So I went to Baggings Books in Rochester today. I quite liked the High street even more (especially on a sunny afternoon). The build up from one bookshop (can't remember name now) to an Oxfam to Baggins was sorta exciting and the shop itself doesn't disappoint in that's its a maize (make your own fun!) but, sad to report, not got much out of the browse. Only found:
Harry Mathews - The Sinking of the Odradek Stadium, for 2 quid.
Other things in the past month:
Anna Banti - Artemisa Tagore - The Home and the World
― xyzzzz__, Friday, 17 September 2010 19:22 (fifteen years ago)
oh, and:
Cesare Pavese - The Political Prisoner
― xyzzzz__, Friday, 17 September 2010 19:30 (fifteen years ago)
Fooled away a couple hours in bookstores today and bought:
Poems, William Dunbar, ed. Kinsley, a used hardcover in the Clarendon Medieval and Tudor Series, Oxford Press, $4.95. A middle english makar who could be rather witty.
Collected Shorter Poems: 1946 - 1991, Hayden Carruth, used hardcover with dust jacket, very good condition, Copper Canyon Press, $12.95. I was not especially enamored of Carruth in the one poetry book of his I've read, but he has the admiration of poets I admire, so I will give him a good run and see what I find.
Short Stories: volume 2: Friendly Brook and Other Stories, Rudyard Kipling, used Penguin paperback, $2. Kipling's okay by me, when he's not propping up the empire.
The Golden Bowl, Hank James, used Penguin paperback, $2. I expect nothing less than the secrets of the universe from this. YOU HEAR ME, HENRY?!
― Aimless, Saturday, 25 September 2010 23:33 (fifteen years ago)
riddle of the sands - erskine childers
Closing time - joe heller
Yiddish policemans union - michael chabon
Expect good things from all, also
― i dont love everything, i love football (darraghmac), Saturday, 25 September 2010 23:37 (fifteen years ago)
Samuel Beckett - How It Is (Grove Press)
― corey, Wednesday, 29 September 2010 23:50 (fifteen years ago)
I seem to be in book buying mode atm. Yesterday I found:
Flatland: A Romance of Many Dimensions, Edwin Abbott, used hard cover, ex-lib 1963 edition, $1.50. The book that provided ILX's Abbott with her nom-de-net.
Mr. Gatling's Terrible Marvel: The Gun That Changed Everything and the Misunderstood Genius Who Invented It, Julia Keller, used trade paperback, $4. YABWASLTYA (Yet Another Book With a Subtitle Longer Than Your Arm).
― Aimless, Sunday, 3 October 2010 17:20 (fifteen years ago)
Pierre Boulez - Notations
― third-strongest mole (corey), Sunday, 3 October 2010 17:30 (fifteen years ago)
I picked this up too. Also:
Freedom - FranzenThe Slap - ?Voodoo Histories - David Aaronovitch
― Ismael Klata, Sunday, 3 October 2010 17:40 (fifteen years ago)
alan furst - spies of the balkans (mainly because the storyline is eerily similar to my wife's father's exodus from greece during WW2 and takes place largely (from what i can gather) in Salonika, which is the city where he lived prior to and in the early days of ww2 (he's 80 years old, or so we think...his information was all lost during the war.)
― ('_') (omar little), Tuesday, 5 October 2010 04:44 (fifteen years ago)
I got 2 bookstore gift cards for my birthday and ordered the following:
August Rodin, RilkeThe Wine-Dark Sea, Sciascia (a rec from here I think?)The Book of Disquiet, Pessoa
― franny glass, Wednesday, 6 October 2010 13:43 (fifteen years ago)
Loved that Furst.
― buildings with goats on the roof (James Morrison), Wednesday, 6 October 2010 23:16 (fifteen years ago)
Mother gave me some money for my b-day so I bought myself a present at the book store (mostly French moderns of course):
Brecht - GalileoBeckett - Words & Music, Play, Eh JoeCéline - Castle to CastleSartre - The Age of ReasonGide - Strait is the GateHeidegger - What is Called Thinking?Queneau - The Last Days
― delicious demonym (corey), Saturday, 9 October 2010 21:38 (fifteen years ago)
Collected Longer Poems, Kenneth Koch, new (remaindered) hardcover, $13.
I also saw that Powell's Books has the Library of America hardcover edition of John Ashberry's earlier poems, up through circa 1980, now remaindered for $19. It's a nice edition, and I will probably pick it up sometime this month.
― Aimless, Sunday, 10 October 2010 18:32 (fifteen years ago)
Are you in Chicago, Aimless?
― groovy-otter.gif (corey), Sunday, 10 October 2010 18:38 (fifteen years ago)
charity book fair:
4 mark twain hardcoversdreiser - sister carriedon delillo - libraportable hawthornele carre - tailor of panama5 james bond novels in one book
― my sex drew back into itself tight and dry (abanana), Sunday, 10 October 2010 18:56 (fifteen years ago)
corey, I am in the Portland, OR area and visit Powell's City of Books bookstore about 10-12 times a year. It is one of the greatest things about living here.
― Aimless, Sunday, 10 October 2010 19:39 (fifteen years ago)
Ah I see. There's a bookstore here called Powell's, but it's on the South side so I don't often get to go there. The bookstore near me is great though. I always find something I'm looking for whenever I go.
― groovy-otter.gif (corey), Sunday, 10 October 2010 19:45 (fifteen years ago)
A 2nd-hand/remainders haul:
4 Wodehouses (2 Mulliner, 2 Jeeves/Wooster)2 H G Wells - Christina Alberta's Father, The BrothersJean Genet - The THief's JournalSam Lipsyte - The AskWaugh - The Ordeal of Gilbert Pinfold (already have this, but this was a 1st edition with nice cover, very cheap)TH White - The Once and Future King
― buildings with goats on the roof (James Morrison), Sunday, 10 October 2010 22:36 (fifteen years ago)
Rereading this for a project, I'd forgotten how the old aphoristic magic was still in evidence; the introduction of Adam Verver is masterly.
― raging hetero lifechill (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 10 October 2010 22:37 (fifteen years ago)
Is that Genet prose or drama?
― groovy-otter.gif (corey), Sunday, 10 October 2010 22:37 (fifteen years ago)
Prose. Pretty good.
― raging hetero lifechill (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 10 October 2010 22:39 (fifteen years ago)
4 books for $14 at bookfinger:
gertrude stein - the autobiography of alice b. toklassigmund freud - three case historiespatricia highsmith - the talented mr. ripleywallace stevens - the palm at the end of the mind: selected poems and a play (edited by his daughter)
― creeping shania (donna rouge), Monday, 11 October 2010 04:24 (fifteen years ago)
so, like, when you go there, how hard to you try to resist the urge to be all, booook FIIIINGAAAAHH? because i can't see how that would not become a regular habit for me if i were anywhere near such a store.
― j., Monday, 11 October 2010 05:05 (fifteen years ago)
Where did you get those? New York's Sneaker Culture, 1960-1987Mall Maker : Victor Gruen, Architect of an American Dream Media Ethics : Cases and Moral ReasoningA New Life : Stories and Photographs from the Suburban South
― Remember the Dayne! (u s steel), Monday, 11 October 2010 11:28 (fifteen years ago)
Continuing to accumulate books faster than I can work up the interest to read them:
Alfred Bester & Roger Zelazny, Psychoshop- After noticing that Vintage's Bester paperbacks are going out of print and the novels have started to demand stupid prices, figured it was time to pick up the last one I didn't already have.Adolfo Bioy Casares, The Invention of Morel and Asleep in the Sun- Thanks to the NYRB thread. I've been a Borges obsessive for ages, knew Bioy Caseares was a real person and not just made up for "Tlön, Uqbar, Orbus Tertius," and yet never thought to just stick his name in google or wikipedia or wherever and find out, hey, he was also a writer! Derrr. Also, as much as I like the idea of weirder/more eclectic lit getting popular exposure, it kind of saddens and annoys me to see that The Invention of Morel has already joined my beloved The Third Policeman as part of Lost's little book club. Okay, people are reading Flann O'Brien and buying books from the Dalkey Archive, awesome, but god dammit, don't do it to try and find clues to where the fucking polar bear came from.
...okay, that got a bit off track. ANYWAY
Bruno Schulz, The Street of Crocodiles and Other Stories- Teenage obsession with the Brothers Quay; read Jakob von Gunten, never got around to Schulz. Rectifying it now.
Johnny Ryan, Prison Pit vols. 1 & 2- argh blood spunk decapitation poo etc
― a black white asian pine ghost who is fake (Telephone thing), Monday, 11 October 2010 16:40 (fifteen years ago)
wallace stevens - the palm at the end of the mind: selected poems
One of my essential books: it's on my bedside table, where the Bible should be.
― raging hetero lifechill (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 11 October 2010 17:03 (fifteen years ago)
Lost or no Lost, Morel is grebt and you owe it to yourself to read it
― haven't you people ever heard of theodor a-goddamn-dorno (bernard snowy), Monday, 11 October 2010 17:24 (fifteen years ago)
'The Warmth of Other Suns' - Isabel Wilkerson
― A Reclaimer Hewn With (Michael White), Monday, 11 October 2010 17:31 (fifteen years ago)
Morel v enjoyable: wd agree. Less, I found, because of any Lost parallels, but the disembodied aesthetic and interesting approach to love the situation engenders.
― Pork Pius V (GamalielRatsey), Monday, 11 October 2010 18:53 (fifteen years ago)
I also liked that it was totally unlike anything Borges wrote and yet simultaneously casts light on the shared literary milieu of the two writers; which is to say, you can see why they were friends, and why Bro-ges dug this book.
― haven't you people ever heard of theodor a-goddamn-dorno (bernard snowy), Monday, 11 October 2010 19:02 (fifteen years ago)
Yeah, the Borges connection is why I'm looking forward to the two ABC novels, not at all the Lost thing. I haven't read Morel yet, so I can't vouch for it (though I do trust Borges and company), but it's the same feeling I got about the Third Policeman namedrop, which I also only found out about way after the fact- annoyance that a brilliant novel is being lazily appropriated to lend some significance to a so-so TV show. On the one hand, it is getting wider exposure, and some people will no doubt read it for the right reasons who wouldn't have heard of it otherwise, but the thought of some douche with a highlighter in one hand and a "Philosophy of Lost" book in the other going through The Third Policeman makes me livid.
― a black white asian pine ghost who is fake (Telephone thing), Monday, 11 October 2010 19:22 (fifteen years ago)
i never watched 'lost' so i didn't even know about this until recently, when i recommended the book to someone and they replied, "oh i've heard of it!" i thought that was actually rather cool, considering its relative obscurity, until they went on about how it was in 'lost' and apparently there were clues buried in the book. that slightly bummed me out.
― ('_') (omar little), Monday, 11 October 2010 21:31 (fifteen years ago)
paul bowles - the sheltering sky (new directions paperback version)halldor laxness - independent people
― ('_') (omar little), Thursday, 14 October 2010 21:20 (fifteen years ago)
Mario Vargas Llosa - Death in the AndesH.W. Brands - American Dreams: The United States Since 1945
― raging hetero lifechill (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 14 October 2010 21:22 (fifteen years ago)
for MY nobel shopping i got 'conversation in the cathedral' and… a later one that i can't remember which hasn't shown up yet. maybe also 'death in the andes'.
― j., Friday, 15 October 2010 02:17 (fifteen years ago)
prolonged brokeness has kept me from buying any books recently, but I just had a birthday and got:
Erich Auerbach - MimesisMikhail Bakhtin - The Dialogic ImaginationGiovanni Arrighi - The Long Twentieth Century
― rmde and dangerous (bernard snowy), Saturday, 16 October 2010 00:45 (fifteen years ago)
dope!
― markers, Saturday, 16 October 2010 00:47 (fifteen years ago)
Got a lousy stinking cold and quite wanted to get slowly drunk in an armchair reading an adventure story this evening and was looking either for Kolymsky Heights or The Rose of Tibet by Lionel Davidson. Both out out print (oh, f'ing Faber Finds for the former, no thanks) but got a couple of his others in Oxfam - Making Good Again (Germany) The Chelsea Murders (er, Chelsea).
Also picked up The Legendary Novel of Mystery and Romance, Fantômas by Marcel Allain and Pierre Souvestre. Probably most of you had heard of it, but I hadn't, which even before admitting it, I'm feeling slightly embarrassed about ('Fantômas, and the 31 sequels which followed it, was a phenomenon', oh.) Encomiums from Blaise Cendrars, Cocteau, Ashberry and Apollinaire on the back.
― Pork Pius V (GamalielRatsey), Saturday, 16 October 2010 15:48 (fifteen years ago)
infinite jest. Looks formidable.
― C. Tuomas Howell (jim in glasgow), Saturday, 16 October 2010 15:58 (fifteen years ago)
With IJ you just have to wade in slowly, then roll with it. In return, it takes you places.
― Aimless, Saturday, 16 October 2010 18:07 (fifteen years ago)
Back in London, so did the rounds - Charing X rd, Gower St Waterstone's, Judd 2. Resisted till the last of them - a nice hardback of that history of the Dark Ages, The Inheritance of Rome for < paperback (looking forward to not finishing it), and John Burrow's History of Histories. Been reading old history lately (Hume, the Greeks, bit of Macaulay), and some Burrow (his little book on Gibbon), so seemed made for me.
LDN ilxors might like to know Martin Stannard's biography of Muriel Spark is in Judd - nice hardback, £7.95.
Amazoned recently – cheap Gene Wolfe hardbacks (Nightside of the Long Sun, Soldier of the Mist), an Oxford Study Bible. Been buying cheap Ballard paperbacks too, sometimes of stuff I've read already – can't resist the ones with exciting covers. http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3054/2844070189_de0e23c53c.jpg
― portrait of velleity (woof), Saturday, 16 October 2010 19:52 (fifteen years ago)
Report back on Fantomas gr - I've been meaning to read it for ages, but I'm afraid it might not be as much fun as it looks (is that the penguin edition with the John Ashbery intro?).
David Thomson makes the films sound amazing - think I have a copy of one of them around here somewhere, maybe I'll watch that now.
― portrait of velleity (woof), Saturday, 16 October 2010 20:23 (fifteen years ago)
Journey Without Maps, Graham Greene, used Penguin paperback in marginal condition, 50 cents. His 1936 book about traveling in Liberia. Supposed to be good.
Le Morte D'Arthur, Sir Thomas Malory, in 2 volumes, ed. Janet Cowen. These are used Penguin paperbacks in good condition, with modernized spelling to assist the thoroughly modern reader. $2 each. I like to read about parfit gentil knights from time to time, their being so different than modern heroes it tickles me.
― Aimless, Sunday, 17 October 2010 01:56 (fifteen years ago)
Fantomas is fun stuff.
And 'The Chelsea Murders' is pretty great, too, though the first 10 pages or so were a bit disorienting, from memory.
― buildings with goats on the roof (James Morrison), Sunday, 17 October 2010 02:30 (fifteen years ago)
A reader located the likely model for the concrete island. If I ever get over one day there I'll make the pilgrimage.
― alimosina, Sunday, 17 October 2010 19:37 (fifteen years ago)
today's haul, from iliad books:
gwf hegel - a philosophy of historyludwig wittgenstein - tractacus logico-philosophicuse.h. gombrich - art and illusionjames purdy - in a shallow graveoscar wilde - portrait of dorian gray and other writingssibyl moholy-nagy - moholy-nagy: experiment in totality
― womack and bolio's (donna rouge), Monday, 18 October 2010 00:48 (fifteen years ago)
PICTURE of dorian gray, durrrr
― womack and bolio's (donna rouge), Monday, 18 October 2010 04:02 (fifteen years ago)
As part of my continuing quest to fill the gaping hole in my life with Stuff (and fill in gaps in my education):Alasdair Gray, LanarkMikhail Bulgakov, The Master and Margarita (Read this ages ago and loved it, but I lost my copy and I'm not sure which translation it was. This is the Vintage Burgin/O'Connor translation. I'll probably end up picking up the Pevear/Volokhonsky on Penguin soon enough, since it looks like it was received fairly well)Julio Cortazar, Hopscotch
― muus lääv? :D muus dut :( (Telephone thing), Monday, 18 October 2010 21:01 (fifteen years ago)
i keep forgetting to email you the name of that oulipo compendium, gah! i will try to remember tonight!
― just1n3, Monday, 18 October 2010 21:03 (fifteen years ago)
No hurry- I'm guessing it's the Mathews/Brotchie Oulipo Compendium.
(It's worth checking out the rest of Atlas's catalog if you don't know them already; they've got some great stuff from Jarry, Bataille, etc, and a Satie book that I really wish was still in print...)
― muus lääv? :D muus dut :( (Telephone thing), Monday, 18 October 2010 21:14 (fifteen years ago)