “cut loose any fixed idea I had ever had about death, about illness, about probability and luck, about good fortune and bad.”


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Barbarian Days
William Finnegan
Penguin Press, 2015

This account of a lifelong surfing obsession won the Pulitzer Prize in biography. William Finnegan, a longtime staff writer for The New Yorker, recalls his childhood in California and Hawaii, his many surfing buddies through the years and his taste for a kind of danger that approaches the sublime. In his 20s, he traveled through Asia and Africa and the South Pacific in search of waves, living in tents and cars and cheap apartments. One takes away from “Barbarian Days” a sense of a big, wind-chapped, well-lived life.


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Personal History
Katharine Graham
Alfred A. Knopf, 1997

Katharine Graham’s brilliant but remote father, Eugene Meyer, capped his successful career as a financier and public servant by buying the struggling Washington Post in 1933 and nursing it to health. Graham took command of the paper in 1963, and steered it through the Watergate scandal and the end of Richard Nixon’s presidency, among other dramas. Her autobiography covers her life from childhood to her command of a towering journalistic institution in a deeply male-dominated industry. Her tone throughout is frank, self-critical, modest and justifiably proud.


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Thinking in Pictures
Temple Grandin
Doubleday, 1995

Memoirs are valued, in part, for their ability to open windows onto experiences other than our own, and few do that as dramatically as Temple Grandin’s “Thinking in Pictures.” Grandin, a professor of animal science who is autistic, describes the “library” of visual images in her memory, which she is constantly updating. (“It’s like getting a new version of software for the computer.”) As Oliver Sacks wrote in an introduction to the book, “Grandin’s voice came from a place which had never had a voice, never been granted real existence, before.”


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Autobiography of a Face
Lucy Grealy
Houghton Mifflin, 1994

When she was 9 years old, Lucy Grealy was stricken with a rare, virulent form of bone cancer called Ewing’s sarcoma. She had radical surgery to remove half of her jaw, and years of radiation and chemotherapy, and recovered. She then endured a sense of disfigurement and isolation from other children. She became an accomplished poet and essayist before dying at 39 in 2002. Although entitled to self-pity, Grealy was not given to it. This memoir is a moving meditation on ugliness and beauty. Grealy’s life is the subject of another powerful memoir, Ann Patchett’s “Truth & Beauty,” which recounts the friendship between the two writers.


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Dancing With Cuba
Alma Guillermoprieto. Translated from the Spanish by Esther Allen.
Pantheon, 2004

Alma Guillermoprieto was a 20-year-old dance student in 1969, when Merce Cunningham offered to recommend her for a teaching job at the National Schools of the Arts in Havana. This memoir is her account of the six months she spent there, a frustrating and fascinating time that opened her eyes to the world beyond dance. Eventually, political turmoil, piled on top of loneliness, youthful angst and assorted romantic troubles, led the author to the edge of a nervous breakdown. This remembrance is a pleasure to read, full of humanity, sly humor, curiosity and knowledge.


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Minor Characters
Joyce Johnson
Houghton Mifflin, 1983

Joyce Johnson was 21 and not long out of Barnard College when, in the winter of 1957, Allen Ginsberg set her up on a blind date with Jack Kerouac, who was 34 and still largely unknown. Thus began an off-and-on relationship that lasted nearly two years, during which time “On the Road” was published, leading to life-altering fame — not only for Kerouac but many of his closest friends. Johnson’s book about this time is a riveting portrait of an era, and a glowing introduction to the Beats. It’s a book about a so-called minor character who, in the process of writing her life, became a major one.


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The Memory Chalet
Tony Judt
Penguin Press, 2010

The historian Tony Judt, who was known for his incisive analysis of current events and his synthesizing of European history in books like “Postwar,” wrote this book of autobiographical fragments after he was stricken with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and had become “effectively quadriplegic.” He would think back over his life in the middle of the night, shape those memories into stories and dictate them to an assistant the next day. “The Memory Chalet,” the resulting unlikely artifact, ranges over Judt’s boyhood in England; the lives of his lower-middle-class Jewish parents; life as a student and fellow at King’s College, Cambridge, in the 1960s and early ’70s; and his life in New York City, where he eventually settled and taught.


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Heavy
Kiese Laymon
Scribner, 2018

The most recently published entry on this list of 50 books, Kiese Laymon’s “Heavy” details the author’s childhood in Mississippi in the 1980s and his relationship with his alternately loving and abusive mother, who raised him on her own. It’s full of sharp, heart-rending thoughts about growing up black in the United States, and his fraught relationship with his body — Laymon’s weight has severely fluctuated over the years, a subject he plumbs with great sensitivity. This is a gorgeous, gutting book that’s fueled by candor yet freighted with ambivalence. It’s full of devotion and betrayal, euphoria and anguish.


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Priestdaddy
Patricia Lockwood
Riverhead Books, 2017

Patricia Lockwood, an acclaimed poet, weaves in this memoir the story of her family — including her Roman Catholic priest father, who received a special dispensation from the Vatican — with the crisis that led her and her husband to live temporarily under her parents’ rectory roof. The book, consistently alive with feeling, is written with elastic style. And in Lockwood’s father, Greg, it has one of the great characters in nonfiction: He listens to Rush Limbaugh while watching Bill O’Reilly, consumes Arby’s Beef ’n Cheddar sandwiches the way other humans consume cashews and strides around in his underwear. Hilarious descriptions — of, to take one example, Greg’s guitar playing — alternate with profound examinations of family, art and faith.


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H Is for Hawk
Helen Macdonald
Grove Press, 2015

When we meet Helen Macdonald in this beautiful and nearly feral book, she’s in her 30s, with “no partner, no children, no home.” When her father dies suddenly on a London street, it steals the floor from beneath her. Obsessed with birds of prey since she was a girl, Macdonald was already an experienced falconer. In her grief, seeking escape into something, she began to train one of nature’s most vicious predators, a goshawk. She unplugged her telephone. She told her friends to leave her alone. Nearly every paragraph she writes about the experience is strange in the best way, and injected with unexpected meaning.


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The Color of Water
James McBride
Riverhead Books, 1996

This complex and moving story, which enjoyed a long run on best-seller lists, is about James McBride’s relationship with his mother, Ruth, the daughter of a failed itinerant Orthodox Jewish rabbi. She fervently adopted Christianity and founded a black Baptist church in the Red Hook section of Brooklyn with McBride’s father. The book is suffused with issues of race, religion and identity, and simultaneously transcends those issues to be a story of family love and the sheer force of a mother’s will.


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Angela’s Ashes
Frank McCourt
Scribner, 1996

“When I look back on my childhood I wonder how I survived at all,” Frank McCourt writes near the beginning of his Pulitzer Prize-winning memoir. His parents had immigrated to New York, where McCourt was born, but soon moved back to Ireland, where they hoped relatives could help them with their four children. Having returned, they experienced crushing poverty. The book did perhaps more than any other to cement the 1990s boom in memoir writing — and reading. It features a Dickensian gallery of schoolmasters, shopkeepers and priests, in addition to McCourt’s unforgettable family.


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Cockroaches
Scholastique Mukasonga. Translated from the French by Jordan Stump.
Archipelago Books, 2016

Thirty-seven of Scholastique Mukasonga’s family members were massacred in the Rwandan genocide in the spring of 1994, when the Hutu majority turned on their Tutsi neighbors, killing more than 800,000 people in 100 days. “Cockroaches” is Mukasonga’s devastating account of her childhood and what she was able to learn about the slaughter of her family. (“Cockroach” was the Hutu epithet of choice for the Tutsis.) It is a compendium of unspeakable crimes and horrifically inventive sadism, delivered in an even, unwavering tone.


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Life
Keith Richards
Little, Brown & Company, 2010

In “Life,” the Rolling Stones guitarist writes with uncommon candor and immediacy — with the help of the veteran journalist James Fox — about drugs and his run-ins with the police; about the difficulties of getting and staying clean; and about the era when rock ’n’ roll came of age. He spares none of his thoughts, good and bad, about Mick Jagger. He also describes the spongelike love of music that he inherited from his grandfather, and his own sense of musical history — his reverence for the blues and R&B masters he has studied his entire life.


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A Life in the Twentieth Century
Arthur Schlesinger Jr.
Houghton Mifflin Company, 2000

Arthur Schlesinger Jr., a prizewinning historian who served in John F. Kennedy’s White House, here writes about the first 33 years of his life, from his birth in 1917 — the year the United States entered World War I — to 1950 and the beginnings of the Cold War. The son of an acclaimed historian, Schlesinger was born into great privilege. He went on a yearlong trip around the world between graduating from prep school and attending Harvard. This book has incisive things to say about the large themes of world history, including isolationism and interventionism, and about many other subjects besides, including the films of the 1930s.


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My Lives
Edmund White
Ecco/HarperCollins Publishers, 2006

“My Lives” is broken into chapters whose headings follow a clever formula: “My Shrinks,” “My Mother,” “My Father,” “My Hustlers” ... But these seemingly narrow-focus, time-hopping slices add up to a robust autobiography. Edmund White’s portraits of his parents and their lives before him are novelistic; his writing about his own sexual experiences is exceedingly candid. Reviewing the book for The Guardian, the novelist Alan Hollinghurst said that “no other writer of White’s eminence has described his sexual life with such purposeful clarity.”


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Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal?
Jeanette Winterson
Grove Press, 2012

This memoir’s title is the question Jeanette Winterson’s adoptive mother asked after discovering her daughter was a lesbian. Winterson’s mother loomed over her life, as she looms over this book. In a quiet way she is one of the great horror mothers of English-language literature. When she was angry with her daughter, she would say, “The Devil led us to the wrong crib.” This memoir’s narrative includes Winterson’s search for her birth mother and the author’s self-invention, her intellectual development. The device of the trapped young person saved by books is a hoary one, but Winterson makes it seem new, and sulfurous.


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Close to the Knives
David Wojnarowicz
Vintage, 1991

David Wojnarowicz, who died at 37 in 1992, was a vital part of the East Village art scene of the 1980s that also produced Keith Haring, Jenny Holzer, Jean-Michel Basquiat and others. He was a painter, photographer, performance artist, AIDS activist and more — including writer. This work of hard-living autobiography is written in a flood of run-on sentences, and in a tone of almost hallucinatory incandescence. A typical sentence begins: “I remember when I was 8 years old I would crawl out the window of my apartment seven stories above the ground and hold on to the ledge with 10 scrawny fingers and lower myself out above the sea of cars burning up Eighth Avenue ...”


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