ejp626 Posted December 6, 2010 Report Posted December 6, 2010 Adam Levin: The Instructions How is this? I'm probably going to tackle it next year, but it looks like a book I'd only read once, so I am struggling not to buy it with a 33% off coupon or something. Anyway, I just wrapped up Mahfouz's The Beginning and the End. Towards the end it looks like it is about to become An American Tragedy set in Egypt, but it doesn't (which is good as I actually didn't care for Dreiser's tale too much) and it goes somewhere darker actually. Quite a good book on the whole, but depressing. Just thought I would share a rant on Ted Hughes' The Iron Giant. I've known about it for a long time, though I never read it or watched the animated film. Anyway, it looked age-appropriate for my son, so I checked it out. I hated it. I thought so much was wrong with it, including the absurdity of having a star/ship travel from somewhere in the Orion constellation to Earth in a matter of months, and all kinds of other bogus physics, then the sadomasochism and the slave imagery, then the simpering wish fulfillment at the end where the space dragon sings the music of the stars and the people of earth lose their war-like tendencies. In short, I hated everything about it and was heartily sorry I'd picked it up. I do wonder what the movie is like, however, as I simply can't believe they could have been that faithful to the original. Quote
jlhoots Posted December 6, 2010 Report Posted December 6, 2010 I'm a third of the way through The Instructions (1030 pages total). To me it's a fascinating novel. Obviously some will be put off by the length. Some familiarity with a lot of the Jewish references will help. Quote
Royal Oak Posted December 6, 2010 Report Posted December 6, 2010 "Spoilt Rotten - The Toxic Cult of Sentimentality" by Theodore Dalrymple. Utterly convincing, as ever. Quote
ejp626 Posted December 6, 2010 Report Posted December 6, 2010 I'm a third of the way through The Instructions (1030 pages total). To me it's a fascinating novel. Obviously some will be put off by the length. Some familiarity with a lot of the Jewish references will help. I'm still very much on the fence. I am sure I won't read it twice, if I read it at all, so I'll just have to be patient and sign up for a copy from the library in the spring. I really didn't understand all the fuss about Kalooki Nights (a fairly big deal in British Jewish literature from 2007). I just didn't enjoy it at all, but the reviewers just lapped it up (as they did with Jacobson's Booker-winning The Finkler Question). I have a fairly strong suspicion that I would be feeling the same way at the end of The Instructions -- meh. That's a lot of reading for little reward. I felt the same way about The Savage Detectives (no way was my effort fully rewarded) and I'm feeling that way about Nabokov now. I'm clearly moving away from a certain kind of ultra-literary fiction as I age. Still, I generally enjoy Jonathan Lethem and Michael Chabon, who are sort of in the same circle. Quote
BillF Posted December 10, 2010 Report Posted December 10, 2010 Nearing the end of this 650 page tome. Quote
jazzbo Posted December 10, 2010 Report Posted December 10, 2010 I know that people rag on the Gateway sequels, but I think they're quite good. Wow, nearing the conclusion of this one, and I really have to say the three sequels I found quite interesting. Very interesting about "machine intelligence," and the prescient discussion of terrorism, and I really was intrigued by the idea of an enemy race of energy beings who were trying to recreate the universe without matter. And. . . spoiler below. . . .. I was totally blown away how at the end of the third book you realize your friendly neighborhood narrator. . . has been dead the whole time he's narrating to you! Quote
jazzbo Posted December 11, 2010 Report Posted December 11, 2010 Shades of P.K. Dick there. Yes. Done entirely differently though. Quote
paul secor Posted December 11, 2010 Report Posted December 11, 2010 Liner notes. Hope that means that there are some new releases in the air. Quote
jlhoots Posted December 11, 2010 Report Posted December 11, 2010 Nearing the end of this 650 page tome. Loved it. I'm told that those who like this book will like A Visit From The Goon Squad (which I'm going to try as soon as I finish The Instructions). Quote
Dave James Posted December 11, 2010 Report Posted December 11, 2010 Lee Child's Jack Reacher novels For what they are, they're about as good as it gets. Completely and totally mindless and completely and totally entertaining. Quote
ghost of miles Posted December 14, 2010 Author Report Posted December 14, 2010 Rereading ON THE ROAD--I've been bitten by the Kerouac bug again of late. Quote
GA Russell Posted December 14, 2010 Report Posted December 14, 2010 In 1982 I started reading Life After Life by Raymond Moody. I found it very interesting, but half way through it I moved from Pittsburgh to York, and the book was lost in the move. I recently picked up a copy, and I've started it tonight. I'm looking forward to reading the whole thing now. Quote
ejp626 Posted December 16, 2010 Report Posted December 16, 2010 Before I get too senile might as well start reading some classics.Think I'll finish it when summer comes along if everything goes well. I am looking to get into Proust in 2012, maybe help distract myself from everything else going to pot. Anyway, for a classic classic I've been reading Erasmus's The Praise of Folly. Not a gut-buster, but it has its moments. I've demoted Nabokov to the benches for the time being and am replacing him with Kamila Shamsie. She doesn't have that many novels, so then I'll read two by Uzma Aslam Khan, and then see how I feel about inserting Nabokov back into the line-up. I have, however, been enjoying Mahfouz and generally Narayan, so they will stay in. It is kind of a nice change: a year of reading almost entirely non-Western fiction. Quote
jostber Posted December 16, 2010 Report Posted December 16, 2010 Norman Lewis - A View Of The World Quote
Matthew Posted December 17, 2010 Report Posted December 17, 2010 Deadball Stars of the American League. A totally captivating book put out by the Society For American Baseball Research, which contains 136 biographies of American League baseball players from the "Deadball Era" of 1901 - 1919. Fascinating reading of players long dead and forgotten; the "Deadball Era" has always held me enthralled, an era with an unique style of play, and of an America way of life long gone. I just ordered the National League version.... Quote
BruceH Posted December 17, 2010 Report Posted December 17, 2010 Finally got around to finishing "The Terrorists," the final Martin Beck novel. I'd been going slow with it because I didn't want it to end. Great series. Quote
gslade Posted December 20, 2010 Report Posted December 20, 2010 Just Started a Norman Partridge Novella Dark Harvest Quote
medjuck Posted December 21, 2010 Report Posted December 21, 2010 Finally got around to finishing "The Terrorists," the final Martin Beck novel. I'd been going slow with it because I didn't want it to end. Great series. Great series. There were a couple of good films based on it. One American (The Laughing Policeman) and one Swedish (Man on the Roof-- based on The Abominable Man). Great read. I'm almost through it. I keep reading reviews that say how great that it's more about music then sex and drugs. Sure there's some stuff about music but not nearly as much as there is about sex and drugs. Quote
ejp626 Posted December 22, 2010 Report Posted December 22, 2010 I guess this can go here as well as anywhere. I think Stefan Zweig's name has come up a couple of times. Anyway, there are a few days left to hear a radio adaptation of his chess-based novella The Royal Game: Zweig It shares many characteristics with Nabokov's The Defense. Wasn't super crazy about either, but liked Zweig's a bit better. I have started reading Treasure Island to my son, who now seems old enough not to be completely scared of pirates. It should take a week or two. After this, it will be Kidnapped. Hard to believe, but I've never read either up to now. As far as my own reading, I did start Shamsie's Kartography, which seems promising. Somewhere towards the end of the month, I am going to tackle Mahfouz's The Cairo Trilogy. I'm excited but a little daunted. Also I think it is too bulky to take on the train, which would slow me down considerably! Quote
B. Goren. Posted December 22, 2010 Report Posted December 22, 2010 Heinrich Böll: The Lost Honour of Katharina Blum. Quote
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