Nu-ILB: What books have you purchased lately?

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On War by CArl von Clausewitz cos it looked interesting. Hope I get around to reading it.

The God of Small Things by Arundhati roy. ditto.

Stevolende, Tuesday, 16 August 2016 16:49 (nine years ago)

Got both of those in a charity shop for €11 each yesterday.

Now been and done bought
Need More Love by Aline Kominsky crumb
and 150 Things Every Man Should Know by Gareth may
for €1 each from another charity shop.

So could be good.

Stevolende, Tuesday, 16 August 2016 16:56 (nine years ago)

got the new james kelman "dirt road" as a b-day present

ælərdaɪs (jim in vancouver), Tuesday, 16 August 2016 16:59 (nine years ago)

don't know why I'm getting double 1s when I try to type one 1 but it was €1 not €11.
Dashed keyboard doesn't register when you hit the 1 half the time , maybe that's it.

Stevolende, Tuesday, 16 August 2016 17:00 (nine years ago)

xxpost as US $2.99 download actually I could download it, and maybe did, but opted to stash it in my portion of Amazon Cloud, read via Cloud Reader, to save disk space, was the idea anyway.

dow, Tuesday, 16 August 2016 18:02 (nine years ago)

I bought two obscure novellas by Muriel Spark today, for $1 each, in used Penguin editions from the mid-1970s with cheesy covers: Not to Disturb and The Hothouse By the East River. I know nothing about them other than that I generally enjoy any work by Dame Muriel.

a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Sunday, 21 August 2016 02:39 (nine years ago)

Maria Edgeworth, CASTLE RACKRENT

the pinefox, Monday, 22 August 2016 10:54 (nine years ago)

sam quinones - dreamland
elizabeth taylor - complete short stories
barry hannah - long last happy

Bein' Sean Bean (LocalGarda), Monday, 22 August 2016 11:09 (nine years ago)

Petrarch - Canzionere. All 300+ poems. Another top 2nd hand find (even more so than Kluge which I can't quite get into rn)

xyzzzz__, Monday, 22 August 2016 21:33 (nine years ago)

Haven't read read that Barry Hannah book, but his first novel, Geronimo Rex is frequently funny-ha-ha and funny-strange-to-scary, 50s-60s Southern Gothic living and learning, esp. in Mississippi collegetown--said to be somewhut autobiographical, which seems plausible, especially considering some of his 70s hijinks in Tuscaloosa (writer in residence and then some, at U of AL)

dow, Monday, 22 August 2016 22:15 (nine years ago)

castle rackrent is a wonderful book, and that elizabeth taylor collection is essential

James Morrison, Monday, 22 August 2016 22:46 (nine years ago)

THe Wearing of the Green Tim Pat Coogan book on the Irish Diaspora.

A Canticle For Liebowitz I know the name and saw this for 25c so will hopefully read it before too long.

Roll Of thunder hear Me cry Mildred taylor book about a black family in Mississippi in the 30s.

Stevolende, Tuesday, 23 August 2016 16:11 (nine years ago)

be warned, the ending of liebowitz goes in a crazy christian direction

Einstein, Kazanga, Sitar (abanana), Tuesday, 23 August 2016 16:37 (nine years ago)

Will probably be a while before i get to it but hopefully going to be ready.
Unless crazy christian is actually fascinating to watch anyway.

Stevolende, Tuesday, 23 August 2016 17:28 (nine years ago)

It does go in a crazy christian way, but an internally consistent crazy christian way that doesn't actually require you to buy into it to believe the characters' behaviour

I hear from this arsehole again, he's going in the river (James Morrison), Wednesday, 24 August 2016 01:57 (nine years ago)

The actual way this manifested itself in Miller's life as well as other biographical details leave me kind of speechless.

Nobodaddy's Fule (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 24 August 2016 15:36 (nine years ago)

Maybe i will read this after Chaos then. There are quite a few lined up for me to read. I'm way out of sync between purchase and consumption. But hopefully this won't be a long read.

Though I will hopefully have a new Ugly Things pretty soon too.

Stevolende, Wednesday, 24 August 2016 18:36 (nine years ago)

some of the books i got yesterday:

pro - gordon r. dickson

utopia or oblivion: the prospects for humanity - r. buckminster fuller

waking the moon - elizabeth hand

as on a darkling plain - ben bova

slights - kaaron warren

class six climb - william e. cochrane

the lord's pink ocean - david walker

the space swimmers - gordon r. dickson

the last master - gordon r. dickson

the harbour - ernest poole

against infinity - gregory benford

the revolution from rosinante - alexis a. gilliland

long shot for rosinante - alexis a. gilliland

the pirates of rosinante - alexis a. gilliland

the mabinogion - translated by lady charlotte guest

the devil his due - judith merril/john wyndham/thomas m. disch and john t. sladek/michael moorcock

fastyngange - tim wynne-jones

the american folk scene: dimensions of the folksong revival - seeger, farina, paul nelson, hentoff, etc.

rock from the beginning - nik cohn (kinda hard to read...but as an artifact it's...an artifact.)

the premier - georges simenon

electric rock - the rock musician's guide to electric guitars and amplifiers - richard robinson

shaggy planet - ron goulart

second thoughts of an idle fellow - jerome k. jerome

red lights - georges simenon

scott seward, Thursday, 25 August 2016 03:26 (nine years ago)

Never read dickson. You always see a lot of him on 2nd-hand SF sections. That Simenon is great, the Jerome good fun, and The Harbour is meant to be an excellent socialist novel, though characteristically I have yet to read my copy...

I hear from this arsehole again, he's going in the river (James Morrison), Thursday, 25 August 2016 03:51 (nine years ago)

Hi Scott, what is it about Rock From The Beginning that's making it hard to read?

dow, Thursday, 25 August 2016 05:21 (nine years ago)

it just seems naive now. and the hepcat lingo hasn't aged well. a ton of snap judgements that just seem off or wrong at this late date. but hey it was written in the heat of the moment and all that. he couldn't google anything!

scott seward, Thursday, 25 August 2016 17:17 (nine years ago)

Isn't part of the fun seeing how perceptions have changed over the years. Not sure how much of an Everyman/shared perspective Cohn would have had at the time. Been a few years since I read him. But I did think he was at least interesting.

Wonder how something like Bob Stanley's Yeah Yeah Yeah will be looked back on in years to come.

Stevolende, Thursday, 25 August 2016 17:22 (nine years ago)

other stuff i got:

a fine and private place - peter s. beagle (weird book!)

the unearth people - kris neville

michael chabon - maps and legends

ron goulart - the sword swallower

the book of philip jose farmer

three against the witch world - andre norton

secret of the lost race - andre norton

damon knight's orbit

the day of their return - poul anderson

the rebel worlds - poul anderson

the winter of the world - poul anderson

the worlds of poul anderson - three novels

world of ptavvs - larry niven

total eclipse - john brunner

the worm ouroboros - e.r. eddison

time out of mind and other stories - pierre boulle

the clockmaker/the watchmaker - georges simenon

the status civilization - robert sheckley

the mezentian gate - e.r. eddison

siege perilous - lester del rey (actually written by paul w. fairman even though he isn't credited...)

splendor in the short grass - the grover lewis reader

scott seward, Thursday, 25 August 2016 17:27 (nine years ago)

"Isn't part of the fun seeing how perceptions have changed over the years"

yeah, but unfortunately music writing from that time period can be really predictable. i need some insights/flashes to keep me going. something i hadn't thought about before. and also those guys can make me wince. just the guyness of it all can make me wince. i see the roots of chauvinism/isolationism/sexism/etc in music writing in that old stuff. and i see it in me too and it bums me out. that was the dominant strain for decades. the self-assured bluster and hyperbole. of which i am definitely guilty of as well.

and i'm reading all these old magazines i got and i read that mary mmcarthy piece on ivy compton-burnett and i just say hot damn! this is what i am looking for in the way of crit. inside and out appraisal of talent that is not always easy to categorize or even understand or write about and somehow getting inside that and making it understandable and also really interesting. you can find some of that in music writing/crit, of course, but a lot of the main people who built the template - here at least - weren't anywhere near as rigorous because they wanted to mimic the comic book shagadelic nature of the music in their writing and while this might have been hilarious/mindblowing at the time if you were stoned....

scott seward, Thursday, 25 August 2016 17:51 (nine years ago)

In groovy tymes, Cohn def came across as a contrarian, even what the jazzers call a moldy or mouldy fig, but a fun one---he got me into PJ Proby, for inst. Don't remember the hepcat lingo--prob blended in with what most early rock writers were doing---but he seemed to combine blunt, if not flat statements w *some* (not too much) flamboyant imagery. Don't know how it would look now, though. As fan testimony, could be called Rock From The Beginning To The End, considering that he said of Dylan, "And if he killed off the thing I loved---well, that was hardly his fault." Also grudgingly admitted the validity of Pepper's etc.
(In 70s, wrote text for Guy Peellaert's coffee table pre-"graphic novel" gallery Rock Dreams, which some said was way too rock-slick, if not gross[don't remember it very well], went on to write magazine feature, which he later said he'd made up: basis of Saturday Night Fever, spent time on Riker's for selling coke, turned up in New Orleans after Katrina, where he claimed to have produced Dirty South rap, don't know if any surfaced.)

Which Orbit did you get---the first one?!

Hey, I found Splendor In The Short Grass too! Mentioned upthread around the end of June:

Splendor In The Short Grass: The Grover Lewis Reader, edited by Jan Reid & Kip Stratton, intro by Dave Hickey. Lewis was a strong longform journo in early Rolling Stone and others---title piece started on location for The Last Picture Show---also incl. short stories, poems and excerpt from unfinished memoir. I still remember bits of the Stone work from orig. publication, and whole thing looks v. worthwhile.
Still haven't started reading it, though.

dow, Thursday, 25 August 2016 18:18 (nine years ago)

xp I would prob enjoy McCarthy on Compton-Burnett more at this point too.

dow, Thursday, 25 August 2016 18:20 (nine years ago)

Oh, and another geezer, but one def. with his own, increasingly non-chauvinist POV---have you read much Dave Hickey? Air Guitar is usually named as a peak, or maybe valley to some---he's apparently controversial in some art-crit circles. Really enjoyable quality-over-quantity music commentary and excursions back in the Noise Boys era of Voice and Creem, but don't know if it's ever been collected. I wanna read his short stories too, but that collection is pricey so far.

dow, Thursday, 25 August 2016 18:29 (nine years ago)

someone gave me air guitar once to read and i did read some of it but that was a long time ago. don't remember much.

in general, i don't read much music writing. i will read historical stuff and occasionally jazz writing which can also be really problematic and i can be picky about it. most of my music reading now is confined to oral histories/interviews or writing by musicians. i've cut out the middle man. i have a swing oral history book that i was looking at the other day and i can just read stuff like that forever. Notes and Tones by Arthur Taylor was my big epiphany. I wanted more of that. i'll take the prejudices and blind spots of musicians over jazz writers any day of the week.

scott seward, Thursday, 25 August 2016 18:53 (nine years ago)

Notes and Tones by Arthur Taylor was my big epiphany. I wanted more of that. i'll take the prejudices and blind spots of musicians over jazz writers any day of the week.

― scott seward, Thursday, August 25, 2016 7:53 PM (thirteen seconds ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

I've still got to finish that. Think it wound up being my traveling book for a while and something else took over. But what i did read of it was pretty good.

also
"yeah, but unfortunately music writing from that time period can be really predictable. i need some insights/flashes to keep me going. something i hadn't thought about before. and also those guys can make me wince. just the guyness of it all can make me wince. i see the roots of chauvinism/isolationism/sexism/etc in music writing in that old stuff. and i see it in me too and it bums me out. that was the dominant strain for decades. the self-assured bluster and hyperbole. of which i am definitely guilty of as well. "

I haven't read Cohn in a while I think I do have a couple of his around somewhere though, though one could still be on a shelf in london. I nearly rebought awopbopaloopbop earlier this year but thought i might already have it.

But yeah would find some of that a turn off.

Stevolende, Thursday, 25 August 2016 18:58 (nine years ago)

Sidney Bechet's Treat It Gentle: An Autobiography is a trip, ditto Mingus's Beneath The Underdog, Milesby Miles Davis and Quincy Troupe (somewhat controversial, source-wise, but Miles is ever the raconteur, once you get him going, and if he and/or QT went back and stuck in other people's shit, it fits great). Billie Holiday and William Duffy
s Lady Sings The Blues is very vivid---despite the "as told to" the voice of her songs (incl. ones she wrote) comes through. I need to find more by female jazz artists---also, strung out on Art Pepper again because the Neon Art posthumous but very live releases presented by wife Laurie (and his characteristically intense, concise comments on Ralph J. Gleason's "Jazz Casual" performance/interview/performance TV series, now YouTubed), I wanna read his (Laurie-assisted) autobio, Straight Life.

Rock books by rockers-wise, I like Dylan's Chronicles, Byrne's multiphasic How Music Works---personal experience and favorite riffs take over from lectures---and don't get me started about Don Felder's Between Heaven and Hell, which I greatly enjoyed over on an ILM Eagles threads A Good Day In Hell.

I've got several country autobios unread, but Tom T. Hall's The Storyteller's Nashville is ace, and frequently hilarious.

dow, Thursday, 25 August 2016 19:38 (nine years ago)

Wolf In White Van is the best *novel* I've found by a muso, and one of the best by anybody.

dow, Thursday, 25 August 2016 19:42 (nine years ago)

damn, rudy van gelder died today...

scott seward, Thursday, 25 August 2016 19:49 (nine years ago)

Yeah I saw that on Facebook. hadn't realised he had still been around.

Stevolende, Thursday, 25 August 2016 22:04 (nine years ago)

Down and Dirty Pictures Peter Biskind his book on the wave of films from the late 80s onwards including such film directors as Quentin tarantino and Steven Soderbergh. I know I enjoyed Easy Riders and raging bulls when I read taht but that could be almost a couple fo decades ago.

& Chuck Palahniuk Fight Club. I think I must have read this since seeing the film but that's also quite a while ago. I don't initially recognise the beginning though.

Basket case What's happening With Ireland's food by Philip Boucher-hayes and Suzanne campbell.
I read a couple of books along the same lines a few years ago which put me off buying supermarket food for at least a while & check out what smaller independent shops were around town. Now I'm mainly buying from LIDL cos its the closest shop. Hopefully its not as bad as some places but not sure if it has the ethos it started with.

born For Liberty by Sara M Evans women in American History looked interesting.
all 4 of those so far were €1 each so worth a splash.

also got How To walk In High Heels The Girl's guide tO everything cos I thought it might show some shot cuts to things I might want to know. & it was 25c as was
Wild Swans 3 `Daughters of China by Jung Chang

then wound up picking up The Dictionary of pub Names for €1.50 in the Dealz near where i had to be this afternoon cos I do find things like that interesting. Seems to have history behind some specific pub's reasons for taking the names too.
Just looked up Elephant and castle and it says that the title refers to the cutlers Company's Coat of Arms which dates back to 1622 but some people will continue to insist on the Infanta of Castile story I thought it might give.

Stevolende, Friday, 26 August 2016 16:53 (nine years ago)

three weeks pass...

Bohumil Hrabal - I Served the King of England. Just a lovely edition of this masterpiece.
Arkady & Boris Strugatsky - Hard to be a God
Doris Lessing - The Four-Gated City (top find: Bantham paperbk ed)
Speaking of Siva (free verse sayings from the 10th - 12th centuries, dedicated to Siva)

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 17 September 2016 20:41 (nine years ago)

bought a 1965 copy of Stoner for $1 at a book sale -- is this worth anything? no dust jacket.

also $1 each
White - The once and future king
Murakami - Dance Dance Dance
Herbert - Dune
Marsh - Enter a Murderer
Mcsweeney's 18

Einstein, Kazanga, Sitar (abanana), Monday, 19 September 2016 01:29 (nine years ago)

That 1965 copy of Stoner must be worth at least five times what you paid for it.

a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Monday, 19 September 2016 04:27 (nine years ago)

John Jeremiah Sullivan - Pulphead
Halldor Laxness - Independent People
Bret Easton Ellis - Less Than Zero
Yuri Herrera - Signs Preceding The End Of The World

Neptune Bingo (Michael B), Tuesday, 20 September 2016 18:46 (nine years ago)

More finds:

Marie Ndiaye - Self-Portrait in Green
Kolatkar - Complete Poems - which I read earlier this year but that was my library copy.

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 20 September 2016 21:46 (nine years ago)

The translations of old Marathi poets in that are magnificent others Jejuri is available through NYRB

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 20 September 2016 21:47 (nine years ago)

Jejuri is ace. Haven't seen the Complete Poems anywhere.

I hear from this arsehole again, he's going in the river (James Morrison), Wednesday, 21 September 2016 00:06 (nine years ago)

Its on Bloodaxe

But yeah v lucky to get a 2nd hand copy.

xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 21 September 2016 20:35 (nine years ago)

I hit my usual spots today, sold some books to Powell's (for a pittance) and came home with:

The Broken Road, Patrick Leigh Fermor, NYRB trade paperback, new (remaindered) for $10. The final installment of his epic pre-WWII on foot journey to Istanbul.

Wars I Have Seen, Gertrude Stein, like-new trade paperback, $8.50 Ms. Stein in her colloquial-friendly persona, gabbing about herself and others.

Blood and Thunder: The Epic Story of Kit Carson and the Conquest of the American West, Hampton Sides, used trade paperback, $3. See epically wordy subtitle for clues.

Early Irish Myths and Sagas, translated by Jeffrey Gantz, used Penguin Classics paperback in readable condition, $2.

Angels on Toast: The Wicked Pavillion: The Golden Spur, Dawn Powell, three novels crammed into one used trade paperback published by QPB Book Club, $4.

a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Thursday, 22 September 2016 23:31 (nine years ago)

Arkady & Boris Strugatsky - Hard to be a God
Doris Lessing - The Four-Gated City (top find: Bantham paperbk ed)
John Jeremiah Sullivan - Pulphead
Angels on Toast: The Wicked Pavillion: The Golden Spur, Dawn Powell, three novels crammed into one used trade paperback published by QPB Book Club

Got these, though Pulphead is the only recent score. All v. worthwhile (QPB member in 80s-90s, bought tons).

dow, Friday, 23 September 2016 00:31 (nine years ago)

Vivienne Westwood by Vivienne Westwood and ian kelly
cos it was at cut price in TK Maxx and I'd recently read about her in The Look by Paul Gorman

Grays Anatomy by Henry Gray cos it was €4 in Oxfam and in pretty good nick, nearly new though th eprice tag from initial purchase hasn't been removed exactly immaculately.

& The Kabbalah from a Sacred texts range for €1 cos I thought it might be worth a look.

and earlier in the week
The Pleasures and Sorrows of Work by Alain de Botton

and The Best Of Myles for €1 each.
Not sure if I've had the Best Of Myles before but certainly not with this cover anyway and Flann O'Brien is always worth a read

Stevolende, Wednesday, 28 September 2016 14:56 (nine years ago)

i preordered a book about perverts by homosexual II!

j., Wednesday, 28 September 2016 21:25 (nine years ago)

Stevolende, put that de Botton in a lead box and dispose of appropriately. The guy's a hack and a nitwit.
Is the Gray's Anatomy a reporoduction of his own work, or the updated textbooky version?

I hear from this arsehole again, he's going in the river (James Morrison), Wednesday, 28 September 2016 23:42 (nine years ago)

Carter, Nights at the Circus
DeLillo, White Noise
Desai, Clear Light of Day
Dinesen, Out of Africa
Gordimer, The Conservationist
King, Green Grass Running Water
Lessing, The Golden Notebook
Murdoch, The Sea, The Sea
Nabokov, Lolita
Williams, Hard Core
Woolf, A Room of One's Own

rhymes with "blondie blast" (cryptosicko), Friday, 30 September 2016 19:26 (nine years ago)

"The Penguin Book Of The British Short Story: From P.G. Wodehouse to Zadie Smith"
"M Train", Patti Smith
"Born To Run", Bruce Springsteen
"Content Provider", Stewart Lee
"Tove Jansson: Work And Love" Tuula Karjalainen

Daniel_Rf, Saturday, 8 October 2016 14:25 (nine years ago)

Colin Irwin book on Highway 61 Revisited
Langland Piers Plowman
Mayday! Mayday! Lorna Siggins book on Irish Air Sea rescues.
Catcher In The Rye for 25c cos I don't think I had it.
&the Oral History of Allman Brothers which is fascinating so far. Just got beyond Duane in Derek & the Dominoes.

Stevolende, Saturday, 8 October 2016 19:33 (nine years ago)


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