Completists' Club discussion
Completionist Goals for 2013

This spring, I'll start reading William T. Vollmann and Anna Kavan.
For Vollmann, I'm going to start with The Ice-Shirt and work through his Seven Dreams series. His canon is large and so I don't expect to complete it any time soon.
For Kavan, I'm going to start with her first two books, A Charmed Circle and Let Me Alone, which she wrote when she still called herself Helen Ferguson. Will skip around her canon after that. Probably not easy to finish her canon due to some books being rare and hard to find, but will read what's available.
Will report back in a few years and let you know how I did, LOL!

I'll also read more of Winterson's novels...and more I hope of Javier Marias, Quim Monzo also Japanese crime writers...

Nice to meet you.

Thanks Jessica, I like the idea of the group. I was a completionist actually back when I was a child. I remember reading all the Hugh Lofting. I purchased a set of the books for my children but they didn't take to them as much as I did. My son also is a completionist, at the age of 12 - he enjoys the Ranger Apprentice series, by John Flanagan, and probably half a dozen other similar type reads.
And now, with Richard Brautigan, rather easy books, but appropriate for this site, I have purchased most already and they are on their way to me! Most that I have purchased are old worn library copies which tend to impart a sense of age and provide a perspective of the time that has passed since they were published.
Thank you for your welcome and friendliness.


I have currently three reading projects going on that would qualify as completionist, namely read the works of Stanley Elkin (two books in so far), John le Carré (five volumes in) and Ali Smith (four books, but one out of order that I'll likely re-read once I get to it) in chronological order. I do not really expect to make it through all of those this year, but it is likely I might add more to the list (having my eye on Vollmann, too, as it happens).

and welcome!



But I'll probably finish all translated Tarjei Vesaas novels in the next few months, nonetheless.


Edit: Maybe complete Roubaud's translated works English. And Brandao's.

I would never have thought of Dickens and Gass as being related--and I guess they only are in that you've fallen hard for both--but I think of them as being so different. Gass more philosophical, metafictional; Dickens descriptive and full of story and character...though certainly also commentary on societal conditions...hmmm.




I've not yet fallen under the Dickens spell, but Cather and Spark, yes.
and welcome to James, as well. I think I've read just one Barth...





Carla--
As Jessica says, many many of the lists here are simple copy n paste. I've included occasionally things like bios and letters in my completionist lists because the author has few books, or because of the status of some of these studies and collections. James Joyce, for example, who has only four major works, was biographicalized by Ellmann whose work is usually taken as on of the better bio's written, and Joyce's letters are voluminous and peculiar. Which is all only to say that the completionist circle drawn around various authors varies from author to author and reader to reader. One of the interesting questions up for grabs in this forum is about what should and what need not count toward our readerly completionism. [only Kafka's includes laundry lists. ; ) ]




For Mishima, I only listed his translated work. I didn't include the three main English language biographies or the book of his letters with Kawabata (which is only available in Japanese and French).



I did complete Olen Steinhauer this year, but that isn't like finishing DFW or Roth. I've made significant dents in the others this year, I'm not sure how many I'll finish in 2013, but I want to make progress on all, and at least finish a couple...just not sure which this year.

It was then I decided if a bird-watching, pretty boy like Franzen can read all of Dickens, so can I.
I'm still trying to find the original article, so I might just be making it up.

Perhaps elsewhere as well, but I heard it on Oprah.





MJ, I think I'm going to be/am intellectually lazier than Carla. I will "aim" for all his novels/stories this year ... but I already see myself distracted by finishing Proust's ISoLT ... but I'm not sure my marriage is up for me reading all his essays too in 2013.



Sounds like a great project! An interesting book that lists and describes novels from the Ancient Egyptians thru 1600 is by Steve Moore: The Novel: An Alternative History: Beginnings to 1600
This would be an excellent resource for your project. Check it out!


No time like the present... Nathan recommended this book. In addition to Moore's commentary, this book is an excellent bibliography for fiction lovers. I'm very curious to see the next installment for 1600 to 1800, which is due to be published this fall.
Books mentioned in this topic
Orlando Furioso: Part One (other topics)The Novel: An Alternative History: Beginnings to 1600 (other topics)
The Ice-Shirt (other topics)
A Charmed Circle (other topics)
Let Me Alone (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Alice Munro (other topics)Yasunari Kawabata (other topics)
Alain Robbe-Grillet (other topics)
Henri Bergson (other topics)
José Saramago (other topics)
More...
So, who will I read... I will read the works of Richard Brautigan. And I will also make a goal to purchase (the internet sellers will appreciate this), all his available works so I can achieve this. RB is a fun, imaginative, poetic, if not hallucinogenic read that leaves after reading a psychic ghostly residue that is legal, but perhaps shouldn't be.
What are your goals for 2013?