What to read on the beach?

So we’re off to Phuket on Sunday. Need to pack some books to read on the beach. But what? Cal and I combed our shelves for unread tomes, and pulled down a big stack. We need to whittle it down some. But what to choose?
I don’t know that some of these are entirely appropriate for the beach, either. Pooh to that.
Here’s the shortlist, subject to amendments. To help us decide I’m including excerpts from the most negative Amazon reviews!
Madame du Pompadour (Nancy Mitford) – “If Madame De Pompadour was this boring, why did Louis put up with her?” (one star)
The Impressionist (Hari Kunzru) – “I tried very hard to find something redeeming in this book, a reason to continue reading. Finally, I thought I had, but it was only a spider crawling across the page.” (one star)
Catherine de Medici (Leonie Frieda) – “superficial and shallow” (two stars)
A Guide for the Perplexed (Jonathan Levi) – “The tanscendent power of a story” (five stars – there were only three reviews! But I’m eager to get some tanscendent power going on. Awesome.)
To the Lighthouse (Virginia Woolf) – “To the Lighthouse” is a rambling monotony, a lifeless droning. No matter how loudly the literary lemmings scream, that will always be so. (one star)
One Hundred Years of Solitude (Gabriel Garcia Marquez) – “It make “Tess of the D’Urburvilles” look like a fast-paced romp.” (one star)
Neuromancer (William Gibson) “Absolutely unreadable; I couldn’t force myself farther than 100 pages into this morass.” (one star) (this one’s a re-read, but I haven’t cracked the cover for 15 or 16 years)
The Best of Katherine Mansfield’s Short Stories (Katherine Mansfield) “Reading these stories was a deeply enriching literary experience.” (five stars, clean sweep of the seven customer reviews)
Letter from America 1946-2004 (Alistair Cooke) – “a remarkable collection of essays” (five stars in every review, another clean sweep)
Good News, Bad News (David Wolstencroft) – “The good news is, I finished reading this book. The bad news is, I can’t believe I paid $8 for it.” (one star) (I don’t even know where this book came from, it seems to be a thriller of some kind, but it’s on the shelves and could be the most beach-appropriate book of the lot)
Advice and opinions welcome. Thanks to other advice I’ve already cut Peake’s Titus Groan and Thackeray’s The Virginians from the list. Utter foolishness.

7 thoughts on “What to read on the beach?”

  1. Ouch, those are some nasty reviews.
    I like that you were even close to considering Mervyn Peake for holiday reading. I’m a fan of the Gormenghast trilogy but light beach reading it ain’t.

  2. I’m not sure I’d go as far as to say Neuromancer is unreadable, but it isn’t the easiest reading book I have ever encountered either…

  3. Debz: that’s what Jamie said, precisely 🙂 i’ve never read it and feel I should!
    samm: yeah, I have much sympathy actually. I first tried to read it age 13 or so, and read the first 40 pages about four times, each time realizing that I had no idea what was going on by the time I reached page 41. Didn’t finish it until the second time I picked it up which was three or four years later, and haven’t read it again since.

  4. Well then ~m it is about time that you and Neuromancer went to Phuket together. I’d have given you the soundtrack to Neuromancer had I known you needed it in Wellington. Never mind. Perhaps you aren’t quite as obsessed with it as I am…
    For the record, I always wanted to go and read it on the bullet train in Tokyo or on my way to the moon.

  5. I highly recommend Katherine Mansfield’s short stories, I am re-reading them at the moment.
    Safe travels!

  6. I think you should read “The Beach.”
    You’ll have it done quickly and will be in the spirit of the story.
    Take It. If it’s the last thing you do!

  7. Take something you’ve been meaning to read for a while. If when you do get there you want light fluff, you will be able to buy it. If not new then I know in Krabi there were quite a few stores with second hand books that you could buy for cheap or swap and buy. I’m sure the same will exist in Phuket.
    My parents are going to be in Thailand the same time as you guys! Madness.

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