Yeah it looks really good. Hope I get a chance to read it through.It's been a while since I read him. But I have enjoyed what I've read.
― Stevolende, Wednesday, 30 March 2016 22:56 (ten years ago)
When I was rationalising my library I let go my beloved copy of Vermillion Sands because I had the complete stories. Still regret that.
― a hairy, howling toad torments a man whose wife is deathly ill (James Morrison), Thursday, 31 March 2016 00:20 (ten years ago)
Might get this---Sedaris covered some of the same territory, but much later (so did at least one other writer, I think):
http://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0119/8902/products/CUNY_web_size_1024x1024.jpg?v=1450292052
Dear Friend of the Little Bookroom,This is the note—on the letterhead of a rare book dealer—that was tucked into the vintage copy of Cleaning Up New York that was sent to me, out of the blue:“If ever a book merited moving from cult classic to classic, it is Cleaning Up New York by Bob Rosenthal. My wife worked for him in Allen Ginsberg’s office and we have been devoted readers ever since. Let me know what you think…”From the first page, I was hooked by this chronicle of a 26-year-old starving poet who needed $60. He registers with a temp agency as a house cleaner and after his references check out—the poet Ron Padgett vouched that the author “always brushed his teeth”—he is catapulted into everyday yet unimaginable worlds behind closed (apartment) doors. Bob knows one thing: Dirt will always win. Clients are a bit more unpredictable, he discovers, as he comes to terms with eccentric domestic habits and intimate dramas; weird vibes and even stranger discoveries; appreciation, dependency, dismissal…and seduction. When our hero becomes a weekly fixture in his clients’ lives, anything can happen, and does. Along the way, he discovers that cleaning itself has its own allures and secrets, to which he devotes alternate chapters (what to wear, favorite products, how dust behaves, as well as the metaphysical nitty-gritty of physical labor).Cleaning Up New York is a quirky reinvention in the tradition of George Orwell’s Down and Out in Paris and London, Studs Terkel’s chronicles of the working class, and Mrs. Beeton’s Book of Household Management, its narrator a kindred spirit to Candide, Ida Tarbell, and Holden Caulfield. It is also an incomparable portrait of the East Village in the Seventies. And, I promise, you’ll never look at a Hoover in the same way again. (Sale price etc) For more information about the book please visit our website. Angela HedermanEditor, The Little Bookroom
― dow, Friday, 1 April 2016 16:28 (ten years ago)
more likely this, from the same source, and mostly for sake of pix (check out more on the Little Bookstore site)
http://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0119/8902/products/Brooklyn_A_Personal_Memoir_1024x1024.jpg?v=1443472977
Brooklyn: A Personal MemoirWith the lost photographs of David AttieBy Truman CapoteIntroduction by George PlimptonAfterword by Eli AttieIn 2001, Truman Capote’s stylish essay in praise of Brooklyn was brought back into print, but not until 2014—more than fifty years after they were taken—were the original photographs commissioned to illustrate the piece discovered by the late photographer’s son. Also found among the negatives were previously unknown portraits of Capote; none of the photos have ever been published. Now, in a new edition with a new title, Brooklyn: A Personal Memoir, the words and images are united for the first time.
Beloved by literary figures from Walt Whitman to Thomas Wolfe, Brooklyn cast its spell over Truman Capote, too. For a few tranquil years in the Fifties and Sixties, he happily made his home on Willow Street, where he wrote the legendary essay “Brooklyn Heights, A Personal Memoir.” In it, he vividly evokes the neighborhood he came to know well, bringing to life the landscape that was for him a world of grand homes and dimly recalled gentility, a garden overhung with wisteria, the famous Promenade, the sometimes menacing waterfront. This is his satisfying meander through a unique time and place.
David Attie’s images provide a stunning and atmospheric parallel portrait of Brooklyn in 1959—its buildings, shops, lost moments—a city at once strangely familiar yet largely vanished. Horse-drawn wagons deliver produce to housewives, kids swim unsupervised in the East River and get into mischief on the docks, and life plays out on stoops and streets against a backdrop of period architecture, the spectacular bridge, and the skyline of Manhattan.
"The long-lost photos...bring even more life to Capote’s sparkling description of the history and spirit of the neighborhood, with its eccentric characters, back alleys and fine houses ('as elegant and other-era as formal calling cards').” —The New York Times, “Travel"
ABOUT THE AUTHORSTruman Capote (1924-1984), the novelist, journalist, and celebrated man-about-town, is best known as the author of Other Voices, Other Rooms, The Grass Harp, Breakfast at Tiffany's and In Cold Blood.
David Attie (1920-1982), a commercial and fine art photographer, began his photographic career as a student of influential Harper's Bazaar art director Alexey Brodovitch, who gave Attie his first professional assignment: to create a series of photo montages to illustrate Capote's “Breakfast at Tiffany's.” Attie’s work appeared in Vogue, Time, Newsweek, and Harper’s Bazaar, among other publications. He produced two books of photographs, Russian Self-Portraits, and (together with Chuck Close, Robert Mapplethorpe, and others) Portrait: Theory.
George Plimpton (1927-2003), the originator of "participatory journalism," was the editor of the Paris Review. His books include Paper Lion, Out of My League, The Bogey Man, Open Net, The Curious Case of Sidd Finch and The X Factor.
Eli Attie is a television writer and producer. He served as a special assistant to President Bill Clinton, and then as Vice President Al Gore's chief speechwriter. Attie was a longtime writer on the series The West Wing and House. He grew up in New York City, is a graduate of Hunter College High School and Harvard College, and lives in Los Angeles.
― dow, Friday, 1 April 2016 16:32 (ten years ago)
can't resist one more pic:
http://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0119/8902/products/Capote_School_Kids_1024x1024.jpg?v=1443472977credit: David Attie
― dow, Friday, 1 April 2016 16:34 (ten years ago)
xps Vermilion Sands is great! I had a copy lent me by my last girlfriend, but I stupidly lent it to someone else and never got it back :(Does the collected stories include the Atrocity Exhibition stuff or no?
― bernard snowy, Friday, 1 April 2016 19:18 (ten years ago)
computer says no.
these three areWhy I Want to Fuck Ronald Reagan.The Assassination of John Fitzgerald Kennedy Considered as a Downhill Motor Race.Notes Towards a Mental Breakdown.
the rest aren't
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Atrocity_Exhibitionhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Complete_Short_Stories_of_J._G._Ballard:_Volume_1https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Complete_Short_Stories_of_J._G._Ballard:_Volume_2
― koogs, Friday, 1 April 2016 20:58 (ten years ago)
but all of Vermilion Sands is included.
― koogs, Friday, 1 April 2016 21:02 (ten years ago)
A couple of 'what the heck, it's just a buck' purchases.
Lives of the Artists, Giorgio Vasari, used Penguin Classics paperback in standard condition, $1.
Selected Poems, W.H. Auden (who also made the selection), used paperback in standard condition, $1.
― a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Saturday, 2 April 2016 22:39 (ten years ago)
Ursula Le Guin- The Left Hand of DarknessHaruki Murakami- The Wind Up Bird ChroniclesMuriel Spark - The Prime of Miss Jean BrodieDavid Bordwell and Kristen Thompson - Film Art
― i;m thinking about thos Beans (Michael B), Sunday, 3 April 2016 18:59 (ten years ago)
Was feeling gloomy so raided my local Oxfam.
Aldous Huxley - Along the Road: Notes and Essays of a Tourist started this, was hoping for Crome Yellow wit, and yes, the aesthete is definitely in evidence, but not in a particularly good way - the short essays are curiously hard going and mannered (perhaps not a surprise). Moments of humour and light though. Flann O'Brian - The Hard LifeChristopher Hitchens - Hitch-22
― Fizzles, Thursday, 7 April 2016 17:13 (ten years ago)
flaubert - sentimental education
been really feeling like pleasure-shopping at physical bookstores lately, despite my finances, and the closest shop now is garrison keillor's, but the place is so irritatingly expensive now even on like cheap mass-market oxford world's classics, that the price almost makes me want to boycott out of spite
― j., Thursday, 7 April 2016 19:36 (ten years ago)
Charles Taylor - Sources of the SelfAmy Clampitt - Selected PoemsPascal - Pensées
― jmm, Thursday, 7 April 2016 19:46 (ten years ago)
I just paid $1 (plus $10 shipping from the UK) for:
Gloria Anzaldua, Borderlands/La FronteraPauline Kael, State of the Art
― rhymes with "blondie blast" (cryptosicko), Thursday, 7 April 2016 19:54 (ten years ago)
we dont really care about theatre do we?
i bought all these for $1.50 each, some really cool stuff & most are in really great condition
http://i67.tinypic.com/2v3ipo6.jpg
― johnny crunch, Saturday, 9 April 2016 19:21 (ten years ago)
seems like some may be worth a bit like marat/sade, pippin, the baldwin.. idk, i just thought they were cool. I'm sure some yale prof died for my bounty
― johnny crunch, Saturday, 9 April 2016 19:24 (ten years ago)
Nice to score a remaindered copy of Ferrante's Days of Abandonment..
― xyzzzz__, Saturday, 9 April 2016 22:53 (ten years ago)
^ oooh! nice
I just came home with a paperback copy of a Farley Mowat book, The Farfarers. I know nothing about it except that Mowat is a generally reliable author who wrote readable, interesting books.
― a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Saturday, 9 April 2016 23:07 (ten years ago)
Those plays look like a nice haul!
― a hairy, howling toad torments a man whose wife is deathly ill (James Morrison), Saturday, 9 April 2016 23:31 (ten years ago)
found 4 boxes of religious philosophy (mostly but not exclusively jewish philosophy) sitting on the curb midway thru walking the dog. grabbed the best looking stuff but honestly left plenty of treasures behind. my score:
http://i.imgur.com/yrWh4GL.jpg
― Mordy, Monday, 18 April 2016 01:11 (ten years ago)
beautiful
― de l'asshole (flopson), Monday, 18 April 2016 01:19 (ten years ago)
Wow, worth grabbing some of those for the cover art alone
― a hairy, howling toad torments a man whose wife is deathly ill (James Morrison), Monday, 18 April 2016 01:35 (ten years ago)
Bought the Bill Kreutzmann book Dealand the NYC music Love Comes To a Building on Fire online last week. Haven't received them yet. Hoping my mail isn't being interfered with, expected things don't seem to be appearing.
It's Monday so will probably get something from a charity shop later.Also really want to read 1971 by David Hepworth and that Heads book.
― Stevolende, Monday, 18 April 2016 08:51 (ten years ago)
amy hempel - reasons to livegary indiana - three month fevergary indiana - horse crazy
― japanese mage (LocalGarda), Monday, 18 April 2016 09:17 (ten years ago)
jc's and mordy's hauls are amazing. envious.
― carly rae jetson (thomp), Monday, 18 April 2016 10:06 (ten years ago)
Well Deal's just arrived so going to read that shortly.Started reading Knut Hamsun's Hunger over the last few days after wanting to for decades.
― Stevolende, Monday, 18 April 2016 12:12 (ten years ago)
acquired nice hardback copies of:
alan burns babel: a novelmarguerite duras the ravishing of lol stein
― no lime tangier, Monday, 18 April 2016 17:35 (ten years ago)
Cicero's Letters To His Friends, volumes 1 & 2, as used Penguin Classics for $0.50 each.
The Joys of Yiddish, Leo Rosten, as a used hardcover, $2. I owned a paperback of this about a decade ago, but sold it. Afterward, I rather missed it.
The Argumentative Indian, Amartya Sen, used trade paperback, $1. Essays.
― a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Thursday, 28 April 2016 00:22 (ten years ago)
I have been really enjoying "Mo' Meta Blues: The World According to Questlove".
― Andrew (nf), Thursday, 28 April 2016 00:53 (ten years ago)
A 1991 hardback of Magick by Aleister Crowley. A book I wanted to pick up 35 years ago.Impulse buy but one that I'm glad I saw.
― Stevolende, Friday, 29 April 2016 20:02 (ten years ago)
1st hand: August Strindberg - The Defence of a Madman
2nd hand:
Erich Heller - Kafka (this is study on Fontana Modern Masters)Fernando Pessoa - Poems (on City lights)
― xyzzzz__, Friday, 29 April 2016 20:33 (ten years ago)
I paid $1 for a nice used hardcover copy of New and Collected Poems 1917-1976, Archibald MacLeish, who is not my favorite poet by any means, but he probably wrote many decently readable poems and I'll troll around in this to find some of them.
― a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Thursday, 12 May 2016 04:12 (ten years ago)
Louis Comfort Tiffany Masterworks book on his stained glass designs etc. Got cheap from Postscript Books cos they have a sale on.Also got Glam Rock by Alwyn W Turner which is a companion to a V&A Museum exhibition from a few years back. I like the music but know less about the scene than I should. Must finish Children of The Revolution too which is somewhere around the room.
I Am Alan Partridge or whatever the autobio is called. It was €1 in a charity shop and the show is good and this is by the writers and expands on the character. Not read enough to see if funny or annoying
Invisible Man Ralph Ellison.I may have already had this but it was €1 so I grabbed it.
The General From The Jungle B Traven.I read his Death Ship years ago and know about him pretending to be somebody else when john Huston was making the film of hisTreasure of Sierra Madre. Seems to be an interesting writer and character. I was surprised that this was a translation but that could be by another pseudonym of his.
Unforgiveable Blackness a biography of Jack Johnson by Geoffrey C Ward. Got it for 25c in pretty good nick. Coincidentally in the same week, possibly day that I saw Miles Ahead and it could be that its the Miles lp that I know his name from mostly.
Sect Appeal by Terry Gibson. The guitarist's memoir of his time in the Downliner Sect. Which I bought alongside the new edition of Ugly Things. & prompted me to get a copy of the Repertoire cd of The Rock Sect's In their 1966lp with the really early Reed/Cale cover and great droning sound.
Several others since I keep hitting charity shops. So I have a major backlog of books piling up.
― Stevolende, Thursday, 12 May 2016 07:59 (ten years ago)
Alwyn Turner has a great (thought not updated in years) site about trash paperbacks: http://www.trashfiction.co.uk/index2.html
― 🐸a hairy howling toad torments a man whose wife is deathly ill (James Morrison), Thursday, 12 May 2016 08:17 (ten years ago)
the book will be funny but this is all about the audiobook. you need the audiobook, trust me.
― japanese mage (LocalGarda), Thursday, 12 May 2016 09:22 (ten years ago)
1st hand: Pere Gimferrer - Fortuny
2nd: Dag Solstad - Professor Andersen's NightKenzaburo Oe - The Silent CryAlvaro Enrigue - Sudden DeathDenton Welch - In Youth is PleasureFriedrich Holderlin - Selected
― xyzzzz__, Friday, 27 May 2016 21:33 (ten years ago)
bought The Three Body Problem by Liu Cixin on my way home from work today
― de l'asshole (flopson), Tuesday, 31 May 2016 01:09 (ten years ago)
Supposedly stellar for genre fiction in Mandarin. I recommend The Killing Star by Charles Pellegrino and George Zebrowski (and possibly its "prequel", Flying to Valhalla) as a harder-sci take on Cixin's "Dark Forest" response to the Fermi Paradox.
― Abandon hype all ye who enter here (Sanpaku), Tuesday, 31 May 2016 11:54 (ten years ago)
I'll check those out, thanks. Arthur C Clarke "Rendezvous with Rama" was one of my favourite books as a teen, the comparisons to that drew me in. Have you read 3BP?
― de l'asshole (flopson), Tuesday, 31 May 2016 14:51 (ten years ago)
a reprint of an 1853 complete Stories of the Brothers Grimm which was €1
Sanctuary by Ken Bruen since i wanted to actually read a Jack Taylor novel and this was 25c.
The Penniless Vegetarian a book of vegetarian recipes I should really work through.
― Stevolende, Tuesday, 31 May 2016 16:53 (ten years ago)
réstif de la bretonne le paysan et la paysanne pervertis: ou les dangers de la ville
― no lime tangier, Wednesday, 1 June 2016 01:27 (ten years ago)
picked up a copy of memento mori after reading all the spark talk today. also picked up a copy of jon wyndham day of the triffids at the same store
― de l'asshole (flopson), Saturday, 4 June 2016 02:08 (ten years ago)
Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell by Susanna ClarkI really enjoyed teh BBC TV adaptation of this so wanted to read it. So very glad to find it as 4 for €1.50 in a charity shop today.
alongsideThe Vampire Lestat by Anne Rice, remember having enjoyed those of her books I read previously so think this could be good. It has been 20 odd years since then though.
Secret History by Donna TarttWait For Me by Deborah Devonshire a memoir by the youngest of the MItford sisters. Should be somewhat interesting, not sure if they were all Nazis but could be intriguing anyway.
also got a hardback 2fer of George Macdonald Fraserr's Flashman at the Charge and Flashman in The Great Game he tends to be fun een if the politics are a little dodgy.
― Stevolende, Tuesday, 7 June 2016 23:41 (ten years ago)
from a book sale in a church that had the sf section listed as occult:Iain Banks - Consider Phlebas and Use of Weapons, to go with my unread copy of player of gamesNicholas Pileggi - Wiseguy, a.k.a. the book goodfellas was based onThree by Flannery O'Connor (Wise Blood, The Violent Bear It Away, Everything that rises...) i don't like that one flannery story that gets in textbooks, but i like the Huston movie version of Wise Blood.
― remove butt (abanana), Wednesday, 8 June 2016 00:16 (ten years ago)
Finally saw 'Wolf in White Van' in a bookshop, so have bought it and started it and am really digging it
― 🐸a hairy howling toad torments a man whose wife is deathly ill (James Morrison), Wednesday, 8 June 2016 01:03 (ten years ago)
(Bought new, I should add!)
― 🐸a hairy howling toad torments a man whose wife is deathly ill (James Morrison), Wednesday, 8 June 2016 01:04 (ten years ago)
Plus was gifted about 50kg of sci-fi paperbacks from a friend moving house, need to sort through and see what is worth keeping
I decided to clean out some books. I took a bagful to sell at Powell's Books. They bought about 40% of them, but only for $15 in trade. I used the trade slip to buy:
Rome and the Mediterranean, Titus Livius, a Penguin Classics paperback, $4.95. Penguin put out Livy's history of Rome in four volumes. This one was missing from my shelves. I had the other three, now I've the full set.
Aucassin & Nicolette and Other Tales, tr. Pauline Matarasso, another Penguin Classics paperback, $2.50. This one is slender, weighs very little (~100 grams or 3.35 oz.) and will probably end up in my backpack on a multi-night hike in the wilderness this summer, where every ounce counts.
― a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Wednesday, 8 June 2016 03:00 (ten years ago)
Looking up 'Aucassin & etc' and have never heard of any of the stories in it, and it looks very appealing
― 🐸a hairy howling toad torments a man whose wife is deathly ill (James Morrison), Wednesday, 8 June 2016 06:30 (ten years ago)
Becoming Elektra a 2010 history of the label
― Stevolende, Wednesday, 8 June 2016 21:07 (ten years ago)