Literary treats - recommend great reads

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Anything by Eve Babitz, but let's go with Sex and Rage: Advice for Young Ladies Eager for a Good Time. Just the most delightful book, a blithe breeze through early 70s LA, like Joan Didion's much more fun younger sister.

Piedie Gimbel, Tuesday, 16 November 2021 17:06 (four years ago)

I second Zazen.

A couple others: Unclay, by T.F. Powys, a hard-to-classify novel about Death visiting a small village in human form and learning all the weird, perverse little secrets of the townsfolk. Deeply odd, funny, a bit unsettling.

Journey by Moonlight, by Antal Szerb, about a Hungarian man on his honeymoon who has a chance encounter with an old friend, becomes obsessed with what has become of his weird goth friends from his teenage years, and abandons his wife to go track them down. His wife then sets off to have her own adventures. I found it totally delightful. (320 pages but they go by quickly.)

JoeStork, Tuesday, 16 November 2021 20:38 (four years ago)

Never heard of Vanessa Velka before, but now I am intrigued. Her mother is Linda Ellerbee! And she won the PEN/Robert W. Bingham Prize!

Sterl of the Quarter (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 16 November 2021 20:57 (four years ago)

I thought The Card of the Gambler by Benedict Kiely was a great retelling of the Death on the tree myth. Think its a story that is repeated across a few nation's mythology. Death put out of commission by being stuck somewhere so nobody dying for a while. I remember i being delicious prose but I read it like 29 years ago when i was first in Dublin. Must get around to reading more of him at some point.

Stevolende, Tuesday, 16 November 2021 21:04 (four years ago)

I'm going to stick to the rools and go with one: A Month in the Country by JL Carr (practically ILX canon, tbh). Swells beyond its 135 pages into timelessness.

Vanishing Point (Chinaski), Tuesday, 16 November 2021 21:06 (four years ago)

One non-fiction too: The Strange Last Voyage of Donald Crowhurst by Nicholas Tomalin and Ron Hall. Colonial-gentleman-cum-Devonian-Quixote sets out to complete the solo round the world yacht race and rather than admit defeat, spirals into deception, isolation and madness.

Vanishing Point (Chinaski), Tuesday, 16 November 2021 21:10 (four years ago)

Ugh, didn't mean to misspell the name. Vanessa Veselka, sorry.

Sterl of the Quarter (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 16 November 2021 21:25 (four years ago)

I think this essay of hers is very much worth reading as well: https://magazine.atavist.com/the-fort-of-young-saplings/

There’s another essay about her narrow escape from the Truck Stop Killer as a teenage runaway but it basically ruined my day when I read it.

JoeStork, Tuesday, 16 November 2021 22:22 (four years ago)

The Boys of My Youth by Jo Ann Beard. Really good personal essays.

Seconding A Month in the Country and also Eve Babitz, but the Babitz I like best is Slow Days, Fast Company.

War With the Newts by Karel Capek. 1936 Czech satire in which people discover and enslave a species of giant intelligent newt and the global economy becomes entirely dependent on them, leading eventually to global Newt revolution and a disastrous rise in sea levels.

Lily Dale, Wednesday, 17 November 2021 04:21 (four years ago)

oh shit, yeah, the boys of my youth is the best. really influential for me. i also love beard's novel in zanesville though it could be construed as ya

STOCK FIST-PUMPER BRAD (BradNelson), Wednesday, 17 November 2021 04:31 (four years ago)

Dog of the South - Charles Portis

terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Wednesday, 17 November 2021 05:13 (four years ago)

Very much appreciating all these recommendations! I had fiction in mind but not opposed to non-fiction at all as long as we're talking real treats, such as well written, perhaps even gripping journalism or narrative essays. Poetry also welcome. Most important is that it be a kind of rewarding read that is not too demanding, an archetype of the treat I'm thinking of could be The Old Man and the Sea or Babette's Feast (although I'm more interested in novels than novellas).

corrs unplugged, Wednesday, 17 November 2021 09:20 (four years ago)

The True Deceiver, Tove Jansson - The best of her adult novels I've read, female children's author who writes stories about harmless little bunnies rubs up against independent, hard edged woman in small village. Ideal Winter read, a good one to gift people as they usually don't have it.

Daniel_Rf, Wednesday, 17 November 2021 10:31 (four years ago)

You may already be familiar with The Hearing Trumpet by Leonora Carrington but that seems well-suited here.

Also second the Charles Portis recommendation -- any of his novels, really, especially Masters of Atlantis.

Chris L, Wednesday, 17 November 2021 12:36 (four years ago)

_The True Deceiver_, Tove Jansson - The best of her adult novels I've read, female children's author who writes stories about harmless little bunnies rubs up against independent, hard edged woman in small village. Ideal Winter read, a good one to gift people as they usually don't have it.


Will check this out

suggest bainne (gyac), Wednesday, 17 November 2021 12:41 (four years ago)

War With the Newts by Karel Capek. 1936 Czech satire in which people discover and enslave a species of giant intelligent newt and the global economy becomes entirely dependent on them, leading eventually to global Newt revolution and a disastrous rise in sea levels.
― Lily Dale

Ah cool, so is Capek worth reading in general, then? Obv famed for popularising 'robot', but I've never been sure if he's worth digging into in his own right.

You may already be familiar with The Hearing Trumpet by Leonora Carrington but that seems well-suited here.
― Chris L

Seconded!

emil.y, Wednesday, 17 November 2021 15:17 (four years ago)

The 'no experimentalism' thing is throwing me a bit, bah. Especially as I feel like IOAWNAT isn't even close to a difficult read! Also I'm guessing that the treat element means nothing too cynical or depressing, right?

emil.y, Wednesday, 17 November 2021 15:19 (four years ago)

I'm going to stick to the rools and go with one: A Month in the Country by JL Carr (practically ILX canon, tbh). Swells beyond its 135 pages into timelessness.

― Vanishing Point (Chinaski), Tuesday, 16 November 2021 21:06 (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink

need to read this; his FA Cup book is absolutely amazing and does similar

imago, Wednesday, 17 November 2021 15:22 (four years ago)

xp I like experimentalism as much as the next person but it just doesn't really fit my idea of a treat

then again rules are meant to be broken and if you know an experimental short novel that's the equivalent of a bounty bar, well... I'd be interested!

some depressing/cynical stuff leaves the reader elated (like Thomas Bernhard) and in that case it's fine by my

corrs unplugged, Wednesday, 17 November 2021 15:33 (four years ago)

*me

corrs unplugged, Wednesday, 17 November 2021 15:33 (four years ago)

also The Hearing Trumpet is one of the best books ever as far as I'm concerned btw, 100% concur, get on it, etc

imago, Wednesday, 17 November 2021 15:38 (four years ago)

I think it's less that I want to recommend pure experimental lit and more that sometimes I don't know what people would consider overly experimental - to me something like The Third Policeman is a real treat, but would its quirks rule it out? But if experimental stuff is not completely banned, just not preferred, then that feels easier.

emil.y, Wednesday, 17 November 2021 15:44 (four years ago)

I recently got around to The Invention of Morel by Adolfo Bioy Casares and that felt quite treat-like. The central character is overly obsessive about a woman he never speaks to, which may be off-putting, but I didn't feel pushed into empathising with that emotion but rather found myself chuckling at its extent. Mileage might vary, I guess.

emil.y, Wednesday, 17 November 2021 15:47 (four years ago)

books like The Third Policeman manage to be both treats and the best books ever written tbf, this thread absolutely needs its ilk

imago, Wednesday, 17 November 2021 15:48 (four years ago)

A Happy man by Hansjorg Schertenleib is a book that's prob a treat, just a guy walking around with a happy (or well-adjusted) life and every sentence it seems like he's going to die, a very strange tension that I haven't really seen very much

Bongo Jongus, Wednesday, 17 November 2021 15:57 (four years ago)

Edmund White's Forgetting Elena is... [pause to consider] quite acceptable here. Don't you think?

alimosina, Wednesday, 17 November 2021 16:07 (four years ago)

various things by John Einarson though I noticed a few years ago that his name keeps getting mispelt on different books or possibly listiongs. He has done some really good music bios including ghost writing/compiling Arthur Lee's memoir. His Mr Tambourine Man on Gene Clark was really good too.

I really enjoyed Behind The Scenes on the Pegasus Carousel by Love drummer Michael Stewart Ware. It was one of the first insider memoirs from the band· I haven't reread it in a while and it has had 2 different updates which I also haven't caught up with.
just looking around my room and seeing love posters on teh wall so being reminded by that.

Simon Reynolds various books on post-punk including Rip It Up And Start Again.

Mark Mordue's book on the young Nick Cave Boy On Fire
Clinton Walker's Stranded on Australian punk and its aftermath

Stevolende, Wednesday, 17 November 2021 16:59 (four years ago)

Natasha Ginzburg - Sagittarius
Joy Williams - The Quick and the Dead
Elizabeth Taylor - A Wreath of Roses

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 17 November 2021 17:05 (four years ago)

based on these selections, one would do well to read any given new york review classic

mookieproof, Wednesday, 17 November 2021 23:08 (four years ago)

I've run into a few duds in NYRB Classics, but overall it has an excellent hit rate. If I see one shelved in a used bookshop I always investigate it and usually buy it, read it and enjoy it.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Wednesday, 17 November 2021 23:37 (four years ago)

Black Wings Has My Angel by Elliot Chaze is another really good NYRB book - a forgotten classic of noir that I can't begin to describe but that made me put the book down and stare at a wall several times while I was reading it.

Lily Dale, Thursday, 18 November 2021 00:04 (four years ago)

That may not sound like much of a treat but I meant it in a good way.

Lily Dale, Thursday, 18 November 2021 00:05 (four years ago)

Loved reading Eva Baltasar's Permafrost earlier this year. Maybe too caustic for a treat? But the prose is really packed, maybe reads a bit like what it is -- European fiction in translation -- but it was as vital to read as anything I've read in a long time.

They hired me on a Monday, three months after my first article. For the first time, I felt colorless — a dreadful muddle of various hues, an unthinkably grim and grayish green. My skin was like a mollusk shell, my body parched, my muscles fibrous like esparto grass — and inside I smelled of a parking lot.

I enjoyed the two above-mentioned Babitz books too.

eatandoph (Neue Jesse Schule), Thursday, 18 November 2021 00:07 (four years ago)

loved 'black wings has my angel'

flopson, Thursday, 18 November 2021 00:13 (four years ago)

That one’s on my list/pvmic

Sterl of the Quarter (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 18 November 2021 00:20 (four years ago)

- The Beginning of Spring (Fitzgerald), my favourite book by my favourite author, the perfect midpoint between her early and late styles
- At Freddie’s (Fitzgerald), the funniest one
- The Beiderbecke Affair (Plater), the best ever novelisation of a TV show (not counting Steven Moffat’s The Day or the Doctor, which is probably too niche for this list)
- Harriet the Spy, one of the few books everyone should read

Chuck_Tatum, Thursday, 18 November 2021 00:49 (four years ago)

I really love The Long Secret, the sequel to Harriet the Spy.

Lily Dale, Thursday, 18 November 2021 01:15 (four years ago)

I’m just about to start reading that!

Chuck_Tatum, Thursday, 18 November 2021 01:39 (four years ago)

Black Wings Has My Angel by Elliot Chaze is another really good NYRB book - a forgotten classic of noir that I can't begin to describe but that made me put the book down and stare at a wall several times while I was reading it.

Hard Rain Falling by Don Carpenter has a similar effect as this, and goes in a couple of directions you wouldn't necessarily expect from this genre.

May as well start rounding out the list of NYRB Treats. The classic Western Warlock by Oakley Hall was one of my most captivating reads of the last few years. You can see the seeds of Deadwood being planted as you're reading it.

Chris L, Thursday, 18 November 2021 01:40 (four years ago)

Warlock rules, can confirm

terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 18 November 2021 01:41 (four years ago)

gah i started it last year and had trouble getting into it. i will try again.

certified juice therapist (harbl), Thursday, 18 November 2021 01:48 (four years ago)

lol i basically tried every nyrb classic that the library had five years ago but couldn't get into any of them. the hearing trumpet and the tove jansson book look promising though.

Linda and Jodie Rocco (map), Thursday, 18 November 2021 02:01 (four years ago)

I borrowed my brother's copy of Warlock, didn't read it, and accidentally dropped it through the library return slot because I mistook it for another NYRB book. This is a good reminder that I should get around to ordering him another copy.

Lily Dale, Thursday, 18 November 2021 02:03 (four years ago)

The Tove Jansson one is super good.

Lily Dale, Thursday, 18 November 2021 02:04 (four years ago)

Ish Reed's early Yellowback Radio Brokedown, The Freelance Pallbearers, and Mumbo Jumbo are short, not sweet, and imaginative, in a fun way (can see where Blazing Saddles might have come from, for inst).
ZZ Packer's Drinking Coffee Elsewhere is a stone cold classic collection of modern short stories, funny and scary and touching.
AJ LIebling's The Earl of Louisiana set standards for The New Journalism, also the old journalism; in 1959, he checks out a particularly wild turn in the epic career of Louisiana Gov. Earl Long, little brother and lifelong rival of the sainted Huey. Sprung from an asylum after brief, pesky experience, he revs up to run for re-election yet again, though now even his juggling of various shades of black-creole-cajun-WASP-country-urban-etc. interests, also the rich, who tend to hate him but make some deals, even his skillz are tested by backlash vs. civil rights movement, as both sides begin to accelerate
---Liebling is well-quaiified to hobnob with sources in NOLA and elsewhere, but mainly he's partaking of the insider gossip, while observing with the eye of a quick study and very seasoned pro (was war correspondant as weill as appreciator of racetracks and victuals, also one of the best New Yorker rovers of his era). Edutaining as all hell, serious too, and not very long (I checked pape count for all of these) _
This may well have been an inspiration for the Coen Brothers movie in which Paul Newman played Earl (good job, though visually a stretch).
Ditto for Billy Lee Bramner's The Gay Place, three novellas from the orbit of a Texas governor w some of the same feats and challenges as Earl (and some other historical pols of those crispy times)---but TGP is too long for this list sry

dow, Thursday, 18 November 2021 02:16 (four years ago)

yes, i have and have read the tove jansson. it's also short!

certified juice therapist (harbl), Thursday, 18 November 2021 02:23 (four years ago)

oh i meant to say and is very good lol

certified juice therapist (harbl), Thursday, 18 November 2021 02:24 (four years ago)

Oh yeah, and Thomas Farber's Tales for the Son of My Unborn Child Berkeley, 1966 - 1969: thoughtful portraits of men and women he knew, also turns the camera around when he gets embarrassingly involved with a sub-Gurdjieff cult leader, a swaggering asshole, shitting on your illusions (worse than Mr. Natural, because realer, although we're left to judge, if we care to, how much of this collection is fiction).

dow, Thursday, 18 November 2021 02:24 (four years ago)

Ah cool, so is Capek worth reading in general, then? Obv famed for popularising 'robot', but I've never been sure if he's worth digging into in his own right.

Yes! I adore Capek, and I went back and forth between recommending War With the Newts, his short story collection Tales from Two Pockets, and a work called Three Novels that might be my favorite but that I ruled out because it could be classified as experimental. He's remembered more for the sci-fi stuff because it's so prescient - he specializes in scenarios where people invent something dangerous, become economically dependent on it, and then keep using it when it's clear that it's actively destroying the world - but he's also good at the small-scale stuff; he's human and humane and funny and dark and intensely empathetic. He's a realist, a magical realist, a satirist, a visionary, and the most grounded and approachable of philosophers. I love him in the same way I love John Prine.

Lily Dale, Thursday, 18 November 2021 02:29 (four years ago)

Damn, that's me sold!

Ish Reed's early Yellowback Radio Brokedown, The Freelance Pallbearers, and Mumbo Jumbo are short, not sweet, and imaginative, in a fun way (can see where Blazing Saddles might have come from, for inst).

Was thinking about suggesting Mumbo Jumbo myself, actually (I haven't read the others). There are elements that I would describe as experimental but it really carries you along, definitely was a fun treat for me when I read it.

emil.y, Thursday, 18 November 2021 02:35 (four years ago)

Also, more people need the middle name 'Keepers'.

I would prefer not to. (Chinaski), Monday, 16 September 2024 19:08 (one year ago)

i am def going to try seek out more from him, for sure - my library has his short story collection, i will try to find Time Will Darken It also

werewolves of laudanum (VegemiteGrrl), Monday, 16 September 2024 19:13 (one year ago)

I read Sara Mesa's "Un Amor" last week and it satisfies all five of the thread's Treat Criteria.

this was enjoyable if quite dark and somewhat frustrating

will check out ‘So Long, See You Tomorrow’ by William Maxwell

corrs unplugged, Monday, 16 September 2024 19:13 (one year ago)

Great thread idea!

I have to say that my reading life has been immensely enriched by the existence of I Love Books and all its contributors. Finding good books used to be much more hit-and-miss, but now my 'hit' rate is over 90% and I have a long list of titles and authors to explore. Thanks, y'all.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Monday, 16 September 2024 19:18 (one year ago)

the Backlisted podcast has vastly enriched my reading — i see references to it here & there a bit on ilx search - wondering if a dedicated thread might be good?

werewolves of laudanum (VegemiteGrrl), Monday, 16 September 2024 19:23 (one year ago)

I'd contribute. I have a mixed relationship with Backlisted but I've got so many amazing books from it.

I would prefer not to. (Chinaski), Monday, 16 September 2024 20:14 (one year ago)

Andy Miller's book is a lot of fun, an atypically good example of the "I did a weird thing for six months and here's what happened" genre. Sometimes I wish he'd stop interrupting his guests (or his co-host) quite so much. But I've heard worse, and he's generally quite funny, so he gets a pass. I enjoy his tormented, self-aware relationship with his own inescapable blokiness, although I think I may have developed a somewhat parasocial relationship with them during the lockdowns.

I don’t know if I’ve every read anything that is this, idk, almost-perfect?

"A Month in the Country" by JL Carr is another perfect, very short novel with a Backlisted podcast (as are, off the top of my head, "Excellent Women" and "Human Voices").

Chuck_Tatum, Monday, 16 September 2024 20:40 (one year ago)

one month passes...

Lie With Me (2017) by Philippe Besson

corrs unplugged, Sunday, 27 October 2024 09:03 (one year ago)

In Praise of Shadows - Junichirō Tanizaki

Book ChancemaN (Noodle Vague), Sunday, 27 October 2024 09:30 (one year ago)

I loved A Month in the Country mentioned above. I will read it again someday.

I definitely recommend that Daniel Woodrell book of stories I just read. The Outlaw Album. Not for the squeamish. But the violence is delivered artfully a la Faulkner. I just started another one by him.

scott seward, Sunday, 27 October 2024 14:51 (one year ago)

It's a bit longer than 300 pages, but Tove Ditlesen's Copenhagen Trilogy is a great, compelling read. Early autofiction, and for me, unputdownable.

gravalicious, Monday, 28 October 2024 13:48 (one year ago)

Palestinian walks : forays into a vanishing landscape Raja Shehadeh,
A Palestinian revisits some places he knew years earlier and reminisces and ruminates on related subjects. I found the book pretty touching.
I've been reading quite a lot of Palestine related material recently and thought this particularly good.

Stevo, Monday, 28 October 2024 19:21 (one year ago)

I started "In Praise of Shadows" -- good so far!

master of the pan (abanana), Wednesday, 30 October 2024 13:44 (one year ago)

Patrick Hamilton - "Hangover Square"

An absolute waking nightmare of a book, kind of a cross between The Secret Agent and Saturday Night And Sunday Morning.. but told in such a direct, sympathetic way, you feel he's speaking directly to you in a language that's been made just for you. Can't remember the last time I just gulped a book down in such great big draughts

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Monday, 4 November 2024 16:16 (one year ago)

xp glad to hear you like it! It's a short thing but beautifully written and conceived

badder living thru Kemistry (Noodle Vague), Monday, 4 November 2024 16:52 (one year ago)

I enjoyed "Slaves of Solitude", sounds like I need to dig deeper into Hamilton. xp

o. nate, Monday, 4 November 2024 21:25 (one year ago)

Has everyone here read Desperate Characters? I feel like I bring it up a lot. I just brought it up on ILE. It's over the top but very memorable! It has definitely stuck with me. The movie version has too.

scott seward, Monday, 4 November 2024 21:33 (one year ago)

Poor George Harvey Bone.

I would prefer not to. (Chinaski), Tuesday, 5 November 2024 11:20 (one year ago)

Indeed

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Tuesday, 5 November 2024 11:27 (one year ago)

I kept picturing it as a black comedy like Nightie Night, or Peep Show, with George played by David Mitchell and Peter with his reprehensible moustache as Ray Purchase from Toast

https://hi-ya.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Ray-Purchase.png

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Tuesday, 5 November 2024 11:31 (one year ago)

Hangover Square is one of my favourite novels, a masterpiece. Part of the small sub-genre of Brighton Noir too!

Critique of the Goth Programme (Neil S), Tuesday, 5 November 2024 11:36 (one year ago)

Hahaha. Black comedy is the only real way to cope with the tragedy of it. Slays two. Found gassed. Thinks of cat. has to be comedy, right?

I used to go to awful marketing conferences at Earl's Court. I'd drift out into the evening and walk among those beautiful Second Empire buildings and think of Bone. What a book.

I would prefer not to. (Chinaski), Tuesday, 5 November 2024 11:42 (one year ago)

Talking of literary treats and (vaguely) Brighton Noir: *Fullalove* by Gordon Burn is magnificent.

I would prefer not to. (Chinaski), Tuesday, 5 November 2024 11:44 (one year ago)

Hangover Square is superb. Only recently realised the title is a pun! #onethread

Zelda Zonk, Tuesday, 5 November 2024 11:46 (one year ago)

Desperate Characters
Keep thinking I've read that, but I'm always just mixing it up with _Two Serious Ladies_ by Jane Bowles.
I'm slightly put off by Franzen's enthusiasm for _Desperate Characters_, which is just nonsense on my part.

_Two Serious Ladies_ may well be an appropriate novel for this thread.

Øystein, Wednesday, 6 November 2024 14:54 (one year ago)

I think DFW was a desperate characters booster as well

2 serious ladies is great as is that one play she wrote

Heartbreaking: the worst novel you’ve finished has a staggering genius (wins), Wednesday, 6 November 2024 14:59 (one year ago)

Just heard recently that the reason Franzen got into it was because Sigrid Nunez lent him her copy while they were at a writer's conference.

Sir Lester Leaps In (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 6 November 2024 15:16 (one year ago)

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/13/t-magazine/sigrid-nunez-paula-fox-desperate-characters.html
Guess she just recommended, didn't actually lend a copy.

Sir Lester Leaps In (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 6 November 2024 15:18 (one year ago)

I'm another Desperate Characters lover. I've also recommended it to many people. one of the interesting things is the picture of early Brooklyn gentrification. another possible hook, the author is Courtney Love's grandmother. I haven't read any of her other books though I started Western Coast and somehow lost the thread

bryan, Wednesday, 6 November 2024 16:38 (one year ago)

Yeah my attempts to read other Paula Fox books fell flat. Kinda like me and Christina Stead books that aren't The Man Who Loved Children (also a Franzen pick or was that Moody? Anyway, i love that book.) And also any Penelope Fitzgerald book that isn't The Bookshop.

scott seward, Wednesday, 6 November 2024 18:03 (one year ago)

also, if anyone hasn't read it yet, please do read The Bookshop. so great.

scott seward, Wednesday, 6 November 2024 18:04 (one year ago)

it is but I also liked offshore, maybe not quite as much, and the blue flower probably more. the golden child was not good though. I'll get round to the rest sooner or later.

french cricket in the usa (ledge), Wednesday, 6 November 2024 18:06 (one year ago)

Penelope Fitzgerald uniformly good except for maybe the first one which is think is The Golden Child. I had a similar Paula Fox problem but now I remember that I did like Poor George.

Sir Lester Leaps In (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 6 November 2024 19:59 (one year ago)

best bk i read recently = "sonny liston was a friend of mine" by thom jones

this train don't carry no wankers (doo rag), Wednesday, 6 November 2024 20:59 (one year ago)

Re-reading The Lantern Bearers by Rosemary Sutcliff, as I often do at times like this.

Lily Dale, Thursday, 7 November 2024 01:24 (one year ago)

two months pass...

Reading another Sigrid Nunez book, one that’s a little harder to get a hold of. Need to finish it soon and return it to the library for the next patron to borrow.

James Carr Thief (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 7 January 2025 03:11 (one year ago)

Finished it last night. Naked Sleeper. Another keeper.

James Carr Thief (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 17 January 2025 02:59 (one year ago)

two months pass...

Sigrid Nunez has been doing it for me lately, The Friend and What Are You Going Through? total gems

As of this weekend I have seen the adaptations of both of these. Much preferred The Friend to The Room Next Door. Felt like the former was completely successful in being faithful to the source material, keeping much of the dialogue and verbiage intact while at the same time opening it up for a film. Performers all delivered, Naomi Watts, Bill Murray, and a Great Dane named Bing, I think. In my mind I felt like Naomi’s performance called back somehow to her breakout in Mulholland Dr. and thereby served as a fitting tribute to her friend David Lynch.

Who Are the Mystery URLs? (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 8 April 2025 21:10 (one year ago)

Cool, might go for The Friend then! Had to turn off The Room Next Door, felt v heavy-handed

corrs unplugged, Wednesday, 9 April 2025 07:49 (one year ago)

Yeah.

Blecch’s Offender (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 11 April 2025 00:02 (one year ago)

In addition to everything else, The Friend also had quite a bit of lived-in NYC detail, while The Room Next Door was more touristy.

Blecch’s Offender (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 11 April 2025 00:12 (one year ago)

eight months pass...

Reread Yoruba Girl Dancing by Simi Bedford and decided to post here instead of WAYR because I feel it entirely qualifies. It's about a privileged Nigerian girl, living with many servants, who then gets shipped off to England at age six because her father thinks she needs an "English education". But while the paternal family are bigwigs in Nigeria their English relations are the product of a white working class woman who had fallen in love with her maternal grandfather and moved to Africa. So on top of the gigantic culture shock she also gets stuck between two worlds: a none more posh boarding school and, during the holidays, time spent running around with neighbourhood kids in Croydon. Her elocution teacher is absolutely raging when, after having erased her Nigerian accent in favour of rp, the protagonist then returns from holidays sporting a thick South London accent. Lots of great atmosphere, all sorts of environments of 50's Britain are tackled. Racism is both pervasive and free floating, she does a really good job of showing how different characters can have different blind spots but also surprising progressive impulses.

Bedford has only written one other book, which I plan on checking out. Her public profile should be much higher.

a ZX spectrum is haunting Europe (Daniel_Rf), Wednesday, 24 December 2025 16:33 (five months ago)

Sounds great! My library only has her other book, will give it a go.

I'll nominate The Reluctant Fundamentalist (2007) by Mohsin Hamad which is a perfect little page turner

corrs unplugged, Monday, 5 January 2026 13:16 (five months ago)


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