Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted (edited)

51MVZdwGvHL._BO2,204,203,200_PIsitb-stic

This week's read bought at the wonderful Salt's Mill, Saltaire. Bumper compendium of all things Ecky Thump, Eeee Bah Gum & Trouble Up 'T Mill...

Wittily signed on the front by Mr M. And incredibly - The MC5, John Taylor, Graham Collier and John McLaughlin all get mentions.

Edited by sidewinder
  • Replies 9.2k
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted Images

Posted (edited)

Midway through Faulkner's Light in August. Parts I find pretty interesting, but the bits about Joe Christmas and his awful childhood (shudder). There are a lot of hard men in this book (sort of Cormac McCarthy hard -- based on the Robin Thicke thread should we be shaming Mr. McCarthy into paying the Faulkner estate?). Joe Christmas and especially his adoptive father are almost parodies of the silent, cruel men who resort to violence since they are so out of touch with any other mode of social intercourse. His father has the added distinction of being absolutely sure he is morally in the right and that his Presbyterian god commanded him to beat the child until he returned to the path of righteousness. A real piece of work. (Just had a flashback that growing up there was one father on the street who matched this profile -- and who was gradually shunned. Nowadays it would be considered to have crossed the line from excessive corporal punishment to child abuse... Would the police have been brought it? Perhaps.)

The other characters are more interesting (and like Sutpen or some of the Snopes are more morally ambiguous). Still, given how much of the novel is given over to Joe Christmas (at least so far), I can't see reading this a second time. (I am sort of chuckling at how Rev. Hightower's congregation must have felt when they first heard his jumbled rantings from the pulpit. Very hard to imagine how he got through Divinity School in the first place.)

Am also reading Joseph Heller's A Portrait of an Artist, as an Old Man. His final novel. Basically a post-modern pastiche (about how hard it is for old authors to still get it up (the pen that is)). Not that good unfortunately, unless one is just deeply into Heller (which I am not).

Edited by ejp626
Posted

9780141009759.jpg

Further to the above - within 50 pages of finishing this one - utterly gripping. I've taught Nazi Germany since the late 70s to younger students (13-16) but never fully appreciated the scale of the violence in 1933.

Hadn't realised that Evans was an expert witness in the David Irving trial in the late 80s, playing a key part in demonstrating the latter's distortions through hard evidence.

Posted

burning-the-days-978033044882602.jpg

Just finished this. Thanks for the recommendation!

Was that me?...anyway, a wonderful book.

I've just finished my first novel of his:

417GwUKHcVL._BO2,204,203,200_PIsitb-stic

which I didn't enjoy nearly as much.

Posted

burning-the-days-978033044882602.jpg

Just finished this. Thanks for the recommendation!

Was that me?...anyway, a wonderful book.

I've just finished my first novel of his:

417GwUKHcVL._BO2,204,203,200_PIsitb-stic

which I didn't enjoy nearly as much.

Try this one:

200px-TheHunters.jpg

Posted

Try this one:

200px-TheHunters.jpg

Thanks for the recommendation, Bill, I've ordered a copy.

I never bought this because it seemed too like the memoirs of his flying career, "Gods of Tin" & "Burning the Days", both of which I enjoyed enormously. Perhaps that's what he's best at writing about.

Posted

519dcxRG4bL._SY346_PJlook-inside-v2,TopR

Great series. I love the way he alternates between a serious Zen novel followed by one that is almost opera buffa. 'Cosi Fan Tutti' has the most amazing opening chapter which is told almost like the prologue to an opera; the whole novel plays with the Da Ponte plot but twists it into the murder story.

Posted

I've been in one of those 'don't know what to read' moods lately, which always makes me turn to old favorites. I've gone through Heinlein's A Door into Summer (a favorite in my teen years that gets weirder every time I read it), Tanith Lee's Don't Bite the Sun (I have a feeling I only like this because I was young when I first read it) and William Tenn's The Human Angle (no apology for this one; I always forget how good Tenn was until I'm reading him again).

Posted

I've been in one of those 'don't know what to read' moods lately, which always makes me turn to old favorites. I've gone through Heinlein's A Door into Summer (a favorite in my teen years that gets weirder every time I read it), Tanith Lee's Don't Bite the Sun (I have a feeling I only like this because I was young when I first read it) and William Tenn's The Human Angle (no apology for this one; I always forget how good Tenn was until I'm reading him again).

Have you checked out the gigantic two-volume Complete Stories put out by NESFA press? I've been thinking of getting those for years.

Posted (edited)

Yeah, I've thought about it. Those and the Eric Frank Russell and Robert Sheckley volumes as well. But while I know I'd appreciate having them in hard cover, I'm just cheap enough that buying stuff I (mostly) already have bothers me.

Edited by Jazzmoose
Posted

Slowly, oh so slowly, getting into Proust. I recall having trouble for the first couple hundred pages getting into the pacing of Trollope, and this is even more extreme. It actually takes 50 pages for him to get to the madeline cookie that sets off the whole series. I am going to have to find a way to spend more time with this, as at my current rate I won't finish until Dec.! It has some subtle payoffs, but I simply cannot imagine ever reading this a second time.

On the side, I am nearly done with Heller's Portrait of an Artist, as an Old Man. It has fallen further in my estimation. It simply is not a good book at all (what a shame), though it is short, so I will finish reading it.

Posted (edited)

511vq9chmjL._SY346_PJlook-inside-v2,TopR

Alan Furst - Night Soldiers

Great series. Just finished watching the BBC dramatisation of Spies of Warsaw last night - they did it well.

If you don't know them you might enjoy this series:

51ihQNzEbhL._BO2,204,203,200_PIsitb-stic

They start in Germany in the 30s. I have his most recent paperback in the to read pile which moves to post-1945.

Edited by A Lark Ascending

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   1 member


×
×
  • Create New...