Nu-ILB: What books have you purchased lately?

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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 (seventeen years ago) link

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 (seventeen years ago) link

Ooooh JR is AWESOME.

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

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 (seventeen years ago) link

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 (seventeen years ago) link

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 (seventeen years ago) link

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 (seventeen years ago) link

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 (seventeen years ago) link

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 (seventeen years ago) link

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 (seventeen years ago) link

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 (seventeen years ago) link

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

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

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 (seventeen years ago) link

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 (seventeen years ago) link

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 (seventeen years ago) link

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 (seventeen years ago) link

I prefer to think of it as a rationale.

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

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 (seventeen years ago) link

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 (seventeen years ago) link

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 (seventeen years ago) link

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 (seventeen years ago) link

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 (seventeen years ago) link

Bookmooched recently:

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

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

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 (seventeen years ago) link

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 (seventeen years ago) link

I bought one of those Aberystwyth detective novels, in the hope that my unread book mountain will assume critical mass and blow up the world.

The Real Dirty Vicar, Wednesday, 4 July 2007 15:16 (seventeen years ago) link

Oh, and I also bought Gore Vidal's memoir, Palimpsest, which was on sale at the Strand Annex.

o. nate, Thursday, 5 July 2007 20:13 (seventeen years ago) link

Yesterday:

JR by William Gaddis, in a used in-new-condition Penguin paperback edition, $4.99. Constant favorable effusions by ILBers led me to buy this book.

Plutarch's Lives VII: Demosthenes and Cicero, Alexander and Caesar in a used Loeb classical library edition, $2.99. I cannot pass up any Loeb edition less than $5. I just can't.

Aimless, Saturday, 7 July 2007 18:57 (seventeen years ago) link

Picked up Cronopios and Famas by Cortazar and Calvino's The Baron in the Trees on some old store credit I forgot I had yesterday.

wmlynch, Monday, 9 July 2007 18:03 (seventeen years ago) link

Not a purchase, but my mommy was in town last week and left me a couple of her books:

Wild Latitudes by Barbara Else (a Kiwi)
The Law of Dreams by Peter Behrens (which was actually her Christmas present from me last year, but which I am more than happy to get back)

franny glass, Monday, 9 July 2007 19:21 (seventeen years ago) link

my university gave me book tokens:

philip dick, 'four novels of the 1960s'
- notes (tho no introduction, hrmf) from jonathan lethem. i already own all the actual novels. but it's a library of america edition of philip k dick, hey.
daniil kharms, 'incidences'
dee goong an, 'the celebrated cases of judge dee'
- looks bizarre. an 18th-century historian's detective novel version of seventh-century chinese legal cases, englished in the 1940's by a dutchman.
david foster wallace, 'infinite jest' (10th anniversary 10 dollar ed)
- i don't know why i felt i needed a second copy.
tove jansson, 'moomin: the complete tove jansson comic strip'
- one wonders if they'll publish her brother's.

thomp, Tuesday, 10 July 2007 19:16 (seventeen years ago) link

i picked up incidences at random, i didn't realise he was on here already. huh.

thomp, Tuesday, 10 July 2007 19:17 (seventeen years ago) link

two weeks pass...

Found an old paperback of Elaine Dundy's "The Dud Avocado".
To quote the cover: "The blithe and bubbling bestseller about an American girl who goes to Paris to be naughty-- and quite often succeeds!"
Well!

Also picked up a bunch of old science fiction paperbacks for a bonus-gift for my father. Intend to wrap a stack (well, five) of them in newspaper and tie it up with some old string to make a nice hobo-gift. I got a raise at work today, so clearly I'm intoxicated by money!

Øystein, Thursday, 26 July 2007 12:31 (seventeen years ago) link

When you read it, do tell us if it succeeds in being "blithe and bubbling", while yet remaining readable. This is a difficult feat, worthy of homage.

Aimless, Thursday, 26 July 2007 18:17 (seventeen years ago) link

I've read a few chapters of it and so far it does succeed at that- it's like Holly Golightly telling her story in the first person. Although maybe that is a cause for worry, that all will not end well.

James Redd and the Blecchs, Thursday, 26 July 2007 19:24 (seventeen years ago) link

The NYRB classics just released a new edition of Dud Avocado last month.

Arethusa, Thursday, 26 July 2007 21:39 (seventeen years ago) link

the book sale was this weekend! three days. it's quite the affair. went the first day and spent about 30 bucks. but today, monday, everything is free! believe you me, they have a LOT left. anyway, here is what i have picked up in the last couple of weeks at the book sale/thrift store/dump:

annual world's best sci-fi volumes: 72/76/77/78/81/83

nebula award stories eleven (edited by ursula leguin)

harlan ellison - approaching oblivion

ann pyne - in the form of a person (short stories ???)

grace paley - later the same day

adam haslett - you are not a stranger here (short stories ???)

robert anderson - ice age (short stories ???)

italo calvino - marcovaldo

o*blek (literary mag)

john cowper powys - lucifer

bruce wagner - the chrysanthemum palace

kate atkinson - behind the scenes at the museum

evan s. connell - the alchymist's journal

penelope fitzgerald - the gate of angels

helen knode - the ticket out (crime novel)

paris review 40th anniversary issue (delillo and toni morrisson interviews. cheever journal excerpts.)

robert coover - the universal baseball association, inc, j henry waugh, prop.

andre dubus - dancing after hours

paule marshall - brown girl, brownstone (really nice out of print 1st edition of little-known african-american 50's lit)

tom phillips - a humument - a treated victorian novel

j.g. farrell - troubles

denis johnson - angels

pam houston - cowboys are my weakness

harold brodkey - first love & other sorrows

harlan ellison - the beast that shouted love at the heart of the world

vernor vinge - the collected stories

j.g. farrell - the singapore grip

calvin trillin - floater

william gass - in the heart of the heart of the country

five fingers review (lit mag)

graham swift - last orders

denis johnson - fiskadoro

malcom lowry - under the volcano

toni morrison - the bluest eye

brian moore - the color of blood

bizarre books (basically, long lists of weird books)

frederick barthelme - painted desert (which i'm reading now)

thomas berger - neighbors

tim powers - the drawing of the dark

marijane meaker - game of survival (couldn't resist this. weird 70's thriller about people stuck in an elevator!)

l.p. hartley - the go-between

tom drury - the end of vandalism (just finished this one)

anne lamott - hard laughter

paula fox - desperate characters (which i've read, but don't own a copy of.)

john fante - dreams from bunker hill & 1933 was a bad year

italo calvino - invisible cities

john westermann - sweet deal (soho crime)

kate atkinson - case histories

russell banks - continental drift (signed!)

alice munro - the progress of love (couldn't remember if i owned a copy)

frederick busch - harry & catherine

andre dubus - voices from the moon

paula fox - a servant's tale

dennis cooper - try

(all told, i don't even think i spent 40 bucks. beat that, amazon!)

scott seward, Monday, 30 July 2007 15:17 (seventeen years ago) link

WOW! That's a great haul! It's probably a good thing I live on the other side of the country, I would go snap up all their free leftovers.

Jaq, Monday, 30 July 2007 17:38 (seventeen years ago) link

Whimper.

How far away was this? Why was I not told?

Casuistry, Tuesday, 31 July 2007 01:09 (seventeen years ago) link

this is on martha's vineyard, chris! i believe you are as far as jaq, no? and yeah, i made out like a bandit today when everything was free. and i was in such a book fog that i completely forgot about the art/architecture/photography section at the front of the gymnasium! oh well. next time. i'm not greedy. much.

scott seward, Tuesday, 31 July 2007 02:49 (seventeen years ago) link

Well, no, I am in NYC for the summer.

Casuistry, Tuesday, 31 July 2007 02:55 (seventeen years ago) link

ah, a mere stone's throw away!

scott seward, Tuesday, 31 July 2007 03:36 (seventeen years ago) link

dennis cooper - try

if you haven't read this yet you're in for ahem a "treat" the rockcritic character is beyond perverse. on the whole I found this book profoundly moving and utterly twisted...long after I thought there were no taboos left to be violated "try" proved me wrong (again)

m coleman, Tuesday, 31 July 2007 12:01 (seventeen years ago) link

nice haul scott. i love brian moore, haven't read that one tho.

In between library runs lately I've bought a few used paperbacks.

patricia highsmith -- the blunderer

kingsley amis -- i like it here

bruce chatwin -- on the black hill

shiva naipaul -- north of south: an african jounrey

m coleman, Tuesday, 31 July 2007 12:07 (seventeen years ago) link

Latest batch is:

<I>The Procedure</I>. Harry Mulisch.
<I>Why I Have Not Written Any of My Books</I>. Marcel Benabou.
<I>After Many a Summer Dies the Swan</I>. Aldous Huxley.
<I>Interfictions: An Anthology of Interstitial Writing</I>.
<I>Snake Catcher.</I> Naiyer Masud.
<I>Crooked Little Vein</i>. Warren Ellis.
<i>Curses</I>. Kevin Huizenga.

Not sure if i'm in the mood to read any of them right now though. (Except Curses.) Too fickle.

orb_q, Tuesday, 31 July 2007 19:45 (seventeen years ago) link

The Brian Moore (Colour of Blood) is really good - read it on the weekend.

James Morrison, Wednesday, 1 August 2007 02:45 (seventeen years ago) link

That Benabou book is one of my favorites.

Casuistry, Wednesday, 1 August 2007 17:58 (seventeen years ago) link

It is of course mentioned in Bartleby & Co, by Enrique Vila-Matas which I recommend to you, Chris. I tried to take it out of the library, but they only had another called something like Get Rid Of This Book Quick!, so I reserved that instead.

James Redd and the Blecchs, Wednesday, 1 August 2007 18:23 (seventeen years ago) link

Eager to read that Benabou. It'll be my first of his.

Yes, Bartleby & Co. is fantastic. Montano's Malady i'm still working on, as i don't want the two books conflated in my memory. The friend who recommended it is not so keen on it as he was on the first. He's slathering for Nazi Literature in the Americas.

Anyone have any idea when that Borges biography by Bioy Casares is going to make it into English translation? although i picked up the Williamson one, i have no intention of reading it. Him hanging with Bioy Casares and Ocampo slagging everyone seems more fun... at least in small doses. The TLS review interested me.

orb_q, Wednesday, 1 August 2007 19:48 (seventeen years ago) link

I bought one of those Aberystwyth detectivey stories. I imagine it will sit in my book mountain until I donate it to Oxfam.

The Real Dirty Vicar, Thursday, 2 August 2007 09:50 (seventeen years ago) link


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