Does anyone what happened to Ginzburg's "A Family Lexicon"?
http://www.nyrb.com/collections/natalia-ginzburg/
They are building a healthy stable in Spanish lit titles. Want to get hold of Ocampo. Arlt and Di Benedetto forthcoming
― xyzzzz__, Saturday, 1 August 2015 07:43 (ten years ago)
Wanna check this! http://www.nyrb.com/products/the-woman-who-borrowed-memories/?variant=1094932805
― dow, Saturday, 1 August 2015 13:24 (ten years ago)
Oh wow---NYRB Classics Book Club. I might do this. Have to think about it:https://subscribe.nybooks.info/ecom/NYB/app/live/subscriptions?org=NYB&publ=BC&key_code=EVAXWWW&type=S&gift_key=GVAXWWW
― dow, Saturday, 12 September 2015 21:33 (ten years ago)
http://www.nyrb.com/collections/forthcoming/products/the-white-stones?variant=6572997249
^ wow
Also love the idea of the Calligrams series. Need to get around Chinese lit and poetry.
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 14 October 2015 15:33 (ten years ago)
I stumbled upon this last year while in Mexico, I'd never heard of her and only read it because I was there but it turned out to be one of my favourite pieces of travel writing:
http://www.nyrb.com/collections/forthcoming/products/a-visit-to-don-otavio?variant=6568056129
― .robin., Thursday, 15 October 2015 18:08 (ten years ago)
Her novels, which are mostly heavily autobiographical, are excellent, too
― as verbose and purple as a Peter Ustinov made of plums (James Morrison), Friday, 16 October 2015 00:14 (ten years ago)
'a way of life, like any other' by darcy o'brien is really, really good i thought
― extremely online (Lamp), Thursday, 10 March 2016 09:18 (ten years ago)
hell of a title
― carly rae jetson (thomp), Thursday, 10 March 2016 09:44 (ten years ago)
That book is great.
― Jesperson, I think we're lost (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 10 March 2016 11:00 (ten years ago)
Yes, love it. Looked for more by him, and they all seemed to be true crime books, which is not USUALLY my bag. Has anyone read any of them?
― like Uber, but for underpants (James Morrison), Thursday, 10 March 2016 11:49 (ten years ago)
Yes, I read two of them, the one about the Hillside Stranglers and the one about Little Egypt. Both were extremely well done but left me feeling weird for a long while, because true crime.
― Jesperson, I think we're lost (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 10 March 2016 11:59 (ten years ago)
Realized that the regular crime novel is usually reassuring because whatever bad stuff happens there is always some rhyme or reason, some pattern some style, whereas true crime opens up a rent in the curtain to peek into the void.
― Jesperson, I think we're lost (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 10 March 2016 12:01 (ten years ago)
do you two have any other nyrb recommendations? i havent been reading much so far this year
― extremely online (Lamp), Thursday, 10 March 2016 23:19 (ten years ago)
Have you read The Go-Between?
― Jesperson, I think we're lost (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 10 March 2016 23:49 (ten years ago)
Of the top of my head...
If you like beautifully written, somewhat elliptical Middle Europeans, try Skylark or SunflowerIf realistic, gritty and Beautifully written, maybe Fat CityFor energetic pulpy fun, Black Wings Has My AngelFor fascinating memoirs, The Burning WorldFor groovy SF, The Inverted World or The Chrysalids
― like Uber, but for underpants (James Morrison), Friday, 11 March 2016 03:06 (ten years ago)
Is there anyone left on this borad who hasn't read Inverted World?
― Jesperson, I think we're lost (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 11 March 2016 03:34 (ten years ago)
got it from library years ago, but it didn't hook me & I returned it unread
― bernard snowy, Friday, 11 March 2016 07:11 (ten years ago)
the closest two NYRBs from where I'm sitting is a collection of Tatyana Tolstaya stories. I've also got Geoffrey Household's Rogue Male stashed somewhere, that's a good'un; & Silvina Ocampo's volume of stories is out in the car I think. I had A High Wind in Jamaica, but I hawked it one summer, during a particularly slow week for sandwich delivery driving
― bernard snowy, Friday, 11 March 2016 07:16 (ten years ago)
Recently scored a 2nd hand copy of The Unknown Masterpiece by Balzac, which is probably the first of these I read.
Thinking we could run a poll of favourite titles. Like a Top 25.
― xyzzzz__, Friday, 11 March 2016 09:40 (ten years ago)
warlock or 30 years war would walk it surely
― cozen, Friday, 11 March 2016 17:52 (ten years ago)
30 yrs war and novels in three lines is all i've read /noob
― goole, Friday, 11 March 2016 19:57 (ten years ago)
both rule hard tho
Yeah, all these are awesome in quite different ways. I guess there's a common strangeness to some of the Tolstaya and Ocampo, but very different sensibilities.
― like Uber, but for underpants (James Morrison), Saturday, 12 March 2016 01:23 (ten years ago)
was gifted 30 Years War this past Xmas on request off the back of that fascinating thread and for w/e reason (quite possibly i was igonorantly ripe for it and simply required a catalyst to get me moving) i've gone on a history reading tear in a bunch of different directions ever since, think it would be cool if ilx occasionally took time out of its busy schedule to discuss some minor and overlooked period/event in world history and recommend excellent books upon the subject.
― Windsor Davies, Saturday, 12 March 2016 01:42 (ten years ago)
Maqroll the gaviero
― the late great, Saturday, 12 March 2016 08:51 (ten years ago)
http://www.amazon.com/Adventures-Misadventures-Maqroll-Review-Classics/dp/0940322919
― the late great, Saturday, 12 March 2016 08:52 (ten years ago)
Before the current What Are You Reading thread sinks into the archive, here's a NYRB thing I posted there
NYRB Winter Sale---50 books at 50% off (wondering about Poets In A Landscape and Pages From The Goncourt Journals)(maybe the Cendrars)
http://www.nyrb.com/collections/winter-sale?utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=NYR%20Winter%20Sale&utm_content=NYR%20Winter%20Sale+CID_093896182073cb3e11f6921e1ab46742&utm_source=Newsletter&utm_term=Browse%20the%20books
― dow, Saturday, 12 March 2016 23:16 (ten years ago)
And some responses:
Started on The Goncourt Journal! Its compulsive reading atm: a mixture of acid bitchyness, passges of excellent crit (the way they lay into Flaubert after a reading of Salammbo, whom they otherwise have much affection for). Also has plenty of misogny - which in turn reflects on various inadequacies - the men as portrayed here can't stop talking about women. Must've been a key text for Proust.
― xyzzzz__, Tuesday, February 16, 2016 4:17 PM (3 weeks ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
There's a really virtuosic pastiche of the Goncourt journals late in Recherche, iirc. (I mean, I think it's virtuosic but haven't read enough of the actual brothers to properly judge.)
― one way street, Tuesday, February 16, 2016 5:20 PM (3 weeks ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― dow, Saturday, 12 March 2016 23:19 (ten years ago)
So I finished Pages from the Goncourt Journals. So much in here, even though its very much the chronicle of two people who gave their lives to one thing: literature - partly because that's what they were good at (and not much else; women were such an obsession because they were a mystery - almost alien beings), but also because the stuff they were writing about like Flaubert and Zola was the stuff that 'won'. So while the subject is cult (Lit in general is a minority interest) they display a tabloid-like ear for both dialogue and speculation - people's lives and tribulations. A snatch of conversation that lingers on for long after you've read it. Something from his cousin:
Just imagine: they [the cousin's rural family] are people who for five generations have married for love
But there is are bits indicating a panorama of Paris in the 19th Century: one of the brothers - Jules - dies (at 39) Edmond carries on (3/4 of this is Edmond) and the entries surrounding his brother's death are touching and dignified. The Paris Commune starts up and this is chronicled as engagingly as what he is usually interested in.
But literature is what they gave themselves and there are insights at what the coming century will bring. The feud with Maupassant (his descent into madness and death doesn't stop Edmond from pissing away in his grave, but the charge of Flaubert minus sticks). There are snatches of a hilarious portrait of Mallarme, just this person that is beyond any comprehension. Edmond notes the weirdness of Baudelaire and so on. And then:
I am interested in novels in which I can feel the transcription in print, so to speak, of creatures in flesh and blood, in which I can read a little or a great deal of the memoirs of a life that has been lived
Where so much 20th century fic goes to (and where these Journals have been in although ironically you get a sense the life is often frustrating, in a they-are-rich-but-are-they-happy sorta way)
and regarding novels about high society:
...but unfortunately, to write novels or plays about that world you mustn't belong to itWhich is basically Proust.
― xyzzzz__, Sunday, February 28, 2016 6:02 PM (1 week ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― dow, Saturday, 12 March 2016 23:36 (ten years ago)
The Goncourt Journals is vital and glad its there but like so much in the NYRB stack its a reissue (I actually read it as a hardback of the OUP ed. from '78 I got at the library and looked the NYRB ed in a bookshop).
Serge's Memoirs of a Revolutionary comes with extra bits and so it would've been a nice thing to do to as much of their reissues, esp Goncourt since its by no means complete and yet you probably don't need to read it all. Thinking they could've commissioned a translation of different bits and re-select. Not just reissue.
Maqroll the gaviero― the late great, Saturday, March 12, 2016 Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― the late great, Saturday, March 12, 2016 Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Loved this in parts - had too much going on while I picked this up so had a stop/start experience with it. But its in line with what I was talking about - I think the previous edition didn't have the complete books so NYRB got the full set out there.
― xyzzzz__, Sunday, 13 March 2016 08:17 (ten years ago)
s1ocki chatting with nyrb on twitter has brought this, which looks cool, to light: http://www.nyrb.com/collections/forthcoming/products/the-glory-of-the-empire?variant=6567691777
― mookieproof, Tuesday, 15 March 2016 16:19 (ten years ago)
What?
― SIGSALY Can't Dance (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 15 March 2016 16:21 (ten years ago)
a bit surprised to see some 60s J H Prynne (The White Stones) coming out in their poetry imprint
― woof, Tuesday, 15 March 2016 16:40 (ten years ago)
Its pretty exciting. Really looking forward to that.
― xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 15 March 2016 16:47 (ten years ago)
yeah early parsable Prynne is great. it's in the big Poems, though, so I may skip it.
― woof, Tuesday, 15 March 2016 16:51 (ten years ago)
William Sloane- The Rim of Morning is a Kindle Daily Deal today
― Blowout Coombes (President Keyes), Tuesday, 22 March 2016 00:53 (ten years ago)
picked up copies of fat city and black wings has my angel thx to James' recs upthread... started the latter on my busride home this evening, hoo boy
― flopson, Tuesday, 22 March 2016 00:59 (ten years ago)
Just finished An Empty Room by Mu Xin which I bought on a whim, has anyone read it?
Highly recommended, its a series of stories which are somewhere between fiction and essays, some of them brutal short stories about war and oppression, others reminiscent of Robert Walser in going for a stroll mode.
― .robin., Tuesday, 22 March 2016 03:53 (ten years ago)
That's on New Directions.
I read Jejuri by Arun Kolatkar last night and its fantastic. Its a pre-NYRB poets edition (and I haven't read it in that edition either but doing it as part of the complete poems).
Very inspired pick-up from NYRB. Kolatkar was very reluctant to issue any of his work (the previous edition was on a small label in the late 70s and back then it was his only book) (he only allowed a re-print on NYRB and further things to come out as he was dying)
― xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 22 March 2016 09:24 (ten years ago)
that william sloane was really fun, highly recommended
― adam, Tuesday, 22 March 2016 11:07 (ten years ago)
Yeah, Jejuri is really good
― like Uber, but for underpants (James Morrison), Tuesday, 22 March 2016 21:19 (ten years ago)
Oops, meant to post it in the general thread.
― .robin., Wednesday, 23 March 2016 04:06 (ten years ago)
where does prynne stop being parseable? asking for a friend
― carly rae jetson (thomp), Wednesday, 23 March 2016 06:11 (ten years ago)
i deeply regret having not picked up the goncourt journals at the blackwells charing cross stock clearance--i bought a whole bunch of NYRBS, pretty much at random, and i can't remember what the others were (stefan zweig?)--but whatever they were, i feel the goncourts would have been the better choice. not least because i remember when i was staying up at gatwick, having got in early morning, and finishing proust, in costa coffee, and reaching the goncourt pastiche, and thinking, what in fuck is this? and then, on looking it up, remembering, clearly, my choice to return the goncourt volumes to the shelf.
― carly rae jetson (thomp), Wednesday, 23 March 2016 06:13 (ten years ago)
has there been any discussion here of what we take the er ethos of the nyrb imprint to be, because i think on a certain level it actually kinda sucks
― carly rae jetson (thomp), Wednesday, 23 March 2016 06:14 (ten years ago)
Like a comma overload now and then.
I saw the OUP edition of the Goncourts 2nd hand last weekend but the spine was damaged so no go.
The NYRB ed has an intro from fucking Geoff Dyer which is a bit off-putting.
re: ethos. Certainly more of a discussion I'd like to see...especially now as its expanding from its early days: NYRB Poets and the Calligrams series. Some of the reissues are lazy others inspired.
I was thinking if you look at Archipelago they have much more of a vision for certain kinds of literature, like their Nerval translation and almost all of the items from German literature proved to be a valuable guide for me.
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 23 March 2016 09:20 (ten years ago)
Not just a guide but pretty much vital, whereas its pockets of stuff from NYRB (although the Hungarian section is quite strong)
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 23 March 2016 09:25 (ten years ago)
Yes, their Hungarian and other Central European stuff is a goldmine.
― like Uber, but for underpants (James Morrison), Wednesday, 23 March 2016 09:59 (ten years ago)
― carly rae jetson (thomp), Wednesday, 23 March 2016 06:14 (7 hours ago) Permalink
what do you mean?
― flopson, Wednesday, 23 March 2016 13:35 (ten years ago)
Pretty covers aren't enough.
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 23 March 2016 13:42 (ten years ago)