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Couldn't wait for the Silversary? (he has a blog, the ancillary stuff bookending April may be of interest) (and my take, unspoiling, but there's an interesting intersection with my most recent reading, Patrick White's Riders in the Chariot, which I must mull) ... (reader's block ... know that feeling) (now, buyer's block, that's another story) Last edited by nnyhav; 28-May-2008 at 02:22. |
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Returned last Friday from a trip and brought back several new volumes: Penguin's Great Loves box set Arthur & George - Julian Barnes Valley of the Dolls - Jacqueline Susann The Mermaid Chair - Sue Monk Kidd (possibly a joke) Cliffs - Olivier Adam Secret - Philippe Grimbert God's Own Country - Ross Raisin
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Helprin was a great surprise,i also got City in winter and order Pacifique stories.I shall follow his work closely.My father will be greatly please for it is the kind of book he is very fond of.
i got Erich Maria Remarque - All Quiet on the Western Front Colin Thubron - Shadow of the Silk Road Michel foucault_dires-a series of lectures |
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Almost a little bit of synchronicity on our part as I've just returned from a lunch-hour jaunt to Waterstones, returning with The Sorrow Of War by Bảo Ninh, which a couple of encomiums on the back compare to All Quiet On The Western Front, albeit a modern Vietnamese version.
Also picked up in the trip were:
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No buyer's block today:
Paul Verhaeghen, Omega Minor (trans Paul Verhaeghen ) [is this the next Discovery of Heaven?]Raymond Queneau, Elementary Morality (Philip Terry) [his last book, intro David Bellos; I had no idea it was available] Aleksander Hemon, The Lazarus Project [the only one I'd expressly gone for] Juan Goytisolo, Makbara (Helen R. Lane) Hermann Broch, The Guiltless (Ralph Manheim) Thomas Bernhard, The Loser (Jack Dawson) Georgi Gospodinov, And Other Stories (Alexis Levitin & Magdalena Levy) César Aira, An Episode in the Life of a Landscape Painter (Chris Andrews) [intro Roberto Bolaño] Last edited by nnyhav; 29-May-2008 at 19:18. Reason: Oops! Aira not Aria (I sometimes get it Buenos Aries too ;) ) |
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Discovery Of Heaven is Harry Mulisch, isn't it? He's a name that's been on the periphery for me (perhaps he needs his own thread) since I read a review of another of his novels. I've no idea what DoH is about, but, based on your question - which was no doubt rhetorical and therefore cancels out what I'm writing - it's either a Holocaust novel or it's Pynchonesque. Quote:
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It's funny because Queneau is mostly seen in France as a "young adulte" writer,because of the film adaptation Zazi dans le metro.A mistake often brough with popularity of one work.Cinema is certainly good for the finance of a writer but terribly reductor as for the range of his work. |
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I've read one of Mulisch's (Siegfried) and thought it absolutely excellent. And I suppose it's a holocaust novel of sorts, dealing with Hitler from a philosophical/theological perspective rather than the historical one. He could definitely use a thread of his own; I don't think I ever wrote a proper review of Siegfried, though. I've got another of his (The Assault, I think) in my short-term TBR pile.
Just picked up: The Long Ships, Frans G Bengtsson One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
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Perhaps the mission of those who love mankind is to make people laugh at the truth, to make truth laugh, because the only truth lies in learning to free ourselves from insane passion for the truth. - Umberto Eco |
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I shouldn't really be allowed near a book store until I've whittled down the unending stacks I've got to something manageable. But then, where would the fun be in that? So
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I try to cadge books from publishing houses rather than buy them new. I have the perfectly genuine excuse that I want to review them. But that doesn't mean that I don't buy books as well; usually, though not always, second-hand. I was in Visby on the Swedish island of Gotland recently, then a day in Stockholm. Here's what I bought:
The frequent mention of Walter Ljungquist is because he's a neglected author I've wanted to read for about twenty years. The translator Thomas Warburton is ninety years old this year and has translated, among other things, Joyce's Ulysses, Sterne's Tristram Shandy, and books by Orwell, Wells, Masters, Conan Doyle, Faulkner, Styron, Djuna Barnes, Henry Green, a play or two by Shakespeare, plus several important Finnish authors into his native Swedish. The name Thomas Warburton is indeed English by origin. Until his 33rd year Warburton was a British citizen, although he has lived all of his life in Finland, apart from a couple of years in Sweden during WWII. |
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When in England, buy as the English. Well, maybe they don't buy the books I did:
Charles Morgan: "The River Line" Charles Morgan: "The Fountain" Anthony Trollope: "Can You Forgive Her?" The last of these was in a curious, small, hardback edition, from Oxford Classics of years ago. The title is equally curious, but I couldn't resist the pocket-sized book for £4, with free coffee stain on the dustcover. I was toying with the idea of buying Blake Morrison's latest, whose title I've forgotten ("South of the River"?), but thought I could buy that so easily online. But I want to read a book like that, dealing like what it's like to live in contemporary Britain. |
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Oh happy day! In the mail:
Warlock by Oakley Hall Suttree by Cormac McCarthy Collected Fictions by Jorge Luis Borges (Penguin Deluxe) YAY! All three look fricken awesome! Had no idea Tom did the blurb on the back of Warlock. Quote:
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Today's visit to the restocked local used book recycler will burden my shelves for a while:
Carlos Fuentes, Terra Nostra (trans Margaret Sayers Peden) Marguerite Yourcenar, Memoirs of Hadrian and Coup de Grâce (Grace Frick) Amoz Oz, A Perfect Peace (Hillel Halkin) Walter Abish, Alphabetical Africa Osamu Dazai, The Setting Sun (Donald Keene) Richard Hughes, A High Wind in Jamaica L.P.Hartley, The Go-Between Graham Greene, The Quiet American Anita Desai, Clear Light of Day Lawrence Durrell, The Alexandria Quartet Manuel Puig, Eternal Curse on the Reader of These Pages Ryū Murakami, Almost Transparent Blue (Nancy Andrew) Other than Fuentes and Desai, of whom I've read one book each this year, and Greene (most of his already read), the above are all new to me. |
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That's one that has interested me since I found out about it. I was surprised to find out he was American as his How German Is It? looked, after a cursory glance, as if it were a German translation, especially as I'd picked it up off a display promoting Germany. Sadly, other than How German Is It?, he's out of print - or perhaps never has been. But, for Alphabetical Africa, I'd be interested in seeing his first chapter, since it's all the letter 'A'. Quote:
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Volume 1 of The Baroque Cycle, Quicksilver. Just Volume 3 to find in hardcover now.
A Frolic of His Own by William Gaddis Barometer Rising by Hugh MacLennan and some Evolutionary Psychology to chew on: How the Mind Works by Steven Pinker. |
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Oh, stay away from Pinker. He's not quite over Chomsky which makes for dreary reading. And do tell us how you liked the Gaddis. I am myself dipping into the Stephenson again (first time read) and into Gaddis' JR (for a reread). Hugh MacLennan's name doesn't ring any bells for me. Care to elaborate? |
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I went out with the intention of buying Stefan Zweig's The Post-Office Girl, but the shop never had it, despite having a pile of copies last week. So, I plumped for Jean Teulé's The Suicide Shop, just to give it a shot.
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