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Connell is one of the greatest and most eclectic of living American fiction writers and woefully underappreciated.

His book Son Of The Morning Star is one of the best books on Custer.

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I'm appreciating how extremely good these books are now. For a guy who wrote HUGE novels, there's almost no padding in them; no long descriptions of scenerey or people; action follows action at what one might describe as a furious pace; the only pauses are for banter; or for laughter at some of Dumas' more extravagant lines - in two books, different characters get into such a rage that, when the object of their rage turns his back on them, they rip their handkerchief to pieces with their teeth!!! Wonderful!

MG

Sounds gripping! Now if only someone would buy the film rights...

Sorry -- just thinking about how Hollywood is so convinced that there are no new decent ideas out there that it seems like 80% of the films out now are either remakes (of much better movies) or sequels.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Three_Musketeers_(film)

Wiki lists 23 (twenty-three) Musketeers films plus 6 cartoons, the latest of which - Barbie & the three musketeers, in which the musketeers are all women, might just possibly be a porn version.

:D

MG

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Re-read this for the first time for several years. Of course it's acclaimed as one of the best science fiction novels, but I think it's a book of very considerable literary merit, irrespective of genre.

Posted (edited)

Never got through Ulysses. Never made more than a dent in Finnegans Wake. Didn't like Portrait of the Artist. Liked but didn't love Dubliners. I'm definitely not a Joycean, but his disciple Samuel Beckett is in the pantheon for me as a reader and a writer, as is Joyce's arch-enemy Gertrude Stein.

I think I read Portrait (the first time) and Dubliners at the "right time" in life, i.e. as a precocious teenager. At that time, I was more willing to dig in a bit deeper and work at the novel (as the modernists intended) and that leaves me more willing to go back to those works. In contrast, I have been trying without success to read Nicholas Mosley's Hopeful Monsters. I suspect I would have gotten through it when I was younger, but I just find its modernist leanings/trappings are too much for me now (with my vastly reduced leisure time), and I can't be bothered. It's also very possible the payoff is not as high as for T.S. Eliot or Joyce.

Similarly, I wonder how I would react to Djuna Barnes' Nightwood if I read it now (must have read it in college). It's short enough that I could certainly tackle it again. However, I never did get around to reading Anais Nin's Cities of the Interior and the window may have closed on when I would have appreciated that work the most. Again, hard to say...

However, I do like Beckett quite a bit and have seen most of his plays (live, not only on those BBC DVDs). Oddly, I have never gotten around to reading his trilogy, but I surely intend to...

Edited by ejp626
Posted

Oddly, I have never gotten around to reading his trilogy, but I surely intend to...

Molloy is possibly my favorite novel, and relatively accessible, then they get progressively more difficult. IIRC, The Unnameable may be one long paragraph.

Posted

Oddly, I have never gotten around to reading his trilogy, but I surely intend to...

Molloy is possibly my favorite novel, and relatively accessible, then they get progressively more difficult. IIRC, The Unnameable may be one long paragraph.

Sounds a bit like Garcia Marquez's Autumn of the Patriach. Starts out fairly simple, but by the end, an entire chapter is made up of a single sentence! Actually I did like this quite a bit and do hope to reread one of these days...

Posted (edited)

Dashiell Hammett: Crime Stories & Other Writings (LOA). Enjoying this very much, the only Hammett I read before was the Maltese Falcon.

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Edited by Matthew

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