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Posted

Wow - 22 plays in 20 days! I'm thinking of 5 years! 

  

No. Read it again - it was 10 plays (largely revision) in 20 days and 22 was the score over the whole 2-year Shakespeare course.

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Posted

Wow - 22 plays in 20 days! I'm thinking of 5 years! 

  

No. Read it again - it was 10 plays (largely revision) in 20 days and 22 was the score over the whole 2-year Shakespeare course.

Oops! And there was me thinking you were the bionic scholar! 

Posted

Richard Powers - Orfeo

Powers writes beautifully about music (classical) and the frustrated composer's lot in a novel that also takes in bio terrorism and homeland security. Glad I picked it up prompted by remembering how much I'd enjoyed his "The Time Of Our Singing" (also music themed) many years ago

Posted

Just got to the end of this 770-page tome! Liked it at first, but the larger-than-life sensationalist tone palled on me eventually. Was far more impressed by The Secret History which I read some years ago.

The_goldfinch_by_donna_tart.png

Posted (edited)

Just finished:

 

Vladimir Nabokov - Lolita. Nabokov’s prose is no less than brilliant here. I think Humbert Humbert must be one of the most iconic characters I have ever seen a writer create. Reading other comments on this book though, I really can’t understand some people having sympathy/empathy for Humbert. To me he was one of the “lowest” characters I ever came across in literature (and I read a lot of Dostoevsky), someone who misused his intelligence and dignified appearance only to get to his “goal” of sexually abusing a child.

 

 

And now reading:

 

Albert Camus – Exile and the Kingdom ( a collection of short stories which all deal with Camus’ philosophy of absurdism)

 

Isaiah Berlin – Russian Thinkers (a collection of essays on the Russian Intelligentsia (such as Herzen, Bakunin, Tolstoy and Belinsky) in the 19th century) 

 

Edited by niels
Posted

Robert Lowell: A Biography by Ian Hamilton.

61n1kkqo6PL._SL500_SX325_BO1,204,203,200

I read a Lowell biography about 10 years ago, but don't recall if this was the one. Fascinating  - and disturbing - life. Loved the bit where he, briefly imprisoned as a conscientious objector, rubbed shoulders with the boss of Murder Inc, leading to a conversation something like this: "What are you in for?" "Killing people. What are you in for?" "Not killing people." Love his poetry and Life Studies sits on my bookshelf.

Posted

Robert Lowell: A Biography by Ian Hamilton.

61n1kkqo6PL._SL500_SX325_BO1,204,203,200

I read a Lowell biography about 10 years ago, but don't recall if this was the one. Fascinating  - and disturbing - life. Loved the bit where he, briefly imprisoned as a conscientious objector, rubbed shoulders with the boss of Murder Inc, leading to a conversation something like this: "What are you in for?" "Killing people. What are you in for?" "Not killing people." Love his poetry and Life Studies sits on my bookshelf.

He did live an interesting life.  In America, once Lowell and Allen Ginsberg died, sad to say, the "public poet" disappeared from the US scene (one could also make a case for Maya Angelou), much to our loss.  With the passage of time, Lowell is becoming the 20th. Century American poet, the quality of his body of work is hard to beat, though Theodore Roethke has to be up there also.

Posted

Robert Lowell: A Biography by Ian Hamilton.

61n1kkqo6PL._SL500_SX325_BO1,204,203,200

I read a Lowell biography about 10 years ago, but don't recall if this was the one. Fascinating  - and disturbing - life. Loved the bit where he, briefly imprisoned as a conscientious objector, rubbed shoulders with the boss of Murder Inc, leading to a conversation something like this: "What are you in for?" "Killing people. What are you in for?" "Not killing people." Love his poetry and Life Studies sits on my bookshelf.

He did live an interesting life.  In America, once Lowell and Allen Ginsberg died, sad to say, the "public poet" disappeared from the US scene (one could also make a case for Maya Angelou), much to our loss.  With the passage of time, Lowell is becoming the 20th. Century American poet, the quality of his body of work is hard to beat, though Theodore Roethke has to be up there also.

Roethke is another I read and liked, though it's many years ago now.

Posted

Just finished Irène Némirovsky's David Golder.  In some ways it is a funhouse mirror version of Silas Marner.  I thought it quite interesting.

I am struggling to get through Howard Jacobson's The Finkler Question.  I might as well push on (about 100 pages left) but he leaves me absolutely cold as a reader.  I didn't see what the big fuss was about Kalooki Nights, and I don't think very highly of The Finkler Question.  This will definitely be the last Jacobson novel I attempt.

The next up after this is Machado De Assis's Epitaph of a Small Winner, which I have never read, despite it being a fairly short book.

Posted

9780141439556.jpg

An old and still strange friend. 

Found this difficult to read - even when I had to read it at university. Didn't have that problem with Jane Eyre BTW. I like the cover illustration on that Penguin edition - something French from a British collection - Corot? Barbizon school?

Posted

9780141439556.jpg

An old and still strange friend. 

Found this difficult to read - even when I had to read it at university. Didn't have that problem with Jane Eyre BTW. I like the cover illustration on that Penguin edition - something French from a British collection - Corot? Barbizon school?

I read it as 'light relief' in my last year at uni as finals were approaching (unbelievable as that may seem it was light relief compared with memorising the key points of Civil War era political pamphlets!).

Utterly haunted by it at the time. I'd read virtually no pre-20th C novels since school up to that point. I was so taken by it that it started me on Austin, the other Brontes, Elliot, Hardy etc over the next couple of years. Must re-read it. 

Posted

9780141439556.jpg

An old and still strange friend. 

Found this difficult to read - even when I had to read it at university. Didn't have that problem with Jane Eyre BTW. I like the cover illustration on that Penguin edition - something French from a British collection - Corot? Barbizon school?

I read it as 'light relief' in my last year at uni as finals were approaching (unbelievable as that may seem it was light relief compared with memorising the key points of Civil War era political pamphlets!).

Utterly haunted by it at the time. I'd read virtually no pre-20th C novels since school up to that point. I was so taken by it that it started me on Austin, the other Brontes, Elliot, Hardy etc over the next couple of years. Must re-read it. 

The cover illustration is a detail from Corot's "Gust of Wind," in the Pushkin Museum in Moscow. 

I agree that WH is a tougher read than JE. I'm re-reading Jane Eyre at the moment. 

Posted

To be honest, I have to agree with the sentiments in the comments that Waterstones was just complete rubbish at selling the things, since the management and staff are wedded to the idea that paper books are the only real books.  I'd say well over 90% of my reading is in the form of tangible books, but I don't pooh-pooh the idea of reading digital books, particularly given the awesomeness of Project Gutenberg.

I just wrapped up Muriel Spark's The Informed Air, which are mini-essays on how she became a writer, her literary preoccupations (mostly Proust and T.S. Eliot) and her reflections on religion, particularly the Book of Job.  This is definitely a book that almost everyone would only flip through once, so see if your library stocks it.

Still working my way through de Assis's Epitaph of a Small Winner.

Posted

Laila Lalami - The Moor's Account

lots of good things written about this and Pullitzer and Booker prize nominations to add to the buzz. the idea of telling the story of Conquistadors from the perspective of one of their African slaves is interesting. The writing however won't flow for me. It's as if it's a translation which self-evidently it isn't. I'll persevere

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