Nu-ILB: What books have you purchased lately?

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Just ordered...
* The new Ian McEwan
* 'It Rhymes With Lust' by Arnold Drake, allegedly the first proper graphic novel, a noir muystery from the 1950s
* 'Missing' by Walter de la Mare

James Morrison, Monday, 26 March 2007 03:35 (eighteen years ago)

So there was a sale on theory this week at my school's book store and I went hog wild:

Jaques Derrida - Dissemination, Acts of Religion, Margins of Philosophy, Writing and Difference, Spectres of Marx
Slavov Zizek - The Sublime Object of Ideology
Michel Foucault - Society Must Be Defended, Madness & Civilization
Gilles Deleuze - Anti-Oedipus, What is Philosophy (with Felix Guattari); Nietzsche & Philosophy
Guy Debord - The Society of Spectacle
Georges Bataille - The Tears of Eros, The Accursed Share (Vols. II & III)
Judith Butler - Gender Trouble
Jaques Lacan - Ecrits
Walter Benjamin - Illuminations, Reflections
Jean-Luc Nancy - Being Singular Plural
Giorgio Agamben - The State of Exception, The Coming Community
Roland Barthes - Image - Music - Text
Jean Baudrillard - Simulacra & Simulation

So far I've read a lot of the Benjamin essays and most of Dissemination, plus paged through The Tears of Eros. I have so much more to read, though!

max, Monday, 26 March 2007 15:29 (eighteen years ago)

Now do that twice a week, and you'll be Josh before you know it.

Casuistry, Monday, 26 March 2007 17:09 (eighteen years ago)

also homeless

max, Monday, 26 March 2007 17:31 (eighteen years ago)

it's always a little difficult in a foreign country, but i think i did alright:

mr. muo's travelling couch - dai sijie
lovesick blues: the life of hank williams - paul hemphill

jergïns, Monday, 2 April 2007 14:25 (eighteen years ago)

Dead Souls (Penguin Classics) - Nikolai Gogol; Paperback

The Pursuit of Oblivion: A History of Narcotics, 1500-2000 - Richard Davenport-Hines; Paperback

Criminal History of Mankind - Colin Wilson; Hardcover


These are in my Amazon.co.uk basket awaiting to be ordered. HURRAH!

nathalie, Monday, 2 April 2007 14:55 (eighteen years ago)

Good haul this weekend, all used except for the Harry Matthews:

George Saunders-Pastoralia
George Saunders-Civilwarland in Bad Decline
Clifford Geertz-The Interpretation of Cultures
Balzac-Histoire de la Treize
Mitchell Duneier-Sidewalk
Warren Lehrer and Judith Sloan-Crossing the BLVD
Marguerite Duras-The Ravishing of Lol Stein
William Vollmann-The Rainbow Stories
Harry Matthews-Cigarettes

C0L1N B..., Monday, 2 April 2007 15:30 (eighteen years ago)

From the Country of Eight Islands: An Anthology of japanese Poetry, edited and translated by Hiroaki Sato and Burton Watson, used hardcover with a nice dust jacket, U. of Washington Press, 1981, US$15.00.

Letters From My Windmill, Alphonse Daudet, used Penguin paperback, US$1.29.
Eyeless in Gaza, Aldous Huxley, used paperback with a eye-gougingly hideous cover, US$1.29.
The Sons, Franz Kafka, used paperback collection of four short stories, US$0.50.
Pragmatism and other Essays, William James, used paperback, US$0.50.

Aimless, Monday, 2 April 2007 17:15 (eighteen years ago)

Letters From My Windmill, Alphonse Daudet, used Penguin paperback, US$1.29.

That's ace. Also read his 'In the Land of Pain', which is absorbing stuff about his suffering from syphilis, translated by Julian Barnes.

James Morrison, Tuesday, 3 April 2007 01:10 (eighteen years ago)

catherine bush, claire's head

derrrick, Tuesday, 3 April 2007 08:34 (eighteen years ago)

On the weekend I bought a teeny little 100-page book of WH Auden poems selected by John Fuller. And the latest issue of 'Descant', which is good for before bed.

franny glass, Wednesday, 4 April 2007 00:37 (eighteen years ago)

two weeks pass...
I have been buying books, even as other ILBers have been cutting back on the habit. Luckily for me, I also sell them.

The True Dharma Eye: Zen Master Dogen's Three Hundred Koans, with commentary and verse by John Daido Loori, new hardbound, $40(!). Also known as the Mana Shobogenzo. I so rarely buy new expensive books that this is a radical departure for me. I've been eyeing this for months. This is quite simply the best collection of Zen stories and commentary I have ever seen. Better than The Blue Cliff Record. Highly recommended if you are interested in Zen.

Life With Father by Clarence Day, used hardcover, $1. An old warhorse from a much different world than today.

Aimless, Sunday, 22 April 2007 17:24 (eighteen years ago)

This was the weekend of the Seattle library booksale. The withdrawal pains were severe, and early morning attendance at the EMP pop conference did not offer much relief.

Jaq, Sunday, 22 April 2007 23:13 (eighteen years ago)

I can't remember'em all. But I do remember buying:

martin amis' money
adventures of sherlock holmes
ballard's crash
paluhniak's haunted
fowles' the collector

and a few others. shit, i can't remember!

nathalie, Thursday, 26 April 2007 11:58 (eighteen years ago)

Also, Max is where I was a few years ago. :-)

nathalie, Thursday, 26 April 2007 11:59 (eighteen years ago)

Uh, another post, sorry:

drop city – t.c. boyle

any good? i noticed this at the store.

nathalie, Thursday, 26 April 2007 11:59 (eighteen years ago)

Peter S. Beagle - The Last Unicorn (huh, the back cover of this has NO text. No blurbs, no brief summery, no "by the author of"... nothing! The unicorn on the cover has a goatee. The tree on the cover looks like it's made of potatoes)
Terry Pratchett - The Light Fantastic
Terry Pratchett - The Colour of Magic (I suspected earlier that I should be able to build a complete Discworld collection through used books stores. Looks like I was right. I've yet to find any of the recent books though)
James Knowlson - Damned To Fame: The Life of Samuel Beckett (I tend to steer clear of biographies, but the blog [Removed Illegal Link] made me want to read this)
Thukydides - The Peloponnesian War (I'm not going to go look up how that's spelled in English)

Øystein, Saturday, 5 May 2007 13:19 (eighteen years ago)

Bloody hell. The link was supposed to be to the blog Anecdotal Evidence: http://evidenceanecdotal.blogspot.com

Øystein, Saturday, 5 May 2007 13:20 (eighteen years ago)

book on cooking techniques.

nathalie, Saturday, 5 May 2007 16:47 (eighteen years ago)

The Most of S.J. Perelman, in hardcover, used, for $2.
Europe Central, William Vollmann, used trade paperback (but like new condition), $3.
Jaguars Ripped My Flesh, Tim Cahill, used trade paperback, $1.
Thunder Over the Ochoco: Vol. II Distant Thunder, Gale Ontko, used paperback, $1. This is a history of early Oregon (this volume covers 1842-1858), with prominence given to the native American side of the story.

Aimless, Saturday, 5 May 2007 17:53 (eighteen years ago)

Sometimes when Aimless posts I play "name the bookstore". I mean those seem to be sub-Goodwill prices!

Anyway I'm reading the latest Peanuts doodah as well as the introduction to Dryden's translation of the Aeneid.

Casuistry, Saturday, 5 May 2007 21:21 (eighteen years ago)

Oh except this is the PURCHASED thread. I PURCHASED that Peanuts book (along Kochalka's American Elf 2) but not the Aeneid.

Casuistry, Saturday, 5 May 2007 21:22 (eighteen years ago)

You are right to surmise I have a bookstore source that is cheaper than Goodwill. As I have little fear that you will troll it as frequently as I do, thereby snatching away the very books I covet, I shall reveal it now. It is run by the local Friends of the Library, is run by volunteers, in donated space, with donated books or culls from the library as the stock. So, every penny spent there is pure gravy that can be donated directly to the library for new purchases to the collection - so I benefit twice from all my purchases there.

It is called "Booktique" and it has limited hours of operation, but it is only a kilometer from my house, so I can troll it rather often. I'm pretty picky about what I buy, even with the low-low-low prices.

Aimless, Sunday, 6 May 2007 00:42 (eighteen years ago)

It has been a while since I visited Title Wave, which rarely has anything as good as your finds, but the prices are the same (and the library connection, for those reading from outside the Portland area).

The local eco-friendly coupon book (an alternative to the Entertainment books that your real estate agent will give you as a gift if you buy a house) had a coupon for $5 of free books at Title Wave, which kinda terrified me -- why on earth would I not want to give Title Wave that $5?! Who would redeem such a coupon?!

Casuistry, Sunday, 6 May 2007 01:50 (eighteen years ago)

God, is there a better part of the U.S. than the Pacific Northwest for book-buying?

C0L1N B..., Sunday, 6 May 2007 04:08 (eighteen years ago)

I just bought a used copy of Niall Ferguson's "Colossus: The Rise and Fall of American Empire" thinking it was something different that it was. The bookstore clerk (it was a pretty lefty bookstore) did give me a funny look, I thought. Now I'm wondering whether it will still make an interesting read, though I'm already finding the preface's dance around the failures of Bush foreign policy more than a bit irritating.

Hurting 2, Sunday, 6 May 2007 04:26 (eighteen years ago)

Just bought a bunch of remainders...

Lady Gregory: Selected Writings
Dreiser: Jennie Gerhardt
Antin: The Promised Land
Dreiser: Sister Carrie
Mackenzie: Sinister Street (Twentieth-Century Class $5.49
Maugham: Collected Short Stories Vol 2
Gaddis: JR

James Morrison, Monday, 7 May 2007 00:19 (eighteen years ago)

Ooooh JR is AWESOME.

franny glass, Monday, 7 May 2007 14:09 (eighteen years ago)

It looks both cool and forbidding - hundreds of huge pages of teeny-tiny type. I must brace myself.

James Morrison, Tuesday, 8 May 2007 02:37 (eighteen years ago)

JR is AMAZING and yet I haven't been able to finish it - I hit a rough patch about 150 pages in where I was starting to lose the thread of what was going on and have had trouble getting back to it. Maybe we can try to help each other out.

Hurting 2, Tuesday, 8 May 2007 02:55 (eighteen years ago)

I had a few friends who were going to read it with me and they all bailed even before I did.

Hurting 2, Tuesday, 8 May 2007 02:56 (eighteen years ago)

That Awful Mess on the Via Merulana - Carlo Emilio Gadda

The Savage Detectives: A Novel - Roberto Bolano

Demons - Fyodor Dostoevsky

Mother's Milk - Edward St. Aubyn

I almost bought Jostein Gaarder's Sophie's World but I left it for another time.

Arethusa, Friday, 11 May 2007 04:08 (eighteen years ago)

Oh, the horripilification of it! In the past few days I have purchased not one, but two gigantic histories - one 958 pp.and the other 848 pp., and those counts exclude the back matter!

The Civil War: A Narrative: Fredericksburg to Meridian, Shelby Foote. It's a huge paperback and even then only comprises a third or so of the whole history. It is exceptionally clearly written and crammed with interest, but is up to its eyebrows in details, details, and more details. US$2.00.

A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution 1891-1924, Orlando Figes. Trade paper in like new condition, US$5.00. If the jacket blurbs and the pile of minor awards are to be believed, this book might even make this period of Russian history somewhat comprehensible. If so, then I may grow ever so wise, even as I grow old while plowing through it.

Aimless, Friday, 18 May 2007 00:26 (eighteen years ago)

That's the middle one of the Shelby Footers, isn't it? I bought them for my dad a while ago. I remember thinking that he was maybe a bit pro-Southern... the stuff in the first book about how Jefferson Davis would only punish any of his slaves after they had been convicted by a jury of their peers struck me as being a bit O RLY. And in the volume you have he never even mentions Joshua Chamberlain at the battle of Gettysburg.

Sorry, that's my inner nerd coming out.

The Figes book is great crack. Maybe I should read it from cover to cover some time.

The Real Dirty Vicar, Sunday, 20 May 2007 08:48 (eighteen years ago)

IR buy with birthday book tokens:

William Dalrymple's The Last Mughal, about the last Mughal Emperor and the Indian mutiny. I get the impression that this book will be a bit sadface. I've been meaning to read something by Dalrymple for a while, and am currently on an India kick (having just finished Mike Dash's Thug

Alan George's Jordan, a book about the country of Jordan. I am not *that* interested in Jordan, given that it is a boring country made up of leftover bits of other countries, but I found Alan George's book on Syria very interesting.

The Real Dirty Vicar, Sunday, 20 May 2007 08:51 (eighteen years ago)

two textbooks!
the resettlement of british columbia: essays on colonialism and geographic change by cole harris
and a double issue of bc studies from 1997/98.

derrrick, Monday, 21 May 2007 03:11 (eighteen years ago)

We had a Vancouverite poet read tonight, and I liked her work. N@talie Simps0n.

Casuistry, Monday, 21 May 2007 05:49 (eighteen years ago)

I seem to be on an east Asian religion bender lately. Yesterday I bought:

The Diamond Sutra, translated by Red Pine, with extensive commentaries, from Sanskrit and Chinese. Trade paperback in excellent condition. It was US$14.00 at Powell's, but I had $13.50 in trade and I used that.

The Book of Tea, Okakuro Kakuzo, used hardcover in a slipcase, a bit warped, but in decent shape. This is one of the older Tuttle editions that were printed in Japan. I owned this long ago and I don't exactly consider it indispensible, but it was nice to find a cheap (US$3.00) copy in OK condition.

Aimless, Monday, 21 May 2007 16:54 (eighteen years ago)

i do not know that poet, but will recognise her name now if i see it!

i had a good day at value villiage:
-"night of the shooting star" by dan vipond. a 1970's conspiracy/thriller, set entirely in the canadian wilderness!
-"fellowship of the stars", a 1974 sci-fi anthology focused on "the friendship between humans and beings from other dimensions"
-"the tent peg", by aritha van herk. western canadian lit, about misfits ending up in the yukon.
-"survival: a thematic guide to canadian literature", by margaret atwood. a classic and a steal at $1.99
-"roadside empire: how the chains franchised america" by stan luxenburg. from 1985, all about the historical development of franchising in the US and the subsequent effect on cultural expectations.
-"act of faith: an illustrated history of the reform party" - a 1991 history of the western-based PC splinter that became canada's official opposition by 1997 and, in a vague sense, is currently in government.

derrrick, Tuesday, 22 May 2007 03:39 (eighteen years ago)

one month passes...

I bought 2 Coetzees today, 'Waiting for the Barbarians' which is one of my favourites, and 'The Life and Times of Michael K' which I've not read before. Also 'Pale Fire' because I don't own a copy and was feeling rich.

franny glass, Tuesday, 26 June 2007 03:30 (eighteen years ago)

Also 'Pale Fire' because I don't own a copy and was feeling rich.

Damn good excuse.

R Baez, Tuesday, 26 June 2007 19:22 (eighteen years ago)

I prefer to think of it as a rationale.

franny glass, Thursday, 28 June 2007 01:22 (eighteen years ago)

A remainder-fest:

Pocket Guide to the Apocalypse, and Parasites Like Us (can't remember either author, but looked promising)
Mark Salzman: The Soloist, The Laughing Sutra
Robert Frost:Early Poems
The Letters of Sacco & Vanzetti
Somerset Maugham: Mrs. Craddock, The Razor's Edge
Hesse: Siddhartha (I'll probably regret this one, even at $3)
Hannah Arendt: Between Past and Future
DH Lawrence: England, My England and Other Stories
Iris Murdoch: The Good Apprentice, The Bell
Pynchon: Vineland
DuBois: The Souls of Black Folk
Conrad: `Twixt Land and Sea
Garland: A Son of the Middle Border

James Morrison, Thursday, 28 June 2007 02:35 (eighteen years ago)

I visited my favorite cheapie bookstore today and came away with:

One Man's Meat, E.B. White, a collection of essays from the WWII years and just prior. A 1944 "new and enlarged' edition, hardcover with dust jacket, in good shape, $3.

Saints and Strangers, George F. Willision, in a 1945 hardcover edition, $1. This is a history of the Pilgrims of Plymouth Colony, starting from their days in England, up through exile in Holland and the voyage to North America. It seems to paint a pretty realistic picture of them.

The Golden Casket: Chinese Novellas of Two Millenia{, tr. into English by Christopher Levenson, from a German translation from the original Chinese. (Whew!) This is a used Penguin paperback in marginal condition and I don't think it ever sold very well, because I've never seen it before today. It seemed worth a tumble for 50 cents.

Aimless, Thursday, 28 June 2007 02:42 (eighteen years ago)

Beauty and Sadness - Kawabata Yasunari
The Stain in the Snow - Georges Simenon
Breakfast with the Ones you Love - Eliot Finushel
Alphabet of Thorn - Patricia McKillip
Varieties of Disturbances - Lydia Davis
Call Me By Your Name - Andre Aciman

Arethusa, Thursday, 28 June 2007 03:47 (eighteen years ago)

Lonely (or is it Lovely?) Bones. Seems to be good.
Fast Food Nation (for less than 3 dollars!)
Cheap ass chicken recipe book (less than a dollar!)
Children Recipe book

nathalie, Saturday, 30 June 2007 09:31 (eighteen years ago)

I traded a bunch of books at Powell's yesterday and used up some of my credit to upgrade my paperback copy of The Dream Songs by John Berryman, to a used hardcover copy. It is a first printing (which I don't care about) in standard condition, and was heavily marked in pencil by the previous owner, so it was marked down to $15 from an overly optimistic $30. I have been busily erasing the pencil markings.

I also picked up a nice harcover edition of The Book of the City of Ladies by Christine de Pisan and translated by Earl Richards. It was only $7.

Earlier this week I picked up a used copy of Ernie Pyle's posthumously published Home Country for $1. It's a just cobbled-together rehash of his journalism from before WWII, but I enjoy Pyle's style and observations, just as his millions of loyal newspaper readers did, so it's fine by me. He was another of those Indiana boys who mastered typing, like Vonnegut.

Aimless, Sunday, 1 July 2007 17:36 (eighteen years ago)

Bookmooched recently:

Jose Ortega y Gasset - History as a System
Christopher Lasch - Revolt of the Elites

o. nate, Tuesday, 3 July 2007 15:36 (eighteen years ago)

Impulse bought Someday I Will Be Invincible by Austin Grossman and that Miranda July book, borrowing the new Arthur Philips and Consider the Lobster.

Jordan, Tuesday, 3 July 2007 15:38 (eighteen years ago)

I do like that Book of the City of Ladies.

I think I am off to the Strand now.

Casuistry, Tuesday, 3 July 2007 20:09 (eighteen years ago)

First update in a while.

Euclides Da Cunha - Backlands
Cristina Campo - The Unforgivable and Other Writings
William Gass - On Being Blue
Jean Genet - The Criminal Child (Selected Essays)
Celine - War
Arthur Schnitzler - Fraulein Else
Domenico Starnone - The House on Via Gemito
Jean Renoir - La Grande Illusion
Elfriede Jelinek - Children of the Dead

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 29 August 2024 07:00 (ten months ago)

K Punk Mark Fisher
The Dalek Handbook
Race and Racism Bernard R. Boxill
My Life So Far Jane Fonda
Power: A Radical View Steven Lukes
To Explain the World: The Discovery of Modern Science Steven Weinberg
Costume and Fashion: A Concise History James Laver

Stevo, Thursday, 29 August 2024 08:46 (ten months ago)

local book sale, all $2 or less

Ferrante - My Brilliant Friend
Wilkerson - The Warmth of Other Suns (#1 and #2 on that NYTimes list)
Tuchman - The Proud Tower, essays covering the era before WW1
Mahfouz - Palace Walk
Updike - Rabbit Run
N.K. Jemisin - Inheritance Trilogy, a massive 1400 page paperback
Dreiser - Sister Carrie, norton critical edition
DeLillo - The Names
Osman - The Thursday Murder Club

master of the pan (abanana), Friday, 30 August 2024 05:25 (ten months ago)

i have been on an austerity program and not buying and trying to read some of the hundreds of friggin' books that i own and haven't read. which can be difficult now that there is an ace book store next door to my house! but it must be done. EXCEPT i did buy books for the store. i needed some new color in the place and i bought three boxes of wholesale books for the front window. its back to school season after all. soooo, i did cop a few for myself. the last Joe Ide crime novel. the last Nick Petrie crime novel. a nice hardcover of Oil! by Upton Sinclair. 2 and 3 of Vernon Subutex (i haven't even read 1 that i've had forever.). What Are You Going Through and A Feather On The Breath Of God by Sigrid Nunez because you guys keep talking about her. and the latest S.A. Cosby crime novel.
there. not too greedy. bought around 80 books for the store. some fun stuff. some art books. some music autobios. sly. richard thompson. raekwon.

scott seward, Tuesday, 10 September 2024 23:50 (nine months ago)

and then i look on a shelf and notice that i already own that nick petrie book. so, the one i got today goes back to the store.

scott seward, Tuesday, 10 September 2024 23:52 (nine months ago)

I got my maiden xpost S.A. Cosby: his latest, All The Sinners Bleed, from library, and was disappointed, esp. considering all the awards that his books have won and been nominated for, incl. this one---about which, in case that's what you actually paid money for, I'll just say don't expect too much---and maybe you'll be pleasantly surprised!

dow, Wednesday, 11 September 2024 03:26 (nine months ago)

oops, you said his latest.

dow, Wednesday, 11 September 2024 03:28 (nine months ago)

George Eliot - The Lifted Veil and Brother Jacob
Christopher Isherwood - Goodbye to Berlin

a mysterious, repulsive form of energy that permeates the universe (ledge), Wednesday, 18 September 2024 19:55 (nine months ago)

free library find yesterday: an old school panther paperback of john o'hara's a rage to live with a very young looking ben gazzara on the cover

no lime tangier, Wednesday, 18 September 2024 21:21 (nine months ago)

I have pre-ordered a large book by Bioy Casares on Borges, but it will not be published until next year.

alimosina, Friday, 20 September 2024 16:56 (nine months ago)

two weeks pass...

I bought books for the first time in a long time. It was my birthday this week so I felt like I owed myself something after one long crappy summer. I bought books online from Barnes & Noble! For the first time ever! I bought seven books by Daniel Woodrell ENTIRELY based on the say so of Meghan Abbott. She says he's great. So, what the hell. Who am I to argue?
Today my pal Ray had his monthly media sale next door to my house. Can you say 22 cardboard gaylords of books weighing, like, a thousand pounds apiece and every book inside is 50 cents for you the consumer? Nothing like digging thru huge boxes of books with old men outside on a beautiful fall day. He gave me a deal and I got 26 books for 10 bucks. Mostly paperbacks.

colette - cheri/the last of cheri
edith wharton - the house of mirth (own but i know not where and this way i can have one handy to look in.)
robert musil - the man without qualities - book one (i'll never read it and its only one part but i felt like reading in it.)
margaret drabble - a summer bird-cage
jean rhys - quartet
david freedberg - the eye of the lynx
patricia dizenzo - an american girl (first - only probably - edition of 1971 american teen slice of life novel.)
doris lessing - briefing for a descent into hell (nice 1st american hardcover with dust jacket and i've avoided doris lessing all my life for some reason.)
editor, janet sternburg - the writer on her work - essays by anne tyler, joan didion, erica jong, maxine hong kingston and more on being a woman and being a writer.
harrison kinney - james thurber - his life and times (it's over a thousand pages so there is no way...but will be so much fun to dip into.)
colette - the complete claudine
may sarton - journal of a solitude
albert camus - notebooks 1935-1942
colette - my mother's house/sido
doris lessing - the summer before the dark
james r. mellow - charmed circle - gertrude stein & company
gertrude stein - 3 lives
may sarton - the house by the sea
may sarton - mrs. stevens hears the mermaids singing
diane johnson - lying low
jean rhys - tigers are better-looking
margaret drabble - the waterfall
diana trilling - reviewing the forties
edith warton - a backward glance
yuri olesha - envy
orrin keepnews and bill grauer, jr - a pictorial history of jazz (hardcover with dust cover. 1957 3rd printing of the 1955 book. the bookmark in it is a mailer/pamphlet from Birdland heralding their 6th anniversary complete with 3 cent stamp.)

my exciting finds though - uh, exciting to me - came earlier in the week. got a nice 1st hardcover edition from 1885 of A Marsh Island by Sarah Orne Jewett, early edition of Deephaven by SOJ, and a beautiful 1893 1st edition of A Native Of Winby And Other Tales by SOJ.

scott seward, Saturday, 5 October 2024 04:04 (nine months ago)

I have pre-ordered a large book by Bioy Casares on Borges, but it will not be published until next year.

― alimosina, Friday, 20 September 2024 bookmarkflaglink

Really looking forward to that book.

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 5 October 2024 07:01 (nine months ago)

colette - my mother's house/sido
Exclaiming about this on recent WAYR?: short pieces, floral, spring-loaded,c'est un trip. As satisfying to me as the best of Proust, and so concentrated.
Really liked Stein's 3 Lives, but so long ago can't commit w/o re-reading; some racial "dialect" might be too distracting now, in that tricky early 20th Century white lit way. (That would be in "Melanctha," traditionally the most highly regarded story in there, I think.)

dow, Sunday, 6 October 2024 19:27 (nine months ago)

briefing for a descent into hell still the only lessing i've read. veers off into sf territory at a certain point which i think she took further in some of her later work?

speaking of, bought 60+ sf books recently & hidden amongst them was a 1st uk edition of mother night. long time since i read that so gonna revisit.

also got a bunch jim thompsons which i went through in a few days of rainy weather this week.

no lime tangier, Monday, 7 October 2024 05:04 (nine months ago)

Mother Night is an okay Cold War thriller---not too generic, got the KV turns for sure- though not very science fictiony; for that I rec my fave KV to date(haven't read 'em all, I mean): his second published novel, The Sirens of Titan (1959): full scale pulpadelic, satirical and yet poignant, amaaazingly, calmly inventive---also sf is his debut full-length, Player Piano(1952): it's 50s executive drama, as in Executive Suite, The Man In The Gray Flannel Suit, Patterns,The Rat Race, etc. etc.---yet set in The Future, when Big Computers, having saved America's ass in The Big War, have been entrusted with peacetime economy, and relegated most workers (men) to menial jobs, though POV characters mostly managerial, in high pressure benign-face office culture across the river, although some of the suits do like to go drink with or in same room as proles (he got a lot of good material working for GE). Discussion of these & other KV way upthread.

dow, Monday, 7 October 2024 17:27 (nine months ago)

i have read very little Vonnegut. don't know why. i read Breakfast of Champions when i was a kid.

scott seward, Monday, 7 October 2024 17:40 (nine months ago)

Discussion of these & other KV way upthread.
Oops, I meant Thread of Wonder.
Haven't gotten that far, Scott. Most of The 60s-70s that I've read seem too uneven, but descriptions of Slapstick and maybe BoC are encouraging.

dow, Monday, 7 October 2024 18:57 (nine months ago)

two months pass...

Mostly buys from the last few months, with some xmas gifts thrown in.

Vladimir Sharov - Be as Children
Sergio Pitol - Taming the Divine Heron
Oguz Atay - Waiting for the Fear
The Bhagavad Gita
Elias Canetti - The Book Against Death
William Faulkner - Absalom, Absalom!
John Milton - Prose Writings
Maria Gabriela Llansol - A Thousand Thoughts in Flight
Vladimir Sharov - The Rehearsals
Giacomo Casanova - The Story of my Life (Abridged)
Camilo Jose Cela - The Family of Pacal Duarte
Istan Orkeny - One Minute Stories
Pierre Senges - Rabelais's Doughnuts
Fleur Jaeggy - Proleterka
Augusto Monterroso - The Rest is Silence
Jean Paul - Maria Wutz
Jeal Paul - The Logbook of Giannozzo the Balloonist
Victor Serge - Notebooks 1936-1947

xyzzzz__, Monday, 30 December 2024 20:11 (six months ago)


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