Nu-ILB: What books have you purchased lately?

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just picked up a hb facing page translation of leopardi canti and my own copy of the changing light at sandover for a £13.

Fizzles, Saturday, 21 February 2015 18:05 (eleven years ago)

Sold a bunch for:

The Arabian Nights (yes - the Husain Haddawy ed.!! that I have so read and love)
Halldor Laxness - Independent People

Then yesterday a selection of Lowell's poetry (selected by M. Hofmann) and Buchner's Complete Plays, Lenz Other Writings on Penguin. I have a version of these which is more focused on the plays (the paras in Lenz are broken up which is not on, considering this is where German prose begins)

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 28 February 2015 13:26 (eleven years ago)

bought some books:

george grosz - ecce homo
john barnicoat - a concise history of posters
alasdair gray - the fall of kelvin walker: a fable of the sixties
paul goodman - don juan or, the continuum of the libido
cecil parrott - the bad bohemian: a life of jaroslav hasek
nicholas hewitt - the life of celine: a critical biography

as it happens the bookshop owner i got the celine bio at showed me an edition of celine's letters he's just published (only available in australasia due to copyright issues, apparently). looks interesting, but expensive.

no lime tangier, Thursday, 5 March 2015 03:12 (eleven years ago)

10% off @ lrb shop night:

Marlen Haushofer - The Wall
Maurice Blachot - The One Who Is Standing Apart from Me

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 5 March 2015 12:58 (eleven years ago)

no lime - is it this?

http://www.brooklynrail.org/2014/09/fiction/the-selected-correspondence-of-louis-ferdinand-cline

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 5 March 2015 13:01 (eleven years ago)

Got a few things.

Katherine Mansfield - Selected Stories
Bruno Schulz - Street of Crocodiles
Janet Carsten - After Kinship
Confucius - The Analects
Mencius

jmm, Thursday, 5 March 2015 14:06 (eleven years ago)

Bought a paper copies of a couple of the Greek texts that Geoffrey Steadman has been producing - Iliad 6 + 20 and Plato's Crito. I'd downloaded a lot of the free pdf versions & they're pretty much exactly what I need to push my Greek a bit.

Cambridge History of Renaissance Philosophy. Kept getting it out of the library, so thought my own copy would be good.

Little pile of Renaissance stuff - the Courtier, Elyot's Governour, the Penguin anthology of English Renaissance Lit Crit.

woof, Thursday, 5 March 2015 14:25 (eleven years ago)

xposts: yep, only had a quick look at it (quite a thin volume), but thinking about going and picking a copy up sometime i have some extra $.

publisher here: https://kilmogpress.wordpress.com/2015/02/12/selected-correspondence-of-louis-ferdinand-celine-ed-trans-mitchell-abidor-2015/

no lime tangier, Thursday, 5 March 2015 17:00 (eleven years ago)

This colleciton of Serge's anarchist writings by the same translator also looks great.

xyzzzz__, Friday, 6 March 2015 10:17 (eleven years ago)

Le Guin, The Compass Rose, and Threshold. They also had the winds twelve quarters vol 2 but I already have two of those thanks to some idiot online seller, still looking for vol 1.

ledge, Saturday, 14 March 2015 11:35 (eleven years ago)

Rilke - Selected, trans. by Stephen Mitchell. It looks so good as a paperback. I find that I am often buying for the content as much as by how good the book looks..

http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41NXRECGZPL.jpg

Saramago - The Death of Ricardo Reis. Read it before, total classic, glad to have my own copy.

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 14 March 2015 12:41 (eleven years ago)

xp just ordered vol 1, hope it doesn't transmute en route to vol 2 like last time. Also ordered sebald's the rings of saturn. Decided against getting Asimov's version too.

ledge, Saturday, 14 March 2015 14:27 (eleven years ago)

Bought a few SF paperbacks today

http://i1194.photobucket.com/albums/aa362/Andrew_Littlefield/020_zps3jdnrvam.jpg

Also saw a happy looking bookcat

http://i1194.photobucket.com/albums/aa362/Andrew_Littlefield/019_zpsskwmrs8q.jpg

sʌxihɔːl (Ward Fowler), Saturday, 21 March 2015 21:04 (eleven years ago)

Turns out I have an earlier Panther paperback of the Spinrad; I also have a copy of The Rats, but not in that classic NEL edition.

sʌxihɔːl (Ward Fowler), Saturday, 21 March 2015 21:06 (eleven years ago)

http://cdn.mhpbooks.com/uploads/2014/10/Specimen-Days-and-Collect-225x300.jpg

j., Saturday, 21 March 2015 21:52 (eleven years ago)

tom mccarthy - c

was looking for remainder but neither my school library nor any local new or used bookstores had it. i just bought a new e-reader so i'll prob just download it. i've heard this one's not as good but no ilx rec'd author has lead me astray so far

it's been a shitty semester for reading for me. got halfway through a couple novels and lost momentum, read half of that anonymous book but completely hated the way it was written. i'll probably finish it and make an ilx post complaining about it at some point. i'm rereading piketty right now in a book club with some classmates. we're giving it the full treatment, going through the online appendix & playing around with the top incomes database. easily the best economics book ever written.

trying not to feel too bad about not reading. i'm rocking ass at school and slowly cutting down on internet use. my girlfriend insists we watch films or netflix every night, and i've basically been living at her place, so my before-bed reading is basically nonexistent, but at least it's being substituted by other good things and not just staying up needlessly late on the internet.

it's gonna be a good summer though. i'll be working purely on research and my data is in a restricted access room in the basement of the library only open 5 hours per day, so i'll have plenty of time to read. my plan is to read pynchon and a bunch of sci-fi. i wanna read robertson davies while i still live in kingston. i quit smoking weed so i expect that'll help.

flopson, Saturday, 21 March 2015 22:15 (eleven years ago)

I do love those panther (etc) sci fi books. Found a copy of rendezvous with rama in chiswick yesterday. Cover wasn't exceptional like those though.

This week I have been mainly buying penguin classics versions of Dickens's books - chuzzlewit, nicholby, rudge and hard times. Few more to go but the pile is already over a foot tall.

koogs, Saturday, 21 March 2015 22:29 (eleven years ago)

(RwR was actually a Pan copy, cover mainly text)

koogs, Saturday, 21 March 2015 22:32 (eleven years ago)

Spinrad's reviews in Asimov's Magazine (later collected, I think) led to me to some really good books, and fearlessly ripped into bad ones, even by Science Fiction gas giants, then went way over the top vs. Le Guin, and I got off the bus before trying his own novels. But I'll check 'em out if I come across affordables (they're long gone from the local library).
Library shop has several by Ha Jin; should I get them?

dow, Saturday, 21 March 2015 23:36 (eleven years ago)

Bug Jack Barron is one of the few SF novels I can think of that has been at the centre of a moral panic, in the uk at least.

sʌxihɔːl (Ward Fowler), Sunday, 22 March 2015 00:00 (eleven years ago)

What happened?

dow, Sunday, 22 March 2015 01:05 (eleven years ago)

was that the one that led to wh smiths not stocking new worlds

♛ LIL UNIT ♛ (thomp), Sunday, 22 March 2015 02:06 (eleven years ago)

a very british moral panic

♛ LIL UNIT ♛ (thomp), Sunday, 22 March 2015 02:06 (eleven years ago)

I've fought manfully to slow the pace of my book purchases and to read as much as possible exclusively from among the titles I've bought. Although this is always something of a losing battle, I can at least take some consolation from how little I usually pay for books, since I shop 95% of the time at charity shops.

Today I bought two used paperbacks:

Broken Columns: Two Roman Epic Fragments: The Achilleid of Publius Papinius Statius AND The Rape of Proserpine of Claudius Claudianus, translated by David Slavitt. This book has the distinction of having a title, sub-title and sub-sub-title, so who could resist? It was printed by the University of Pennsylvania Press and I paid $4 for it.

Hard Rain Falling, Don Carpenter, published by NYRB Classics for $4. It's a down-and-out, hard-bitten novel and a fair amount of the book apparently takes place in 1960s Portland, Oregon, my hometown. Again, irresistible.

Aimless, Sunday, 22 March 2015 03:04 (eleven years ago)

dow - I can't beat the Wiki entry:

The book was serialised in the British New Wave science fiction magazine New Worlds during Michael Moorcock's editorship. Its explicit language and cynical attitude toward politicians, as well as the fact that the magazine was partially funded by the British Arts Council, angered British Members of Parliament.[2] Jennie Lee, Baroness Lee of Asheridge, then head of the Arts Council, successfully defended the book. Later, it was banned by W. H. Smith, a major British chain of bookstores.[3] Feminist typesetters at New Worlds rejected the story as sexist.

sʌxihɔːl (Ward Fowler), Sunday, 22 March 2015 07:32 (eleven years ago)

Oh yeah, all of that sounds very plausible, without having read it.[3] is plausible in that male satirists talkin' salty 'bout a liberation, especially ones who "grew up" in the 50s, could come off pretty sexist: Terry Southern, Richard Farina, sometimes Ed Sanders (not to mention college boys of the 40s, like Mailer).

dow, Sunday, 22 March 2015 18:51 (eleven years ago)

Although I think irony was the usual alibi, then as later.

dow, Sunday, 22 March 2015 18:53 (eleven years ago)

I don't think I've ever posted on I Love Books, but anyway A Brief History of Seven Killings by Marlon James is the best book I've read in years, kaleidescopic view of Jamaica in the mid/late 70s, told from the perspectives of probably over 40 characters, centering on the incident where some gunmen ran up in Bob Marley's house (real life incident) but a great mix of fiction and history, reggae culture, organized crime, CIA interference, Jamaican politics, etc etc

really blown away, what a talent, his ability to write in the voice of so many disparate characters and inhabit them is stunning

kurt kobaïan (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 24 March 2015 14:33 (eleven years ago)

read a review of that awhile ago, looked interesting.

sort of related: anyone read naipaul's novel about the events surrounding michael x's compound once he fled to jamaica from britain? reading up on the details of that story is totally bizarre.

no lime tangier, Tuesday, 24 March 2015 14:49 (eleven years ago)

Latest finds:

Hilda Hilst - With my Dog-Eyes
Joseph Roth - Flight Without End
Joyce - Finnegans Wake
C.P. Cavafy - Collected Poems
Ingeborg Bachmann - Three Paths to the Lake (found by Tim for me! :-))

xyzzzz__, Monday, 30 March 2015 16:26 (eleven years ago)

John Darnielle, Master of Reality (replacing a copy I lent out and never got back)
John Darnielle, Wolf in White Van
Jonathan Lethem, Lucky Alan

That shit right there is precedented. (cryptosicko), Tuesday, 31 March 2015 00:07 (eleven years ago)

three weeks pass...

I traded a bunch of books I already owned to finance the purchase of all the following books, so it isn't like I spent any money, right?

Novels and Stories, Jack London, used hardcover in good condition, Library of America edition, $17.95.

Collected Stories, Franz Kafka, used hardcover in good condition, Everyman's Library edition, $4.

Nobody Knows My Name, James Baldwin, used 1962 vintage paperback, $4.50. Jacket blurb: "The explosive bestseller by America's angry young man."

Fathers and Sons, Ivan Turgenev, used penguin paperback in good condition, $1.

The Distant Music, H.L. Davis, used paperback in good condition, $4.95. A novel by an Oregon author who I've mentioned before on ILB.

Giant Purple Wakerobin (Aimless), Monday, 27 April 2015 05:13 (eleven years ago)

picked these up new for cheap:

roberto bolaño - the skating rink & nazi literature in the americas
penguin's tales of the german imagination (happy to see unica zürn in there)

yet to pull the trigger (so to speak) but have been contemplating buying that 1000+ page isaac babel collection as well

no lime tangier, Monday, 27 April 2015 05:26 (eleven years ago)

What collection is that? Didn't know he'd written 1000 pages of stuff!

as verbose and purple as a Peter Ustinov made of plums (James Morrison), Wednesday, 29 April 2015 04:01 (eleven years ago)

http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51Z5N3ZW57L.jpg

twice the length of the collected stories, so there's quite a lot in there including plays & screenplays. not sure what else or how ephemeral some of the other contents may be. only familiar with the old penguin collection, so looking forward to checking out the other stuff.

speaking of babel and film, discovered benya krik from 1926 is up on youtube

no lime tangier, Wednesday, 29 April 2015 05:52 (eleven years ago)

wow, okay, i need to look at that

as verbose and purple as a Peter Ustinov made of plums (James Morrison), Wednesday, 29 April 2015 06:56 (eleven years ago)

Me too! Where should I start with him, if I can't find that?

From the library shop (capitalization same as the covers):

Walker Percy omnibus--- I already read The Moviegoer, and that seemed great, also enough, but since this also has The Last Gentleman and The Second Coming, I'll check them out (and/or donate this back to the library). What else should I read by him?

Harriet Doer, Stones for Ibarra

Michael Moorcock, Legends From The End Of Time Supposedly the last round-up, from '99.

Pablo Neruda, Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair Only one of his I ever see; what else should I read?

Adam Hochschild, King Leopold's Ghost Kurtz country.

Leon Edel, Henry James, A Life "This is a masterly abridgment of the greatest literary biography of our century. Edel has not only cut, he has added---he has actually deepened his original work."---Louis Auchincloss. Joyce Carol Oates's blurb doesn't call it the greatest, but otherwise concurs.

John M. Barry, Rising Tide: The Great Mississippi Flood And How It Changed America

dow, Wednesday, 29 April 2015 19:17 (eleven years ago)

Sold a bunch for:

2x vols of Modern Euro Poets - Apollinaire and Gunter Grass
Francois Villon vol on Anvil
Roberto Bolano - Romantic Dogs
Dante - Inferno (tr. Steve Ellis)

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 2 May 2015 22:13 (eleven years ago)

went to a small book sale and got

jco - mudwoman $1
olive kitteridge $1
& michael lewis -flashboys $2 (sez it's a signed copy and there is a scribble on the title page ? don't authors usu sign on the page where their name is idk)

johnny crunch, Saturday, 2 May 2015 23:10 (eleven years ago)

huh well it looks the same as http://www.ebay.com/itm/SIGNED-NEW-FLASH-BOYS-by-Michael-Lewis-2014-Hardcover-/251923993648?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item3aa7d71430

so i guess is legit

johnny crunch, Saturday, 2 May 2015 23:13 (eleven years ago)

that babel collection is terrific and essential btw. i dunno if his actual polish front diaries were in earlier collections or not but having them backtoback w the red cavalry stories is revelatory, and the plays about jewish gangsters in odessa rule.

difficult listening hour, Saturday, 2 May 2015 23:22 (eleven years ago)

i wrote a huge undergrad seminar paper that was basically a glorified book report on that volume (with lots of quotes from lenin's telegrams, for history.)

difficult listening hour, Saturday, 2 May 2015 23:25 (eleven years ago)

^the babel arrived earlier today & looks to be pretty damn impressive. now just need to find the time to read it.

also picked up 2nd hand:

rayner heppenstall - two moons
wyndham lewis - the complete wild body
céline - journey to the end of the night

no lime tangier, Thursday, 14 May 2015 05:27 (eleven years ago)

the celine's an old new directions edition... with a really early translation... think the copy i used to have was the ralph manheim version...

no lime tangier, Thursday, 14 May 2015 05:40 (eleven years ago)

Adam Hochschild, King Leopold's Ghost Kurtz country.
>

THis was fascinating but I haven't read it in years. I know I read it amongst a load of things from the University library in the summer of 2003.
Belgium or the King of there felt it was missing out on the scrabble for Africa so decided it would claim to be trying to rid the area around the Congo of slavery. It instead created a hell on Earth for the local natives and provided then ship's captain Joseph Conrad a model for some of his writing including the up river of Kurtz. Conrad actually had dealings with the regime in being sent there to trade by the company he was working with. Or something similar.
It was all exposed by a Liverpool shipping clerk if I'm remembering rightly.
Think I have a copy of the book so I should reread it, but the to read list is pretty long.

Stevolende, Thursday, 14 May 2015 06:45 (eleven years ago)

Mark Twain wrote scathingly about King Leopold's misrule in the Congo at the time it was happening. Reading his denunciation was how I first learned of that bit of colonial history (though not at the time it was happening).

Aimless, Thursday, 14 May 2015 16:30 (eleven years ago)

More 2nd hand madness:

Shirley Hazzard - The Bay of Noon (James do you like her?)
Nikolai Gogol - Dead Souls (love the Yale Uni paperbk)
Hrabal - Harlequin's Millions

xyzzzz__, Friday, 15 May 2015 21:38 (eleven years ago)

Also: Tanizaki - The Reed Cutter and Captain Shigemoto's Mother.

xyzzzz__, Friday, 15 May 2015 21:46 (eleven years ago)

Found and bought a copy of Procopius' Secret History today, as a used Penguin paperback, good condition, $2. Probably the second juiciest of the ancient histories, behind Suetonius.

Aimless, Saturday, 16 May 2015 04:33 (eleven years ago)

attended a book sale, purchased some books ($1 each)

george meredith - the egoist
thomas hardy - the well-beloved, the distracted preacher & other tales
joyce carey - to be a pilgrim
anthony powell - hearing secret harmonies
children of albion: poetry of the underground in britain
fernando arrabal - plays volume 3
chris marker - owls at noon prelude: the hollow men
antonioni - l'avventura (illustrated script, interviews, essays, criticism)

no lime tangier, Friday, 22 May 2015 08:51 (eleven years ago)


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