Read and Appreciated in 2003

A Year’s Best List

Originals · Listmania! 2003 · January 6, 2004

Persepolis, Marjane Satrapi

(Autobiography/graphic art)

Possibly the finest graphic novel I’ve ever read—hilarious and horrific, cute and tragic all rolled into one as Satrapi tells the story of her childhood and teens in pre-and post-revolutionary Iran. One of those invaluable volumes you throw at people when they’re being condescending about comic book art.

The Broken Sword, Poul Anderson

(Fantasy)

Okay, this was actually published in 1954 (and reprinted several times since in an author-modified form), and okay even the back-to-basics honour-the-original-text version came out September last year, but I didn’t get around to reading it until 2003, and that was the first time I’d read the original version, and… Anyway—the point is, you can shut the gate on Sword and Sorcery once you’ve read this one. Anderson banged it out before Lord of the Rings made its appearance, and it’s still the last word on elves ‘n’ swords ‘n’ sorcery. Tolkien, Schmolkien! This is the real shit (and it’s a lot shorter too).

Veniss Underground, Jeff VanderMeer

(Well, you tell me… SF/fantasy/horror? Yeah, sort of.)

Man, this is genius—first you’re given a nightmarish far future world and, through throwaway detail and intense characterisation, made to accept it as real. Then, the substance of this world you’ve just got to grips with begins to fracture apart and you’re pitched into the realms of pure nightmare without redemption or reference back to the real you thought you’d got a handle on. Reads like early Angela Carter on too much amphetamine and a dash of the DTs.

The Year of Our War, Steph Swainston

(Fantasy/weird fiction)

Okay, another cheat—this one isn’t even due out ‘til April next year, but I was lucky enough to be given the manuscript a few months back. The background of Swainston’s tale is a Tolkienesque landscape of feudal society up against a horde of implacable destroyers—and that’s where it stops, because neither she nor, after a couple of chapters, you are interested in this sweeping backdrop. Instead, the novel becomes an intense and lyrically detailed character piece in which past history and petty rivalries, drug addiction, infidelity and a very peculiar afterlife come to dominate the action. There is enough brutal battle and feudal intrigue to delight any fantasy fan, but with it comes a rich seasoning of genuinely delirious imaginings and moments of laugh out loud hilarity, both of which are so often sadly lacking in much so-called cutting edge fantasy these days.

Stranger Things Happen, Kelly Link

(Weird short stories and then some)

Also not published in 2003, but I got it for my birthday this year—Kelly Links stories are like no-one else’s, and no two are even close to alike. Impossible to describe, so I won’t. Read it!

How the Universe Got Its Spots, Janna Levin

(Non fiction, cosmology)

Into the non-fiction now, and after reading a number of heavy tomes on hyperspace, string theory et al, I was pleasantly surprised with the elegance and ease with which Janna Levin coolly explains current developments in cosmology, as well as narrating a moving and poetic slice of her own personal life and the way in which it is informed by the scientific work she does.

A Devil’s Chaplain, Richard Dawkins

(Academic articles)

Dawkins is one of my heroes—there’s no-one better in the academic world for cutting through the post-modern, New-Age, born-again bullshit we all have stomach on a day to day basis and handing you a huge card with the words REALITY CHECK inscribed. Required reading for anyone who has a brain and wants to use it.

The New Rulers of the World, John Pilger

(Journalism)

Another of my heroes—what Dawkins does for academia and the life sciences, Pilger does in the political arena. Anyone who still thinks we in the West are the good guys needs to read this.

Globalization and its Discontents, Joseph Stiglitz

(Economics)

The title speaks for itself. Stiglitz used to work for the World Bank and now he doesn’t, for reasons which become rapidly apparent as you speed through this indictment of global economics and its principal players. A devastating critique from someone who was there in the thick of it and knows what they’re talking about.


Richard K. Morgan is the author of the Philip K. Dick Award-nominated novel Altered Carbon, which is currently being adapted to the big screen. Its sequel, Broken Angels is due out in the United States in April 2004, while a new novel titled Market Forces will appear in the UK.

Copyright © 2003 by Richard K. Morgan.