Read a decent amount of things on vacation. Highlight was probably Trieste and the Meaning of Nowhere by Jan Morris, which I mostly read while in Trieste, kind of corny I know but it was very enjoyable. Reflects on the strange history of the city and its pull upon her and a number of other writers despite its comparative lack of great sights and cultural/economic/historical importance. Found it tremendously moving towards the end, it was Morris's last book and it concludes with her musing on her own feelings about aging and irrelevance and how much that plays into her own perception of the city.
The Tartar Steppe, by Dino Buzzati - real bummer! But pretty incredible, the sort of novel that you can sum up in a brief sentence but is filled with odd, otherworldly detail and atmosphere that makes it hypnotic to read.
On The Marble Cliffs, by Ernst Junger - very odd semi-supernatural allegory that may or may not have been a swipe at the Nazis, didn't really get this tbh but it was pleasant enough to read.
The Ballad of Black Tom, by Victor Lavalle - I really should have read the Lovecraft story it's riffing on but I thought it was a really compelling and surprising little horror novel.
still in the middle of The Garden of Seven Twilights, by Miquel de Palol - recently published by Dalkey Archive, long novel of stories within stories within stories, which I'm always kind of a sucker for. Most of the stories are pretty fun though there are some jarring shifts in tone and not a ton in the way of characters.
― JoeStork, Tuesday, 3 October 2023 03:57 (one year ago) link
Travellers and The Settled Community: A Share Future John Heneghan, Mary(Warde) Moriarty , Michael O hAodhabook onIrish travellers . I wanted to get hold of some reading matter on the subject in teh wake of the Misleor festival last week. I think this has been on the shelves in teh local library for a while so I should have got to it faster. Came out in 2012.Various essays on various factors on traveller life and interaction with settled community. I read the first couple of sections last night and it looks good.
Faith, Hope and Carnage Nick Cave and Sean O'Haganbook based on several conversations between the two from the early days of the pandemic lockdown in 2020. Gives some insight into Cave's headspace. Glad I read it, would still like a memoir from him though
― Stevo, Tuesday, 3 October 2023 10:15 (one year ago) link
Finished The Swimming Pool Library. Will is an entirely tedious protagonist - "My vanity which was so constitutional that it had virtually ceased to be vanity", lol nice try - the sections from Charles' diaries are no consolation. There was a feeling of a gathering of energies towards the end, before the last little burp of plot. I'm aware that I complained about lack of plot in my last read, I know a book can be perfectly fine without one but I think I'm just craving a good substantial story right now.
― behold the thump (ledge),
I read it after The Folding Star, The Spell, and especially The Line of Beauty, hence its slightness, its insularity.
― hat trick of trashiness (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 3 October 2023 12:03 (one year ago) link
Good to know I picked the duffer (impulse charity shop purchase).
― behold the thump (ledge), Tuesday, 3 October 2023 12:39 (one year ago) link
Might get round to those others (and reread TLoB) one day.
Having just recently learned of the existence of the Two Month Review podcast, I am rereading 2666 as I listen to their episodes discussing it.
― The king of the demo (bernard snowy), Tuesday, 3 October 2023 16:42 (one year ago) link
To stay with the TD world for a bit longer, I started a book of Thomas Ligotti short stories. The story I read last night, 'The Frolic', is a curious thing. There was a Cheever vibe in the uneasy middle-class calm of the set and setting but everything was underlit by this kind of diseased atmosphere that built as the story progressed. I fell asleep pretty much directly after I'd finished the story and had the most intense bout of sleep paralysis, where I was being consumed by a sallow, clinging fog. Which is a 100% recommend in my book.― I would prefer not to. (Chinaski), Tuesday, September 26, 2023 11:12 AM (one week ago)
― I would prefer not to. (Chinaski), Tuesday, September 26, 2023 11:12 AM (one week ago)
― The king of the demo (bernard snowy), Tuesday, 3 October 2023 16:51 (one year ago) link
this was my september, all contemporary japanese authors, all cheap on amazon the month before, and all quite short and light.
Before The Coffee Gets Cold - Toshikazu KawaguchiLast Children of Tokyo - Yoko TawadaThe Nakano Thrift Shop - Hiromi KawakamiConvenience Store Woman - Sayaka MurataTales From The Cafe - Toshikazu Kawaguchi
a coffee shop with a side order of time travel, japanese Children of Men, and two about female shop assistants.
― koogs, Tuesday, 3 October 2023 16:54 (one year ago) link
there's a cheap lovecraft omnibus in the amazon uk's monthly deals btw, someone was asking (actually, the delphi omnibus is always cheap). and there are plenty of lists of top 10 lovecraft stories (i can never remember which names go with which stories so i'm kinda useless. The Cats Of Ulthar had cats in it fwiw)
― koogs, Tuesday, 3 October 2023 17:00 (one year ago) link
I read Rilke's Letters to a Young Poet for the first time; to observe as Rilke gently repeats advice to his much less talented acolyte brought on a few giggles. I picked up Mario Vargas Llosa's entry Letters to a Young Novelist too.
― hat trick of trashiness (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 3 October 2023 17:30 (one year ago) link
I always preferred Lovecraft's dream stories to the Cthulhu mythos.
― immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Tuesday, 3 October 2023 19:02 (one year ago) link
Thanks for the Lovecraft advice. I've not read a single thing but have read so much stuff that references him (however obliquely) it feels like I'm missing something.
I've never made it through Letters to a Young Poet. It's short but I still found it a slog.
― I would prefer not to. (Chinaski), Tuesday, 3 October 2023 20:34 (one year ago) link
It's a very 19/20 year old sort of book.
― xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 3 October 2023 21:10 (one year ago) link
I despise Rilke lmfao
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Wednesday, 4 October 2023 01:51 (one year ago) link
― xyzzzz__,
I'd say fin-de-siècle or at least early 20th century.
After a dip into ILB archives confirming Mario Vargas Llosa's rec, I'm gonna start Juan Carlos Onetti's A Brief Life.
― hat trick of trashiness (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 4 October 2023 14:26 (one year ago) link
Love Onetti, though I've not read that one.
Rilke's novel was really good imo; a lot of his letters are fantastic and have all sorts of things in them, like his letters to Clara has some really nice art criticism.
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 4 October 2023 17:42 (one year ago) link
After a few days of flitting around in some various books, I’ve settled on the recent gift of TJ Clark’s Heaven on Earth: Painting and the Life to Come. I loved his book on Poussin, which I read in August, and this seems equally fascinating and “up my alley” so to speak.
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Thursday, 5 October 2023 12:49 (one year ago) link
The Sight of Death I loved that book. His Picasso book is fantastic too.
― jmm, Thursday, 5 October 2023 12:54 (one year ago) link
Uh, meant to put a question mark after that title
― jmm, Thursday, 5 October 2023 12:55 (one year ago) link
yes, The Sight of Death is the “Poussin” book. Of course, Poussin is in Heaven on Earth, too, but we also have Brueghel the Elder, Giotto, Veronese, and a few others.
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Thursday, 5 October 2023 14:09 (one year ago) link
I am reading Paul Morley's book "A Sound Mind: How I Fell in Love with Classical Music (and Decided to Rewrite its Entire History)". I am struggling with it. This guy really needs an editor. Its so overwritten and unfocused, digressing all over the place and yet I dont think he really gets under the skin of classical music. There's plenty of lists and facts alright but fails to engage really except for some funny anecdotes about him attending the Classical FM awards. His central thesis is that streaming is changing the way we look at classical music - it's all there and its not as hide bound to the past anymore. Streaming has made classical music more democratic. Argues that it's even looking to the future more than current pop music which seems even more quaint and showbiz now. Not an argument, I'm totally interested in but whatevz. I'm not entirely sure that I buy it.
― Saxophone Of Futility (Michael B), Thursday, 5 October 2023 15:51 (one year ago) link
Vietnam: An Epic Tragedy, 1945-1975 - Max Hastings. Not being British, it's hard for me to gauge how much and how rightly this guy is detested around here, but I'm finding this to be a very readable overview of 30 years' worth of folly.
Up in the Old Hotel - Joseph Mitchell. Collected New Yorker articles. Highly recommended to anyone who loves reading about antiquated eccentric characters of the 20th century.
― Chris L, Thursday, 5 October 2023 17:20 (one year ago) link
I'm reading Remain In Love by Chris Frantz on a post-Stop Making Sense Talking Heads kick. Late getting to it because I thought it seemed mostly inessential give or take a few pull quotes. About halfway through and I'd say I was only half right. I'm having a lot of fun, it's balm for a tired mind. The voice is so clear. In the world according to Frantz, parents are great, girls are beautiful, Tina's a knockout, food is delicious, art is cool, celebs are friendly, bands rock well, David Byrne is an asshole. Every sentence is one clause. There's just enough wry humour and self awareness here and there to keep you going but mostly it's just immersive dining, boning, rocking and gossiping from somebody who's been very fortunate in life and is happy to embrace it. I guessed he was a Taurus about 30 pages in.
Slightly interested to see how sour it might get when times get hard, but so far, I am knocking this back like a packet of Skittles.
― verhexen, Thursday, 5 October 2023 17:53 (one year ago) link
I started reading Mary L. Trump's 2020 book, Too Much and Never Enough about everyone's least favorite fails-upward-son. First impression is that it has enough substance to have made a good in-depth magazine article, but was padded out to 200 pages in order to wring a book out of it. It has some explanatory power for the origins and development of Donald's warped personality, but the time for explanations has long passed and the time for long overdue consequences may finally be in sight.
― more difficult than I look (Aimless), Thursday, 5 October 2023 18:23 (one year ago) link
Honore de Balzac - The Quest of the Absolute
After Bovary it's an inescapable impression that 19th century French writers were utterly obsessed with mapping out the contours of boredom.
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 5 October 2023 20:56 (one year ago) link
Having just recently learned of the existence of the Two Month Review podcast, I am rereading 2666 as I listen to their episodes discussing it.― The king of the demo (bernard snowy)
― The king of the demo (bernard snowy)
― dow, Thursday, 5 October 2023 21:41 (one year ago) link
Doing an ilx search on "2666" turns up page after page of interesting commentary. It prompted a lot of engagement and conversation from at least a couple dozen ilxors.
― more difficult than I look (Aimless), Thursday, 5 October 2023 22:04 (one year ago) link
I don't do podcasts, but that is tempting. 2666 is one of my favorite books I've ever read. I never reread books these days, but I will be rereading it again at some point.
― il lavoro mi rovina la giornata (PBKR), Thursday, 5 October 2023 22:43 (one year ago) link
Rereading Kokoro, Natsume Soseki. Think it's been less than a decade since I read it but my memory of it is mostly "wtf this guy gets so obsessed with this random old dude and is such a dick to his parents"; I was perhaps still too close to student age myself, if only psychologically, and at this stage of my life I can see the guy's callousness from more of a distance - yeah he takes his parents for granted, that's what ppl in their late teens/early 20's are like. Quite gripped by the mystery of what lead sensei down his road of misanthropy - I have no memory at all of what it turns out to be!
I've been forcing myself to do a reread every ten books I finish - by nature I never do this, just move from book to book with that stupid checklist, pokemon collecting mentality. But forcing myself to do it reminds me of an uncomfortable truth: often enough, even with books I loved, I will remember very little from them and given enough time it's like I've never read them at all.
― Daniel_Rf, Friday, 6 October 2023 09:46 (one year ago) link
Good discipline, I should try it. I'm painfully reminded of the very recent episode where I finished a book and on adding it to goodreads discovered that I'd read it eleven years before. It did not stir a single shadow of a memory.
― behold the thump (ledge), Friday, 6 October 2023 09:57 (one year ago) link
I recently read Either/Or by Elif Batuman, the sequel to her debut novel, The Idiot, which I read a couple of years ago. It seems that her skills have improved. The novel feels sharper and more focused. It still has that somewhat aimless quality of reading a real-life diary. Things happen one after the other, sometimes with no discernible connection. But that feeling fits well with the coming-of-age theme, as questions of agency and purpose are central. Selin often wonders why other people seem some definite and well-defined but to herself she seems so vague and numinous. It's a lovely and funny book, and I'm looking forward to the next in the series.
― o. nate, Friday, 6 October 2023 18:45 (one year ago) link
Sergio Pitol - Mephisto's Waltz (Selected Short Stories)
Pitol is one of the very best dozen or so writers I have discovered over the last few years through translation and his take on the short story is really interesting because they are at times like sketches of what a writer could do with a story.
Also very few writers integrate their reading into their fiction. The last story starts with a commentary on Thomas Mann. A couple finish with a commentary on the story just told.
This could be a bit like Borges but in between you have the story of fictional people doing fictional things. He integrates a lot of his life in them, so they take place while in a place he was put in through his real life as part of Mexico's diplomatic service.
I went through most of it yesterday and in the morning these are the impressions.
― xyzzzz__, Saturday, 7 October 2023 07:45 (one year ago) link
I finished Mary Trump's book. It was OK-ish, but didn't tell much about Donald that wasn't already obvious in 2020 to anyone who had been paying even a modest amount of attention and whose head wasn't buried in the personality cult. My conclusion: overhyped and underdone.
― more difficult than I look (Aimless), Saturday, 7 October 2023 17:15 (one year ago) link
I started Evelyn McDonnell's The World According to Joan Didion and finished Elizabeth Bowen's Eva Trout.
― hat trick of trashiness (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 7 October 2023 17:16 (one year ago) link
Small Worlds by Caleb Azumah Nelson (which is about finding the right words)
― youn, Sunday, 8 October 2023 10:14 (one year ago) link
I'm between book club novels, am on pause in my obsession with John Le Carré and Dennis Lehane, and am listening to an audiobook of Something Wicked This Way Comes by Ray Bradbury. I'm assuming you are all more acquainted with this novel than me.
I love the story. A fantasy horror novel written in purple prose about two 13-year old boys trying to overcome evil in a small town, and a father trying to help them. It is a good book for Halloween
― Dan S, Wednesday, 11 October 2023 02:49 (one year ago) link
Henry Green - Caught. Besides the goings on between two firefighters it has some great writing on The Blitz.
― xyzzzz__, Friday, 13 October 2023 08:50 (one year ago) link
The Man Eater Of Malgudi, R.K. Narayan -Protagonist works as aprinter whose front office doubles as sort of hang out space for the denizens of the (fictional) Indian village he lives in. One day a burly taxidermist (!) muscles his way in and unilaterally decides to become his tenant, all the while bullying his friends at every opportunity. This has the sort of cozy, gently satirical bent that makes you feel like you've known the characters for agees. There's a bunch of books in the series it seems. This one's dedicated to Graham Greene "for many years of friendship".
― Daniel_Rf, Friday, 13 October 2023 09:49 (one year ago) link
read Village of Eight Graves by Seishi Yokomizo, which is the 4th? Kosuke Kindaichi mystery (the 3rd released in english) and it was less good than the previous two. 70+ more to go...
― koogs, Friday, 13 October 2023 10:49 (one year ago) link
On a brief vacation I read The Moving Target, one of Ross MacDonald's earliest Lew Archer novels (the first one?). Now reading Our Man in Havana, Graham Greene, which so far as I've read merits the descriptor: droll.
― more difficult than I look (Aimless), Friday, 13 October 2023 16:49 (one year ago) link
Our Man in Havana is one of those books I read as a kid that embedded itself in my brain and pops up at odd moments.
― Lily Dale, Friday, 13 October 2023 17:49 (one year ago) link
xp I loved The Moving Target, and the rest of the Lew Archer novels that I've read. They are like a travelogue of the underbelly of 1940s - 1950s Los Angeles.
― immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Friday, 13 October 2023 18:25 (one year ago) link
Finished The Buddenbrooks, which was a bit of a morbid slog. Each character briefly flickers, chokes, and stays around for another 250 pages to watch another character do the same thing as the cycle repeats. Each character is ultimately quite internal, the only meaningful interactions happen within the family, one or two secondary characters excepted. Everything remains at the domestic level of alliances and marriages and buying houses, with the political developments (1840 to 1880 or so) treated very discretely. I have loved family novels where nothing happens inside / the agitated outside is blocked out (The Leopard), so maybe I just need to accept some dislike of young and old Thomas Mann (he wrote The Buddenbrooks in his twenties, and he was old at the time of Dr Faustus) while considering The Magic Mountain one of the greatest masterpieces.
The next book to come with me in my bag is Mysteries (Knut Hamsun) if that's what's it's called for you guys too.
― Nabozo, Monday, 16 October 2023 08:24 (one year ago) link
Finished Mouthful of Blood by Toni Morrison where a lot of her shorter non fiction work is compiled.Enjoyed it, but it took me a couple of years to get around to. Picked it up during first year of pandemic. Pretty good anyway. Now need to read her fiction work that I've picked up over last few years.
Ilan Pappe The Ethnic Cleansing of PalestineHave had this for a while too and again should have read it long since. But have had it lying around and thought I really should read this and another couple of titles on palestine and the Israeli state structure. I am surrounded by books, quite literally and do want to read most of them.So hoping I can eventually do so. I was going to get around to Angela Saini's Patriarchs next but now think that will wait .
Alfred Metraux Voodoo In Haitilate 50s ethnological look into the syncretic religion in one of the places it most prevailed in. Quite interesting .
August Meier & Elliott Rudwick From Plantation to Ghetto70s book on black history in what became the United States.INteresting to read this when I'm used ti much more recent books on the history which have come out after years of decolonisation and anti racist thought being more prevalent.Pretty good and i do think I am coming across some details that I don't remember from elsewhere. Not sure to what extent this is a go to source for later books. I came across it in a bibliography from something anyway. Both writers seem to have written quite widely in similar areas black history and human rights and things.
The Power of Language Viorica Marianrecently published book on the effects of multilingualism on the individual and the society they are part of.Looks at linguistic relativity and things. & associations created by the resemblance between different words and even momentary triggers of initial letters etc.So somewhat interesting.I think I was looking for more on something I read about how language speaking breaks down within families . Where if the family is multilingual it can come down to communication between different individuals within that family being primarily in different languages between specific individuals. So father talks to daughter in language a , to son in language band mother to daughter and sibling to sibling may be primarily in a different language than one to another member of teh family. Which is something I came across in a Guardian or Observer review of a book a few years ago. NOt really seen that in here so far. But what's here is interesting.
― Stevo, Monday, 16 October 2023 09:34 (one year ago) link
Oh yeah, scored a copy of Richard Morton Jack's book on Nick Drake from a different library a few days ago too. Bit not really started it yet.
& just read a book on the history of Motown called Dancing in the street : Motown and the cultural politics of Detroit by Suzanne Smith
and David Olusoga's Black & British which was pretty good but he seems to have left out details I read in his other books that I would have included in this . SS Verdala the troopship carrying the BWIR troops from the West Indies to Europe detouring into a storm in waters way further North than the troops were provisioned for and causing death and a great deal of damage thanks to frostbite etc to about 600 of them. Would have thought it was important enough to repeat. It's in his The World's War whichis earlier,Think I did notice a few others but otherwise pretty good history that covers a lot of areas I wasn't as familiar with. I like the author and am reading through a lot of his work.
― Stevo, Monday, 16 October 2023 09:44 (one year ago) link
The Narayan was a delight! Laughed out loud a few times, and it's just such a cozy delightful environment - will def pick up more of his novels when I see them.
Now on to Junichiro Tanizaki, The Secret History of the Lord of Musashi. Currently our lord is still in puberty and having a sexual awakening seeing women wash the decapitated heads of enemies brought back from battle. So there's that.
― Daniel_Rf, Monday, 16 October 2023 10:05 (one year ago) link
Susie Boyt's Loved and Missed (New York Review Books) is described by an American reviewer as "a disarmingly droll tragicomedy about imperfect motherhood and fractured families," without getting too cuet about it, apparently (also: New York Review Books). Mentions that this is the only Boyt book published in the States so far, other than My Judy Garland Life, which looks like my kinda memoir. International correspondents! Are her novels good??
― dow, Tuesday, 17 October 2023 03:04 (one year ago) link
I'm about to finish Hugh Eakin's Picasso's War: How Modern Art Came to America, have cracked open Hua Hsu's Stay True, but am uh hesitating before opening The Netanyahus.
― hat trick of trashiness (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 17 October 2023 09:40 (one year ago) link
The Power of Language Viorica MarianThe Power of Language Viorica Marianfinished this may have to come back and reread in future. Author is running a Lab dealing with multilingual behaviour studying it etc. It did touch on some interesting stuff .Ideas of effect on cognition of having more than one language etc. Just out I think or at least library system just got hold of it and i got 2nd loan on this copy
― Stevo, Tuesday, 17 October 2023 09:58 (one year ago) link
Hua Hsu's Stay True
My sister gave me this for my birthday. Will probably get to it next year.
― il lavoro mi rovina la giornata (PBKR), Tuesday, 17 October 2023 12:07 (one year ago) link
It will -- in the best sense.
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Tuesday, 19 December 2023 13:31 (ten months ago) link
Osvaldo Lamborghini - Two Stories
Please let me know what you make of this one. I'm a big big fan of Sublunary, and I have pretty decent exposure to experimental writing, but I thought this was genuinely complete nonsense, a chaotic surface with nothing underneath.
― J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Tuesday, 19 December 2023 15:09 (ten months ago) link
Didn't think much of the first story, but the second held some interest with it's exploration of different relationships and sexualities in that period of oppression in Argentina's history. It reminded me a little of Hilda Hilst's writing though yeah a lot more chaotic (or modernist lol)
Would probably get hold of another book of his, were it to be translated, which I am not sure it will.
― xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 19 December 2023 15:59 (ten months ago) link
Osvaldo Lamborghini sounds like a mysterious author from a Bolano novel.
― il lavoro mi rovina la giornata (PBKR), Tuesday, 19 December 2023 19:40 (ten months ago) link
There is a quote by him in the PR for the book:
"It scares me."
― xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 19 December 2023 22:42 (ten months ago) link
I am guessing we should begin a new thread for winter, yes? I will do so later today.Glück’s About Ed seems to find me weeping over my oatmeal every morning, an image just bathetic enough that I have to question why I am crying— is it for Bob? For Ed? For all of my dead friends? Past loves? Who knows. It’s an incredible book.
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Saturday, 23 December 2023 14:20 (ten months ago) link
A new WAYR thread has been hatched:
Nothing Doting Living Loving: What Are You Reading In The Winter of 2023?
― more difficult than I look (Aimless), Saturday, 23 December 2023 19:20 (ten months ago) link