Uwe Johnson, Anniversaries: Now about 600 pages in. There's been narrative time enough to accept that it's going to end badly for all of the 1930s German characters, regardless of what you're meant to think of them. No one is really spared, in the end: the Nazi true believers, the Jewish people run out of town, the collaborationists who just want to go along to get along, the principled resisters. The best outcome you can hope for is keeping your head down and trying to make it through, and it only costs your soul and ability to think of yourself as a good person, if you care to think of it.
I remember teaching a class of college freshman Viktor Frankl's Memories of a Concentration Camp and pointing out to them that Frankl remarks several times that the best people did not make it because they were too concerned for others, and that this remark implies that Frankl excludes himself from the good people in Auschwitz. How could this wise, avuncular narrative presence, so filled with insight and compassion, have possibly been a bad person? Well, he glosses over his own bad parts in the retelling--that's simple enough to do when you're writing the story.
And so it is in a difficult time. You can always lie about what you did or felt later, should you live that long. I know the compromises I am making; do you know yours?
Leo Tolstoy, War and Peace: set myself a pace to finish it in three months and, sure enough, I am well past a third of the way in. And every time a character is on stage perhaps too long for my taste--old Bolkonsky, Pierre (when he gets in one of his moods), the Rostovs and their money troubles--the narrative focus shifts and there's something new and better.
Wallace Stevens, Selected Poems: About to chuck this one out, canonicity notwithstanding. Harmonium reads of a stern, New Englandly paternal authority, with interwar sexism and racism generously sewn in. We'll give the later stuff a try, but move on shortly.
Adrienne Rich, Collected Poems: Now this is more like it, the polyphony of the permanent observer who can recreate a number of different voices because of observation (one assumes). Some midcentury rich lady nonsense, but then here comes "Sunday Evening" and even that redeems itself.