Heavens! Look at the Time: What Are You Reading During This Summer of 2017?

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I am pulling up to the final few pages of The Custom of the Country, Edith Wharton, and apart from its being focused exclusively on the folkways of the very wealthy, with special emphasis on New York and Paris, it has been reasonably compelling. It is worth noting that, for the purposes of the characters in this book, the world is solely made up of the wealthy and no other kind of existence is imagined. The social climber at the center of the book is cruelly lacerated, but from the perspective of the lowly reader, every last one of them comes off badly.

A is for (Aimless), Tuesday, 12 September 2017 17:46 (six years ago) link

Kazimierz Brandys: Rondo -- supremely entertaining Polish novel about theatre/WW2 Resistance/fakery/sexual obsession

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Tuesday, 12 September 2017 23:30 (six years ago) link

Finished Rachel Cusk's Transit, it's better than Outline (which I enjoyed). It's still a series of little character studies, but the narrator slowly starts becoming less of a cipher. You get her first name near the end of this one (spoilers!), and I'm pretty sure that's the first time?

I'm currently reading the new Orhan Pamuk, enjoying it but I have no idea where it's going or even what kind of story this is going to turn out to be (which is a good thing I guess).

change display name (Jordan), Thursday, 14 September 2017 14:31 (six years ago) link

Also read VanderMeer's Borne, it's fun except for all of the time that Borne is not 'onscreen', which is unfortunately most of the second half of the book. Great final image though.

change display name (Jordan), Thursday, 14 September 2017 14:33 (six years ago) link

I am pulling up to the final few pages of The Custom of the Country, Edith Wharton, and apart from its being focused exclusively on the folkways of the very wealthy, with special emphasis on New York and Paris, it has been reasonably compelling. It is worth noting that, for the purposes of the characters in this book, the world is solely made up of the wealthy and no other kind of existence is imagined.

You have troubles with novels about wealth? It's not criticism, I'm just curious. That's her milieu, but not her only one: she wrote one of the great American short novels about rural insularity, Summer.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 14 September 2017 14:42 (six years ago) link

jordan the narrator's first name gets used once in outline, when she gets a phone call. that's it tho. glad to hear transit is good, will add to the ever growing pile

adam, Thursday, 14 September 2017 15:26 (six years ago) link

That Mary Roach thing ended up being way too cutesey for my taste, but I still finished it.

Now back to French rural life and Pagnol with Manon Des Sources

Daniel_Rf, Thursday, 14 September 2017 17:00 (six years ago) link

Oh that rings a bell, thanks Adam! I wonder if she makes a point of using it once per book. Looking forward to the last one in the trilogy.

change display name (Jordan), Thursday, 14 September 2017 17:21 (six years ago) link

Having laid to rest Edith Wharton's book, I took up with a very different novel, To Build a Ship by Don Berry, set on the Oregon coast in 1851, at a time when native americans still outnumbered settlers by about 5 to 1. I chose this because I spent most of the past week camping and hiking just a few miles south of Tillamook Bay, where the story occurs.

Earlier this year I read Trask by the same author, set in 1848 in the same coastal area. He wrote a third novel called Moontrap which forms a sort of trilogy of books about Oregon in those few years of transition, when California was being overrun by ragtag fortune hunters and Oregon received some of the overflow. I own Moontrap and will read it before too many months go by.

A is for (Aimless), Saturday, 16 September 2017 17:48 (six years ago) link

read & quite enjoyed john clute's first novel the disinheriting party. more seventies postmodernist grotesquerie than anything to do with sf proper... kind of interested in checking out his other novel now.

now per wahlöö's the lorry.

no lime tangier, Saturday, 16 September 2017 20:06 (six years ago) link

Ernest Becker - The Denial of Death

Well bissogled trotters (Michael B), Sunday, 17 September 2017 02:05 (six years ago) link

Very interested to know what The Lorry is like

Reading BACACAY by Witold Gombrowicz, his first collection of stories, and it's very good and quite mad so far

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Sunday, 17 September 2017 23:16 (six years ago) link

Was thinking of reading Patrick Modiano, then saw a mention of The Black Notebook---good? Or should I start somewhere else, if at all?

dow, Monday, 18 September 2017 01:34 (six years ago) link

Bacacay was good, but stylistically unlike other Gombrowicz. Wondered if this was the translator, but looking it up I find that, annoyingly, the other Gombrowicz i have read (Ferdydurke, Pornografia) was translated, chinese whispers style, from another translation rather than the original Polish

With Modiano, try Dora Bruder or Honeymoon: if they don't grab you, he is prob not for you. Haven't read Black Notebook.

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Tuesday, 19 September 2017 03:54 (six years ago) link

I have begun reading a novella, Cat's Foot, Brian Doyle. He's a local author who died recently and therefore is enjoying a small local revival. From this and the one other book of his I've read, his main stylistic trope is to craft sentences meant to evoke a childlike directness and simplicity, while maintaining an adult's point of view.

He also incorporates a variety of 'magical realism', which allows him to lard his story with transparent fantasies. I can't say this pleases me, but for those who are susceptible to it, the general effect is to lard the story with dollops of sentimentality, while effectively saying, this is only a fairy tale, so you may ignore your critical facilities and indulge yourself in unearned emotions.

Luckily, it's short, so I'll probably forge on to the end and return it to the library tomorrow.

A is for (Aimless), Tuesday, 19 September 2017 18:29 (six years ago) link

Very interested to know what The Lorry is like

turns out it is actually one of the wahloos vintage have subsequently republished (retitled a necessary action). quite downbeat portrayal of fifties era artist/drop-out life in a small coastal spanish town/environs and the underlying tensions between locals, visitors and franco-ist officialdom. thought it was very good!

no lime tangier, Wednesday, 20 September 2017 02:24 (six years ago) link

Ah, excellent,I have that in the tbr pile in its new title. Cheers!

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Thursday, 21 September 2017 07:07 (six years ago) link

I am racing through "Black Teeth and A Brilliant Smile" by Adelle Stripe, a novel based on the life of Andrea Dunbar. I love it. So Yorkshire!

Tim, Thursday, 21 September 2017 08:35 (six years ago) link

I'm now reading Fishcakes and Courtesans: The Consuming Passions of Ancient Athens. It is about halfway between a scholarly and a popular handling of the subject matter and the author, James Davidson, really knows his stuff. I'm not sure anyone here on ILB gives a hoot about ancient Athens, but I expect to enjoy this.

A is for (Aimless), Thursday, 21 September 2017 18:04 (six years ago) link

Warriors of God: Inside Hezbollah's Thirty-Year Struggle Against Israel. Nicholas Blanford.

-_- (jim in vancouver), Thursday, 21 September 2017 18:10 (six years ago) link

Just finished Gavid Grossman's A Horse Walks Into A Bar: it's only 194 pages, but so dense, so action-packed a monologue that I only read for an hour each night at bedtime this past week, with no loss of momentum. The old comic, the expert at long-game set-ups is leading his audience and himself off the trail of zingers, off the rails too, but toward the inside-out hobo jungle of psychodrama, revelation, confession, testimony, what maybe the final bit---meanwhile the audience, incl. the narrator, becomes known by quite the range of reactions, in a rowdy Israeli pitstop one frickin' night: "You wanna clear your head, and this guy gives us Yom Kippur!" Others are like, "No, he's still giving us jokes too," even counting them, a bit shell-shocked, others are drawn into the serious cobweb moonlight, at least for a while. And yet the monologist (who has to react to all this, of course) doesn't try to explain *every* fucking thing, the author doesn't try to spoonfeed us: revelation leads to room for speculation.
Even more interesting to read so soon after In Search of Lost Time.

dow, Friday, 22 September 2017 15:45 (six years ago) link

Andre Aciman, Call Me by Your Name

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Friday, 22 September 2017 16:22 (six years ago) link

I'm reading Aciman's latest, Enigma Variations. It's worth checking out if you like Call Me By Your Name. This one starts in Italy and moves to New York City, and follows one male character through a number of romances (with men and women) that feel like little Rohmer stories with a Proustian interest in lingering more on how a relationship might turn out than the actualities. I like his writing, but I wouldn't want to hang out with his characters for long.

jmm, Friday, 22 September 2017 16:38 (six years ago) link

xpost Jeez, that looks good: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/25/books/review/DErasmo.t.html?mcubz=0 Think you mentioned getting The Gallery? What did you think of that? Still need to check it out.

dow, Friday, 22 September 2017 16:51 (six years ago) link

Query to the Doctor, but any other responses to The Gallery are welcome.

dow, Friday, 22 September 2017 16:53 (six years ago) link

Andre Aciman, Call Me by Your Name

What'd you think? I adored it.

the general theme of STUFF (cryptosicko), Friday, 22 September 2017 17:03 (six years ago) link

Jeez, that looks good

yeah, it is, I've read it twice now and love it. The movie version looks good also.

jmm, Friday, 22 September 2017 17:04 (six years ago) link

i'm only 40 pp in

lots of interior monologue, which is intriguing as it's an imminent awards-friendly movie

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Friday, 22 September 2017 17:05 (six years ago) link

read The Gallery a couple years ago, excellent

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Friday, 22 September 2017 17:07 (six years ago) link

I'm going to Iceland next month. I've only read a bit of Sjon - what should I read? Fancy a bit of fiction, and something social history/anthropological/travel-related if such a thing exists.

The shard-borne beetle with his drowsy hums (Chinaski), Friday, 22 September 2017 17:30 (six years ago) link

Andre Aciman, Call Me by Your Name

What'd you think? I adored it.

― the general theme of STUFF (cryptosicko), F

I'm reading it too; I'm halfway done. The narrator's monomania distracts me.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 22 September 2017 17:31 (six years ago) link

I can say definitively that Armie Hammer is alarmingly well cast as Oliver: the hauteur, looks, frigidity.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 22 September 2017 17:38 (six years ago) link

The narrator's monomania distracts me.

Do you remember 17-year-olds?

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Friday, 22 September 2017 18:33 (six years ago) link

iirc. lord sotosyn teaches students who are slightly older than17, but not by much.

A is for (Aimless), Friday, 22 September 2017 18:42 (six years ago) link

Aciman writes 28-year-olds exactly the same way.

jmm, Friday, 22 September 2017 18:42 (six years ago) link

I don't read my student's monologues, Morbsy.

I'm enjoying it. Apparently the film kept the peach scene.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 22 September 2017 18:47 (six years ago) link

I really meant do you remember yerself at 17. ;)

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Friday, 22 September 2017 18:55 (six years ago) link

xpost

If that's the case, between this and Toni Erdmann, we have an interesting little cinematic trend going on here.

the general theme of STUFF (cryptosicko), Friday, 22 September 2017 20:49 (six years ago) link

I've been reading Dennis Lim's elegant and insightful David Lynch: The Man from Another Place, Christina Sharpe's In the Wake, a series of essays on antiblackness that examines the wake, the ship, the hold, and the weather as figures for the Middle Passage and the structures of white supremacy, and Dodie Bellamy and Kevin Killian's capacious anthology of writing from the New Narrative movement, Writers Who Love Too Much, which works both as an overview of the major US and Canadian experimental prose writers of the 1980s and early '90s and as a welcome redress to the obscurity of many of the less prolific writers from New Narrative circles, something like a Bay Area counterpart to Brandon Stosuy's Down is Down, But So is Up.

one way street, Friday, 22 September 2017 21:19 (six years ago) link

*("an overview of most of the US and Canadian experimental prose writers of the '80s and early '90s whom I actively find interesting, apart from Delany, Wallace, Wojnarowicz, and Anne Carson" might be more accurate, though)

one way street, Friday, 22 September 2017 21:24 (six years ago) link

Chinaski I was very pleased I'd read some sagas when I went, Njal's is a good one, I really like Laxdaela and Gisli's also. "Independent People" by Halldor Laxness is a must IMO.

More Nordic bizniss inc all the Icelandic bits that come to my mind here on the bus here: Scando Lit: search

Including all the above, sorry.

Tim, Friday, 22 September 2017 23:18 (six years ago) link

Cheers, Tim - that's fantastic.

The shard-borne beetle with his drowsy hums (Chinaski), Saturday, 23 September 2017 11:52 (six years ago) link

Was thinking I might be approaching my fill of fiction (for a while), when Ashbery died and some surprisingly (given prev. lazy skimming/stoned staring of yore) engaging, refeshing JA poems appeared on Twitter---which of his books should I get? (Maybe not Three Poems for now, that's the one I was staring at back in the 70s.)

dow, Saturday, 23 September 2017 19:33 (six years ago) link

Start with Houseboat Days.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 23 September 2017 20:09 (six years ago) link

Yeah, Houseboat Days, Self-Portrait in a Convex Mirror, Rivers and Mountains, and The Double Dream of Spring are probably the most compelling books to start with.

one way street, Saturday, 23 September 2017 20:27 (six years ago) link

Will get, thanks! Now I'm wondering about Frank O'Hara.

dow, Saturday, 23 September 2017 20:39 (six years ago) link

Start with Lunch Poems!

one way street, Saturday, 23 September 2017 20:51 (six years ago) link

A Wave too. He repeats himself something fierce, though, so his collections tend to bore me after a while -- as I learned this week when I checked Can You Hear, Bird? out of the library. You can start anywhere!

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 23 September 2017 21:18 (six years ago) link


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