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Posted

are you retired or something? all this lazing about reading......:)

 

Dave and George put money in my bank account every month to do this. All I have to do is turn up and vote Tory every 5 years. 

I knew I was going wrong somewhere. Remind in four and half years will you please

Posted (edited)

Marilynne Robinson - Lila

beautifully written first fifty pages.....hungry to finish but want to savour at the same time. i don't remember Gilead having quite such an immediate impact as good as that was

I ended up liking Gilead much more than I expected.  I understand what she is doing in Lila and in Home, but I am just not sure I want to spend time in these other characters' lives.  But I may one of these days.

Currently, midway through Machado de Assis's Philosopher or Dog? which is a sort of sequel to Epitaph of a Small Winner.

I'm also reading Margaret Atwood's Payback, which is a non-fiction exploration of debt and indebtedness.

Next up, more Canadiana: Alice Munro's Who Do You Think You Are? and Michael Ondaatje's The Cat's Table.

Edited by ejp626
Posted

Isaiah Berlin - Russian Thinkers
Fantastic collection of essays on Herzen, Tolstoy, Belinsky a.o.

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I read that last year, along with some of the writers he was describing.  A very good set of essays, even if he goes a bit over the top in praising Herzen.

Posted (edited)

Isaiah Berlin - Russian Thinkers
Fantastic collection of essays on Herzen, Tolstoy, Belinsky a.o.

84707.jpg

I read that last year, along with some of the writers he was describing.  A very good set of essays, even if he goes a bit over the top in praising Herzen.

I have to say that reading Herzen has been high on my list for a long time now (especially My Past and Thoughts), and these essay's certainly got me excited to finally start with these memoirs. When you say you think Berlin is getting a bit over the top, do you mean that in regards to Herzen's prose or regarding his ideas? 

When I read his ideas, I always get the impression that many of these can be directly linked to existentialism (long before anyone spoke of this term).  Furthermore his seemingly firm rejection of all extremes, whether it be extreme conservatism, liberalism or socialism is a moral conviction I also see in people like Albert Camus or Václav Havel. And because these are people I hold in very high esteem (to say the least), I have the feeling that diving in  Alexander Herzen's memoirs would be of high interest for me.    

 

 

Edited by niels
Posted

I would say that Berlin wanted so desperately to find a Russian socialist thinker who opposed the communism that stemmed from Marx's writings that he often exaggerates the break.  You can find several places in Herzen's late letters where he is still calling for revolution, for example.

I thought Herzen's memoirs were quite interesting (I read them slightly abridged in the two volume set from Oxford), but at some point or other Berlin calls them as good or better than Tolstoy's War and Peace!  Come on, man.  Don't blow these things up to that extent.  It does them a real disservice.

I've actually meant to blog about this for a while, but just haven't gotten around to it.

After you finish Berlin and read Herzen, you might be interested in reading Tom Stoppard's The Coast of Utopia, which draws very heavily on both these sources.

Posted

Anecdote from Robert Craft's "Stravinsky: Discoveries and Memories": 

 During a Stravinsky visit to London, Isaiah Berlin wangled seats for Stravinsky and crew to a new production of “Figaro,” orchestra seats that would enable Stravinsky to leave after the first act and rush to the Albert Hall for Monteux’s 50th anniversary performance of “Le Sacre.” "But when the second act of ‘Figaro’ followed the first without intermission, Isaiah had to extricate the Stravinskys from a fully occupied front row and hustle them off…. The departing composer apologized to his neighbors in a stage whisper: ‘Excuse us but we all have diarrhoea.’”

Posted (edited)

robert lax

poems

(1962-1997). 

This is a great volume from the very underrated poet Robert Lax.  It's forcing me to re-examine how I read poetry.

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Edited by Matthew
Posted (edited)

The third Trevor novel I've read recently, this one echoing Felicia's Journey with its gothic content and Love and Summer with its small community setting.

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Edited by BillF
Posted (edited)

I'm just starting Alice Munro's Who Do You Think You Are?

Her first two collections have a complicated, but largely positive view of growing up in rural Ontario.  That's oversimplifying, but I was shocked when I came to "Privilege" where she is describing the situation in the rural school Rose attends.  Munro makes this sound like some Hobbesian nightmare where the teacher turns a blind eye to all the terrors that the older kids inflict on the younger kids - and the younger kids inflict on each other.  It's practically Lord of the Flies set in Hanratty, Ontario (she was actually writing about Wingham, Ont.).  The relationship between Rose and her step-mother Flo isn't much better.  It looks like the whole collection will be pretty dark.

Edited by ejp626
Posted (edited)

I'm just starting Alice Munro's Who Do You Think You Are?

Her first two collections have a complicated, but largely positive view of growing up in rural Ontario.  That's oversimplifying, but I was shocked when I came to "Privilege" where she is describing the situation in the rural school Rose attends.  Munro makes this sound like some Hobbesian nightmare where the teacher turns a blind eye to all the terrors that the older kids inflict on the younger kids - and the younger kids inflict on each other.  It's practically Lord of the Flies set in Hanratty, Ontario (she was actually writing about Wingham, Ont.).  The relationship between Rose and her step-mother Flo isn't much better.  It looks like the whole collection will be pretty dark.

Was introduced to Munro's work on a short course on Canadian and Australian fiction which I took a dozen years ago. She impressed me more than any other writer on the reading list. Recall really liking her Progress of Love and Love of a Good Woman.

 

 

Edited by BillF
Posted (edited)

Reading David Halberstam's Teammates about four players on the Red Sox (Ted Williams, Dom DiMaggio, Johnny Pesky and Bobby Doerr).  Nice baseball book but more a book about four men.

teammates_topstory.jpg

Edited by Brad
Posted

Reading David Halberstam's Teammates about four players on the Red Sox (Ted Williams, Dom DiMaggio, Johnny Pesky and Bobby Doerr).  Nice baseball book but more a book about four men.

teammates_topstory.jpg

Read the book years ago. You nailed it with your comment: Nice baseball book but more a book about four men.

Posted

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Still not through with unum cypher's great book, but some things need to be tended to, so this one comes in between ... it's much less closely focussed on the actual music than Gioia, goes in bigger swipes, giving the "big picture" in a sense (also sometimes in a way that I think is not really accurate, but no biggies so far) ... anyway, if I had read this when growing up (and into jazz music at the same time), I'm sure it would have been about as helpful as Berendt's "Jazz Book" proved to be (and in some cases as mis-leading, since it's sometimes difficult to challenge views one has settled on in youth ... or rather, it's difficult to realise which parts of these views should be challenged in the first place). So this is not a full endorsement, but I'm not saying one shouldn't read this either ...

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