I was lukewarm on Call It Sleep. The pages and pages of dialogue wore me out. He's excellent at depicting emotional violence though.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 3 October 2014 13:58 (nine years ago) link
Adam, that sounds .. kind of fantastic
― ♛ LIL UNIT ♛ (thomp), Friday, 3 October 2014 19:41 (nine years ago) link
as for The Small House at Allington, it was one of my least favorite Trollopes.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 3 October 2014 19:44 (nine years ago) link
Clark Ashton Smith, The Dark Eidolon and Other Fantasies - New penguin classics collection so I thought I'd check him out. About six stories in and wishing there was more of this type of stuff, from the back cover: "Bow down: I am the emperor of dreams; I crown me with the million-colored sun/ of Secret worlds incredible, and take/ their trailing skies for vestment when I soar." So far there's been a few too many stories that take place in realistic settings. I think its a chronological survey so maybe he wrote the more cosmic strange stuff when was older?
Murakami, South of the Border, West of the Sun - Really happily surprised by this so far, tried 1q84 earlier this year but only could get through book 1. I think this was written in the same period he wrote Norwegian Wood/wind up bird, prose is definitely of that quality so far.
Anindita Banerjee, We Modern People: Science Fiction and the Making of Russian Modernity - Bit of a slog through the first 30 pages of methodology/theory review, but its starting to pick up, excited to hear more about electric trains connecting st. petersburg and beijing, underground through the himalayas and caspian sea, as imagined by random russians in the mid 19th century.
― hobbes, Saturday, 4 October 2014 06:26 (nine years ago) link
I recommend Death and the Afterlife by Samuel Scheffler if anyone's looking for fun, accessible new philosophy that philosophers have apparently taken seriously as something original in the field. It's about doomsday scenarios like in Children of Men, where knowledge of mankind's imminent extinction has a widespread dampening impact on people's capacity to find joy and meaning in life, to form plans and have meaningful projects. He tries to draw out the implications of this conclusion, showing that a big part of what holds us together as purposive agents is this assumption that mankind will live on significantly after our deaths, and that this belief is actually much more psychologically crucial than beliefs about personal survival after death.
It also goes into immortality (would immortality be tedious?) and fear of death (is it rational to fear death?). This would be fun stuff to teach.
― jmm, Sunday, 5 October 2014 12:53 (nine years ago) link
What I wondered while reading was whether mere thought experiments about our attitudes towards imminent extinction can effectively take into account the workings of the human emotional immune system. The period in which the reader is thinking about their possible reactions is probably only a few hours, whereas a real person in that situation might have enough time to become acclimated to mankind's new horizon and learn to accept it. That would fit with how people deal with their own individual mortality.
― jmm, Sunday, 5 October 2014 13:07 (nine years ago) link
Reading the accumulating evidence, like this http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2014/sep/29/earth-lost-50-wildlife-in-40-years-wwf, can only hope the Earth can eventually replenish, somehow, and that the next dominant species is wiser, or has no clue re any re-accumulating fossil-to-oil deposits---not for another good long while, anyway (but how many times has this happened).
― dow, Sunday, 5 October 2014 15:42 (nine years ago) link
reading wuthering heights. finding it impossible to do so without getting the song stuck in my head.
― Treeship, Sunday, 5 October 2014 16:24 (nine years ago) link
going back to the guardian article though, the comments are so infuriating. people seem so smug -- almost giddy -- about humanity's imminent extinction due to our greed or selfishness or other moralistic terms. they act like they're not implicated in it at all and also never ask the question if the risks of trying to develop an industrial civilization were worth it considering the potential it allows (never fully realized) for many people to live very well.
― Treeship, Sunday, 5 October 2014 16:42 (nine years ago) link
it's not that the grim analysis is wrong, but george carlin-esque cynicism seems so stupid and pointless to me. like, we are humans. if our species has an unsustainable way of life, let's try to fix that. even if it's impossible and industrialization -- or even agriculture -- was the beginning of the end, we should be looking at solutions. tsk tsking is dumb because these issues have nothing to do with people being "greedy" and everything to do with systemic issues like population growth and capitalist economies focused on growth at all costs.
― Treeship, Sunday, 5 October 2014 16:46 (nine years ago) link
Not referring to you dow, necessarily, but I don't personally really care about the "next species" to dominate earth any more than i do the hypothetical life forms in distant galaxies. Human extinction, even mass- scale traumatic population depletion through starvation or displacement, should still be thought of as preventable
― Treeship, Sunday, 5 October 2014 16:59 (nine years ago) link
Yeah, I had a bit of a minor meltdown in the global warming thread over that report. It's amazing to me that species like tigers can be so iconic in the human imagination, when in reality we've almost completely wiped them out. Some love of nature.
― jmm, Sunday, 5 October 2014 18:19 (nine years ago) link
Didn't read the comments, know what to expect there, but prevention seems increasingly unlikely, esp. considering the price, in several senses, incl. the gamble of efficacy---no, we shouldn't give up, but a big part of what holds us together as purposive agents is this assumption that mankind will live on significantly after our deaths, and that this belief is actually much more psychologically crucial than beliefs about personal survival after death. seems to require whatever recycling of hope, wherever it can be found (and to each his own)
― dow, Sunday, 5 October 2014 18:27 (nine years ago) link
Quite a lot of Blake, also Erdman's Prophet Against EmpireFeel a bit zombified in bursts, so a little Jim Thompson for switch-off (after dark, my sweet).Biography of Nicholas Van Hoogstraten also worked for switch-off. Never finished the Good Soldier Švejk so started that again. So funny!
― woof, Tuesday, 7 October 2014 08:59 (nine years ago) link
My ILX posting has gone from a trickle to a narrower, slower trickle since my computer crashed this summer, but I'll resist the temptation to write a longer roundup post. I'm finished with In Search of Lost Time, which I'd been reading for most of the year. I think I want to let a decade or so elapse before I reread it in sequence, so I can see how my perspective on the text will have shifted, and I think I want to spend a couple of months reading mostly novellas for contrast. I have mixed feelings about Lynne Tillman on the basis of her essays and stories, but I'm impressed with the terseness of Haunted Houses so far. Casey Plett's first book of stories, A Safe Girl to Love, deals with the messiness of trans women's experience, and particularly their relationships with one another, in a way I haven't really seen outside of Imogen Binnie's Nevada and the work of a few other trans writers. Stylistically (and formally in a couple of stories narrated in the second-person), it probably owes something to Lorrie Moore, but it never feels safe or excessively workshopped.
― one way street, Tuesday, 7 October 2014 16:36 (nine years ago) link
i shd be done with proust this evening, thank god
― ♛ LIL UNIT ♛ (thomp), Tuesday, 7 October 2014 16:48 (nine years ago) link
don't spoil the ending for us
― j., Tuesday, 7 October 2014 19:28 (nine years ago) link
You will all begin again from page one, I can tell.
Elena Ferrante - The Story of a New Name. So so amazing.
Now onto Elio Vittorini - Women of Messina.
― xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 7 October 2014 22:15 (nine years ago) link
Big Flannery score:http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/08/books/university-acquires-flannery-oconnors-papers-and-effects.html?_r=0
― dow, Tuesday, 7 October 2014 22:22 (nine years ago) link
Cool, thanks. Feel like the physical building those things end up in should be guarded by peacocks. If not live ones then at least artistic renditions thereof.
Didn't read the comments, know what to expect there, but prevention seems increasingly unlikely, esp. considering the price, in several senses, incl. the gamble of efficacy---no, we shouldn't give up, but /a big part of what holds us together as purposive agents is this assumption that mankind will live on significantly after our deaths, and that this belief is actually much more psychologically crucial than beliefs about personal survival after death./ seems to require whatever recycling of hope, wherever it can be found (and to each his own)
― Do Not POLL At Any Price (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 8 October 2014 01:45 (nine years ago) link
I know what you mean, but I've done everything I can do as an individual, and frankly I have o% confidence any governments are going to do the right thing, so giddy joy at the inevitable demise of all the fuckwits who have actively fought against doing anything to save the pklanet is all I have left
― ornamental cabbage (James Morrison), Wednesday, 8 October 2014 02:17 (nine years ago) link
Dutch government is trying to do the right thing, for obvious reasons.
― Aimless, Wednesday, 8 October 2014 03:12 (nine years ago) link
fair point. i live in Australia, however, which no longer even has a climate change policy, due to being run by genuinely evil fuckheads. anyway, back to books...
― ornamental cabbage (James Morrison), Wednesday, 8 October 2014 04:40 (nine years ago) link
just finished portugal in european and world history by malyn newitt
for a small country portugal has had some interesting leaders
― the final twilight of all evaluative standpoints (nakhchivan), Wednesday, 8 October 2014 16:46 (nine years ago) link
i was v much not into the last idk how many pages of proust
― ♛ LIL UNIT ♛ (thomp), Friday, 10 October 2014 19:37 (nine years ago) link
I am continuing with Foote's Civil War history. His Confederate sympathies are emerging more distinctly as Robert E. Lee enters the scene and the south begins to win more battles. Now that we're deeper into the campaigns of 1862, he tends to lionize the Confederate generals and army rather unabashedly. :(
― Aimless, Friday, 10 October 2014 21:37 (nine years ago) link
Buddenbrooks -- at last.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 10 October 2014 22:23 (nine years ago) link
Even the "masked ball" passage, Thomp?
― one way street, Saturday, 11 October 2014 20:30 (nine years ago) link
Couple of jazz books I picked up yesterday. Jazz People by Val Wilner where I read the Babs Gonzales piece and a book of interviews from around 1970 called Note by Note or something
― Stevolende, Saturday, 11 October 2014 21:23 (nine years ago) link
― one way street, Saturday, 11 October 2014 20:30 (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
the masked ball is good but still maybe the third best party of the parties. the one at the end is the worst party.
i have been reading SHORT BOOKS: clive bell's 'art', richard hughes' weird docu-novel 'in hazard', lars iyers's 'spurious'
― ♛ LIL UNIT ♛ (thomp), Saturday, 11 October 2014 21:39 (nine years ago) link
Making a bit of progress in The Arabian Nights. I always really enjoy it but can't ever seem to keep up a steady pace.
― jmm, Sunday, 12 October 2014 02:28 (nine years ago) link
I read one night a night for 2½ years.
― Frederik B, Sunday, 12 October 2014 02:35 (nine years ago) link
Maybe I'll do that. The way I read, if Shahriyar had my attention span, Scheherazade wouldn't have lasted long.
― jmm, Sunday, 12 October 2014 02:44 (nine years ago) link
no xbox in olden days
― adam, Sunday, 12 October 2014 03:17 (nine years ago) link
Elena Ferrante - Days of Abandonment.
I loved Vittorini's Conversation in Sicily but found Women of Messina tough going wrt writing, and Days of Abandonment was sitting there. Picked that up, loved it from the first sentence on page one (so connect with her voice) that I couldn't go back to Vittorini. Gave that back to the library.
― xyzzzz__, Sunday, 12 October 2014 12:58 (nine years ago) link
I just picked up a copy of Capital in the Twenty-First Century on a 14 day loan from the library. I will not be able to renew it, because of the high demand. I will certainly not finish it in 14 days. But I do intend to interrupt my civil war odyssey long enough to evaluate whether or not to invest in my own copy of this.
― Aimless, Sunday, 12 October 2014 18:04 (nine years ago) link
I often drift toward fiction about complicated friendships between women, so I've been meaning to read Ferrante's My Brilliant Friend series. I've started the revised American edition of Sheila Heti's How Should A Person Be?, and I'm not sure yet whether I can simply find "Sheila" and her friends smug and vacuous or whether I should admire Heti's verve in fictionalizing herself as smug and vacuous even in her soul-searching (after all, any number of male novelists have been lionized for dramatizing their abrasive qualities). In either case, so far it seems flimsy in comparison to Chris Kraus's I Love Dick--maybe that's an unfair comparison, but both novels seem to explore similar questions. I've also started Bolaño's Little Lumpen Novelita, which seems more promising. I've recently finished Jeanne Thornton's The Dream of Doctor Bantam, which is mordantly funny, vivid in evoking mid-2000s Austin, and incisive about mourning and doomed relationships.
― one way street, Sunday, 12 October 2014 19:06 (nine years ago) link
revised how?
― ♛ LIL UNIT ♛ (thomp), Sunday, 12 October 2014 19:31 (nine years ago) link
Apparently Heti smoothed out some of the novel's transitions and elaborated on the circumstances leading up to Sheila's divorce: http://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2012/07/27/two-versions-one-heti/http://www.themillions.com/2012/06/how-should-a-writer-be-an-interview-with-sheila-heti.html
― one way street, Sunday, 12 October 2014 20:15 (nine years ago) link
hunh. guess that's the version i read! who knew!
― ♛ LIL UNIT ♛ (thomp), Sunday, 12 October 2014 21:45 (nine years ago) link
read 'the graveyard' by marek hlasko last night in one sitting. a classic polish novel, something i picked up on a whim at elliott bay books in seattle last month. wonderful read, will definitely seek out more of his stuff.
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Sunday, 12 October 2014 21:51 (nine years ago) link
Making a bit of progress in The Arabian Nights. I always really enjoy it but can't ever seem to keep up a steady pace.― jmm, Sunday, October 12, 2014 Bookmark Flag Post PermalinkI read one night a night for 2½ years.― Frederik B, Sunday, October 12, 2014 Bookmark Flag Post PermalinkMaybe I'll do that. The way I read, if Shahriyar had my attention span, Scheherazade wouldn't have lasted long.― jmm, Sunday, October 12, 2014 Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― jmm, Sunday, October 12, 2014 Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― Frederik B, Sunday, October 12, 2014 Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
The one I've read is the Haddawy translation (as you can see from the link its a reconstruction from the earliest text, sounds like a fool's game) but for me it gave the flavour for that spider web of a prose. In my mind you could see what both Boccaccio and Proust got out of it.
― xyzzzz__, Sunday, 12 October 2014 22:14 (nine years ago) link
I'm reading a recent Penguin Classics edition translated by Malcolm C. Lyon, and trying not to think about what a textual nightmare this book must be. I don't want to start shopping for translations. As long as it's clear and the humour transfers, I'm happy.
― jmm, Monday, 13 October 2014 02:55 (nine years ago) link
The storyteller herself is such a tantalizing and romantic character that I keep wishing for a hiatus where we could see more of her immediate story. Only a minor disappointment with the 1001 Nights that the bits of framing at every chapter break are pretty much the same.
― jmm, Monday, 13 October 2014 03:55 (nine years ago) link
Currently reading Therese by Francois Mauriac. It's fine but mixes the traditional novel and traditional themes with a hint of modernism in a way that reads very dated today.Also Women of Algiers In Their Apartment by Assia Djebar, which I am honestly finding pretty boring.
― justfanoe (Greg Fanoe), Monday, 13 October 2014 13:51 (nine years ago) link
lol i thought frederik was xping to tom's 'short books', i was like damn son good job
i am reading… g.e. moore. sometimes, it seems worthwhile and interesting despite my belief that it cannot go anywhere. other times, i just wanna take dude aside and tell him to get real.
― j., Monday, 13 October 2014 14:57 (nine years ago) link
i spent about twenty minutes reading the principia ethica about an hour ago. i just
― ♛ LIL UNIT ♛ (thomp), Monday, 13 October 2014 15:49 (nine years ago) link
i've never read that, i'm reading 'main problems', where he spends 50 (100, 200) pages working up to proving that material objects exist
― j., Monday, 13 October 2014 17:52 (nine years ago) link
also that space exists
probably that existence exists
Oh yeah, heard interesting Fresh Air interview re the one about Mary, not too thrilled about being boosted from mother to Mother. Thought about reading that one (& NM). Is it good?
― dow, Tuesday, 23 December 2014 01:36 (nine years ago) link
I think THE ARMIES OF THE NIGHT is really good!
I think Toibin as a journalist is an incredibly slack writer. I was not very impressed by BROOKLYN. But perhaps his other novels are better.
BLEEDING EDGE seems to be the second best Pynchon novel I have read yet.
― the pinefox, Tuesday, 23 December 2014 10:41 (nine years ago) link
Brooklyn was one novel I didn't finish this year. There may have been others. I read the first half of Howard Jacobson's J, skimmed the second out of bored curiosity.
― ledge, Tuesday, 23 December 2014 10:56 (nine years ago) link
David Lodge's novel about Henry James is far superior to Toibin's
― sʌxihɔːl (Ward Fowler), Tuesday, 23 December 2014 11:00 (nine years ago) link
reassuringly awful
http://www.lrb.co.uk/v36/n24/tom-mccarthy/writing-machines
― the pinefox, Tuesday, 23 December 2014 13:41 (nine years ago) link
Brooklyn isn't a great novel but it offered consistent pleasure; I practically read it in one sitting in summer '09.
He's never written one outstanding novel. He reminds of William Trevor in that way: consistent pleasure.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 23 December 2014 13:43 (nine years ago) link
reassuringly awfultl;dr
― I Am The Cosmos Factory (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 23 December 2014 14:40 (nine years ago) link
But lol at taking Ballard at face value in the part I did read.
― I Am The Cosmos Factory (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 23 December 2014 14:41 (nine years ago) link
xpost James, I hope to read the second Neapolitan Novels fairly soon; will say more on dedicated NN thread when get some homework done.
― dow, Tuesday, 23 December 2014 15:12 (nine years ago) link
I loved Brooklyn but not sure what to read by him next.
― MaudAddam (cryptosicko), Tuesday, 23 December 2014 17:25 (nine years ago) link
His first story collection boasts a couple of stunners.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 23 December 2014 17:50 (nine years ago) link
A 1/3 of the way through Russian Short Stories from Pushkin to Buida on Penguin (selected and partly translated by Robert Chandler). So far I loved Pushkin's The Queen of Spades and the surprise of the collection is The Greatcoat by Gogol. Never held him in to much affection when I tried him years ago. My fault then. Certainly like to pick up more by him.
Turgenev and Tolstoy's stories are nothingy. Dostoevsky's Bobok is amusing and I can't wait to give a couple of his novels another go next year.
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 24 December 2014 10:37 (nine years ago) link
Sounds interesting. I read a Pushkin short story collection I really liked a long time ago called The Captain's Daughter, looks like it is still in print, although some complain about the translation. Search: the story "Snowstorm." Also Search: Thorold Dickinson's underseen, underrated film version of The Queen of Spades. May be Anton Walbrook's best performance. Search also, although not Russian, the same actor-director team and the superior if suppressed, original film of Gaslight.
― I Am The Cosmos Factory (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 24 December 2014 15:34 (nine years ago) link
I am borrowing The Captain's Daughter from the library (same translator) (NYRB bought out a paperbk of it last year) and the film looks good too.
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 24 December 2014 15:47 (nine years ago) link
I'm also reading Pushkin!
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 24 December 2014 15:56 (nine years ago) link
Will check out the NYRB version, thanks. One I had was old Vintage edition. Cover art teh awesome, though:http://img1.fantasticfiction.co.uk/images/n6/n34100.jpg
― I Am The Cosmos Factory (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 24 December 2014 16:25 (nine years ago) link
David Lodge's novel about Henry James is far superior to Toibin's― sʌxihɔːl (Ward Fowler), Tuesday, December 23, 2014 6:00 AM (Yesterday)
― sʌxihɔːl (Ward Fowler), Tuesday, December 23, 2014 6:00 AM (Yesterday)
Has anyone read his H.G. Wells book?
― I Am The Cosmos Factory (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 24 December 2014 16:44 (nine years ago) link
Hm. When are they going to retranslate the Other Stories?
― I Am The Cosmos Factory (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 24 December 2014 17:00 (nine years ago) link
the best James in fiction is the one who pops up in Gore Vidal's Empire, intrigued by Teddy Roosevelt's noise.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 24 December 2014 17:19 (nine years ago) link
Hm. Apparently he shows up in Lodge's Wells book as well.
― I Am The Cosmos Factory (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 24 December 2014 17:39 (nine years ago) link
Halfway through Armies of the Night and thank god the past 60pp have deemphasized Mailer's constant monitoring of his every fluctuation of mood and he has noticed some of what was happening outside of his woolly cow-sized head.
― oh no! must be the season of the rich (Aimless), Wednesday, 24 December 2014 19:14 (nine years ago) link
I finished the third volume of My Struggle. It seemed less carefully written than the others (or, for me, the writing did not magically cross time and space). I've just started The Book of Strange New Things by Michel Faber and am enjoying it so far.
― youn, Thursday, 25 December 2014 19:30 (nine years ago) link
Season's greetings, incl. "Out Demons Out!" for all yall Armies of the Night readers, and everybody else, of course.
― dow, Thursday, 25 December 2014 20:42 (nine years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qZ0RkMcPbQA
wonder what became of the footage from the bbc crew following mailer about
― no lime tangier, Thursday, 25 December 2014 21:02 (nine years ago) link
I finished the third volume of My Struggle.
Hitler's not a good writer imo
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 25 December 2014 23:25 (nine years ago) link
Rejected ILB Thread TItle: It's Springtime for Knausgard, What Are Your Reading Now?
Reposting link to Eagleton review of Lodge and Toibin books about James, along with amusing quote:http://www.theguardian.com/books/2006/jun/24/featuresreviews.guardianreview27
Though he is impressively candid about his rancorous feelings about The Master, a book he still can't bring himself to read, the whole coincidence, minor enough in itself, begins to sound as momentous as Joyce and Lenin landing up in Zurich at the same time. He couldn't have been more agitated if he'd learnt that Tóibín had nicked his credit cards or was impersonating him every night in the Groucho Club.
― Pigbag Wanderer (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 30 December 2014 01:38 (nine years ago) link
Hahah!
― the pinefox, Tuesday, 30 December 2014 08:02 (nine years ago) link
C. Vann Woodward - The Strange Career of Jim CrowPushkin - The Captain's DaughterElizabeth Drew - Whatever It Takes
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 30 December 2014 13:08 (nine years ago) link
Origins of The New South: more CVW enlightenment re my neck of the woods
― dow, Tuesday, 30 December 2014 15:26 (nine years ago) link
And what came back out of it
― dow, Tuesday, 30 December 2014 15:27 (nine years ago) link
Started Argonauts of the Western Pacific. I also found an interesting book of Malinowski's photography in this period, which I'm gonna read concurrently.
― jmm, Tuesday, 30 December 2014 16:29 (nine years ago) link
T.H. White, The Sword in the Stone - Absolutely loving this, savoring a chapter every few days. T.H. White just seems like he would have been the coolest grandpa.
Jeff Vanermeer, Annihilation - Had my expectations up but the prose is often awkward and characterizations kind of laughable. Its hard to sell me on the believability of this strange "other" world when you can't establish "normal" human nature convincingly. Like the setting seems cool but the narration just keeps taking me out of it. Roadside Picnic handled this "weird zone that needs to be explored" scenario much better. But I'll probably still buy the sequels to see how it all turns out...
― dutch_justice, Wednesday, 31 December 2014 10:14 (nine years ago) link
I finished Armies of the Night and I am glad to say that Mailer did redeem his very wobbly start by the time the book ends.
I will remark that, although it is apparent by the end why Mailer chose to make this book is so Mailer-intensive, I would still rate this book as highly flawed. The meat of the book is contained in maybe 40 of the 300 pages and he only pulls this mess together loosely, by virtue of some low-grade intellectual tap dancing. Still, it was worth reading all 300 to get at those 40 and the book is a valuable period piece.
― dumpster® fire (Aimless), Wednesday, 31 December 2014 19:26 (nine years ago) link
The third volume explains why twee love is best: that is when boys and girls are more or less equal and can still get along doing things like skipping rope or playing long lost wanderer returns to island home. After that, they grow apart and perhaps are not reunited until old age. This assumes best means compatible and sympathetic, but if you want tension, look to middle age.
I have now started Speedboat. I started State of Grace last year but did not finish. I read Dept. of Speculation last year and gave it to my sister.
The timing of the end of the Book of Strange New Things was perfect -- before the descent, in time to see the Manhattan skyline.
― youn, Saturday, 3 January 2015 01:31 (nine years ago) link
It definitely seems like it's time to spawn the next WAYR thread, now that January is here. I'll see what I can do about a clever title, but I am not feeling particularly clever atm.
― dumpster® fire (Aimless), Saturday, 3 January 2015 01:38 (nine years ago) link
To quote a famous rabbi: "It is done."
― dumpster® fire (Aimless), Saturday, 3 January 2015 01:51 (nine years ago) link