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It seems Sheridan Morley directed a version with Joanna Lumley that has been packaged as an audio book. I couldn't find anything to say which character Ms. Lumley plays. It's easy to picture her as either Elvira or Madame Arcati.
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'Books alone are liberal and free; they give to all who ask; they emancipate all who serve them faithfully.' -- Richard de Bury (inscribed over the entrance of the Los Angeles Central Library) |
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Island by Alistair MacLeod. Another Canuck author. Very well respected for his short stories although gets overshadowed by Munro.
Last edited by ions; 19-Jul-2008 at 16:00. |
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Great Haul today
Kétala, Fatou Diome Die Gelehrtenrepublik, Arno Schmidt (I'm in for a reread) New England White, Stephen L. Carter In Verteidigung der Gesellschaft, Michel Foucault Kindheitsmuster, Christa Wolf |
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I'm under a self-inflicted book buying ban, started 20th of June. It will end on the 18th of August. So far, I manage. My brother just gave me Too loud a solitude by Bohumil Hrabal. I would have yelled my joy, almost.
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I know the feeling. Back in 2006 I decided to set myself a book buying embargo. Knowing that I had put it in place meant that I could easily remove it. It felt like rule breaking, probably in the same way a smoker can believe quitting cigarettes is making a sacrifice, and ensured that I bought probably the most books I've ever bought in a year. 264, to be exact.
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Quote:
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Doesn't make me feel better, abecedarian.
Anyway, two more Booker potentials, this time from Australia: His Illegal Self, Peter CareyAnd a Penguin Modern Classic, to mingle with the others: Love In A Cold Climate and Other Novels, Nancy Mitford |
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Popped in a bookshop in exeter today and got The Savage Detectives
in the mail mascha kaléko, die paar leuchtenden jahre selma meerbaum-eisinger, ich bin in sehnsucht eingehüllt |
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Back in my teens, when I was reading horror, there was author I always wanted to read - especially as the market was stale - but his books were never available in the UK and, browsing around, editions were always limited and therefore out of my price range. Today, however, I saw a collection of his short stories, recently published, which I thought I'd snap up to see whether he is, as I've been assured elsewhere, any good. So Teatro Grottesco by Thomas Ligotti.
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MLA Style Manual and Guide to Scholarly Publishing the other day. Couldn't find my old paperback MLA manual so I got a new edition hardcover.
Need to get more essays on Literature and theory so... Habitations of the Word by William H. Gass Survival by Margaret Atwood In September I have some Umberto Eco, Northrop Frye and Robertson Davies to pick up. Oh and the Borges non-fiction. Perhaps some other essay centric stuff too. I finally found the 3rd and last instalment I needed to complete the hardcover collection of The Baroque Cycle, The System of the World. Pleased about that as it was done in relatively frugal fashion. I also grabbed me a copy of A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter M. Miller Jr. |
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The latter is my favorite book, bar none. I shan't go into the reasons, lest it spoil your first impression (hey, I own it in its first impression, how ironic), and there's nothing like reading anything like it the first time through.
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Since it's payday I got a few NYRB Classics:
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