Heavens! Look at the Time: What Are You Reading During This Summer of 2017?

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crawling my way thru Tony Tulathimutte's Private Citizens, I think I have like 70 pages left. Came out last year, my dad gave it to me to see what I thought because it was pumped up as another "millennial spokesman" novel. It's like Franzen meets Tao Lin. Also lots of incredibly obvious DFW worship and riffs that are straight out of Infinite Jest. But he's a good prose stylist, very lyrical, lots of really cool turns of phrase. I look forward to reading whatever he puts out next.

― flappy bird, Wednesday, June 14, 2017 2:27 PM (one month ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

im abt 1/3 of the way into this, liking it. the characters are v well realized, i can see it as a film i think

also recently finished o'neill's mourning becomes electra -- p great; not a ton of discussion of o'neill on ILB, i may start a dedicated thread~

johnny crunch, Thursday, 3 August 2017 17:45 (six years ago) link

I just returned from a camping trip, during which I read several books:

Three Tales, Flaubert. I liked A Simple Heart and The Legend of Julian Hospitator, but Herodias seemed much too overwrought, even if it makes a few shrewd observations.

The Public Image, Muriel Spark. This was located right in the center of Spark's strengths. It is not as praised as her other work and my only thought as to why would be that perhaps her audience was not interested in the subject of celebrity.

Human Voices, Penelope Fitzgerald. This is filled with affectionate humor and is clearly centered around memories concerning the wartime BBC that she felt warmly toward. It does not dive as deeply into human nature as The Bookshop or The Blue Flower, but it's very enjoyable.

A is for (Aimless), Tuesday, 8 August 2017 05:52 (six years ago) link

Loved the atmosphere conjured up by Human Voices

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Tuesday, 8 August 2017 07:21 (six years ago) link

The period called The Phony War, after Dunkirk and before the Battle of Britain, must have felt about as surreal as she depicts it.

A is for (Aimless), Tuesday, 8 August 2017 17:30 (six years ago) link

I read The Drifter by Nick Petrie and it was EXCELLENT. Crime novel with Jack Reacher-esque antihero suffering from PTSD. I have the second one too and i'm looking forward to it. Even Lee Child is a fan.

Started The Mote In God's Eye by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle. a CLASSIC that i have never read. Famously, Heinlein said it was the finest SF novel he had ever read. i got the sequel that they wrote 20 years later as well.

scott seward, Tuesday, 8 August 2017 19:27 (six years ago) link

I've loved every book by Fitzgerald except The Blue Flower, and even that one is pretty good.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 8 August 2017 19:34 (six years ago) link

The Nine Tailors by Dorothy L Sayers, my first Lord Peter Wimsey mystery (the title is a campanology reference). Has a great foreword by the author: "From time to time complaints are made about the ringing of church bells. It seems strange that a generation which tolerates the uproar of the internal combustion engine and the wailing of the jazz band should be so sensitive to the one loud noise that is made to the glory of God."

Gulley Jimson (Ward Fowler), Wednesday, 9 August 2017 11:19 (six years ago) link

I've been reading in Seven Viking Romances, a Penguin anthology of old Icelandic lit that clearly has a fantasy-romance element. A Viking romance is nothing like a Harlequin romance. Women play very peripheral roles, while swords and death play a very central role.

A is for (Aimless), Sunday, 13 August 2017 21:42 (six years ago) link

Baba Dunja’s Last Love
Lincoln in the Bardo
Krazy: A Life in Black and White
The Sympathizer

rb (soda), Monday, 14 August 2017 00:29 (six years ago) link

Francois Sagan: Bonjour Tristesse and A Certain Smile. The critical verdict on these seems to stretch from 'works of precocious genius' to 'juvenilia of a writer of significant but unfulfilled promise'. There's plenty of evidence to support both views. I ended up on the fence but the books were short, enjoyable and easy to read.

Elizabeth Jane Howard: The Long View. Early Howard, quite different from the Cazalet novels, the only other books of hers I've read. Her strengths remain pretty constant while the weaknesses change: The Cazalet books sometimes rely on popular fiction tropes to fill the gaps in inspiration; the less inspired bits in The Long View aim at something more self-consciously literary and not all of it comes off. But she's a brilliant psychologist and overall I thought this was pretty magnificent. I've just started The Sea Change, another early one.

Ben Ratliff: The Jazz Ear. Discussions with jazz greats while listening to their choice of music. You'd have to have an interest in jazz to care about it of course but I thought it was pretty great. Lots of unexpected insights. Ratliff's idea that playing some recordings will get musicians to open up works really well.

frankiemachine, Monday, 14 August 2017 21:12 (six years ago) link

the work of art in the age of its technological reproducibility and other writings on media benjamin

-_- (jim in vancouver), Monday, 14 August 2017 21:15 (six years ago) link

I'm reading Paul McGrath's autobio

Well bissogled trotters (Michael B), Monday, 14 August 2017 23:57 (six years ago) link

Holiday reading:

Moriarty, Kim Newman. Revisionist take on Holmes from the baddie's pov but also League Of Extraordinary Gentlemen-like mash-up of all sorts of 19th century genre and literary fiction characters, mostly handled quite reverentially. Lots of silly winks in the chapter titles ("The Hound Of The D'Ubervilles"). I can imagine some people really hating this but I found it clever and funny.
An aborted stab at Léo Henry, Le Diable Est Au Piano", about Corto Maltese meeting Blaise Cendrars in Brazil. Couldn't get with it - maybe 2edgy4me and possibly somewhat racially suspect in its glee for the squalor of the favela, but it's just as likely my beach-addled head wasn't in for something quite this demanding and not in my native tongue, so I went for...
O Espelho Que Foge, Giovanni Papini. Originally picked this up as part of a beautiful Portuguese re-edition of Borge's Library Of Babel project (it has an intro by the man); short stories by a 19th century Italian decadentist, highly influenced by Poe and itself anticipating magical realism and Weird fiction in many ways. Got a bit samey reading one story after the other on a flight, but I do highly recommend this guy - melancholic, poetic, world weary in a way that's evocative of half-abandoned villages in the middle of Summer. Quite spooky, too.

Now I'm reading At The Existencialist Cafe, Sarah Bakewell. She does an extremley good job making some of the more difficult philosophers accessible - which immediatley makes me suspicious, both out of fear that she's being reductionist/dumbing stuff down and (perhaps sadly moreso) because of Tall Poppy Syndrome making me feel that what I SHOULD do is struggle with the original texts and learn to understand them instead. But what the hell, the chances that I'll ever decide to tackle Heidegger are pretty slim at this point and it's dumb to be angry at someone for giving me knowledge.

Daniel_Rf, Tuesday, 15 August 2017 09:25 (six years ago) link

Oh, also Julian Barnes - The Sense Of An Ending, which started out strong but had a crazy melodramatic conclusion that made it difficult for me to take it seriously.

Daniel_Rf, Tuesday, 15 August 2017 09:30 (six years ago) link

The film is quite good, btw.

Frederik B, Tuesday, 15 August 2017 10:01 (six years ago) link

Finished Chehkov's Letters and a collection of Olav Hauge's poetry.

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 15 August 2017 13:13 (six years ago) link

I haven't updated this lately, have I? Good things I've read off the top of my proverbial include a couple of Par Lagerqvists ("Herod and Mariamne" and "Barrabas"), "White Tears" by Hari Kunzru, "All My Puny Sorrows" by Miriam Toews and Damon Krukowski's "The New Analog" about what's changed in moving to a digital world, especially in respect of music and communication. I read "Attrib." by Eley Williams again and I will never stop recommending it.

Tim, Tuesday, 15 August 2017 13:19 (six years ago) link

Art and Illusion, by E. H. Gombrich, from 1960. It looks at visual depiction and the history of artistic styles via early cognitive science. It's very fun.

jmm, Tuesday, 15 August 2017 15:29 (six years ago) link

I've been reading Hugo Ball's diaries, Flight Out of Time, which I had only really known through excerpts in Lipstick Traces and the like; the sections dealing with Zurich Dada and with Emmy Hennings are fascinating, but I wasn't really prepared for how brief they are in relation to Ball's musings on German identity and the harmful consequences of the Protestant Reformation. I also recently read Taylor Mac's anarchic satire Hir: I think it's flatter on the page than it's likely to be in performance, but I can appreciate how it both hollows out and repurposes the tropes of the collapsing nuclear family drama, and how determinedly it resists resolving any of its tensions. I'm also starting Samuel Delany's collection of novellas, Atlantis: Three Tales: its prose is unsurprisingly richly textured so far, but I'm not really far enough into it to comment otherwise.

one way street, Tuesday, 15 August 2017 17:04 (six years ago) link

*(supposedly harmful, obvi)

one way street, Tuesday, 15 August 2017 17:12 (six years ago) link

Chekhov's letters are very entertaining

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Tuesday, 15 August 2017 22:47 (six years ago) link

I read a good review of the slate of recent Henry Green re-prints that have recently come out through NYRB publishing which sparked my interest. I recall there being some messages on the Spring thread about him/them. If anyone has a recommendation on which is a good starting point (he was prolific), I'd be happy to hear!

My wife is reading Delaney's Dhalgren (and also picked up The Jewels of Aptor the other day). Although I've never been as into scifi, he seems super fascinating and someone I'd very much like to read.

Also, re: Damon K - he recently started a podcast, Ways of Hearing, which is very related (I'm guessing he adapted passages from the book for it?) and has been very enjoyable!
https://www.radiotopia.fm/podcasts/showcase

Federico Boswarlos, Wednesday, 16 August 2017 20:13 (six years ago) link

re: Henry Green - Party Going is the starting point imo

re: Chehkov - those are lovely and build an interesting picture. Its well worth reading them alongside Janet Malcolm's book on him as they contain thoughtful (as always) commentary. There are strong moral positions - the case for a principled literature (Zola defending Dreyfus, Tolstoy) that provides a kind of guiding light. The letter to his elder brother on what it is to be cultured (after seeing his behaviour) is also terrific and sets the tone. On a lesser note women are there to look good, there are a few times where he remarks that there are no beautiful women to look at and that's kind of it. I think sometimes he wrote more passionately about Tolstoy than to his wife (although that - as Janet Malcolm and the commentary notes show - its perhaps a marriage that should not have been).

xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 16 August 2017 20:37 (six years ago) link

Oops, meant to write *spate not slate up there. I see Penguin published an omnibus ed with Loving/Living/Party Going, which I'll try and keep an eye out for (thanks for the Party Going rec - looking it up, I came across this ed.).

Still trying to squeeze in a few more shorter books before re-reading Swann's Way and having a go at the rest of A la Recherche. I'm hoping to read Watt by Beckett, Love's Work by Gillian Rose, and perhaps one of these Green ones.

Federico Boswarlos, Wednesday, 16 August 2017 20:55 (six years ago) link

W/ Henry Green you shld start by Concluding

Gulley Jimson (Ward Fowler), Wednesday, 16 August 2017 21:03 (six years ago) link

ketchup on list from previous thread:

• very close now to finishing nicola barker's DARKMANS (in my defence it is quite long)
• found the misplaced copy i did after all have of THE IPCRESS FILE (i now have two, and had not misremembered that i owned only, only that i had started reading it) -- will write up a note or two on the four deightons i read when i have a moment -- ditto the barker when i eventually get there
• finished THE SURGEON OF CROWTHORNE and recommend it, squirmy moment and all: tho i felt it was under-edited (several anecdotes seemed to appear in fragmentary form more than once, in a way that didn't strike me as stylistic) and now and then he reached for a word or an idea i wished he'd been persuaded to drop -- but the basic idea is good and the all-round tale fascinating (i shd add that i embarked on it assuming it was fiction and it took me more pages than it probably should have done to realise that it isn't)
• started and finished eric ambler's THE MASK OF DIMITRIOS (which i thought i'd read before but certainly hadn't)

THE SOT-WEED FACTOR (the original poem) is a weird mix of fascinating (for its uncalculating portrait of pre-revolutionary america) and terrible (as poetry) (the rhyme scheme is like being slapped with a fish)

mark s, Wednesday, 16 August 2017 21:39 (six years ago) link

re: Henry Green - Party Going is the starting point imo

Not my favourite.

*reads further down*

W/ Henry Green you shld start by Concluding

This is my favourite

Wewlay Bewlay (Tom D.), Wednesday, 16 August 2017 21:48 (six years ago) link

I just read a book about the Paris Commune called "Massacre" which depressed me so thoroughly I decided to read Strindberg to lift my spirits but haven't even finished the introduction yet, it's longer than some novels.

Wewlay Bewlay (Tom D.), Wednesday, 16 August 2017 21:54 (six years ago) link

I don't think I have read Concluding (one of 2/3 I haven't) so will give that one a go too.

xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 16 August 2017 22:02 (six years ago) link

All the Green theefers I know or know of are on this page---wherever you dive in, if you like him at all, you're likely to get hooked: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Nothing-Doting-Blindness-Vintage-Classics/dp/0099481480/ref=pd_lpo_sbs_14_t_1/257-1520979-5155141?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1&refRID=HJ31ZK7JCJ8BZ2RBK0AS

dow, Thursday, 17 August 2017 00:50 (six years ago) link

"threefers", I meant.

dow, Thursday, 17 August 2017 00:51 (six years ago) link

my Elena Ferrante Summer concluded, just finished the Neapolitan Quartet. two quotes from The Story of The Lost Child

In what disorder we lived, how many fragments were scattered, as if to live were to explode into splinters.

I realized in a flash that memory was already literature...my book...really was bad, and this was because it was written with obsessive care, because I hadn't been able to imitate the disjointed, unaesthetic, illogical, shapeless banality of things.

Inhaled Dawn Powell's Angels on Toast, next up her Turn, Magic Wheel. currently reading John Williams' Stoner and enduring my son's smirking jokes abt the title

busy bee starski (m coleman), Friday, 18 August 2017 12:24 (six years ago) link

adding to my list above

Cosey Fanni Tutti's ART SEX MAGIC: not very far in, but so far GPO is way more of an arsehole than you maybe imagined (or at least than *i* imagined, having met him a handful of times, when he was charm itself -- i always tended to think he was more sinned against than sinning; now i am a LOT less certain)
Michael Ende's JIM BUTTON AND LUKE THE ENGINE DRIVER -- children's classic from the late 50s (translated from german, where i believe ende is p well known?); rereading to see how it stands up… it's a sweetnatured attempt at a kind of multicultural fable, jim is a black orphan (who i think in later stories goes looking for his parents); he and luke travel to china to help rescue the emperor's daughter from dragons; the china in question is um let's say an ahistorical and fantastical orientalist invention (transparent trees made of glass, food a wild absurdist caricature, ditto its folkways). it's kinda racist, in fact, though there's no malice in it whatever (the general tenor is that people are nice everywhere and shd get along, even if they're from very different backgrounds). easily the best scene is a hermit who lives alone in the desert bcz -- unlike the rest of us, who look smaller the further away they're viewed from, he looks bigger, so is always encountered as a vast giant

mark s, Friday, 18 August 2017 12:48 (six years ago) link

Cosey Fanni Tutti's ART SEX MAGIC: not very far in, but so far GPO is way more of an arsehole than you maybe imagined (or at least than *i* imagined, having met him a handful of times, when he was charm itself -- i always tended to think he was more sinned against than sinning; now i am a LOT less certain)

I talked about it here, Cosey Fanni Tutti: Classic or Dud?

Wewlay Bewlay (Tom D.), Friday, 18 August 2017 13:36 (six years ago) link

(translated from german, where i believe ende is p well known?)

Yeah, remember enjoying these stories as a very small child, despite my parent's aversion to them, which was indeed based on their racial politics (though I'd imagine as much about the book covers, where Jim Knopf had some distinctly gollywog-like features).

Daniel_Rf, Friday, 18 August 2017 14:29 (six years ago) link

jim is handled perfectly acceptably in the illustrations in the edition i have, but the various chinese characters tend to the cartoonish and hence often the problematic

the illustrator, maurice s. dodd, is better known for his strip the perishers

mark s, Friday, 18 August 2017 14:39 (six years ago) link

haha oh well

mark s, Friday, 18 August 2017 14:41 (six years ago) link

Didn't know Dodd had done illustration work outside of The Perishers. He was chiefly the writer on The Perishers, and only took over the artwork too when the (much, much better) artist Dennis Collins retired.

Gulley Jimson (Ward Fowler), Friday, 18 August 2017 14:48 (six years ago) link

Yeah, in the classic German edition I had the art was....not great. https://pictures.abebooks.com/isbn/9783551313065-us-300.jpg

There's been modernized editions with new art though. Researching this I also found out the original book uses the German n word, once, though apparently not with malicious intent (frankly Germany was pretty late in getting rid of it in the public sphere, there was still a popular kind of dessert with the name around when I was a kid).

Daniel_Rf, Friday, 18 August 2017 14:51 (six years ago) link

re dodd: there doesn't seem to be much outside the perishers! the only other books i can find he worked on are jim phelan's waggon-wheels and tony elphick's billykin's first voyage

(neither of which i'd heard of till i started googling)

mark s, Friday, 18 August 2017 15:01 (six years ago) link

> there was still a popular kind of dessert

what did this entail?

(that said, we had (have?) golliwogs on our jam for ever)

koogs, Friday, 18 August 2017 15:53 (six years ago) link

Kinda similar to tea cakes, but people called them "n word kisses". :/

These days I think they just go by the name of the company that makes them, which gloriously enough is called Dickmann's. You can spend a good time on YouTube giggling at the commercials, I know I did:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YLmr_qlVTDM

Daniel_Rf, Friday, 18 August 2017 16:06 (six years ago) link

U.R. Anantha Murthy - Samskara

Really good but finding everything slow-going. You can see why the BJP celebrated his deat. He has no respect with the theocracy they are trying to implement. Although it seems to be working as a book I think it has the makings of a terrific film too (and a film of this was made in the 70s, which I'll try and source)

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 20 August 2017 19:01 (six years ago) link

I finished Seven Viking Romances. There was some small overlap with the more fantastical Arthurian romances, in that a dwarf might appear from time to time or the occasional magic castle, but there is no denying that a Viking's idea of a romantic tale is mainly built around swords hacking at human limbs, ships, plundering, and heavy drinking.

I'm now 2/3rds of the way through Concluding by Henry Green. It has rather a unique flavor to it that is hard to describe briefly. At times it puts me in mind of Cold Comfort Farm, but where CCF is broad and hammers away cheerfully at its targets, Green confines himself to the merest glances and gestures at his characters' absurdity. Everything and everyone is very English, and their mild absurdity contains a lurking tragic note that you can't wholly ignore. I can't offhand think of another book like it.

A is for (Aimless), Thursday, 24 August 2017 00:28 (six years ago) link

You're in for a treat if you've never read Green. Most of his major novels have been republished in sparkling NYROB editions.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 24 August 2017 00:40 (six years ago) link

I recently read a biography of Evelyn Waugh, who was a friend of Green, and I learned that like Waugh, he was a raging Tory. It's funny how quite a few of the modernist-leaning writers of the age were on the Right.

Zelda Zonk, Thursday, 24 August 2017 00:55 (six years ago) link

Still reading the tome-like "Transformation of the World" by Osterhammel. Thought-provoking and informative, though it does contain a lot of sentences like: "Here two things must be distinguished." (actual sentence)

o. nate, Thursday, 24 August 2017 01:39 (six years ago) link

The only other Green I've read was his very first novel, Blindness about a year ago. A bit odd that my next one is his very last novel, but that is how it fell out. There are ample clues to his Tory leanings sprinkled through Concluding, where mentions of The State are invariably biting or bitter.

A is for (Aimless), Thursday, 24 August 2017 01:42 (six years ago) link

I recently read a biography of Evelyn Waugh, who was a friend of Green, and I learned that like Waugh, he was a raging Tory. It's funny how quite a few of the modernist-leaning writers of the age were on the Right.

― Zelda Zonk, Wednesday, August 23, 2017

Amis too. All my favorite terse British novelists (I've no idea about Scottish-born Spark).

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 24 August 2017 01:42 (six years ago) link


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