What are you reading - on or about October 2006

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'Tis the season of mists and mellow fruitfulness (which I prefer to read as referring to calvados). You find yourself reading something. When this you suss, think of us! Please tell us what reading matter you are staring down at present. Thank you.

P.S. I am rather in the middle of Kim by Kipling. The most fascinating character (and the central one) is India. All else pales in this book beside Kipling's ardent love for India, which shoes in every sentence. It's a love letter. I'm enjoying it.

Aimless (Aimless), Sunday, 1 October 2006 17:19 (seventeen years ago) link

I just started The File on H. by Ismail Kadare. I loved his Broken April and I'm hoping this one is as good. It is tremendously disappointing that no one is translating his work directly into English yet though.

wmlynch (wlynch), Sunday, 1 October 2006 18:22 (seventeen years ago) link

100 pages into Don Delillo's "Underworld" and loving it.
Aside from that, I've decided to read at least one short story every day this month. Different authors each day. This is the sad kind of bum I am. I rather like the idea.
Today's was Greg Egan's "Mitochondrial Eve"

Øystein (Øystein), Sunday, 1 October 2006 23:11 (seventeen years ago) link

150 pages into Blood Meridian.

Jordan (Jordan), Sunday, 1 October 2006 23:17 (seventeen years ago) link

Dare Wright: The Secret Life of a Lonely Doll

Mary (Mary), Monday, 2 October 2006 00:14 (seventeen years ago) link

Hey, I'm reading the What If Guy! It's a...why are you punching me? Why? Guys?

In fact I'm reading The Scramble for Africa, which goes firmly in my list of books you wish came in two separate volumes for portability purposes.

accentmonkey (accentmonkey), Monday, 2 October 2006 06:21 (seventeen years ago) link

oh lord. excluding textbooks, i have to read ian mackay, the quest of the folk: antimodernism and cultural selection in 20th century nova scotia and ruth harrison, animal machines: the new factory farming industry for 8pg book reviews by the end of the month. that's in addition to about 300 pgs of other reading per week for my three history classes.

at the same time, i want to read william c heine, the last canadian (a 1970s thriller about, literally, 'the last canadian.' i think it's about a plague.), some science fiction/horror short stories (by anyone!), and finish delillo's libra.

i just finished delillo's the body artist, which is probably my second favourite of his now, after the names.

derrick (derrick), Monday, 2 October 2006 07:39 (seventeen years ago) link

Banville's The Sea, which I suspect may improve as I get into it.

Matt (Matt), Monday, 2 October 2006 07:43 (seventeen years ago) link

I finished "The Plot Against America" which I adored. I was trying to explain to someone over the weekend why it's better than some lame-o counterfactual and I ended up spluttering about Dungeons & Dragons. Poor show.

Then I read "Love's Death" by Oswcar van den Boogard, which is (if anything) slightly more miserable than the title implies. A little girl dies on the second page and it gets less cheerful from there. It was OK, if a little unremitting.

I nearly started "Blindness" by Henry Green but my train arrived and I had to get to work.

Tim (Tim), Monday, 2 October 2006 08:43 (seventeen years ago) link

Kyle Gann's bk on (composer) Conlon Nancarrow. Got it through local library order (bizzarely had it on their database, which means there is at least one other 'fan' of the player piano round this borough).

Once I got it I looked at Kyle's blog where he announced that this bk is now out on paperback.

xyzzzz__ (jdesouza), Monday, 2 October 2006 09:17 (seventeen years ago) link

Are you an ex-Dungeon Master, Tim?

If so, ha ha ha, etc.

PJ Miller (PJ Miller 68), Monday, 2 October 2006 11:43 (seventeen years ago) link

I'm not, so ner.

Tim (Tim), Monday, 2 October 2006 12:31 (seventeen years ago) link

Did Henry Green write any books with more than one-word titles?

I'm reading A Life Stripped Bare by Leo Hickman, it's an easy read and makes me feel a bit more normal for finding it a struggle to be 'ethical', but also that it's worthwhile to keep trying.

Just finished Case Histories by Kate Atkinson, which was gripping, moving and well-written. Feels like a long time since I enjoyed a novel to the full for some reason, but this one I did.

Archel (Archel), Monday, 2 October 2006 13:55 (seventeen years ago) link

Yes! "Party Going".

Tim (Tim), Monday, 2 October 2006 14:24 (seventeen years ago) link

Goodness, almost verbose there.

Archel (Archel), Monday, 2 October 2006 14:31 (seventeen years ago) link

Since everyone hates him, I'm just starting Lawrence's Sons and Lovers.

SRH (Skrik), Monday, 2 October 2006 15:06 (seventeen years ago) link

College Girls: Bluestockings, Sex Kittens and Coeds, Then and Now by Lynn Peril

Halloween Merrymaking: An Illustrated Celebration of Fun, Food and Frolics from Halloweens Past by Diane Arkus

Mary (Mary), Tuesday, 3 October 2006 01:07 (seventeen years ago) link

Saturday
Ian McEwan

KylieC (mydogmo), Tuesday, 3 October 2006 05:27 (seventeen years ago) link

I went on holiday for a week and read 'The Spy Who Came In From The Cold'. Great holiday reading and very enjoyable. Anyone recommend more Le Carré?

Now I am reading 'Lolita'.

Meg Busset (Mog), Tuesday, 3 October 2006 10:58 (seventeen years ago) link

I liked Le Carre's Little Drummer Girl quite a lot.

franny (frannyglass), Tuesday, 3 October 2006 11:43 (seventeen years ago) link

Finally finished The Slaves of Solitude and highly recommend it. I've become a little obsessed with Patrick Hamilton now, and just ordered Hangover Square since my library didn't have it.

Now reading Potiki by the fabulous Patricia Grace.

franny (frannyglass), Tuesday, 3 October 2006 12:15 (seventeen years ago) link

The Push Man by Yoshihiro Tatsumi. I didn't quite realize going into it that it would involve so many discarded fetuses.

Casuistry (Chris P), Tuesday, 3 October 2006 15:41 (seventeen years ago) link

Finally finished the dreadfully horrid Glass Books of the Dream Eaters - I strongly recommend giving it to someone you hate. It really was bad. Incredibly bad.

So for a change of pace I started Dibdin's Ratking, which is the first in his Aurelio Zen series - and it's positively marvelous. Or maybe I'm just tickled to be reading something that's literate, gramatically correct, has vibrant characters, and is entertaining.

Oh, and my bathroom reading currently is going back and forth between Rabbit Health in the 21st Century and The Cornucopia: Being a Kitchen Entertainment and Cookbook, Containing Good Reading and Good Cookery from More than 500 Years of Recipes, Food Lore, etc. As Conceived and Expounded by The Great Chefs & Gourmets of the Old and New Worlds Between the Years 1380 and 1899, Copiously Illustrated - the latter is most excellent, the former informative.

I'm Passing Open Windows (Ms Laura), Tuesday, 3 October 2006 17:10 (seventeen years ago) link

so many discarded fetuses

How many?

I'm Passing Open Windows (Ms Laura), Tuesday, 3 October 2006 17:11 (seventeen years ago) link

twelve.

beckett, murphy
stuff for 'popular fiction' and 'contemporary american novel' courses.

tom west (thomp), Tuesday, 3 October 2006 20:03 (seventeen years ago) link

Well, ok, I just skimmed, and it looks like there have only been three discarded fetuses so far. Still, three more than I expected.

Casuistry (Chris P), Tuesday, 3 October 2006 20:05 (seventeen years ago) link

There was another one before the book ended! Now I'm starting to hope that in later works he got all subtle about it, and it became some nightmarish Al Hirschfeld/Nina thing to find the discarded fetuses.

Casuistry (Chris P), Tuesday, 3 October 2006 21:43 (seventeen years ago) link

Started The Testamenet of Gideon Mack - very good, but too heavy for my bag, so I started Dream Number 9 - also very good. I do not know the authors.

PJ Miller (PJ Miller 68), Wednesday, 4 October 2006 12:58 (seventeen years ago) link

Currently fucking with my head on the train journey to work is A Spy In The House of Love by Anais Nin.

Navek Rednam (Navek Rednam), Wednesday, 4 October 2006 17:07 (seventeen years ago) link

When Saturday Comes

PJ Miller (PJ Miller 68), Thursday, 5 October 2006 06:17 (seventeen years ago) link

I am to p. 166 in The Guermantes Way. At this rate, maybe I'll finish by the end of the year. I really need to pick up the pace.

youn (youn), Thursday, 5 October 2006 10:48 (seventeen years ago) link

I've been reading the same two paragraphs of At-Swim-Two-Birds every night as the Nyquil kicks in.

Jaq (Jaq), Thursday, 5 October 2006 12:32 (seventeen years ago) link

Which ones?

Øystein (Øystein), Thursday, 5 October 2006 12:50 (seventeen years ago) link

Something about the Pooka and the Good Fairy and a game of poker.

Jaq (Jaq), Thursday, 5 October 2006 17:06 (seventeen years ago) link

Ratking was excellent, as was Vendetta and now I have to decide if I'll continue with the series and read Cabal next or if I should take a break and read something else.

I'm Passing Open Windows (Ms Laura), Thursday, 5 October 2006 18:52 (seventeen years ago) link

Bad Boy, Jim Thompson - his memoir of a misspent youth. I only just started it, but it seems to be a pretty decent series of amusing anecdotes, with no high purpose or deep meaning.

Oddly enough the publisher classifies it as "Crime Fiction" (you know, that tag in the upper left corner of the back cover, to guide where bookstores shelve it), because that is what the author usually writes.

Aimless (Aimless), Thursday, 5 October 2006 19:13 (seventeen years ago) link

Still reading The Manuscript Found at Saragossa, along with a book of collected essays and lectures of John Cage's on silence and other musical topics.

mj (robert blake), Thursday, 5 October 2006 19:58 (seventeen years ago) link

One Big Damn Puzzler by John Harding

andyjack (andyjack), Friday, 6 October 2006 09:28 (seventeen years ago) link

This week--

Bob Woodward- State of Denial
Conservatize Me- John Moe
L.A. Rex- Will Beall

ramon fernandez (ramon fernandez), Friday, 6 October 2006 11:25 (seventeen years ago) link

jeezus, i finally finished Roderick Hudson. But I've been busy! I think it might be the earliest novel i've ever read where a character describes an unlikely situation as being "like something out of a novel!". i don't know what to read next. I might take a James break and read something fluffy and recent. Then go back to James.

okay, i found something. I'm gonna read Amy Bloom's 2000 story collection *A Blind Man Can See How Much I Love You* and then read *What Maisie Knew* by James. My copy of What Maisie Knew is one of those nice old Anchor paperbacks with the Gorey covers. I love those things. Those two books should take me to january!

scott seward (scott seward), Monday, 9 October 2006 13:24 (seventeen years ago) link

Arch! I like like like Kate Atkinson, and do you want her older book, Not the End of the World which I LOVE, ane/or her newest one, One Good Turn?

Laurel (Laurel), Monday, 9 October 2006 14:22 (seventeen years ago) link

NB: I know I am sometimes lame about remembering to put things in the mail, but for your/my love of Kate Atkinson, I will manage it!

Laurel (Laurel), Monday, 9 October 2006 14:28 (seventeen years ago) link

Yes please! Oh I have a new address now - will email it to you.

Now reading Utterly Monkey by Mr Zadie Smith er I mean Nick Laird. It's a bit boring. And something or other by Mavis Cheek, who I guess would be my favourite 'guilty pleasure' author if I had any guilty feelings about books.

Archel (Archel), Monday, 9 October 2006 15:27 (seventeen years ago) link

hey tom you have to let me know if being british (though unfortunately not irish) instead of american enables you to find the 'hilarious' chapter in 'murphy' very, like, understandable. i get the sense it was intentionally written to exclude almost every possible reader from understanding it and thus laughing at it, but it could just be irish in-jokes, which wouldn't be so bad.

i'm reading schopenhauer, montaigne, and a book about wcw and the art world.

Josh (Josh), Monday, 9 October 2006 19:03 (seventeen years ago) link

Georges Simenon The Outlaw & Three Bedrooms in Manhattan

m coleman (lovebug starski), Tuesday, 10 October 2006 09:19 (seventeen years ago) link

above are "taut psychological thrillers" recommended to me as similar to Pat Highsmith and I can see it. On the non-fiction front I just finished Steven Johnson's imminent The Ghost Map, a history of the London cholera epidemic of 1854. It's good, if not quite the "scientific detective story" Johnson intends. But he applies some of the theories from his earlier books like Emergence to a real-world narrative, and they make sense.

m coleman (lovebug starski), Tuesday, 10 October 2006 09:23 (seventeen years ago) link

I gave up on Number Nine Dream fairly quickly. BOR-ING.

PJ Miller (PJ Miller 68), Tuesday, 10 October 2006 09:48 (seventeen years ago) link

Stumbled over this page on NYRB's classics page where they've put up the fore/afterwords to many of their releases. They're all in the dreaded PDF-format, but what the hey.
It's making me want to buy more books.

Øystein (Øystein), Tuesday, 10 October 2006 11:01 (seventeen years ago) link

Read my first Lorrie Moore story (from Like Life) on the bus this morning, and ended up reading it twice, and was fascinated both times.

franny (frannyglass), Tuesday, 10 October 2006 11:09 (seventeen years ago) link

I like most of LeCarre, favorites are:

The Spy Who Came in from the Cold

Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (great bbc miniseries btw)

A Perfect Spy

Hugo Lovelace (Hugo Lovelace), Tuesday, 10 October 2006 15:39 (seventeen years ago) link

The Freelance Writer's Handbook by Andrew Crofts.

PJ Miller (PJ Miller 68), Wednesday, 25 October 2006 07:28 (seventeen years ago) link

Derrick, I kind of agree with you about the ending of Thursday. Shame, 'cause it was a cracking read up til then, especially the mad chase across the French countryside.

glad to hear you say this to know that i'm not just mad. it was so wonderfully delightful until the very, very end, and the anticipation makes the lousy payoff seem all the worse. i felt cheated :(

this week, i am cracking into turkey: a modern history and terrorists or freedom fighters: reflections on the liberation of animals.

derrick (derrick), Wednesday, 25 October 2006 07:54 (seventeen years ago) link

So "The Goodbye Kiss" is violent, macho, misogynist, brutal, generally nasty. In the blurb it's all "searing indictment of modern Italy" blah blah but the only enjoyment I can see in this thing is in identification with the pretty much irredeemable main character. And I couldn't. I think it paints you into that miserable undergraduate* corner which is all "hur-hur it's so AMORAL", and sod that. Oh well, at least my long commute yesterday meant that it didn't stink up my life for more than a day.

So now I'm reading "Portnoy's Complaint", which is much more up my proverbial alley. NO I DON'T MEAN BY WAY OF IDENTIFICATION WITH THE LEAD CHARACTER, cheeky.

*I have met more first year undergraduates who take this self-congrtulatory and fruitless line than I have any other broad group, please don't take this as some kind of blanket condemnation of undergraduates!

Tim (Tim), Wednesday, 25 October 2006 13:46 (seventeen years ago) link

Now I want to read Henry James too. Sigh. It is unfair that the number of things I want to read should increase as the time available to me dwindles.

Have you read anything by him before? The early work is actually written in a fairly straightforward manner -- it just isn't as interesting as the later stuff (to me, anyway). The ornate style only really confuses in the final works.

Could I recommend one of his novellas to you? "Daisy Miller," perhaps? "The Aspern Papers"? Those probably wouldn't require a whole lot of time if they interested you.

mj (robert blake), Thursday, 26 October 2006 01:56 (seventeen years ago) link

Henry James: Search and Destroy

Aimless (Aimless), Thursday, 26 October 2006 02:11 (seventeen years ago) link

I think, as long as people don't have severe time restrictions, they should just start with Portrait, when it comes to James. just so they know why it's worth the bother. I love the short stuff, too, but I think it's more palatable to James-lovers than to, you know, normal people. even people who don't have much use for James generally can appreciate Portrait, I think.

I like them, but I definitely wouldn't start with The Bostonians or What Maisie Knew.

horseshoe (horseshoe), Thursday, 26 October 2006 04:09 (seventeen years ago) link

and if you like Portrait and have even more time to invest, Wings of the Dove and The Ambassadors are amazing. read them as slowly as you possibly can.

horseshoe (horseshoe), Thursday, 26 October 2006 04:11 (seventeen years ago) link

I was really enjoying the Tin Drum - first book in ages I haven't had to read doggedly - but then the final Snicket arrived and I think I'm going to have to switch to that just to get to The End, although I'm not feeling terribly enthusiastic about the Series any more.

Mädchen (Madchen), Thursday, 26 October 2006 08:58 (seventeen years ago) link

I felt the same about the series, it was just dragging on too long, but I'm about halfway through The End, and its better than the last few have been.

Ray (Ray), Thursday, 26 October 2006 09:59 (seventeen years ago) link

TH, did the LRB ever show up?

the pinefox (the pinefox), Thursday, 26 October 2006 14:37 (seventeen years ago) link

PF, I have "emailing PF" on my to do list! I am a heel for not having done so.

LRB has not yet shown, but a letter arrived, with a little slip on it, a little slip I completed and returned by return.

The next day the same letter arrived (with a date two days later than the first) , with an identical little slip. I thought it best not to return that one, it might have confused them.

I have not yet seen a real actual LRB, but I hope to and I remain very grateful for your kind thoughts.

Tim (Tim), Thursday, 26 October 2006 16:08 (seventeen years ago) link

one for chris p from an environmental report I was just reading

DESCRIPTION OF STRATA

Tarmac

Dense Brown Granular FILL - MADE GROUND*

Firm / Stiff Red Brown silty sandy
gravelly CLAY*

Soft Mottled Brown clayey sandy
SILT some gravel*

Loose Brown silty SAND*

Medium Dense Brown silty gravelly
SAND

Medium Dense Grey Brown silty sandy
GRAVEL with cobbles*

(Continued...)

cozen (Cozen), Thursday, 26 October 2006 17:38 (seventeen years ago) link

I was just wondering where you had disappeared to, c.! That is a nice one.

Casuistry (Chris P), Thursday, 26 October 2006 20:27 (seventeen years ago) link

i'm reading *what maisie knew now*. i dig it so far. i finally finished roderick hudson. roderick was what i read after the europeans. i was reading an amy bloom short story collection as a respite from james, but i really just wanted to get back to him! all my paperbacks have the introductions that he wrote for the new york editions of his books and they are BONKERS. so dense and tangled. almost surreal in their obscurity. read THOSE and the actual books are a breeze. i love all the leavis quotes on the backs of my james books. "A masterpiece!" "Did I mention that this too is a masterpiece?" "An early/middle/late masterpiece!" "A small, delicate...masterpiece!" "This one is really no good. Hah! Fooled you! It's a masterpiece!"

scott seward (scott seward), Friday, 27 October 2006 02:56 (seventeen years ago) link

er, *what maisie knew*.

scott seward (scott seward), Friday, 27 October 2006 02:57 (seventeen years ago) link

all my paperbacks have the introductions that he wrote for the new york editions of his books and they are BONKERS.

right? sometimes I'll think I'm actually understanding one of his ridiculous labyrinthine metaphors in those intros and all of a sudden, it'll turn a previously-unimaginable corner of insanity. Like in the preface to Portrait, when he's describing the "house of fiction" and it gets all out of control.

it's funny, because in academic novel studies, a lot of critical weight is given to those prefaces; they get cited a lot as seminal in the formation of the field. but it's not clear to me that anyone who cites them has actually read them, because the idea that you could actually easily lay out, like, a blueprint for a novel from one of them is totally absurd.

anyway, I'm glad you like What Maisie Knew. I had a weirdly emotional reaction to that book. I think it's generally regarded as cold.

horseshoe (horseshoe), Friday, 27 October 2006 04:42 (seventeen years ago) link

Can I have a letter with a little slip, please? Assuming it's something nice.

PJ Miller (PJ Miller 68), Friday, 27 October 2006 09:51 (seventeen years ago) link

All my paperbacks have the introductions that he wrote for the new york editions of his books and they are BONKERS. so dense and tangled.

This thread is making me want to read Henry James, a writer I've never remotely considered before and about whom I know basically nothing. I am totally a sucker for florid prose. I didn't know James was florid.

Just finished The Man With the Golden Arm (finally). It reminds me of that line of Rilke's about lying down with a leper and warming him with your warmth, and I think Algren has come closest to achieving that (in a metaphorical sense) than any other writer I know. It was pretty wonderful and haunting, and I had bizarre dreams about morphine and snow and elevated trains last night.

And now I feel like kind of a twat for quoting Rilke, and I started Anthony Powell's A Question of Upbringing this morning.

franny (frannyglass), Friday, 27 October 2006 11:56 (seventeen years ago) link

Yeah, I tried reading the preface to "Portrait" AFTER reading the actual book and it still made no sense. I will do the same thing after reading "The Golden Bowl," but I don't imagine it being easier, or particularly more insightful for me as a reader. Maybe James understood what he was talking about, though -- I would like to think so, anyway.

That is probably going to take another week though, since "Golden Bowl" doesn't lend itself to fast reading.

mj (robert blake), Friday, 27 October 2006 12:33 (seventeen years ago) link

I'm just about to start 'Man with the Golden Arm'.

Jordan (Jordan), Friday, 27 October 2006 13:47 (seventeen years ago) link

Not that kind of slip, PJM.

Cozen: Moy Sand and Gravel?

TH: good news!

the pinefox (the pinefox), Friday, 27 October 2006 13:53 (seventeen years ago) link

I'm still plowing through Steven Pinker's The Blank Slate - which is kinda long and not exactly light reading, but it's filled with enough thought-provoking arguments to keep me going (when I'm not being distracted by magazines, the Internet, etc.). I also took a short detour to read William Styron's 80-page depression memoir Darkness Visible, which is likably short.

o. nate (onate), Friday, 27 October 2006 13:59 (seventeen years ago) link

Last night I finally settled into what I'll be reading for the next few weeks: Books 21-30 of Livy (or ought that to be Books XXI-XXX?), published in Penguin as The War with Hannibal.

Livy is transparently rooting for the Romans to win. Hannibal is this shrewd, faithless, evil genius who keeps beating the tar out of the true-blue Roman consulary legions, who mean well, but for some reason just can't win for losing, the poor fellas.

Aimless (Aimless), Friday, 27 October 2006 15:56 (seventeen years ago) link

philosophical investigations, for the first time since sixth form, having finally bought a copy.
a cyberpunk detective thriller called a philosophical investigation.
frank kogan's real punks don't wear black.

this week's classes: the time machine and the book of daniel.

tom west (thomp), Friday, 27 October 2006 17:10 (seventeen years ago) link

Because I heart the things that ILB tells me, I finally went out and bought a copy of Somerset Maugham's Of Human Bondage today and have started reading it. It is very good. I would like to thank whoever it was who recommended it. I will find the post, yes I will.

accentmonkey (accentmonkey), Friday, 27 October 2006 18:58 (seventeen years ago) link

Back in the World by Tobias Wolff (not sure if that's the right spelling of his name), a really gorgeous collection of short stories. there was actually a bit of a James-ian moment in one of my favourite stories, where the main character is in the back seat of a hearse been driven by some freaky film crew people. he peers over the front seat because all 3 of the others have gone quiet, and finds them doing something naughty... but the narrator doesn't tell us what.. i'm such a pervert, i spent a good while trying to imagine just what the three of them could possibly be doing..

Half-way through July, July by Tim O'Brien. he has a really lovely, dry, comic style which is incredibly "readable". Fits nicely into my interest in post-war US fiction.

justine paul (justine), Saturday, 28 October 2006 23:57 (seventeen years ago) link

Livy is transparently rooting for the Romans to win.

Ya think?

I won't spoil the ending for you, though.

The battle of Cannae took place on my birthday, a few thousand years before my birth, according to the Wikipedia. I'm not sure how I should feel about that.

I am reading Nokter the Stammerer's Life of Charlemagne, which is awkwardly translated in the Penguin version (all the Latinisms are plain as day) but which, so far, is kind of hysterical.

Casuistry (Chris P), Monday, 30 October 2006 08:04 (seventeen years ago) link

PF: even better news: an LRB arrived this weekend! Now I have read a longer article on Gunter Grass than ever I imagined I might.

Thank you. I wonder if I will become a subscriber, in my own right, eventually.

Tim (Tim), Monday, 30 October 2006 13:59 (seventeen years ago) link

philosophical investigations, for the first time since sixth form, having finally bought a copy.

First 80-odd paragraphs are maybe the best philosophy ever committed to paper. I think he tends to lose me shortly after that though.

a cyberpunk detective thriller called a philosophical investigation.

Arf. I bought that, years ago, on the strength of the title. Disappointingly straightforward I thought, but dick lit ain't really my thing.

frank kogan's real punks don't wear black.

Been meaning to get that - mainly on the strength of his Wittgenstein tours de force over on ILX!

ledge (ledge), Monday, 30 October 2006 15:42 (seventeen years ago) link

So, I finished The Golden Bowl over the weekend, and I will probably read The Ambassadors at some point in the next month. Recent times have been hectic, however, so I can't read as much as I have been wanting to.

Currently, I am reading a book on African-Portuguese slave culture for a class, and probably will start Dangerous Liaisons within the next couple of days once all of the chaos has subsided a bit.

mj (robert blake), Monday, 30 October 2006 15:59 (seventeen years ago) link

i'm reading David Bowman's book on Talking Heads. i hate it and i hate him and if i ever meet him i will punch his nose. still reading it though - you can't thwart interesting characters and stories though he's having a fairly good stab at it.

jed_ (jed), Monday, 30 October 2006 16:44 (seventeen years ago) link

The ending of PI, Part I, is fantastic, but don't skip ahead and read it, it won't really make sense until you've gotten further along.

Casuistry (Chris P), Monday, 30 October 2006 20:14 (seventeen years ago) link

i am reading Carl Johann-Valgren's Hercule Barfuss story. It's ace so far!

wogan lenin (dog latin), Tuesday, 31 October 2006 00:17 (seventeen years ago) link

Hmm, just gone back to PI and I can't find the para that gave me problems last time... but due to my solipsistic tendencies, the private language argument is always a bone of contention.

ledge (ledge), Tuesday, 31 October 2006 00:37 (seventeen years ago) link

OK, I'll bite. How so?

Casuistry (Chris P), Tuesday, 31 October 2006 01:12 (seventeen years ago) link

traci lords bio (i know i know...) and susan sontag's book on photography

Nathalie (stevie nixed), Tuesday, 31 October 2006 09:32 (seventeen years ago) link

Haha, I'm reading the Manics Bio. Considering it's lauded as the best rock bock of the decade, it makes me glad I don't make a habit of reading rock books.

PL argument - I think it's just 'cause my sympathies lie in the opposite direction. While in general I buy his whole project of putting philosophy at the service of language instead of vice versa, in that particular instance I find the sceptical argument more compelling - irrefutable indeed; and the idea of being unable to follow a rule without a community just doesn't convince me.

ledge (ledge), Tuesday, 31 October 2006 09:54 (seventeen years ago) link

I'm just finishing "Ghostwritten" by David Mitchell. If I'd read this one first I'd have been dazzled by it -- it's easily the best of his first three novels, and he's a very talented writer. But, having read the other two first, there is a feeling of going over similar territory in a similar way. I gather he's tried to do something different with Black Swan Green, which seems to have surprised some reviewers, but I think it was something he had to do if his readership wasn't going to dwindle.

frankiemachine (frankiemachine), Tuesday, 31 October 2006 12:04 (seventeen years ago) link

Black Swan Green is a pretty straight teenager-coming-of-age story, no interlocking narratives or switching styles. It's an enjoyable read, but doesn't seem to have a point.

Ray (Ray), Tuesday, 31 October 2006 12:57 (seventeen years ago) link

?

it had a point! no tricks were necessary (although it does have an interlocking narrative from a previous book actually). i thought it was extremely moving which not something i could say about his other books, much as i liked them.

jed_ (jed), Tuesday, 31 October 2006 13:17 (seventeen years ago) link

Haha, I'm reading the Manics Bio. Considering it's lauded as the best rock bock of the decade, it makes me glad I don't make a habit of reading rock books.

hey there's a link! apparently traci guest appeared on a manics track?

the bio's lame. the whole fucking book she says she hates talking about her porn daaazzze! i mean ffs 90 percent of the readers all buy the damn book to find out more about that period in her life, not so much about her experiences in the rave scene. she must know this.

Nathalie (stevie nixed), Tuesday, 31 October 2006 13:22 (seventeen years ago) link

The only point I recall is contained within 'teenager comes of age'.
I don't think it was a bad book, by any means, but I was left wanting something more. The plot was fine, the style was fine, the characterisation was fine, but nothing stood out and actually impressed me. Was it moving? Yes, but not enough.

(I noticed the recurring character, but the narrative structure is still very simple. Not that there's anything wrong with that)

Ray (Ray), Tuesday, 31 October 2006 13:32 (seventeen years ago) link

Traci stepped in because Kylie wasn't available/was too prudish, if I recall (x-p)

Mädchen (Madchen), Tuesday, 31 October 2006 17:56 (seventeen years ago) link

Finished Suite Francaise the other day - positively breath-taking, even if one disregards the situation under which it was written. The appendices are pretty upsetting, though.

Anyway, after finsihing that, everything else kinda pales in comparison (to coin a cliche) - I've picked-up and put down five books, at last count, and finally settled on The Coroner's Lunch, 'cause I figured that it was different enough I wouldn't keep comparing it to Suite. It's pretty entertaining, I must say.

I'm Passing Open Windows (Ms Laura), Tuesday, 31 October 2006 23:17 (seventeen years ago) link

Neverending Story, I did have a brief daliance with Still Life With Woodpecker before I started Neverending Story but it didn't stick.

Navek Rednam (Navek Rednam), Wednesday, 1 November 2006 22:44 (seventeen years ago) link

I finished John Dufresne's Deep in the Shade of Paradise last night, which made me cry. I started reading it because I thought I had misplaced The True History of the Kelly Gang, which I later found in my suitcase, right where it should have been. So now, back to that, and once that's done I'll read those last 25 pages of At-Swim-Two-Birds.

Jaq (Jaq), Wednesday, 1 November 2006 23:02 (seventeen years ago) link

And hey! It's November! Quick, somebody start a new thread!

Jaq (Jaq), Wednesday, 1 November 2006 23:07 (seventeen years ago) link

Your wish is my command.

Aimless (Aimless), Thursday, 2 November 2006 02:55 (seventeen years ago) link

quick, write my dissertation!

Josh (Josh), Thursday, 2 November 2006 03:09 (seventeen years ago) link

No no Josh, it's NaNoWriMo, not NaDiWriMo!

Jaq (Jaq), Thursday, 2 November 2006 05:39 (seventeen years ago) link


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