The Michigan Daily - Wt 4 t e. - Thursday, January 18, 1996 - 5B OOKS ontinued from Page 18 (Houghton Mifflin) a tale of a won- erfully outrageous ex-puppeteer, vhich won the National Book Award ction. The poetry Award went to tanley Kunitz for "Passing Through" Norton). Meanwhile, the Pulitzer cople actually made a good choice this ear, honoring Carol Shield for her su- >erb character study in "The Stone Dia- ies" (Penguin). Not all novelists received such high wards this year, but plenty of excellent ovels were released in 1995. Jane miley, who somehow won the Pulitzer 'r' for her Oprahesque saga "A Thou- aA cres," did a much better job with his year's "Moo" (Knopf), an xcuberant satire on academia. Kazuo higuro, the British-Japanese master f restraint, went hog-wild this year vith "Unconsoled" (Knopf), a slightly irreal journey of a world-renowned :oncert pianist. Kaye Gibbons contin- ied her ascent to the forefront of con- emporary women novelists with Sits Unseen" (Putnam). Madison eto) Bell's "All Souls' Rising" (Pan- heon), Ann Beattie's "Another You" Knopf),andGabriel Garcia Marquez's Of Love and Other Demons" (Knopf) were other substantial contributions to ~he fiction world. A different type of brash, pop cultur- illy aware fiction continued to come :ut of Vancouver's Douglas Coupland, ho followed up his wonderful "Life ~fter God" %with "Microserfs," I perCollins) a hilariously and some- times sadly true tale of cybergeeks. Fiction master Norman Mailer dipped into the world of non-fiction and sur- faced with the highly-touted biography "Picasso" (Atlantic Monthly). Despite all the quality fiction that arose in 1995, there were still other efforts that came out in 1995 that were hugely succesful, but, well, the only way to describe them is "crappy." Rob- e@ames Waller ("Border Music" and "Puerto Vallarta," both from Warner Books) continues to assault the literary world with his barage of I'm-a-love- guru-soft-porn drivel and Pat Conroy ("Prince of Tides") offered the nauseat- ingly trite"Beach Music" (Doubleday). Grishan mania continued with "The Rainmaker" (Doubleday), and Grisham's egomaniasoared as his book "The Client" became a weekly televi- sion series. But back to bright side. In 1995, Ann Arbor hosted some of the top authors as they toured across the country, includ- ing the aforementioned Ishiguro and Gibbons. Excellent readings and ap- pearances also came from T. Coraghessan Boyle ("Tortilla Curtain"), Tobias Wolff ("In Pharoah's Army") and Tim O'Brien ("In the Lake of the Woods"), who delighted his audience at Borders with an emotional break- down. At least two local writers and University professors offered highlyacclaimed works in 1995: OyamO's "I am a Man" (Applause) and Nicholas Delbanco's "In the Name of Mercy" (Warner) made waves in the national literary pool. Now, with 1996 only three weeks old, you are probably already behind in your reading. Me too. Staff Picks: Top 10 Books of 1995 Elizabeth Lucas G. "Snow Falling on Cedars," David Guterson (Vintage) 2. "Ancestral Passions," Virginia Morrell (Simon & Schuster) 3. "Moo," Jane Smiley (Knopf) 4. "Memoir from Antproof Case," Mark Helprin (Harcourt Brace) 5. "Ladder of Years," Anne Tyler (Knopf) Dean Bakopoulos 1. "Of Love and Other Demons," by Gabriel Garcia Marquez (Knopf) 2. "The Stories of Vladimir Nabakov," edited by Dmitri Nabakov (Knopf) 3. "Microserfs," by Douglas Coupland (HarperCollins) 4. "The Unconsoled," by Kazuo Ishiguro (Knopf) 5. "Moo," by Jane Smiley (Knopf) Top 10 Things that Happened in the Book World in 1995: 1. Ann Arbor continues to attract top writers from across the world like, Kazuo Ishiguro, Kaye Gibbons, and Tobias Wolff. 2. Arthur Miller, Michigan Daily alumnus, celebrates his 80th birthday - and he's still writing. 3. Seamus Heaney gets the Nobel Prize he so deserves. 4. Knopf publishes Albert Camus' unfinished would-be masterpiece "The First Man." 5. No books from Rush Limbaugh. 6. The National Endowment for the Arts survives GOP attacks - at least for now. 7. Everyman's Library publishes all of Updike's "Rabbit" novels in one edition. 8. Penguin celebrates its 60th birth- day and issues all kinds of excellent little books for a buck. 9. Douglas Coupland's "Micro- serfs" lampoons cyberculture. 10. "Bridges of Madison County" falls off the New York Times' Top 10 sellers list. Worst 10 Things that Hap- pened to Books in 1995: 1. Newt Gingrich gets a book deal from HarperCollins. 2. Robert James Waller survives. 3. More "Life's Little Instruction Books" cone out and underscore American desire for trite, feel-good fixes. 4. New Age market, despite being full of hooey, explodes. 5. The O.J. Simpson trial allows everyone who should never have writ- ten a book to write one, and what's worse is that people actually read them. 6. He just turned 88, and still no word from J.D. Salinger. 7. Bill Waterson, creator of the "Calvin and Hobbes"comic strip se- ries, retires. 8. John Grisham doesn't retire, de- spite using same recycled plot 10 tirnes. 9. John F. Kennedy Jr. decides to try his hand as a magazine publisher, bom- bards American public with "George." 10. Market for books-on-tape doubles. American illiteracy contin- ues upward trend. RMEM15E'- D~ecermheR Lp ~4 1W O% FF 8LL- cUSED LP s , ' ~oZ cF aLL NSW NIG Lp's wFLL. ITS T BEEN Jcat ST' ,a~ FCO 2s .U4SEDCDs 617 'PACI 663-3qq The Department of Communication Studies invites you to attend an informational meeting introducing... The New Concentration in Communication Studies Thursday, January 18 4:00 - 5:00 p.m. Lecture Room #1, MLB or Tuesday, January 23 12:00 - 1:00 p.m. 2114 MLB Tobias Wolff, author of "In Pharaoh's Army," was one of many fine writers who brought their literary genius to Ann Arbor in 1995. I 1 0 o youknowwhere yourstudent ID ? How about your k eiS? Professor Vincent Price, Chair of the Department of Communication Studies will be on hand to discuss the new concentration and answer questions con- cerning new courses, transfer of old courses to the new concentration, and options available to concentrators. There will be handouts available. Informa- tion is also available in the department office at 2020 Frieze Building. Your computer disk with the t erm paper °n that's due today? Your ATM card? 1 1 .bop~ HI!URN~I Where ail you have to bring iswt need tc Oh yeah, and some money. Butnotasmuch if you mentionthis upstairs from Rick's I 0atou) ad *9N NobAUMroaut W-Mi McKINSEY & COMPANY'S TOKYO OFFICE INVITES PhD AND MS CANDIDATES IN SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING TO ATTEND A DISCUSSION ON FEBRUARY 2/3, 199 OV. p . c .!-M-A te% - - tItix. 6~61 97i N~tAL*~0 to ft, / 7 " ' . ' ' )t ". k ,2 2 %. ~8±1 ABU 4 #3 a 1M 2 5 13 %aft A& I v 1: ]KI(Ittitin I T = v pp = )v 4:0001M * 130S V, f: U -C 13 t to i __