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Posted (edited)

Sorry to ask this here but I thought you readers might know. I'd like to know whether there is a thread where people have written their own thoughts like as a musing or a poem or something?
Thanks. regards, page

Edited by page
Posted (edited)

Now reading:

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Thanks for bringing that up. Checked online blurb and it looks right up my street - put an order in. Just finished the last but one David Downing novel which is set in late '45 in Berlin and across southern and eastern Europe against the backdrop of the mass migrations and the Jewish routes to Palestine. I teach the Cold War to 17-18 year olds so books like this provide constant new information and anecdotes.

Can recommend this one I read last year that overlaps though covers a longer time period:

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Edited by A Lark Ascending
Posted (edited)

Now reading:

51_En_Cb_Pdi_KL.jpg

Thanks for bringing that up. Checked online blurb and it looks right up my street - put an order in. Just finished the last but one David Downing novel which is set in late '45 in Berlin and across southern and eastern Europe against the backdrop of the mass migrations and the Jewish routes to Palestine. I teach the Cold War to 17-18 year olds so books like this provide constant new information and anecdotes.

Can recommend this one I read last year that overlaps though covers a longer time period:

nba-3.jpg

After I finish Savage Continent I'll probably order the following recent title which has been getting good reviews.

Amazon.co.uk

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Edited by erwbol
Posted

Finished Robert Boswell's "Tumbledown." Terrific novel. Boswell takes some risky narrative chances toward the end and brings it all off beautifully (e.g. creates two divergent paths of the plot -- one in which a particular character commits suicide, another in which he does not -- and sustains them in rapid alternation almost until the very end). What a generous book, too. A lot of these people (many of them "clients" in a private mental hospital) are in significant, even dire, straits in life, but he isn't out to unduly punish them or us or to provide dubious uplift either. In particular, one semi-subsidiary character who comes across for a good while as a fairly annoying transcendental doofus eventually and quite believably comes to behave with a good deal of soulful good sense.

Posted

I'm actually in the middle of a lot of novels, which isn't something I generally like to be doing, so I will try to close out on a few. The main problem is that the Proust volumes are quite heavy in addition to being slow going, so I can't take them everywhere, esp. if I know I need to be carting other things back and forth to work. I will have close to 8 hours on the bus tomorrow (Sat.) and maybe will get through a couple of shorter books instead.

Anyway, Proust's Within a Budding Grove.

An e-book version of Henri Alain-Fournier's Le Grand Meaulnes

Jeremy Thrane by Kate Christensen

Vargas Llosa's The Bad Girl (I am not at all taken with this one. I find it repetitive and quite tedious actually.)

That Awful Mess on Via Merulana by Carlo Emilio Gadda (Maybe the best of the bunch, but I am having some trouble understanding why what comes across as largely a police procedural was considered (at one point) a major modernist masterpiece. Unless I am totally off-track, the revealing of how many unlikely people are implicated in the crimes was old hat when Priestly did it in An Inspector Calls.)

Posted

I knocked off 2 from my list (The Bad Girl and Le Grand Meaulnes). While I will always prefer a printed book for reading on the go, reading the epub file (through an epub-reader extension on Firefox) wasn't too bad. I went ahead and downloaded a few more epub files from Project Gutenberg. Apparently, a bunch of folks on-line are reading Middlemarch in Dec. and have a whole schedule to follow. I might join along.

I should be able to finish That Awful Mess on Via Merulana by Friday, then refocus on Proust. Or at least I should have been able to, except I have gotten interested in reading Robert Walser (Berlin Stories, The Tanners, etc.).

Posted (edited)

Now reading:

51_En_Cb_Pdi_KL.jpg

Thanks for bringing that up. Checked online blurb and it looks right up my street - put an order in. Just finished the last but one David Downing novel which is set in late '45 in Berlin and across southern and eastern Europe against the backdrop of the mass migrations and the Jewish routes to Palestine. I teach the Cold War to 17-18 year olds so books like this provide constant new information and anecdotes.

Can recommend this one I read last year that overlaps though covers a longer time period:

nba-3.jpg

Thanks for the Anne Applebaum recommendation, I've just started it.

Edited by kinuta
Posted

In general, I have been underwhelmed by Anne Applebaum's various oped pieces in the Washington Post and/or Slate. They usually strike me as neo-con-lite (and consistently Rah-rah'ing for American Power) to the point I rarely click through if I see her name in the byline.

However, I had no idea that she lives permanently in Poland and is married to Poland's Minister of Foreign Affairs Radosław Sikorski. That is certainly interesting.

Posted

I've been keeping it light, trying to recover from the Mars trilogy; I read Alan Dean Fosters For Love of Mother-Not and just reread Methuselah's Children by Heinlein.

I may have to take a break from SF for a bit; I feel one of my recurring Vonnegut jags coming on...

Posted

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Picked up a cheap used copy of this which turned out to be signed by the author. An eminently readable jazz autobiography, of particular interest to me as Peter is almost exactly my age and the changes in the British jazz scene 1950s to present are all recognizable to me. Fascinating stories of jazz greats - and he knew many. He was particularly close with Philly Joe as they had the same "hobby". Lots of humour, too, as for instance when as a young man during his brief baritone-playing phase, he gets off a bus with his saxophone case to be greeted by a chirpy Cockney with, "Wotcher got in there, mate, a bleedin' submarine?" :lol:

Posted

Still on my Tolstoy kick:

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In the Pevear and Volokhonsky translation.

I read this a few months back. Some parts are really interesting, and some just drag...

I can see that, This is my second time through it, the last being quite some number of years ago. I find Tolstoy engrossing, but in 800 pages, there are going to be some longueurs, I suppose. I found it tougher going the first time. Also, I think having read War and Peace just before this, I feel more immersed in Tolstoy's authorial world.

Posted

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The first to arrive of two books recommended in the heated Crouch thread. The Baldwin piece is the same as the one

The other one will take some time to arrive as it was out of stock at amazon.co.uk at the time I placed my order.

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Posted

Keep putting Proust on the back burner. May just never finish, when it comes right down to it.

Renata Adler's Speedboat -- pretty disappointed with this actually; intentionally disorganized snippets of text/anecdotes that she admits cut off before they actually gel or cohere.

I think I'll be a lot more satisfied with Gregor von Rezzori. I have an early novel (Oedipus at Stalingrad) and a late novel (The Orient Express) checked out from the library. At one point, I owned a copy of The Death of My Brother Abel, but am not sure I still do. I'll keep an eye out for it.

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