A Year in Reading: Derek Teslik

December 16, 2006 | 2 min read

My longtime friend and former roommate Derek Teslik is the guy who got me into blogging. He was once an avid blogger himself but has long since left the fold, and believe me, the blogging world is less for it. Luckily he has consented to send me a once yearly post from his undisclosed location:

coverThe Psychic Soviet by Ian Svenonius. The former frontman of Nation of Ulysses and The Make-Up, now singer for Weird War (aka The Scene Creamers), finally delivers a theoretical tome to back up the agitative manifestos he places in his liner notes. Svenonius, who I have called the “kool keith of indie rock,” expounds on some of the great questions of rock and roll (e.g. Beatles or Stones?) while drenching the whole thing in pseudo-socialist theory and protecting the pocket-sized book from beer and sweat stains with a handsome pink plastic cover.

coverState of Denial by Bob Woodward. The most influential largely-unread-but-published book of the year. Woodward’s modern history provided the nation with the Geraldo-in-the-Superdome moment of the Iraq war, allowing the nation to come out and say what they knew in their guts but tried to hide in their brain. Because the most damning revelations of the book (the Bush inner circle was dismissive of the al-Qaida threat in the months before 9-11, etc.) had long been lunatic fringe allegations, they were dismissed as “old news” and somehow didn’t have the staying power and impact they should have. But the book’s publication shifted the American psyche on the war. Proof? After it’s publication, even Chris Matthews grew a pair, at least on the subject of the war. I only read the first fifth or so, but MAN, is Rumsfeld a dick!

Stephen Colbert’s Alpha Squad 7: Lady Nocturne: A Tek Jansen Adventure by Stephen Colbert. This unpublished work has already spawned a cartoon series and a late night talk show. From the galleys I’ve had a chance to read, it’s a real page turner! Colbert picks up the pace a bit after the darker Alpha Squad 6: Death Be-comes Her, Or Does It?, returning to what fans of the series love the most – sex and gut-gripping fantasaction. This will make many best-of-2007 lists as well.

If I Did It by O.J. Simpson. State of Denial for the Dr. Phil set. And Chris Rock called it years ago.

Thanks Derek!

is a writer, runner, and lawyer living in Washington, D.C.