NYRB Publishing

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Note the date.

o. nate, Friday, 1 April 2016 18:20 (eight years ago) link

hmm

k3vin k., Friday, 1 April 2016 18:21 (eight years ago) link

lol smh @ me

k3vin k., Friday, 1 April 2016 18:22 (eight years ago) link

Black Wings Has My Angel rocked my world. Thanks James

de l'asshole (flopson), Friday, 1 April 2016 18:40 (eight years ago) link

Any new plans?

We are doing something we don’t do very often which is reissuing all of a writer’s work—in this case the novels of Henry Green.

cozen, Friday, 8 April 2016 06:35 (eight years ago) link

Not sure why - all of them are available. iirc Dalkey issued them all already in the US?

Not a bad interview, and I love how he recognises some of my favourite writers in the series: Pavese, Krudy (I'd love it if they commissioned more translations from him), the modern Russians.

Plenty of stuff that I won't get around -- at some point you know The Door and Stoner might be fine and accomplished but not something you'll ever need. Time is short.

xyzzzz__, Friday, 8 April 2016 11:42 (eight years ago) link

man you read like 6 books for every one i read lol

de l'asshole (flopson), Friday, 8 April 2016 12:07 (eight years ago) link

shame Paris Review didn't ask Frank to unpack "we" and "good"

de l'asshole (flopson), Friday, 8 April 2016 12:08 (eight years ago) link

I don't think did Dalkey did all the Henry Greens - just the later ones? Still, seems an odd choice, but maybe I am just getting old and have seen too many Henry Green pushes. Or it's more that I thought the internet had helped flatten out the sudden attention spikes he used to get - like most people who should know about Henry Green will probably run into him nowadays.

(but people should read Henry Green, obviously)

woof, Friday, 8 April 2016 13:39 (eight years ago) link

i read party going last year, it was pretty hard to find. wonder if the nyrb editions will give the burst of interest needed to get NRQ's film adaptation off the ground

de l'asshole (flopson), Friday, 8 April 2016 14:13 (eight years ago) link

woof - sorry yes the last four of his books have been issued by Dalkey. Really one of the very best things they've done.

Agree Henry Green has to be read but idk, rather they translated more Krudy. I was just thinking "great if you like Krudy so much why don't you issue more". I told 'em to put together a translation of Rosa's Grande Sertão: Veredas but they won't listen to me.

What's "NRQ's film adaptation", flopson?

xyzzzz__, Friday, 8 April 2016 14:30 (eight years ago) link

LOL, gotta say that would get a Henry Green revival going far more than re-issuing these in NYRB covers.

xyzzzz__, Friday, 8 April 2016 14:50 (eight years ago) link

I want the Gallant, and have ordered Houses. The Giono looks good, but I already have several by him I haven't got round to, so it will have to wait.

I am going to read The Door, because wahay Hungarian, but definitely back xyzzzz in his calls for more Krudy

shame Paris Review didn't ask Frank to unpack "we" and "good"

you're all aesthetically bankrupt whores. hey xyzzzz thanks for the heads up on the gower st waterstones, i'd been meaning to pick up a copy of lolly willowes on this trip and hadn't even realised it was in nyrb. very fortuitous.

carly rae jetson (thomp), Thursday, 14 April 2016 09:01 (eight years ago) link

They do her Summer Will Show, too, if you can lower yourself

And "Mr Fortune's Maggot", though they called it "Mr Fortune" (I think they appended another related short story?).

Tim, Thursday, 14 April 2016 09:46 (eight years ago) link

three weeks pass...

http://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0726/9203/products/Memories_from_Moscow_to_the_Black_Sea_2048x2048.jpg?v=1460057487

EMORIES
FROM MOSCOW TO THE BLACK SEA
by Teffi, a new translation from the Russian by Robert Chandler and Elizabeth Chandler, Irina Steinberg, and Anne Marie Jackson, introduction by Edythe Haber

$11.87 $16.95
(30% off)
Available as E-BookBiography & MemoirInternational LiteratureRussian Literature
PAPERBACK

Available as an e-book from these retailers
An NYRB Classics Original

Considered Teffi’s single greatest work, Memories: From Moscow to the Black Sea is a deeply personal account of the author’s last months in Russia and Ukraine, suffused with her acute awareness of the political currents churning around her, many of which have now resurfaced.

In 1918, in the immediate aftermath of the Russian Revolution, Teffi, whose stories and journalism had made her a celebrity in Moscow, was invited to read from her work in Ukraine. She accepted the invitation eagerly, though she had every intention of returning home. As it happened, her trip ended four years later in Paris, where she would spend the rest of her life in exile. None of this was foreseeable when she arrived in German-occupied Kiev to discover a hotbed of artistic energy and experimentation. When Kiev fell several months later to Ukrainian nationalists, Teffi fled south to Odessa, then on to the port of Novorossiysk, from which she embarked at last for Constantinople. Danger and death threaten throughout Memories, even as the book displays the brilliant style, keen eye, comic gift, and deep feeling that have made Teffi one of the most beloved of twentieth-century Russian writers.
PRAISE

I never imagined such a memoir could be possible, especially about the Russian Civil War. Teffi wears her wisdom lightly, observing farce and foible amid the looming tragedy, in this enthralling book.
—Antony Beevor

Teffi demonstrates a profound sympathy for the ordinary people among whom she counts herself, swept along by cataclysmic events. While she sympathises with those who cannot help themselves, she is not afraid to look into the depths of what human beings can do to one another and what happens when civilisation breaks down.
—Virginia Rounding, Financial Times

The book is expertly and collectively translated by Robert Chandler, Elizabeth Chandler, Anne Marie Jackson and Irina Steinberg. It reads extremely easily and well in English and is furnished with an introduction, translators’ afterword and copious notes to explain references and allusions now lost to time.
—William Boyd, Sunday Times

Memories is an astonishing work that, like Sholokhov’s Quiet Flows the Don, and for many of the same reasons, deserves to be turned into a film. It is both a thriller and an unforgettably personal account of one of the worst periods in Russian history.
—Catherine Brown, Literary Review

An] astonishingly vivid memoir...Wittily, wryly, wistfully, but never self-indulgently, Teffi tells the story of her escape from Moscow to Kiev to Odessa and onto a dodgy boat to cross the Black Sea as the country she loves is turned upside down in the aftermath of the Bolshevik revolution.
—Ysenda Maxtone Graham, Country Life

A vividly idiosyncratic personal account of the disintegration - moral, political, strategic - of Tsarist Russia after the Revolution, as alive to the farcical and the ridiculous as it is to the tragic; a bit like what Chekhov might have written if he had lived to experience it.
—Michael Frayn


Related Books
SALE

TOLSTOY, RASPUTIN, OTHERS, AND ME
THE BEST OF TEFFI
by Teffi, a new translation from the Russian by Robert Chandler, Rose France, and Anne Marie Jackson

$10.47 $14.95
(30% off)
Available as E-BookInternational LiteratureRussian Literature
PAPERBACK

Available as an e-book from these retailers
Early in her literary career Nadezhda Lokhvitskaya, born in St. Petersburg in 1872, adopted the pen-name of Teffi, and it is as Teffi that she is remembered. In prerevolutionary Russia she was a literary star, known for her humorous satirical pieces; in the 1920s and 30s, she wrote some of her finest stories in exile in Paris, recalling her unforgettable encounters with Rasputin, and her hopeful visit at age thirteen to Tolstoy after reading War and Peace. In this selection of her best autobiographical stories, she covers a wide range of subjects, from family life to revolution and emigration, writers and writing.

Like Nabokov, Platonov, and other great Russian prose writers, Teffi was a poet who turned to prose but continued to write with a poet’s sensitivity to tone and rhythm. Like Chekhov, she fuses wit, tragedy, and a remarkable capacity for observation; there are few human weaknesses she did not relate to with compassion and understanding.

PRAISE

Nearly all her portraits – both of ‘famous historical figures’ and of ordinary people – are sharp and vivid. There is only one person in Teffi’s autobiographical prose who we are not really allowed to see. This is Nadezhda Lokhvitskaya, carefully concealed by her witty, observant and humane alter ego –Teffi.
—Masha Karp, The World Today

Teffi is an inimitable presence in Russian literature, a genuine wonder.
—Georgy Ivanov

Teffi can write in more registers than you might think, and is capable of being heartbreaking as well as very funny. I wish she were still alive, and I could have met her. But then I realised she would have seen right through me. I can’t recommend her strongly enough.
—Nicholas Lezard, The Guardian

dow, Tuesday, 10 May 2016 22:13 (eight years ago) link

Haven't read that one, but based on the collection of her stuff that came out last year from Pushkin Press, 'Subtly Worded', it would be well worth getting

two months pass...

Summer Sale

40% off 44 titles

http://www.nyrb.com/pages/nyrb-summer-sale

flopson, Tuesday, 9 August 2016 20:54 (seven years ago) link

one month passes...

Also wondering about this one:

The English biographer, naturalist, philosopher and convivial wit John Aubrey (1626-97) did not leave a diary behind, to the dismay of those who admire his writing about other people. In an ingenious new book titled “John Aubrey: My Own Life,” the historian Ruth Scurr has made one for him, and it is a thoroughgoing delight. Ms. Scurr has rummaged through Aubrey’s letters, books and unpublished manuscripts. She has isolated his writing about his own life and set it in chronological order, modernizing spellings and adding discreet commentary when necessary...She has done the world a service in compiling “John Aubrey: My Own Life.” This is a funny book, and a wise and moving one, that delivers to us a man in full.
—Dwight Garner, The New York Times

quoted here:
http://www.nyrb.com/products/john-aubrey-my-life?variant=16330445255&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Ruth%20Scurr%202&utm_content=Ruth%20Scurr%202+CID_f57492bfc3db8da5e050bf3840e94475&

dow, Thursday, 15 September 2016 23:30 (seven years ago) link

That come out last year in the UK, was raved about everywhere

I hear from this arsehole again, he's going in the river (James Morrison), Thursday, 15 September 2016 23:39 (seven years ago) link

Got my eye on Zama by Antonio Di Benedetto: proto-Bolano. I certainly need it.

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 17 September 2016 20:32 (seven years ago) link

That does look good, came across this article last week:

An Argentinian Novelist, Out of Oblivion

by the light of the burning Citroën, Saturday, 17 September 2016 20:42 (seven years ago) link

tx, gd rev

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 17 September 2016 21:05 (seven years ago) link

Zama is very much worth your time

I hear from this arsehole again, he's going in the river (James Morrison), Saturday, 17 September 2016 23:26 (seven years ago) link

http://www.nyrb.com/collections/forthcoming/products/the-invisibility-cloak

The Ge Fei'll be their first work by a living Chinese writer, right?

An art/comics-world friend who's never read any NYRB titles has been raving about the selections in the NYR Comics series, but haven't seen anything in the shops down my way.

etc, Sunday, 18 September 2016 06:17 (seven years ago) link

The Invisibility Cloak looks promising. I read one other Ge Fei book, https://penguin.com.au/books/flock-of-brown-birds-9780734399601
Which seemed a bit hackneyed in its postmodernism, but it was originally from the 1980s, and apparently it was a big deal in Chinese lit at the time

I hear from this arsehole again, he's going in the river (James Morrison), Sunday, 18 September 2016 21:48 (seven years ago) link

On the Aubrey book, the LRB was a bit sceptical - sounds like there's a lot of silent prose-tidying.

woof, Sunday, 18 September 2016 22:00 (seven years ago) link

three months pass...

hey--does anyone know a place in brooklyn, say, in the cobble hill or boerum hill area, where i can find these books?

Nope, not any more

The Magnificent Galileo Seven (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 2 January 2017 13:48 (seven years ago) link

two weeks pass...

Benjamin Kunkel reviews Zama by Antonio Di Benedetto. sounds great http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/01/23/a-neglected-south-american-masterpiece

flopson, Thursday, 19 January 2017 15:36 (seven years ago) link

Such a beautiful review (also Coetzee writes an OK rev in the NYRB). Its great to see that Esther Allen is working on more translations and there is also a film of it to be released later this year apparently.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 19 January 2017 23:29 (seven years ago) link

two weeks pass...

The Calligrams series...haven't bought anything from this however Francois Chang's study looks like a good primer.

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 4 February 2017 14:59 (seven years ago) link

hmm, will prob get Red Shift, Platonov, Rosenkrantz (i LOVE dialogue) and the J.R. Ackerley (i read We Think The World Of You last year)

if anyone says nice things about any of the other books I am easily convinced :)

flopson, Saturday, 11 February 2017 20:04 (seven years ago) link

Haven't read it since my smoggy early twenties, but Growing Up Absurd brought some focus (no small feat at the time).

dow, Saturday, 11 February 2017 20:11 (seven years ago) link

huh, can't believe I've never heard of this guy! added to the pile

flopson, Saturday, 11 February 2017 20:20 (seven years ago) link

Ordering Chocky and Human Comedy, plus Pinocchio for my kid. Was tempted by Red Shift and Growing Up Absurd as well...

o. nate, Saturday, 11 February 2017 20:35 (seven years ago) link

if i weren't broke i would be all over the two walser volumes!

re: goodman, not published by nyrb but his series of novels published together as empire city is quite interesting and feeds into his philosophical writings.

no lime tangier, Saturday, 11 February 2017 21:03 (seven years ago) link

Oh yeah, and he co-authored the groundbreaking Gestalt Therapy, which I thought useful (also in my twenties). He was also kind of Chomsky before (well-known) Chomsky, lefto-anarchist-wise, but with more range. This is weirdly "organized", but works more info into the eventual rehash:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Goodman

dow, Saturday, 11 February 2017 22:07 (seven years ago) link

ha, as it happens i think the first book of goodman's i read included an attack on chomsky's linguistic theories!

no lime tangier, Saturday, 11 February 2017 22:18 (seven years ago) link

said on said book: http://www.nytimes.com/books/99/10/03/specials/said-goodman.html

no lime tangier, Saturday, 11 February 2017 22:19 (seven years ago) link

might get the Arlt, too. i'm a sucker for proto-Cortazar gods of Argentine lit with hyperbolic quotes by contemporary Lat Am writers (Bolano: "Let's say, modestly, that Arlt is Jesus Christ")

flopson, Saturday, 11 February 2017 22:34 (seven years ago) link

Yeah, that arlt is calling to me

I hear from this arsehole again, he's going in the river (James Morrison), Saturday, 11 February 2017 22:45 (seven years ago) link

man, with shipping i only save like 5$ vs going downtown to buy these brick-and-mortar >:(

flopson, Saturday, 11 February 2017 22:51 (seven years ago) link

I scored a 2nd hand copy of the Valle-Inclan today.

Agostino is fantastic.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 12 February 2017 00:06 (seven years ago) link


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