Read The Novel Cure: From Abandonment to Zestlessness: 751 Books to Cure What Ails You Online
Authors: Ella Berthoud,Susan Elderkin
Ragtime
E. L. DOCTOROW
Z
estlessness is a notoriously difficult ailment to diagnose. Easily confused with boredom (which is really a failure of the imagination; see: Boredom) and apathy (which manifests as physical sluggishness although it, too, has a mental cause; see: Apathy), zestlessness can appear, to the untrained eye, to be simply a case of having a dull personality. Left untreated, it can ruin entire lives—and we’re not just talking your own. To live without zest is to live without an appetite for new experiences, to miss out on the spice, the juice, the edge that makes life thrilling. It is to live with deadened, flattened senses, with your passions unaroused and your curiosity untapped. It is to depress the hell out of those around you—and, frankly, us too. Do us all a favor. Read this novel and switch yourself on.
Ragtime
takes as its subject the dawn of the twentieth century in the United States—a time when the entire nation was in the exhilarated grip of commotion, invention, and change. Sparkling new railroads sprung up across the country. Model T Fords spilled off the assembly lines. Twenty-five-story buildings shot skyward and aircraft zoomed people away. Telephones connected people as never before. Skyrockets and cherry bombs exploded in the skies. In ordinary homes, sneezing powder and squirting plastic roses tickled people’s noses and made them laugh.
In among all this is the story of a well-to-do family in New Rochelle, New York. The son—known simply as “the little boy”—is fixing his gaze on a bluebottle fly crossing a screen one day when Harry Houdini crashes his car outside and is invited in for tea. Soon after, Mother discovers a black baby in the garden, and takes the child in—thus breaking the first of several cultural and gender taboos. When Father returns from an expedition to the Arctic to find her running his fireworks business, he becomes increasingly alienated from the domestic scene, and the family begins to fall apart.
By turning his lens from vivid close-up to great, sweeping vista and allowing real and fictional characters to meet at the junctions of a vast, complex cobweb, E. L. Doctorow injects the novel—and the reader—with enormous zest. As immigrants from Italy and Eastern Europe, such as Tateh and his beautiful daughter, pour into squalid tenements on the Lower East Side, the financier J. P. Morgan sets new standards of wealth and power, and Houdini defies death with more and more terrifying feats. Freud puts America on the couch, and the boy’s uncle, known as Mother’s Younger Brother, stalks the country’s first sex goddess, Evelyn Nesbit.
As you read, notice how Mother and the little boy say yes to progress and change. Watch how Father, conversely, says no, refusing to move with the times. Like Tateh, let the tumult and tumble of Doctorow’s startling sentences remove you from what is familiar and failing. Board the train to a new life. Take with you the boy’s curiosity for recent inventions. Appropriate Grandfather’s joy at the sight of spring (though take care, if you’re getting on in years, that you don’t slip and break your pelvis doing a spontaneous jig). Put yourself in a place where change is a given, and feel the zest flood back in.
See also:
Disenchantment
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Thank you to our team of readers, who valiantly tested our literary cures and reported on their efficacy: Becky Adams, Miranda Alcock, Tim Bates, Josh Beattie, Nichole Beauchamp, Chris Berthoud, Colin Berthoud, Lucy Berthoud, Martin Berthoud, Veronique Biddell, Amanda Blugrass, Gael Cassidy, Sarah Cassidy, Sarah Constantinides, Belinda Coote, Stephanie Cross, the Danny House Book Group, William Davidson, Sandra Deeble, Mel Giedroyc, Gael Gorvy-Robertson, Teresa Griffiths, Gill Hancock, Jane Heather, Belinda Holden, Charlie Hopkinson, Grahame Hunter, Clare Isherwood, Lou James, Tim Jones, Sarah Leipciger, Annabel Leventon, Rachel Lindop, Hilary Macey-Dare, Sam Nixon, Emma Noel, Anna Ollier, Patricia Potts, Joanna Quinn, Sarah Quinn, Janaki Ranpura, Lucy Rutter, Carl Thomas, Jennie Thomas, Morgan Thomas, Clare Usiskin, Pippa Wainwright, Heather Westgate, and Rachel Wykes.
For G&Ts, nurturing, and hands-on help, we would like to thank Damian Barr, Polly and Shaun at Tilton House, Pippa Considine, Tim Jones, Natalie Savona, Laurie Tomlinson, and Olivia Waller.
Thanks to our Bibliotherapy Advisory Board for ideas and suggestions over the years, including Terence Blacker, Rose Chapman, Tracy Chevalier, Abi Curtis, Nick Curwin, Ashley Dartnell, Geoff Dyer, Piers Feltham, Patrick Gale, Sophie Howarth, Alison Huntingdon, Nicolas Ib, Lawrence Kershen, Caroline Kraus, Sam Leith, Toby Litt, Anna McNamee, Chiara Menage, Stephen Miller, Tiffany Murray, Jason Oddy, Jacqueline Passmore, Bonnie Powell and her Facebook friends, Charlotte Raby, Judy Rich, Robin Rubenstein, Alison Sayers, Anna Stein, Chris Thornhill, Ardu Vakil, S. J. Watson, Rebecca Wilson, and Charmaine Yabsley.
Special thanks go to our colleague and friend Simona Lyons at the School of Life; and Morgwn Rimmell, Caroline Brimmer, Harriet Warden, Clemmie Balfour, and all those at the School of Life who supported us throughout the period of writing the book.
Thanks also to our bibliotherapy clients past and present, who gave us ideas for books we had not yet read, and allowed us to practice our medications on them.
Thank you to our agent Clare Alexander, our editor Jenny Lord and all at Canongate, plus Colin Dickerman, Liesl Schillinger, and all at Penguin USA.
A posthumous thank-you to our tutor at Cambridge, David Holbrook, who set us on our way.
And most of all to our families: Martin, Doreen, Saroja, Jennie, Bill, Carl, and Ash, for their love and support throughout this process; and to our children, Morgan, Calypso, Harper, and Kirin for putting up with our mental absence.
READING AILMENTS INDEX
Amnesia, reading associated (CURE: Keep a reading journal)
Book buyer, being a compulsive (CURE: Invest in an e-reader and/or create a “current reading” shelf)
Busy to read, being too (CURE: Listen to audiobooks)
Children requiring attention, too many (CURE: Designate a reading hour)
Concentrate, inability to (CURE: Go off grid)
Depletion of library through lending (CURE: Label your books)
Find one of your books, inability to (CURE: Create a library)
Finishing, fear of (CURE: Read around the book)
Give up halfway through, refusal to (CURE: Adopt the fifty-page rule)
Give up halfway through, tendency to (CURE: Read in longer stretches)
Guilt, reading associated (CURE: Schedule reading time)
Household chores, distracted by (CURE: Create a reading nook)
Hype, put off by (CURE: Put the book in its place)
Identity, unsure of your reading (CURE: Create a favorites shelf)
Live instead of read, tendency to (CURE: Read to live more deeply)
Loneliness, reading induced (CURE: Read in company)
New books, seduced by (CURE: Learn the art of rereading)
Non-reading partner, having a (CURE: Convert or desert)
Overwhelmed by the number of books in the world (CURE: See a bibliotherapist)
Overwhelmed by the number of books in your house (CURE: Cull your library)
Read instead of live, tendency to (CURE: Live to read more deeply)
Reverence of books, excessive (CURE: Personalize your books)
Sci-fi, fear of (CURE: Rethink the genre)
Sci-fi, stuck on (CURE: Discover planet Earth)
Shame, reading associated (CURE: Conceal the cover)
Skim, tendency to (CURE: Read one page at a time)
Starting, fear of (CURE: Dive in at random)
Tome, put off by a (CURE: Cut it up)
Vacation, not knowing what novels to take on (CURE: Plan ahead to avoid panic purchases)
Well-read, desire to seem (CURE: Ten novels for the literary fake)
TEN-BEST LISTS INDEX
The Ten Best Audiobooks for Road Rage
The Ten Best Novels for After a Nightmare
The Ten Best Novels for Duvet Days
The Ten Best Novels for Eightysomethings
The Ten Best Novels for Fiftysomethings
The Ten Best Novels for Fortysomethings
The Ten Best Novels for Going Cold Turkey
The Ten Best Novels for Ninetysomethings
The Ten Best Novels for the Over One Hundreds
The Ten Best Novels for Plane Journeys
The Ten Best Novels for Sci-Fi Beginners
The Ten Best Novels for Seeming Well-Read
The Ten Best Novels for Seventysomethings
The Ten Best Novels for Sixtysomethings
The Ten Best Novels for Teenagers
The Ten Best Novels for Thirtysomethings
The Ten Best Novels for Twentysomethings
The Ten Best Novels for the Very Blue
The Ten Best Novels for When You’re Locked Out
The Ten Best Novels for When You’ve Got a Cold
The Ten Best Novels to Cheer You Up
The Ten Best Novels to Make You Weep
The Ten Best Novels to Cure the Xenophobic
The Ten Best Novels to Cure Wanderlust
The Ten Best Novels to Drown Out Snoring
The Ten Best Novels to Lower Your Blood Pressure
The Ten Best Novels to Make You Laugh
The Ten Best Novels to Read in a Hammock
The Ten Best Novels to Read in the Bathroom
The Ten Best Novels to Read in the Hospital
The Ten Best Novels to Read on a Train
The Ten Best Novels to Turn Your Partner (Female) On to Fiction
The Ten Best Novels to Turn Your Partner (Male) On to Fiction
AUTHOR INDEX
The page numbers in this index refer to the printed version of this book. The link provided will take you to the beginning of that print page. You may need to scroll forward from that location to find the corresponding reference on your e-reader.
Abe, Kobo,
15
Achebe, Chinua,
345
Aciman, André,
46
Agee, James,
56
Alain-Fournier,
116
Alcott, Louisa May,
341
Alexie, Sherman,
364
Ali, Monica,
181
Almond, David,
184
Ames, Jonathan,
107
Ammaniti, Niccolò,
157
Andrews, Virginia,
282
Apuleius,
83
Austen, Jane,
30
,
95
,
257
,
273
,
350
Baker, Nicholson,
179
Balzac, Honoré de,
372
Banks, Iain,
272
Baricco, Alessandro,
397
Barrie, J. M.,
221
Barrows, Annie,
180
Barry, Sebastian,
269
Beckett, Samuel,
112
Beerbohm, Max,
93
Befeler, Mike,
132
Behn, Aphra,
38
Benioff, David,
272
Bernières, Louis de,
179
,
185
,
290
Bester, Alfred,
383
Beukes, Lauren,
261
Bhattacharya, Rahul,
386
Birch, Carol,
290
Blatty, William Peter,
143
Block, Lawrence,
222
Bolaño, Roberto,
290
Böll, Heinrich,
112
Botton, Alain de,
350
Bowen, Elizabeth,
132
Bowles, Paul,
218
Boyd, William,
272
Broch, Hermann,
347
Brontë, Anne,
366
Brontë, Charlotte,
50
Buck, Pearl S.,
159
Bukowski, Charles,
335
Bulgakov, Mikhail,
165
Burnett, Frances Hodgson,
191
,
350
Butler, Samuel,
87
Byatt, A. S.,
67
Calvino, Italo,
112
Cameron, Peter,
180
Camilleri, Andrea,
222
Campbell, Bonnie Jo,
395
Capella, Anthony,
368
Carr, J. L.,
326
Carroll, Lewis,
269
Cartwright, Justin,
153
Cather, Willa,
122
Céline, Louis-Ferdinand,
77
Cervantes Saavedra, Miguel de,
218
Chapman, Maile,
180
Chatwin, Bruce,
48
Chbosky, Stephen,
364
Chevalier, Tracy,
233
Childers, Erskine,
280
Clarke, Arthur C.,
313
Clarke, Susanna,
261
Clavell, James,
376
Cleave, Chris,
97
Cleland, John,
282
Coates, John,
7
Cocteau, Jean,
198
Coe, Jonathan,
201
Collins, Suzanne,
179
Collins, Wilkie,
222
Comyns, Barbara,
250
Conan Doyle, Arthur,
76
Connell, Evan S.,
334
Connelly, Michael,
222
Cornwell, Patricia,
33
Cortázar, Julio,
313
Coupland, Douglas,
272
Cruse, Howard,
77
Cunningham, Michael,
180
Davis, Lydia,
46
DeLillo, Don,
96
Dennis, Patrick,
107
DeWitt, Helen,
344
DeWitt, Patrick,
64
Diamant, Anita,
294
Díaz, Junot,
46
Dick, Philip K.,
64
Dickens, Charles,
19
,
72
,
269
,
350
Djian, Philippe,
108
Domínguez, Carlos María,
181
Donleavy, J. P.,
317
Dostoyevsky, Fyodor,
169
,
195
,
312
Drabble, Margaret,
370
Dreiser, Theodore,
199
Dumas, Alexandre,
157
Dundy, Elaine,
340
Durrell, Lawrence,
384
Duteurtre, Benoît,
237
Eco, Umberto,
272
Egan, Jennifer,
273
Ellis, Alice Thomas,
278
Ellison, Ralph,
301
Endo, Shusaku,
269
Enger, Leif,
341
Enright, Anne,
77
Ephron, Nora,
46
Erdich, Louise,
294
Esquivel, Laura,
132
Eugenides, Jeffrey,
104
,
114
,
294
,
366
Evison, Jonathan,
313
Fallada, Hans,
108
Faulkner, William,
132
Faulks, Sebastian,
150
Fermine, Maxence,
177
Fielding, Helen,
188
Fitzgerald, F. Scott,
47
,
270
,
318
,
338
,
389
Fitzgerald, Penelope,
352
Flanagan, Richard,
343
Fleming, Ian,
222
Flynn, Gillian,
179
Ford, Richard,
119
Forester, C. S.,
185
Forster, E. M.,
183
,
273
,
290
,
354
Fox, Paula,
42
Francis, David,
255
Francis, Dick,
222
Frayn, Michael,
376
Frazier, Charles,
377
French, Tana,
157
Frisch, Max,
193
Gaddis, William,
389
Gaines, Ernest J.,
91
Galchen, Rivka,
193
Gale, Patrick,
370
García Márquez, Gabriel,
96
,
334
,
372
Gardam, Jane,
278
Garner, Helen,
61
Gawain Poet, The,
126
Genet, Jean,
283
Ghosh, Amitav,
386
Gibson, William,
323
Gilchrist, Ellen,
372
Gillespie, Grant,
6
Giono, Jean,
355
Godden, Rumer,
137
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von,
230
Gold, Glen David,
157
Golden, Arthur,
376
Golding, William,
308
Goldman, William,
76
Goncharov, Ivan,
77
Grahame, Kenneth,
269
Grass, Günter,
339
Gray, Alasdair,
368
Greer, Andrew Sean,
280
Gurganus, Allan,
280
Gustafsson, Lars,
289
Hadfield, John,
67
Ha Jin,
255
Hamilton, Jane,
294
Hamsun, Knut,
189
Harbach, Chad,
245
Harding, Paul,
64
Hartley, L. P.,
314
Haslett, Adam,
166
Hautzig, Deborah,
129
Hawthorne, Nathaniel,
199
Hedayat, Sadegh,
395
Hemingway, Ernest,
22
,
132
,
269
,
270
,
366
,
386
Hemon, Aleksandar,
112
Hensher, Philip,
178
Herbert, Frank,
324
Hiassen, Carl,
320
Hines, Barry,
328
Høeg, Peter,
185
Hoffman, Alice,
269
Holtby, Winifred,
103
Homer,
204
Hosseini, Khaled,
273
Hughes, Richard,
333
Hughes, Thomas,
55
Hugo, Victor,
238
Hunt, Rebecca,
104
Hurston, Zora Neale,
119
Ibbotson, Eva,
76
Isherwood, Christopher,
67
Ishiguro, Kazuo,
180
,
280
,
297
,
323
Ivey, Eowyn,
360
Jackson, Mick,
390
Jackson, Shirley,
25
Jacobs, Kate,
366
Jaffe, Rona,
366
Jansson, Tove,
77
Jerome, Jerome K.,
269
Johnson, B. S.,
362
Johnson, Denis,
64
Johnson, George Clayton,
11
Kadare, Ismail,
113
Kaddour, Hédi,
395
Kafka, Franz,
193
Kaufman, Sue,
186
Kavenna, Joanna,
68
Kazantzakis, Nikos,
136
Keneally, Thomas,
179
Kesey, Ken,
330
Kidd, Sue Monk,
77
Kipling, Rudyard,
5
Kneale, Matthew,
350
Knox, Elizabeth,
185
Kosinski, Jerzy,
179
Krauss, Nicole,
334