Posted by bennardfajardo on February 19, 2014 · 3 Comments
All this Valentine’s shenanigans last Friday have made me sentimental and a bit melancholic on the subject of love and all its subtleties. So, with nothing better to do, I reminisced on all the short stories I’ve read over the course of my life that tackled the complicated subject of love and I thought about … Continue reading →
Filed under Books, Thoughts on Short Fiction · Tagged with Amador Daguio, Books, Dean Francis Alfar, Give, How To Be An Other Woman, James Salter, Lorrie Moore, Miranda July, Short Stories, Something That Needs Nothing, The Kite of Stars, The Wedding Dance
Posted by bennardfajardo on January 2, 2014 · 2 Comments
Hey ho! 2014 is already here and it means another year of meaningful reading, another year of exploration, and another year of growth. Before I present my reading list for the first month of the year, let me recap the books that I read on the last month of last year: The Diamond as Big … Continue reading →
Filed under Books, Reading List · Tagged with A Schoolboy's Diary, A Sport and A Pastime, Adolfo Bioy Casares, Books, Essential Reading, Gustave Flaubert, James Salter, Lydia Davis, Madame Bovary, Neil Gaiman, Revolutionary Road, Richard Yates, Robert Walser, Silvina Ocampo, The Ocean at the End of the Lane, Where There's Love There's Hate
Posted by bennardfajardo on December 23, 2013 · 4 Comments
Finishing my last short story collection this year, Alice Munro’s Who Do You Think You Are?, I can conclude that this is a good year for short fiction. Of the 68 books that I’ve read so far for 2013, 23 were short story collections or anthologies and that is not mentioning the various short stories … Continue reading →
Filed under Books, Thoughts on Short Fiction · Tagged with Alice Munro, Books, Dave Eggers, Denis Johnson, Elmore Leonard, George Saunders, James Joyce, James Salter, JG Ballard, Jorge Luis Borges, Lorrie Moore, Lourd de Veyra, Lydia Davis, Lysley Tenorio, Miranda July, Raymond Carver, Steven Millhauser, TC Boyle, Thoughts on Short Fiction, Vladimir Nabokov, William Faulkner
Posted by bennardfajardo on May 4, 2013 · 12 Comments
May is here and, okay, I know I haven’t been active in blogging lately but I wouldn’t miss this monthly feature for the world so I will set aside a few minutes of my time to present my reading list for the month of May. But before we proceed, let us not forget the rundown … Continue reading →
Filed under Books, Reading List · Tagged with Atonement, Books, David Mitchell, Denis Johnson, Donald Barthelme, Elmer, Essential Reading, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Gerry Alanguilan, Ghostwritten, Goodreads - The Filipino Group, Hunger, Ian McEwan, James Salter, Javier Marias, Jeffrey Eugenides, Jesus' Son, Knut Hamsun, Last Night, Lolita, Milan Kundera, Object Lessons: The Paris Review Presents The Art of The Short Story, Raymond Carver, Shortcuts, Sixty Stories, The Great Gatsby, The Paris Review, The Unbearable Lightness of Being, The Virgin Suicides, There is a Balm in Gilead: Our Memories of Hope, Vladimir Nabokov, When I Was Mortal
Posted by bennardfajardo on April 1, 2013 · 8 Comments
I just had to change the featured image and the name for this monthly feature since the former is so clunky and messy while the latter is kind of obscene. So, as per the suggestion of Rhena, I changed the look and the name of this feature. Anyway, enough with the idle chitchat and on … Continue reading →
Filed under Book Love, Books · Tagged with Alice Munro, Birds of America, Book Love, Books, Children Playing Before A Statue of Hercules, David Bezmozgis, David Sedaris, Denis Johnson, Hateship Friendship Courtship Loveship Marriage, James Salter, Jesus' Son, Last Night, Loot and Other Stories, Lorrie Moore, Miranda July, Nadine Gordimer, Natasha, No One Belongs Here More Than You, Short Stories