2018 Springtime For ILB: My Huggles. What Are You Reading Now?

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(that's how I remember Light Years)

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 19 June 2018 00:55 (five years ago) link

I'm not sure those other guys deserve all the trouble they get either.

o. nate, Tuesday, 19 June 2018 01:04 (five years ago) link

Yeah, not as widely read and not as self-regarding.

Uncle Redd in the Zingtime (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 19 June 2018 01:24 (five years ago) link

I read Patrimony by Philip Roth a few weeks ago, my first Roth book (thanks to Alfred for putting the idea in my head that this should be the first one I checked out). Roth in autobiographical mode, with his father as subject, sounded more inviting to me than any of the novels. I found it moving and, in places, startlingly intimate. The ending made me cry of course. I've lost a parent to cancer, so a lot of it resonated with that experience. Herman Roth is so much like one of my grandfathers that I wound up thinking just as much about what it was like losing him.

jmm, Tuesday, 19 June 2018 01:38 (five years ago) link

xp Evelina is hysterically funny and sharp, and pretty rough. There's real violence, sexual harassment, ogling men around every corner.

abcfsk, Tuesday, 19 June 2018 08:07 (five years ago) link

Yeah, there are a couple of scenes where she's alone, and drunken men in packs are coming up at her, and the menace is really well captured. For a comic novel it is amazingly good on the feeling of being powerless.

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Tuesday, 19 June 2018 11:03 (five years ago) link

After a week of bloody naval warfare, for my next book I chose something where the battles are more sedate: Barchester Towers, A. Trollope, wherein High Church and Low Church clerics politely vie for social supremacy, unsheathing their well-manicured claws at one another, while the reader is invited to look on in fascinated amusement.

A is for (Aimless), Tuesday, 19 June 2018 17:15 (five years ago) link

Cesare Pavese: The Beautiful Summer -- wonderful book, lovely cover, but Penguin also fail to give the translator's name and seem to have printed the actual pages on crappy old newsprint and then charged 8 quid for it

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Wednesday, 20 June 2018 00:35 (five years ago) link

HALT! Are you aware that a summer reading thread has begun at 2018 Summer: A Loaf of Bread, a Jug of Wine, and What Are You Reading?, and if not, why not?

A is for (Aimless), Saturday, 23 June 2018 17:51 (five years ago) link


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