really liked zone one, as went on about on rolling fantasy and one of those recent what have you been reading? threads
― dow, Friday, 18 January 2013 16:15 (thirteen years ago)
the instructions - adam levina moment in the sun - john saylesflannery: a life of flannery o'connor - brad goochnews from the empire - fernando del paso
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Friday, 18 January 2013 23:41 (thirteen years ago)
Concluding - Henry Green (£1.50, battered 1964 Penguin paperback)Blood's a Rover - James Ellroy (£2.00, signed UK H/C)The Earth - Zola (£1.35, 1980 Penguin Classic translation)Killer Instinct - Jane Hamsher (£1.95, 1997 US H/C - non-fiction bk abt the making of Natural Born Killers, feat. a praiseblurb on the back from Alan Moore, of all people)The New Poetry - selected and introduced by A. Alvarez (£1.00, 1966 revised and enlarged edition, Penguin paperback with a lovely repro of Jackson Pollock's 'Convergence' on the cover)
― Ward Fowler, Saturday, 26 January 2013 10:12 (thirteen years ago)
The Stranger's Child by Alan HollinghurstBento's Notebook by John Berger
― "Rob is startled, this is straight up gangster" (R Baez), Tuesday, 29 January 2013 00:54 (thirteen years ago)
I should mention I stumbled onto and purchased a copy of:
On the Natural Faculties, Galen, tr. A.J. Brock, as a used Loeb Classical Library volume in hardcover, good shape (a nice dust cover, even) for $3. I have only a modest interest in Galen, but I have a pact with myself to buy any and every used Loeb edition in good shape that I run across, if it is under $5.
― Aimless, Tuesday, 29 January 2013 01:52 (thirteen years ago)
that's weird Ward Fowler - I am going to be reading Concluding very soon indeed. We must exchange notes.
― imago, Tuesday, 29 January 2013 23:35 (thirteen years ago)
Ward - austerity-era prices. I like it ;-)
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 30 January 2013 00:28 (thirteen years ago)
imago - cool! i am abt 50 pages in to the Green - and have opinions! see you in the 'What are you Reading?' thread
xyzzz - austerity in this case is just another word for cheapskate! All the above were from my favourite tumbledown 2nd-hand bookshop (think I posted a pic somewhere up thread) - you will have to visit! There are always bargains to be had - not long ago I got from them a pristine UK hardcover first ed of Durgnat's Mirror for England for £3.45 (i love those crazy five pences...)
― Ward Fowler, Wednesday, 30 January 2013 09:08 (thirteen years ago)
Nancy Mitford - Penguin Complete NovelsEdith Wharton - The Age of InnocenceEdith Wharton - Ethan Frome
I read Ethan Frome long, long ago. I was delighted to rediscover what an amazing story it is.
― jim, Wednesday, 30 January 2013 19:44 (thirteen years ago)
Just bought The Lewis Men
1. cos it was 20p in the amazon store2. i keep seeing the ads for the third one everywhere, not in a sort of 'shit yeah i must read that' sort of way but in a 3. 'wonder what genre/airport/commute novels are doing these days' sort of way
also marcello's Blue in the Air.
― Say Bo to a (Fizzles), Sunday, 3 February 2013 10:50 (thirteen years ago)
True Grit by Charles Portis, because I really want to read it again.
― "Rob is startled, this is straight up gangster" (R Baez), Sunday, 3 February 2013 17:46 (thirteen years ago)
The Free Southern Theater: A Documentary of the South's Radical Black Theater, with Journals, Letters, Poetry Essays and a Play Written By Those Who Built It Starts with an account of an NYC fundraiser, hosted by Harry Belafonte, then back to the often-dangerous boondocks, where this Mississippi-founded troupe brought the shows--- audiences were really on top of Waiting For Godot, for instance. Things get suitably complicated (and stay somewhat perilous) in New Orleans, where we also get the most microscopically detailed descriptions of everyday people in the 60s I've ever seen. Actors should always have to go out and write this stuff down; every composition student should. These guys weren't students, just staying sharp, on a working afternoon off. Then on to Planet Texas....really an amazing cache of testimonies, written as or soon after it all happens.
― dow, Tuesday, 5 February 2013 15:28 (thirteen years ago)
"Radical Black" is a late tag for this initially integrated company and repertoire. Always necessarily adaptive, The FST was transformed as outside pressures came to include those of/from the increasingly besieged Civil Rights-to-Black Liberation struggle.
― dow, Tuesday, 5 February 2013 15:45 (thirteen years ago)
Ironically, as part of my project to divest myself of some of my books, I took five volumes away to sell and ended up coming home with:
The Changing Light at Sandover, James Merrill, used hardcover with dust jacket in very good condition, for $20. After trading the other books, that came to a $3.50 cash outlay. I was intrigued by the recent comments about it on ILB and, magic peacock notwithstanding, I decided to take it home for a spin.
― Aimless, Thursday, 7 February 2013 00:01 (thirteen years ago)
"Monoceros" by Suzette Mayr, after attending her reading this morning. Excerpts she read sounded incredible; sad that it'll be a few months before I have time to read it.
― Public Brooding Closet (cryptosicko), Friday, 8 February 2013 01:01 (thirteen years ago)
I found a readable used copy of Independent People, by Halldor Laxness, for $1. Of course I bought it.
― Aimless, Monday, 11 February 2013 18:03 (thirteen years ago)
Helen Vendler's Emily Dickinson book.
― the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 11 February 2013 18:05 (thirteen years ago)
John Ashbery, "quick Question"
Just starting Jhumpa Lahari's "The Namesake" a few years after buying it off a remainder table.
― Raymond Cummings, Tuesday, 12 February 2013 11:30 (thirteen years ago)
Just having one of those bored-at-work amazon-browsing overdoses.
Charles Simic's selection from Thomas CampionInvisible Republic, Greil Marcus
After hunting round "The Faber Book of" for 'used and new from £0.01':The Faber Book of Contemporary American PoetryThe Faber Book of Soccer
A Theologico-Political Treatise and a Political Treatise by Spinoza, have wanted a copy of this around for a while. District and Circle and Electric Light by Seamus Heaney. Thought I'd check in with him & again these were 'used & new from £0.01'.Biographia Literaria, bcz I decided it was VITAL I reread this. Haven't picked it up.
I should stop now. That's enough books.
― woof, Wednesday, 13 February 2013 17:10 (thirteen years ago)
Read this from the library, now got my own: Rome 1960: The Olympics That Changed The World by David Maraniss. Title is a bit bombastic, and maybe backwards, but anyway this Olympics was pivotal, and the book is multidimensional as hell, yet no probs w clarity. Also, doesn't try to explain too much, so there are def subjects for further study. Why was weightlifting anathema, with Cali Olympics aspirants resorting to secret workout sessions and homemade weights?
― dow, Wednesday, 13 February 2013 18:19 (thirteen years ago)
i'm broke rn but found a 2$ copy of christine delphy: a materialist analysis of women's oppression
― flopson, Wednesday, 13 February 2013 19:39 (thirteen years ago)
For a long time, conventional wisdom said that weightlifting, for athletes other than weightlifters, would cause one to become "musclebound" and as inflexible as a fire hydrant.
― Aimless, Wednesday, 13 February 2013 19:48 (thirteen years ago)
I should've thought of that, thanks (maybe why the author didn't bother to explain it)
― dow, Wednesday, 13 February 2013 23:44 (thirteen years ago)
Apex Hides The Hurt by Colson Whitehead - ZO has set me off on a Whitehead spree, I imagine ('cept THE INTUITIONIST, cuz I've already read that one).Gould by Stephen Dixon - This was free. The blurb on the back mentions Calvino. Anyone wanna rep it?
― "Rob is startled, this is straight up gangster" (R Baez), Saturday, 16 February 2013 02:09 (thirteen years ago)
My younger brother brought his twin brother Muscle by Samuel Fussell for his birthday, about the professional bodybuilding world. Looked quite good.
― fizzles tics (Fizzles), Tuesday, 19 February 2013 13:30 (thirteen years ago)
I like the author/title rhyme. Unusual.
― woof, Tuesday, 19 February 2013 14:45 (thirteen years ago)
I traded in some books yesterday and came home with:
Collected Poems, Yvor Winters, in a well-thumbed but readable paperback copy with a few pencil notations, for $4. A modest collection, but every poem reflects Winters' concern with clarity and concentration. He obviously was a relentless self-editor.
The Bab Ballads: With which are included Songs of a Savoyard, W.S. Gilbert, in a lovely, fully illustrated 1950 hardcover printing, for $8. The fruit of a piercing wit and a worthy mind.
― Aimless, Sunday, 24 February 2013 18:28 (thirteen years ago)
shit dudes i went to the mit bookstore on friday and looked t a bunch of shit. i want to get the new-ish zizek, less than nothing, but it's mad expensive.
not really a purchase but: http://www.amazon.com/Shallow-Rewards-Commentaries-2005-2012-ebook/dp/B007AMN8OG
(it's free right now)
― markers, Sunday, 24 February 2013 19:14 (thirteen years ago)
I feel virtuous. My bookshelves actually have a tiny bit of open space once more. Today I sold about 25 books and only bought two:
Troilus and Crisyde, Geoffrey Chaucer, in a used hardcover from Everyman's Library, good condiiton, for $5.50. This is not a modernized version, but the middle english with plentiful marginal notes for easier reading of the thorny bits.
Psmith, Journalist, P.G. Wodehouse, in a new hardcover marked down from $13.95 to $8.95. One of his better efforts, imo.
― Aimless, Sunday, 3 March 2013 04:33 (thirteen years ago)
Envy you, reading that for the first time
― Johnny Too Borad (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 3 March 2013 04:47 (thirteen years ago)
Noticed Faction Books while on an errand yesterday - loved it, old school piled-high collections of books, comics, vinyl etc. Had no time to properly root around, but quickly picked up:
http://g-ecx.images-amazon.com/images/G/02/ciu/c4/92/bcd5c27a02a0382641a88110.L._AA300_.jpg
and a 70s copy of The Man Who Fell to Earth (novel, that is). Also heard about the owner's UFO encounter.
― woof, Sunday, 3 March 2013 11:24 (thirteen years ago)
Aimless, Friday, March 2, 2007 6:52 PM (6 years ago)
This thread is now middle-aged, in dog years.
― Aimless, Sunday, 3 March 2013 18:07 (thirteen years ago)
Glenn Patterson - "The Mill for Grnding Old People Young"Margaret Atwood - "The Handmaids Tale"
― Old Boy In Network (Michael B), Sunday, 3 March 2013 18:31 (thirteen years ago)
Third in a series of xp books read early, purchased lately: following Sarah Barnwell Elliot's Some Data and The Free Southern Theater's The Free Southern Theater (plus Maraniss's Rome 1960), finally got Jeff Nuttall's Bomb Culture, with consideration of his fellow Goon Show fans the Moors Murderers, for inst, amidst the mists of hang-time w RD Laing, Alexander Trocchi and many others, as the 60s get 60s-er, skoob towers and all.
― dow, Monday, 4 March 2013 01:29 (thirteen years ago)
Thought my bank card have been declined because I was skint so I rushed home from Tesco and panic bought the following to see if I was solvent:
The Faber Book of Reportage (792 pages for a penny! wow!)Richard Ford - Independence Day
Turns out that NatWest has just gone into meltdown again. Phew.
― the Shearer of simulated snowsex etc. (Dwight Yorke), Wednesday, 6 March 2013 23:15 (thirteen years ago)
Roderick Hudson
― Josh and D.A.M. (Drugs A. Money), Thursday, 7 March 2013 08:31 (thirteen years ago)
Louise Glück - A Village LifeDerek Walcott - White Egrets
two recent books by older/established poets with whom I'm not really familiar—haven't spent much time with either yet, tho I skimmed the Walcott enough to notice the poem dedicated to Obama & entitled "Forty Acres" (!)
― fiscal cliff racer (bernard snowy), Thursday, 7 March 2013 16:14 (thirteen years ago)
(unfortunately, beyond the outrageous conceit of the title, it's not very radical. concluding lines: "... and the young ploughman feels the change in his veins, heart, muscles, tendons, / till the field lies open like a flag as dawn's sure / light streaks the field and furrows wait for the sower." I prefer the poem after it, where Walcott discusses Obama with his barber)
― fiscal cliff racer (bernard snowy), Thursday, 7 March 2013 16:18 (thirteen years ago)
The Man in the Iron Mask, Alexander Dumas, in a used Penguin paperback, $1.
― Aimless, Friday, 8 March 2013 02:41 (thirteen years ago)
benedict anderson - imagined communitiesgeorges bataille - story of the eyephilip k dick - flow my tears
― ( ( ( ( ( ( ( (Z S), Friday, 8 March 2013 02:53 (thirteen years ago)
tbh with story of the eye i thought eh, 1928 borderline porno, this is going to be pretty tame. but holy moley, the piss is flying left and right
― ( ( ( ( ( ( ( (Z S), Friday, 8 March 2013 02:55 (thirteen years ago)
standing at a swedish festival
― k3vin k., Friday, 8 March 2013 03:01 (thirteen years ago)
for the longest time i thought that line went "discussing story of the year", with "year" pronounced in a ridiculous accent, and wondered why he would give props to story of the year like that
― ( ( ( ( ( ( ( (Z S), Friday, 8 March 2013 03:05 (thirteen years ago)
"tbh with story of the eye i thought eh, 1928 borderline porno, this is going to be pretty tame"
ahahaha
― attempt to look intentionally nerdy, awkward or (thomp), Friday, 8 March 2013 18:15 (thirteen years ago)
The Nonexistent Knight and The Cloven Viscount by Italo CalvinoThe Baron In The Trees by Italo CalvinoSleepless Nights by Elizabeth Hardwick
― "Rob is startled, this is straight up gangster" (R Baez), Friday, 8 March 2013 18:27 (thirteen years ago)
Two bios by Paul Mariani. One of Berryman and one of Lowell.
― alimosina, Friday, 8 March 2013 22:49 (thirteen years ago)
multi-xpost — Story of the Eye is okay but Blue of Noon might actually be one of the 20th-century's best novel(la)s
― fiscal cliff racer (bernard snowy), Saturday, 9 March 2013 02:59 (thirteen years ago)
Just bought 7 books, which I really need to stop doing because I'm still acquiring books faster than I'm reading them.
Flann O'Brien - The Third PolicemanMo Yan - Pow!Italo Calvino - The Baron in the TreesItalo Calvino - The Nonexistent Knight and the Cloven Viscount (really weird that R Baez just bought these two books too)Laurence Sterne - The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, GentlemanKingsley Amis - Lucky JimGK Chesterton - The Man WHo Was Thursday
― justfanoe (Greg Fanoe), Monday, 18 March 2013 17:04 (thirteen years ago)
Third Policeman is an awesome mindfuck.
― Public Brooding Closet (cryptosicko), Monday, 18 March 2013 18:30 (thirteen years ago)
I'm still working down a trade balance from a sale of books a couple of weeks ago. I used some of it to buy:
the Alphabet, Ron Silliman, as a new trade paperback, $17.98. I read a few pages in the bookstore and this seemed pretty damned interesting, although I expect that at 1000+ pages this huge poem won't really hang together so much as flow onwards, without any obvious purpose other than 'say stuff'.
― Aimless, Monday, 18 March 2013 21:51 (thirteen years ago)