Javier Marìas

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (71 of them)

(and now i have finished it i have gone back and read the thread --)

re: the continuities with other books: all souls (which i just ordered) is apparently about all the oxford types that deza mentions in the first section -- nb. i am kind of glad i waited until i had met some oxford types to start reading this, ha -- and dark back of time is a gloss on all souls that sort of leads into this

what i hadn't seen mentioned was that custardoy is all over a heart so white: the character that luisa's sister-in-law calls to get the scoop on him is that book's narrator, and what he explains about custardoy is all stuff he mentions directly there. it was kind of weird to see him showing up, actually. -- but i wonder if that accounted at all for my not thinking the third book sagged at all. -- also possibly that i went directly into reading it from the second, so i wasn't reading it as anything but one big, long novel (and it really seems like the natural break between books, if there were to be one, would fall at the end of 'poison'). -- but shadow seemed to be kind of implacable in terms of, this is how this would have to happen - a logic of structure that couldn't not go any other way, given how everything's been framed. (whereas farewell seemed to go back to being way more human and having some room for chance operation, rather than, er, self-perpetuating narrative permutation (which n.b. i'm not saying is a bad structural principle in any way))

'permutation' -- i kept waiting to see if the recurring line about 'my fever, my spear, my dance and dream' (etc) would ever show up with all seven ducks lined up in a row, which i guess i'm glad it didn't -- also i was curious about his choice of 'spear', which seems to be lacking the metaphorical freight of the other six (unless it has some other weight in spanish, though i feel like jull costa would have glossed that somewhere): and then it shows up in an incredibly literal fashion

likewise i was amazed (given how he seems to be, normally, with his titles, and his running lit. quotes - 'a heart so white' must directly reference the scene in macbeth it gets its title from a dozen times) at how casually 'your face tomorrow' was glossed eight hundred pages -- & curious whether anything is to be made of the switch from 'thy' to 'your', given how much weight there is here on 'usted' and 'tu' (and 'mr tupra' and 'bertram' and 'bertie', amongst all the others)

desperado, rough rider (thomp), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 22:39 (twelve years ago) link

also i am very curious who people pictured dick dearlove as whilst reading

desperado, rough rider (thomp), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 22:40 (twelve years ago) link

i did not know that, about his other novels being connected. well i knew about 'all souls' but not the others

(_()_) (Lamp), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 22:45 (twelve years ago) link

thread making me think I shd read this + Machen & Gawsworth links, right?

The Winged Devil Ape (Fizzles), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 18:12 (twelve years ago) link

Just read 'While the Women are Sleeping', his short story collection, because of this thread, as not feeling strong enough atm for a huge trilogy

Really enjoyed it, even if a couple of the stories left me a bit bewildered as to what actually happened.

He has this lovely urbane, witty, charming Spanish thing going on, rather like Alberto Manguel, and sometimes Borges. And a bit like Robert Louis Stevenson (ans the Spanish bit), who I'm pretty sure Borges, Manuel and Marias are big fans of.

Not only dermatologists hate her (James Morrison), Sunday, 19 February 2012 23:47 (twelve years ago) link

Gawsworth MAY show up in a story in While the Women are Sleeping, btw

Not only dermatologists hate her (James Morrison), Sunday, 19 February 2012 23:48 (twelve years ago) link

Gawsworth MAY show up in a story in While the Women are Sleeping, btw

Oh yeah, I just remembered that - through the window of the retail store, I think.

OWLS 3D (R Baez), Monday, 20 February 2012 02:32 (twelve years ago) link

gawsworth is mentioned in all souls, which is proving to be easily the most genuine oxford novel i have yet encountered

desperado, rough rider (thomp), Monday, 20 February 2012 02:37 (twelve years ago) link

All right, all right, I may have to give this guy another chance. Still have a copy of Dark Back of Time, maybe I will reread All Souls first.

Dalai Mixture (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 20 February 2012 02:51 (twelve years ago) link

Perfectly alright to read Dark Back first, I'd say. That was my first Marias, the one that hooked me.

Doesn't get mentioned much, but The Man Of Feeling is a splendid book. Less bound to digression, more Nabokovian.

OWLS 3D (R Baez), Monday, 20 February 2012 16:28 (twelve years ago) link

All Souls has a scene in which (like A Heart So White, and Your Face Tomorrow too kind of) an interpreter makes up his own questions during an interrogation of some kind; also, like the latter, a disquisition on how the word 'eavesdrop' doesn't exist in Spanish

desperado, rough rider (thomp), Monday, 20 February 2012 20:49 (twelve years ago) link

three years pass...

oh to have time to reread these

♛ LIL UNIT ♛ (thomp), Sunday, 19 July 2015 04:21 (eight years ago) link

Vaster than empires and more slow

Crawling From The Blecchage (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 19 July 2015 07:43 (eight years ago) link

one year passes...

You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.