Spring 2007: What?! Are You Reading?

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This is the thread where we proudly tell the whole world what books we have our noses stuck in while the birds are singing, the flowers are blooming and the insects are hatching out.

I have been reading The Pursuit of Power by WIlliam H. McNeill.

Aimless, Wednesday, 21 March 2007 17:27 (seventeen years ago) link

TOMORROW IS MY LAST DAY OF FINALS AND READING WILL BEGIN AFRESH.

Debating what to read over break. I mean I have a few books that I will wrap up. Might read that book by the guy who walked across Europe (A Time of Gifts or somesuch) or might read On Certainty (I'm feeling the need) or might go scrounge up that Story of French book or might just watch a bunch of old Muppet Shows for a week, who knows.

I am just bored out my skull with these medieval mystics. Although Christina of St Trond (aka "Christine! the Astonishing!") is fantastic, I'll give her that.

Casuistry, Wednesday, 21 March 2007 22:56 (seventeen years ago) link

I'm reading Roald Dahl's The BFG out loud to my son.

Sara R-C, Wednesday, 21 March 2007 23:48 (seventeen years ago) link

I just finished Knut Hamsun's Hunger which was excellent, and now I'm onto Waiting for the Barbarians.

wmlynch, Thursday, 22 March 2007 00:10 (seventeen years ago) link

Ooh I love Waiting for the Barbarians.

I'm still struggling through A Company of Readers and it's taking me forever. I keep falling asleep on the subway.

franny glass, Thursday, 22 March 2007 00:58 (seventeen years ago) link

Ooh I love Waiting for the Barbarians.

I'm still struggling through A Company of Readers and it's taking me forever. I keep falling asleep on the subway.

franny glass, Thursday, 22 March 2007 00:59 (seventeen years ago) link

Oh man, I suck.

franny glass, Thursday, 22 March 2007 00:59 (seventeen years ago) link

Hunger's great. Did you ever see that show 'The Book Group;, with the episode where they all read 'Hunger', and the Swedish woman is complaining about it, and saying it demonstrates how stupid Norwegians are, when the main character could just go and buy a sandwich (I paraphrase).

James Morrison, Thursday, 22 March 2007 01:21 (seventeen years ago) link

Am reading Voltaire's Letters on England, which is an entertaining grab-bag of stuff on Quakers, art, science, Pascal, etc.

James Morrison, Thursday, 22 March 2007 01:22 (seventeen years ago) link

I really enjoyed that book.

Casuistry, Thursday, 22 March 2007 01:52 (seventeen years ago) link

Matt Seaton - The Escape Artist
Joseph Conrad - Heart Of Darkness

xpost I really enjoyed A Time Of Gifts (by Patrick Leigh Fermor) - I think the most interesting aspect is the fact that he's walking across this landscape that is at most a couple of steps removed from mediaeval society, but which you know will within a few years have been changed utterly by the war and the subsequent collectivisation effort under the Soviets. The second book From The Woods To The Water is somewhat less interesting since he spends most of his time being passed from one aristocratic household to another, but there is a great moment when he arrives at one grand house to find the owner and his guests playing bicycle polo....

Eoghan, Thursday, 22 March 2007 13:26 (seventeen years ago) link

BULGAKOV - MASTER AND MARGIRATE. Yes, I'm overdoing it with the caps but 1 it's finally not a trashy smutty book (like Ron Jeremy's bio I finished in a week) and 2 it's just so amazingly over the type FANBLOODYTASTIC. I don't think I have read anything as good as this. Hyperbole? Huhuh. I hope I can finish it, cause it's very *intellectual*. ;-)

nathalie, Thursday, 22 March 2007 15:23 (seventeen years ago) link

I started in on A Time of Gifts this morning. So we'll see!

Casuistry, Thursday, 22 March 2007 16:27 (seventeen years ago) link

Am in-between books at the moment (we will see what this weekend brings), but I just finished [i}The Bloody Streets of Paris[/i] by Jacques Tardi, which was pretty amazing. I had never heard of Tardi before, but apparently he's some kinda big French comic guy. Unfortunately, it doesn't seem like any of his other books have been translated :( Maybe it's time to brush up my francais??

Before that I read Christine Falls by Benjamin Black / John Banville. It was good, though slightly dissapointing. "super-intellectual literary irish dude goes slumming and writes thriller set in 1950s dublin and boston, how can this not be the greatest book evah?"

askance johnson, Thursday, 22 March 2007 16:56 (seventeen years ago) link

For school:

Feed by M.T. Anderson &
The Subtle Knife by Philip Pullman

For work/fun:

The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick


Virginia Plain, Thursday, 22 March 2007 18:56 (seventeen years ago) link

The Bulgakov - I read that early this year/late last year and enjoyed it thoroughly, though even with lots of poking around and looking things up, I still suspect half of it went over my head. I found this fascinating.

There are some sites with great art from scenes in that book - see here, an example from which is http://beiderbecke.typepad.com/tba/images/master_margarita.jpg. Also, how cool is this? http://www.cyberussr.com/rus/gal/begemot3.jpg

James Morrison, Friday, 23 March 2007 02:07 (seventeen years ago) link

I read Ruth First's 117 Days, about her time as a political prisoner in Apartheid-era South Africa (she was later killed by a letter bomb sent by South African police). Now, for light (in a bleak, existential sort of way) relief, I'm reading David Goodis' pulp/noir Black Friday.

James Morrison, Friday, 23 March 2007 02:09 (seventeen years ago) link

Is that David Goodis book from Millipede Press, James?

James Redd and the Blecchs, Friday, 23 March 2007 03:11 (seventeen years ago) link

James, thanks so much for that link! It is a bit overwhelming to say the least. I hope I can stick with it, as it's been a while since I read such *intellectual* books. That said, I still think it's awesome.

nathalie, Friday, 23 March 2007 12:31 (seventeen years ago) link

hi, long time lurker, first time contributor
i'm currently about halfway through Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close (Safran Foer). it's quite good.
but based on this thread, i got a copy of the bulgakov this morning and am itching to start.

reecie, Sunday, 25 March 2007 03:11 (seventeen years ago) link

Hi Mr Redd: The Goodis is published by Serpent's Tail - it' got Black Friday and a bunch of his short fiction from magazines.

Am now into the 4th section of David Mitchell's 'Cloud Atlas', which is thoroughly engrossing - but I'm hoping against hope that the connections between the stories won't turn out to be all boring and New Age-y.

James Morrison, Sunday, 25 March 2007 11:58 (seventeen years ago) link

for pleasure:
george chauncey, [i]gay new york[/]
a biog. of janos kadar

for school:
like, fifteen different books for thesis

impudent harlot, Sunday, 25 March 2007 16:51 (seventeen years ago) link

For pleasure--Orhan Pamuk's Snow (which is really fucking great; it took me a while to get into it but I'm amazed by the number of complex themes Pamuk is willing to not just engage with but actively embrace)

For school--Plato's Republic, Heidegger's Nietzsche, just finished Lady Mary Worley Montagu's Letters and moving on to Robinson Crusoe.

max, Monday, 26 March 2007 15:32 (seventeen years ago) link

Is it OK to be annoyed with the endless descriptions in a travel book?

Casuistry, Monday, 26 March 2007 17:08 (seventeen years ago) link

Yes, especially if it is by Paul Theroux or has the word "Provence" in the title.

James Redd and the Blecchs, Monday, 26 March 2007 17:44 (seventeen years ago) link

Dear Theo: The Autobiography of Vincent Van Gogh

I have always been fascinated by Vincent's art -- very cerebral and hallucinogenic, probably because of all of the absinthe and careful deliberation he took in his painting. Anyway, I am trying out this edited version of his letters because I do not have the stamina to read the unabridged collection presently. He is a great writer of letters, so I probably will do this in the future.

mj, Tuesday, 27 March 2007 02:26 (seventeen years ago) link

Back to Fernand Braudel - vol. 2 of The Mediterranean & The Mediterranean World....

Eoghan, Tuesday, 27 March 2007 09:14 (seventeen years ago) link

Ah, Braudel.

I'm reading The Affair of the Poisons, Murder, Infaticide, and Satanism at the Court of Louis XIV by Anne Somerset and, while it's good enough, I suppose, I'm not convinced of her grasp of French.

Michael White, Tuesday, 27 March 2007 15:36 (seventeen years ago) link

When I'm done I'm moving on to Zweig's Beware of Pity.

Michael White, Tuesday, 27 March 2007 16:55 (seventeen years ago) link

Zadie Smith - White Teeth

o. nate, Wednesday, 28 March 2007 00:58 (seventeen years ago) link

Patrick Hamilton - Hangover Square.

franny glass, Wednesday, 28 March 2007 15:10 (seventeen years ago) link

Recently finished Patricia Highsmith's Ripley Under Ground and Lethem's How We Got Insipid (wispy little collection of two medium stories), now reading World War Z.

Jordan, Wednesday, 28 March 2007 15:44 (seventeen years ago) link

The Ripley books are great but they started to creep me out. Read the 'under water' one.

Michael White, Wednesday, 28 March 2007 20:42 (seventeen years ago) link

On the previous thread I mentioned that I was reading China Mieville's Un Lun Dun - it was fun and entertaining and really damn creative.

Just finished Michael Cox's The Meaning of Night: A Confession - not too bad, not great, think I wasn't in the right mindset for the language (it was overly mannered and I didn't appreciate all of the editorial footnotes).

Now I'm reading Curse of the Narrows by Laura M. Mac Donald, about the explosion in Halifax, NS in 1917 - extremely readable and fascinating (and, for whatever reason, calls to mind David McCullough's The Johnstown Flood).

Jordan - what do you think of World War Z so far?

MsLaura, Wednesday, 28 March 2007 21:54 (seventeen years ago) link

Hangover Square is one of my favourite books, and Patrick Hamilton one of my favourite writers. Nobody does pubs and sad boarding houses quite like him (or anywhere near as funny).

Am reading Maurice Leblanc's "Arsene Lupin, Gentleman-Thief".

The best Ripley book is _probably_ 'Ripley's Game', but they're all great (although the last one is probably the weakest - it felt as though she needed a better ending to the series, but I guess she died before writing it).

James Morrison, Wednesday, 28 March 2007 23:22 (seventeen years ago) link

Harry Matthews-My Life in CIA
Apuleius-The Golden Ass (Robert Graves translation)

C0L1N B..., Thursday, 29 March 2007 06:11 (seventeen years ago) link

Autumn 2007 in the Antipodes!
I'm reading the From Hell comics

badg, Thursday, 29 March 2007 06:19 (seventeen years ago) link

I think the Ripley books are not Highsmith's best, they seem a bit mannered or something compared to:

This Sweet Sickness
The Cry Of The Owl
A Dog's Ransom
Found In The Street

these are my favorites tho I liked the Ripleys (haven't read the last)

m coleman, Friday, 30 March 2007 10:24 (seventeen years ago) link

Hamilton is awesome. His villains are the WORST. I got so mad during The West Pier it took me a month to read it.

franny glass, Friday, 30 March 2007 13:06 (seventeen years ago) link

I loved 'The West Pier' so much. A pity the Gorse books just petered out with the third one, and his career of villainy never hit full stride. The only Hamilton I've not read is his first, 'Monday Morning'. I can't find a copy ANYWHERE!

Am now reading Peter Ho Davies' 'The Welsh Girl', which is a wonderful, very quiet war book (set in Wales in 1944).

James Morrison, Sunday, 1 April 2007 12:28 (seventeen years ago) link

Howl's Moving Castle by Diana Wynne Jones. Much better than the movie.

Virginia Plain, Sunday, 1 April 2007 18:47 (seventeen years ago) link

i'm rereading don delillo's the names - it's still my favourite of his.
next i think i will read catherine bush's third novel, claire's head.

derrrick, Sunday, 1 April 2007 21:38 (seventeen years ago) link

Hamilton fans who haven't seen it should try to get a hold of the BBC dramatisation of "20,000 Streets under the Sky" - very faithful to the novels, and captures their atmosphere better than I would have thought possible on what is obviously a tight budget. Zoe Tapper is a perfect Jenny Maple: the difficult thing to manage is making Bob's obsession with Jenny plausible without making the viewer completely lose sympathy with one or both characters, and I had absolutely no problem believing that Bob would have been besotted (ie I was a bit besotted with her myself). Sally Hawkins's Ella is also beautifully done.

frankiemachine, Monday, 2 April 2007 09:51 (seventeen years ago) link

nope, instead i am reading a paperback on the chernobyl disaster and its impact on the nuclear industry written by a 'team of observer correspondents.' it's fun and scary.

derrrick, Tuesday, 3 April 2007 07:03 (seventeen years ago) link

I finished Pursuit of Power about a week ago. It was a nice combination of erudition and insight, but much more of the former than the latter.

Then I took Beneath the Wheel by Hesse with me on an overnight hike and read about 2/3 of it in my tent while rain pattered a foot or two over my head. As soon as I returned to a world where this was not the only book within 5 miles of me, it became difficult to finish it. I finally did so last night. It was an early work and YACOAN (Yet Another Coming Of Age Novel), and so not his best stuff.

I haven't yet decided on my next book. Too many choices.

Aimless, Tuesday, 3 April 2007 16:57 (seventeen years ago) link

I haven't been on a winning streak recently. I have read Louise Welsh's "The Bullet Trick", which didn't live up to the hype although entertaining enough in a modest way -- like the novelisation of an episode of Jonathan Creek by a slightly better writer than you imagine would take the job. Natsuo Kirino's "Out", I abandoned a couple of hundred pages in, especially disappointing since it was warmly recommended by people who generally like the same things I do: I can see that Kirino has a genuine freshness of perspective, but I found it psychologically implausible and gloomily unpleasant; also annoyingly manipulative in the twisty way thrillers can be. I re-read Vikram Seth's " An Equal Music", which I enjoyed very much when it was first published, but it didn't stand up to rereading. The bits
about the practicalities and politics of being in a string quartet were still fascinating and beautifully done, but the love story was sickly, and I had a strong impression that I was meant to like the adulterous lovers far more than their shallow selfishness would allow.

Much better than any of these was David Mitchell's "Black Swan Green". I seem to remember some indifferent reviews of this, and of course it was surprisingly left off a very dreary Booker shortlist. Quite unfairly so, in my opinion.

Also read recently Paul Griffith's "The String Quartet -- A History", solid criticism but a bit dry. I've also been re-reading Yeats's "Selected Poems". I started with a bit of trepidation, because I'm conscious of a few people who've lost their taste for Yeats despite being fans in their teens or 20s. I needn't have worried though, I like his work as much as I ever did.

frankiemachine, Tuesday, 3 April 2007 17:24 (seventeen years ago) link

Since my last post, I have finished reading the selection of Van Gogh's letters, a biography about Paschal Beverly Randolph, and reread a play by Shakespeare for a class. So, these last few days have been fairly productive by my standards.

Right now, I am stuck in book lingo again, but a trip to the library tomorrow should fix said situation.

mj, Thursday, 5 April 2007 04:07 (seventeen years ago) link

Book Lingo? Limbo? Lingo?

I finished the walk to Hungary, which was generally pleasant (the guy who learned English by reading Shakespeare was fantastic). Now school has started up again. I am not sure what I will read next. Perhaps I too am in Look Bingo.

Casuistry, Thursday, 5 April 2007 05:18 (seventeen years ago) link

'American-Born Chinese' by Gene Luan Yang
'The Revolt of "Mother"' by Mary E Wilkins Freeman
'A Smile of Fortune' by Joseph Conrad
'The Progress of Love' by Alice Munro

James Morrison, Thursday, 5 April 2007 06:44 (seventeen years ago) link

I often wonder how many books people (*real readers*) read per week or per month. I am happy if I can finish one in two weeks if it's a *serious* book. If it's pulp then I usually finish it in a week.

nathalie, Thursday, 5 April 2007 10:44 (seventeen years ago) link

I'm almost through with Delillo's Falling Man--it's much better than I thought it would be. Also raced through Mievelle's Un Lun Dun while waiting for my car to be serviced--it was okay, but not oustanding.

Virginia Plain, Friday, 1 June 2007 22:36 (seventeen years ago) link

MsLaura, "The Necropolis Railway" was great, I thought. It seems to have ended up the start of a series, though I haven't read the others.

James Morrison, Saturday, 2 June 2007 05:06 (seventeen years ago) link

Ken: Ha! Good call. I think the Hindi/Urdu number might be a typo? These numbers don't resemble the ones on, say, Wiki, all that much.

Casuistry, Saturday, 2 June 2007 06:06 (seventeen years ago) link

I can't talk to you right now, Chris, I got to go pick up another batch of library books on reserve, even though I am not returning any of my backlog yet.

James Redd and the Blecchs, Saturday, 2 June 2007 18:23 (seventeen years ago) link

i just finished omensetter's luck and will probably do tarzan of the apes before i go back to moby-dick. also i found another heinlein juvenile second-hand today which will probably come up another fifty pages into melville. i may start a poll as to what should be my next stupidly long book after that, hah.

thomp, Sunday, 3 June 2007 02:41 (seventeen years ago) link

halfway into PKD 'a maze of death'

started george melly 'revolt into style'

finished a bunch of essays on Alain Resnais (the old 'cinema one' paperback by John ward) and a maddening collection of articles written by commie composer Hans Eisler. Really interesting picture of a time.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 3 June 2007 10:19 (seventeen years ago) link

<i>Enduring Love</i> is indeed good. <i>Don Quixote</i>, I could see why it has the reputation it has, but a dull read for me. The Grossman translation doesn't match the hype, but new translations of classics so rarely do. It may improve on re-reading but I'm not particularly minded to try.

I've hardly been reading, going through a patch where music is obsessing me. I skimmed the last 100 pages or so of <i>Carter Beats the Devil</I> after not really giving it a chance, read it in too small chunks over a long period. Now reading Arlington Park, I feel pretty conflicted by Cusk whose massive talent is too much at the mercy of her neurotic gloom.

frankiemachine, Sunday, 3 June 2007 18:24 (seventeen years ago) link

Anyone else read Roberto Bolaño's The Savage Detectives?
I just finished it about 10 minutes, and it's a great read. Good enough to convince me to order By Night in Chile before I was finished reading the first book, just to have it ready to go.

There's a nice article about Bolaño and The Savage Detectives here

Z S, Sunday, 3 June 2007 22:27 (seventeen years ago) link

Just finished 10 minutes AGO, I meant. 2666 is due to be translated into English and published sometime next year, and is supposedly 1100 pages. I can't wait.

Z S, Sunday, 3 June 2007 22:29 (seventeen years ago) link

I haven't read Savage Detectives yet, but By Night in Chile is fantastic. It has one of my favorite last lines of all time.

wmlynch, Sunday, 3 June 2007 23:43 (seventeen years ago) link

I'm picking up the new Miranda July collection today. Just finished the new David Mamet and Christopher Hitchens books (in that order).

Mordechai Shinefield, Monday, 4 June 2007 12:20 (seventeen years ago) link

I have that Miranda July book on request at the library. I will most likely get it some time in 2010.

franny glass, Monday, 4 June 2007 12:46 (seventeen years ago) link

I have the Savage Detectives at home but I can't bear to open it up. Over the weekend I read Iggy Pop: Open Up and Bleed--good summer reading. In that vein, I checked out David Bowie: Living on the Brink, but I think I've already read it.

Virginia Plain, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 04:58 (seventeen years ago) link

Having polished off two more parts of the Russian Revolution, I paused to refresh myself with Glacial Lake Missoula: And Its Humongous Floods by David Alt.

It describes the physical evidence for the existence of a mammoth lake in Montana, half the size of Lake Michigan, that filled behind a series of glacial ice dams, then repeatedly drained itself when the dams broke, releasing all its 500 cubic miles of water in a matter of days. Yes, I said days. That's about as dramatic as geology ever gets, except maybe for supervolcanoes.

Aimless, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 17:06 (seventeen years ago) link

Ooo! I have that book! Dramatic Palouse Falls in eastern Washington is probably the result of it draining.

Jaq, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 17:35 (seventeen years ago) link

I started reading that Iggy bio this weekend and had trouble putting it down, although I haven't finished it yet, when I went to bed on Sunday night I had just gotten to the part where they bulldozed the Fun House.

James Redd and the Blecchs, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 18:59 (seventeen years ago) link

I think I read McPhee talking about that flood. Or something.

I need to decide which books to take on my trip...

Casuistry, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 19:14 (seventeen years ago) link

For a second I read that as "talking about that blood" referring to Iggy's blood.

James Redd and the Blecchs, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 19:16 (seventeen years ago) link

I've been reading Godel, Escher, Bach by Hofstader, and am amazed I put it off for so long.

stet, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 19:26 (seventeen years ago) link

I'm reading Sanatorium Under The Sign Of The Hourglass by Bruno Schulz, a book I've adored immensely over the past few months (including random recommendations to friends, associates, and well-wishers), despite having not yet read past page 50 - I imagine I've committed some sin there, but I can't be bothered to fully analyze my actions.

ALSO, I'M REREADING: The Gift by Vladimir Nabokov - actually I've been opening this up at random over the past few months and basking in whatever passage I come upon. I'm probably up to my fourth readthrough at the moment.

R Baez, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 19:55 (seventeen years ago) link

I've been wondering for the last five years or so, why the hell isn't Sanatorium Under The Sign Of The Hourglass in print?

Jeff LeVine, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 20:17 (seventeen years ago) link

I'm thoroughly addled by that - I had no idea it was out of print (used copy, natch, from the "Writers From The Other Europe" box set released a few decades back).

R Baez, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 20:29 (seventeen years ago) link

Stephen Crane: "Active Service" - excellent

James Morrison, Wednesday, 6 June 2007 08:13 (seventeen years ago) link

if you like Bruno Schultz, read the other genius,most original write from poland (who was also bruno's friend, and also was influenced by Kafka and avant-garde) witold gombrowicz:pornograpfia,cosmos,trans-atlantic,ferdydurke, all masterpieces.the sort of books Nabokov and the south american metaphysics writers (sabato,cortazar..) would have liked (and maybe they did,if they managed to read them).
he has this upgraded vision of the Faust myth, that is originay it's own, and it's fascinating.

about Bolano, i was kinda dissapointed by "night in chile", not as superb as some people said it would be,but "savage detective" and "2666" suppose to be much much better.

Zeno, Wednesday, 6 June 2007 13:08 (seventeen years ago) link

Alice in Sunderland: An Entertainment, a graphic novel by Bryan Talbot just arrived for me. It looks amazing. I love to be the first borrower of a library book, when it is all new and pristine and untouched.

Virginia Plain, Thursday, 7 June 2007 01:10 (seventeen years ago) link

http://www.grahamrawle.com/books_womans/cover.jpg
The rather amazing 'Woman's World' by Graham Rawle, which I'd heard about a while ago, but happened upon in a bookshop yesterday. For those who don't know about it, it's a (proper, somewhat Patricia Highsmith-like) novel constructed entirely from words and phrases cut out of 1960s women's magazines.

Like so: http://www.grahamrawle.com/books_womans/spread-large.jpg

James Morrison, Friday, 8 June 2007 01:21 (seventeen years ago) link

I am all too tempted to say that, when a dog walks on its hind legs, we do not applaud that it does it well, but that it does it at all.

Aimless, Friday, 8 June 2007 16:43 (seventeen years ago) link

Yes, but have you read it? It's actually a very good book even if you read it without the context, and, though I can't say how without giving the plot away, the manner of its production has a real point.

James Morrison, Monday, 11 June 2007 07:23 (seventeen years ago) link

Is that what Dr. Melfi was reading on the penultimate episode of the Sopranos?

James Redd and the Blecchs, Monday, 11 June 2007 15:33 (seventeen years ago) link

the narrator's actually a guy

thomp, Monday, 11 June 2007 19:28 (seventeen years ago) link

n.b. i haven't read it

thomp, Monday, 11 June 2007 19:28 (seventeen years ago) link

is one of the people on this thread julio desouza? does he still come here?

thomp, Monday, 11 June 2007 19:28 (seventeen years ago) link

Btw I watched Notes on a Scandal the other night and thought it was Patricia Highsmithy as fuck.

Jordan, Monday, 11 June 2007 21:35 (seventeen years ago) link

ha i said the same thing after seeing NoaS

m coleman, Tuesday, 12 June 2007 10:13 (seventeen years ago) link

I also watched NoaS the other night and thought it was poor, though many of the problems are there in the novel.

I just didn't believe that Sheba would have had an affair with Connolly, also true of the book, but made worse by Blanchett's never-out-of-your-face glamour and picking such a young looking actor to play Connolly. I also didn't believe that Sheba would have gone to live with Barbara near the end, either in the book or the film.

Dench's performance was good, but in the book Barbara's character is slowly revealed: it takes a bit of time to realise how unreliable a narrator she is, and to work out that she is a monster. Dench is a monster from the start. I'm not sure how much this is Dench's fault and how much the director's.

The lesbianism is also more in-your-face in the film than in the book --in the book Barbara is motivated by loneliness, social aspiration, lust for power, and dimly recognized sexual infatuation in more or less equal measures. They are all present in the film, but the lesbianism dominates.

frankiemachine, Tuesday, 12 June 2007 10:45 (seventeen years ago) link

I finished Zadie Smith's White Teeth, which had its moments - but overall I found it a bit overrated. Maybe three stars. The bits of small-scale observational comedy were better than the quasi-allegorical, portentous sociopolitical plotting that tends to take over in the last third, despite her attempts to keep the tone light and knowing by wink-winking the more obvious improbabilities. She seems to share her weakness in this regard with some other trendy young po-mo writers, like David Foster Wallace, who seem to have absorbed a baleful influence from writers like Pynchon.

o. nate, Tuesday, 12 June 2007 16:08 (seventeen years ago) link

Hello thomp...I come here every now and again, yes.

Just finished this little comp of essays on the politics of music (from the late 80s) that I picked up off the library shelf. A cpl of ok things but the essay on Ligeti ws...I dunno, he didn't even address Ligeti's break from serialism. The essay on minimalism had some of the (usual) unquestioned (not good, that) generalizations of the differences between European and US composition. Couple of ok ones, but I had to give it back so I couldn't re-read.

The 'Art into Pop' by Simon Firth and...somebody else. Nice enough history of the role of the art school in rock and pop, with some discussion of how certain concepts made their way.

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 12 June 2007 17:35 (seventeen years ago) link

Agree about Smith. She's a phenomenal talent, but she under-rates what she's good at (creating psychologically plausible, finely nuanced character) and over-rates the whole baggy po-mo nonsense - I think she feels she HAS to do that kind of thing to be taken seriously, and ends up imitating "big boys" like Rushdie who are not remotely as gifted as she is.

frankiemachine, Tuesday, 12 June 2007 18:25 (seventeen years ago) link

Yes, I agree - it's a strange pass that we've come to in literary history that in order to be taken seriously you have to be strenuously silly, but there we are.

o. nate, Tuesday, 12 June 2007 18:44 (seventeen years ago) link

julio, could i get your email address? i'm t✧✧.w✧✧✧@gm✧✧✧.✧0m. if it's not an imposition i'd like to pick your brains about something related to the london free improv scene. cheers.

-

i don't seem to have read much lately. i read a louis sachar novel.

thomp, Tuesday, 12 June 2007 20:19 (seventeen years ago) link

huh. that's obscured my email address a whole bunch more than i was expecting. why'd it do that?

thomp, Tuesday, 12 June 2007 20:19 (seventeen years ago) link

Yeah, I was wondering how anyone was going to decode that.

I've recently read Herman Hesse's 'The Prodigy', which was OK in a sub-Goethe way, and Gertrude Atherton's 'THe Bell in the Fog'. a collection of her Edwardian/Victorian suspense stories. THe title one is interesting - the central character is patently based on Henry James and his writing 'The Turn of the Screw', and the Henry James analogue develops a frankly creepy obsession with a beuatiful 6yo girl. Good, but odd.

James Morrison, Wednesday, 13 June 2007 01:26 (seventeen years ago) link

i'm reading the second book of the 'prince of nothing' trilogy by r scott bakker. it's very good, but i don't think it looks as good on a book cv as the other reads here. but then i don't read for self improvement.

darraghmac, Thursday, 14 June 2007 03:04 (seventeen years ago) link

Experiencing pure enjoyment can be very self-improving.

James Morrison, Thursday, 14 June 2007 06:07 (seventeen years ago) link

Tom just seen it - as I think I know your surname I've emailed you from an account of mine. Let me know if you get it.

Been having probs w/home internet access so will check back/reply to anything on saturday.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 14 June 2007 17:16 (seventeen years ago) link

The library has 2 of the Updike Rabbit books for me! In the week of not having anything from my hold list, I reread Steinbeck's Sweet Thursday.

Jaq, Friday, 15 June 2007 16:03 (seventeen years ago) link

Soon we shall need a new 'What Are Your Reading' thread for Summer 2007. I am not dissatisfied with this fact.

I plan to the next week camping and hiking, not forgetting to bring many books with me - ratty paperback books that I can read with grubby hands. The Russian Revolution magnum opus I am (still) reading shall not go with me. It is unsuitable for such pastimes, being both nice and pig-enormous. When I return, I shall reveal all.

Aimless, Friday, 15 June 2007 23:30 (seventeen years ago) link

speaking of the Rabbit books, I finally bought the Everyman's version w/ a gift card from xmas and am now mid-Redux and its been a great read so far...really enjoying, though I knew I would to be fair.

skimming through, someone mentioned Adam Rapp's Year of Endless Sorrows a while back. Read it maybe 3+ months ago, did like it quite a bit, can basically only remember hilarious workplace party scene w/ main character escorting bosses' daughter.

johnny crunch, Friday, 15 June 2007 23:54 (seventeen years ago) link

Just finished The Road this morning. It was my first c. mccarthy and I was somewhat disappointed. It was somewhat enjoyable, and a rather quick read, but it all just seemed rather pointless. And I guess I just didn't take to his prose, it seemed a bit boring to me.

Before that was Black Swan Green, which I enjoyed immensely. I was sad when it was over. Most sympathetic narrator evah.

askance johnson, Saturday, 16 June 2007 01:15 (seventeen years ago) link

Has anyone here read and enjoyed The Electric Michelangelo? I had to stop after 60 or so pages because it was all melodramatic, stylistically out-of-control pap. Not a moment could Hall let pass by without adding ornaments to make it profound. Why Hall? Why.

Arethusa, Monday, 18 June 2007 02:14 (seventeen years ago) link


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