2018 Springtime For ILB: My Huggles. What Are You Reading Now?

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (261 of them)

I saw a copy of Charles Mann's The Wizard & The Prophet at my public library, checked it out and have started reading it. Its subject is basically how humankind is going to deal with 10 billion people on earth in the not-so-distant future, or to put it another way, it asks how doomed are we?

In order not to look like any of several dozen other books that approach the same subject matter, he packs the material around two seminal scientists with opposing views. One was the godfather of the "reduce, reuse, shrink our footprint" rather ascetic approach. The other was primarily instrumental in the Green Revolution and solidly in the "science and ceaseless innovation will let us all prosper" camp.

Even before picking up the book, I know which camp I'm in. The earth is finite and a human population crash can be avoided only for so long and will be all the worse for having been postponed. But Mann is a very good researcher and finds especially interesting facts to decorate his books. He also writes clear readable prose. So, I'm in this book for as long as he can tell me new things, or old things in new ways.

A is for (Aimless), Saturday, 19 May 2018 22:31 (five years ago) link

Joao Gilberto Noll's Quiet Creature on the Corner is truly trippy, the author has to write a plot twist (its like some sort of ouliaipian constraint, or just wilful attention deficit), you end with so much chop and change at barely 100 pages that it feels like barely anything at all. Obviously not reading it in one sitting didn't help. Now onto Return to Region by Juan Benet and he is a writer to be discovered by, and surely to be re-issued one day. Maybe the Spanish civil war novel - although written in that Proustian block paras (with some ineteresting twists), whose effect is often to take it away from anything historical and specific to something else - its an experience very unique to the act of turning pages. I'll try and type up some more if I have it or to block quote something juicy from it.

On the poetry front I put down Durs Grunbein's Selected. Its kinda ok, just couldn't quite connect with it.

xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 23 May 2018 22:02 (five years ago) link

I finished “Skylark” which seemed rather low-key at first, but which by the end seemed instead well-paced and judiciously modulated. It’s a small gem of a book, in which minor yet colorful events are presented with such clarity that they achieve outsized resonance.

o. nate, Thursday, 24 May 2018 01:39 (five years ago) link

^^^^^^^^

JA Baker: The Peregrine -- basically, peregrines are excellent, which I can't argue with

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Thursday, 24 May 2018 01:56 (five years ago) link

Perfecting Sound Forever: The Story Of Recorded Music, Greg Milner

Daniel_Rf, Thursday, 24 May 2018 09:41 (five years ago) link

This is a badly-written review - like a school essay - but it sort of confirms for me that Cusk is Not My Thing. Which is fine, but I feel like I'm missing something. I've tried and failed with her work a few times. It just seems so airless and dull. What am I doing wrong?

Chuck_Tatum, Friday, 25 May 2018 14:55 (five years ago) link

All Gates Open Rob Young

got as far as Tago Mago . Quite enjoying it.
NOt sure why Young didn't interview Damo Suzuki about his childhood/Pre-Can years . Seems to have gone to 2ndary materials for that stuff. Would have thought Suzuki might be open to being interviewed about it. & then i see that he answers a couple of questions on that period in a Mojo interview this month. So not sure what gives there.
Book does give me more information on that early period than I was aware of, but just not sure why not first hand?

Also saw more on Malcolm Mooney's early years and those of the rest of the band.

So would recommend this but i think I need to find my copy of the box set book and see what's said in there too.

Stevolende, Friday, 25 May 2018 15:04 (five years ago) link

reading moving kings by joshua cohen, its comparatively less annoying/showy than book of numbers, im digging it

johnny crunch, Friday, 25 May 2018 18:01 (five years ago) link

bluets maggie nelson. good but not as good as argonauts; probably bc the relationship at the centre of it is less interesting? also thematically a bit more shallow. but still the m nelson signature genius on every page so i ant complain. anyone read newest one?

flopson, Friday, 25 May 2018 18:33 (five years ago) link

I loved bluets - read it last month ago when my library finally got it - it’s brilliant

I guess I agree argonauts is better

Elonio Grimesci (wins), Friday, 25 May 2018 18:44 (five years ago) link

Darker Muses is the one I can't get. kornel Esti and Anna Edes are both wonderful.

― Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Wednesday, May 16, 2018 5:06 PM (one week ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

James, I was curious about this book and found a copy for $5 today. After I read it and you're still desperate for it, I can send it your way if you care to pay postage.

omar little, Friday, 25 May 2018 22:28 (five years ago) link

this edition:

https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/51wAtvLSDDL._SL300_.jpg

omar little, Friday, 25 May 2018 22:29 (five years ago) link

I WILL DO THAT THANK YOU YES PLEASE

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Saturday, 26 May 2018 00:14 (five years ago) link

I’ll let you know when I’m finished!

omar little, Saturday, 26 May 2018 00:50 (five years ago) link

Introduction to Perfecting Sound Forever already almost hilariously out of date (hadn't noticed the book's from 2009 when I first picked it up); fidelity wars put in terms of vinyl vs SACD, not vs FLAC files or whatever.

First chapter so far annoying to me because of a pretty uncritical stance towards Edison, which grates because he was A Very Bad Man. This objection possibly unreasonable as none of his Badness had much to do with recording technology, afaik.

Anyway, still a very interesting read and I do feel like I'm learning more about what recordings actually are. But I feel it'll be too dry for today's mission - I'm visiting someone in detention near Gatwick, about two hours on public transport - so I'm bringing David Copperfield instead.

Daniel_Rf, Saturday, 26 May 2018 10:20 (five years ago) link

I started reading Numbers in the Dark, the story collection by Italo Calvino. Some very enjoyable tales - some of my favorites so far have been the unpublished ones. The only ones I've skipped so far have been the ones that were too clearly aiming at some sort of political allegory.

o. nate, Sunday, 27 May 2018 19:23 (five years ago) link

I read “Egress” a new collection of short pieces on Little Island - rather stellar in the main I thought. Predictably enjoyed Eley Williams and David Hayden.

I read “Killing Time” by Donald E Westlake, partly because I was interested by the typography on the (old green spine Penguin) cover, partly because I’m meeting up with a Westlake-enthusiast friend in Chicago next week and partly to remind myself that I don’t much enjoy hard-boiled stuff (while I do admire it when it’s well-done, as it is here).

Now I’m reading “Young Törless” by Robert Musil and I’m loving every page so far.

Tim, Wednesday, 30 May 2018 16:56 (five years ago) link

The Wizard & the Prophet, as expected, has some nice, out of the common run nuggets of fact in it, but the baseline is all too familiar, even though it is well and clearly summarized. We are solidly wedded to fossil fuels and lack any effective mechanism to change course. We're fast plunging into a very dangerous and doubtful future and the main questions are how fast and how far we will go down the chute.

The biographical stuff on Vogt and Borlaug, the two figures he chose to typify the two sides of the argument, is moderately interesting, but compared to the scope of the main subject matter, descending back down to details about how Vogt got along with Margaret Sanger is too close to triviality.

A is for (Aimless), Wednesday, 30 May 2018 17:19 (five years ago) link

xp Daniel, you might enjoy David Byrne's opinionated and detailed history of recording in How Music Works, re interaction of technology, environment (what sounds good in arenas, clubs, how and why CBGB became a prestigious and popular Scene but still wondering why similar locales did not)(also a great quote on mutual embarrassment of stumbling upon someone who was listening to music all alone, when recorded music was still new and strange), and his personal experiences over the decades, like having studio professionals convincing him that you had to do it this way, then later what no that sounds horrible have to do it *this* way, also the stages of conceiving writing recording etc (fave in this sequence is the tour on which the dancers had the musos dancing and the musos had the dancers playing instruments).

Now that's what I call reading and writing--from Paris Review staff picks:
On a lark, I decided to climb the highest hill in South Dakota: Black Elk Peak in the Black Hills. Four hours later, doused in sweat and crumpled forward like a folding chair, wheezing and admiring a plaque proclaiming “the highest point east of the Rockies and west of the Pyrenees,” I had reached the vista point of a sacred American landscape. The Black Hills have been held as holy for centuries by the Sioux, an ellipse of green-shadow pine and bald gray rocks like an iceberg floating on the Plains. Shadows, scarce on the Plains, accumulate in the folds of the Black Hills, dense and irregular as a mosaic. From atop Black Elk Peak one can watch the cloud tufts pitch and roll, watch the hills, gone black and heavy in the transient shadows, light up like bulbs ticking on. It is a landscape that has been transformed by centuries of humans who have perceived it as sacred, and by the weight of those expectations. By Sylvan Lake, at a trailhead to Black Elk Peak, Crazy Horse had his great vision, in which he received instructions about the necessary preparations to render him invincible in battle. And it was to the peak that now bears his name that Black Elk, the Lakota Sioux medicine man, was taken in his prophetic experience, and from where, as he says in Black Elk Speaks, his brilliant end of life memoir and sermon, he saw “the whole hoop of the world.” The existence of Black Elk Speaks is a product of extraordinary luck—the result of the meeting of a poet, John Neihardt, and the aging Black Elk, who was unknown beyond the remote part of the Pine Ridge Reservation where he lived. The two understood each other enough for Black Elk to entrust his story to the poet. And it is an extraordinary life—from fighting in the Battle of the Little Bighorn to touring Europe with Buffalo Bill to growing old on the reservation (recounted also in Joe Jackson’s excellent biography Black Elk: The Life of an American Visionary). The Black Hills, an ancient American sacred space, are like a cave mouth opening towards the sky, and Black Elk is one of its great voices. —Matt Levin

dow, Wednesday, 30 May 2018 17:54 (five years ago) link

Fear and His Servant, by Mirjana Novaković: deeply odd, very enjoyable Serbian work that may or may not be fantasy. A man who MIGHT be the Devil is on a quest to track down reports of vampires in 1730s Belgrade: he fears them because they are the dead come back to life, a Biblical sign of the Last Judgment and Satan's final defeat. But he's a strange, timorous, oddly powerless Devil, though he has an odd knowledge of 19th- and 20th-Century literature and song. And the vampires may not even be real, but the rumours part of a power struggle between the Serbs, the Ottomans and the Austro-Hungarians.

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Wednesday, 30 May 2018 23:51 (five years ago) link

Interested in that Westlake, Tim. I especially enjoy his non-comedy novels, though I will read anything by him I can get my hands on.

“Young Törless” is brilliant.

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Wednesday, 30 May 2018 23:53 (five years ago) link

I was initially surprised by how explicitly queer Young Torless seemed to me but once you read enough from that era and milieu it becomes apparent that "it's fine to experiment in college" was already a thing.

Daniel, you might enjoy David Byrne's opinionated and detailed history of recording in How Music Works, re interaction of technology, environment (what sounds good in arenas, clubs, how and why CBGB became a prestigious and popular Scene but still wondering why similar locales did not)(also a great quote on mutual embarrassment of stumbling upon someone who was listening to music all alone, when recorded music was still new and strange), and his personal experiences over the decades, like having studio professionals convincing him that you had to do it this way, then later what no that sounds horrible have to do it *this* way, also the stages of conceiving writing recording etc (fave in this sequence is the tour on which the dancers had the musos dancing and the musos had the dancers playing instruments).

Yeah, tbf reading Perfecting Sound Forever a frequent thought I have is "I really should be reading How Music Works instead, shouldn't I?".

Daniel_Rf, Thursday, 31 May 2018 09:10 (five years ago) link

partly because I was interested by the typography on the (old green spine Penguin) cover

Penguin UK issued a number of early, non-Parker, non-funny Westlakes round about the same sort of time:

https://pictures.abebooks.com/GDP/md/md16609830317.jpg

https://pictures.abebooks.com/GDP/md/md16609830357.jpg

https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/41n5jrIUvcL._SX373_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg

Ward Fowler, Thursday, 31 May 2018 09:30 (five years ago) link

Yeah my “Killing Time” is like that “Killy” there. Three near-perfect typefaces that work really badly together imo. I suppose I bought the book though, so who’s the loser?

Tim, Thursday, 31 May 2018 12:23 (five years ago) link

got Helen DeWitt, Some Trick on Tuesday, knocked out the first three stories (of 13) yesterday. There's so many exclamation points!!!!!!! It's a delight, I kept cackling.

valorous wokelord (silby), Thursday, 31 May 2018 15:31 (five years ago) link

Then I sent her an email.

valorous wokelord (silby), Thursday, 31 May 2018 15:31 (five years ago) link

John Keats - So Bright and Delicate. Love Letters and POems of John Keats to Fanny Browne. Jane Campion did a film based on their relationship - I should track it down sometime.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 31 May 2018 21:05 (five years ago) link

My 'Some Trick' is allegedly on its way, am very impatient.

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Friday, 1 June 2018 03:00 (five years ago) link

not released here until 26th apparently. <taps foot impatiently for 24 days>

Fizzles, Saturday, 2 June 2018 10:23 (five years ago) link

I'm reading a collection of the journalism of Nellie Bly. At the moment she has contrived to be committed to the insane asylum for NYC and is exposing the fecklessness of the doctors, the brutality and cruelty of the nurses, the highly insanitary conditions and the loathsome inedibility of the food. And yes, she names names. Plus, the fact that many of the women were not insane, but merely didn't speak English or had been troublesome to their employers.

A is for (Aimless), Saturday, 2 June 2018 18:16 (five years ago) link

btw, Nellie Bly wrote during the last decades of the nineteenth century and early twentieth.

A is for (Aimless), Sunday, 3 June 2018 02:59 (five years ago) link

Social Sculpture - The rise of the Glasgow art scene - Sarah Lowndes

( ͡☉ ͜ʖ ͡☉) (jim in vancouver), Tuesday, 5 June 2018 21:16 (five years ago) link

I Always kept A Unicorn by Michael Houghton which I picked up a couple fo months ago and have been meaning to read for ages.
Seems pretty good so far. Sandy has left home and is getting solo spots in folk clubs while working in the day asa shorrt term nurse which means she's turning down extra training she's offered and getting stuck with the worst jobs.

Stevolende, Tuesday, 5 June 2018 21:30 (five years ago) link

Social Sculpture - The rise of the Glasgow art scene - Sarah Lowndes

The one who was once married to the Nobel Prize winning poet?

omgneto and ittanium mayne (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 5 June 2018 21:37 (five years ago) link

I read the third in the Red Riding Trilogy. Grim as hell, but increasingly moving towards a mythic reading of place.

Now reading Tim Robinson's Stones of Aran: Pilgrimage. It's been ages since I've had an appetite for the 'enraptured man, abroad in nature' book. I'm ready. I think.

The shard-borne beetle with his drowsy hums (Chinaski), Wednesday, 6 June 2018 11:13 (five years ago) link

Manchette: Ivory Pearl -- unfinished political/historical thriller, sort of like an ultraviolent Melody Blaise with more serious intent

William Trevor: Last Stories -- great stuff, and now I have no more stories by him to read, which sux

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Thursday, 7 June 2018 01:30 (five years ago) link

got Helen DeWitt, Some Trick on Tuesday, knocked out the first three stories (of 13) yesterday. There's so many exclamation points!!!!!!! It's a delight, I kept cackling.

― valorous wokelord (silby), Thursday, May 31, 2018 11:31 AM (six days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Then I sent her an email.

― valorous wokelord (silby), Thursday, May 31, 2018 11:31 AM (six days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

post her reply if she does :)

flopson, Thursday, 7 June 2018 01:39 (five years ago) link

Social Sculpture - The rise of the Glasgow art scene - Sarah Lowndes

The one who was once married to the Nobel Prize winning poet?
― omgneto and ittanium mayne (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, June 5, 2018 2:37 PM (three days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

i don't know. she is married to the artist Richard Wright at the mo

( ͡☉ ͜ʖ ͡☉) (jim in vancouver), Friday, 8 June 2018 21:46 (five years ago) link

Nellie Bly was an interesting figure, kind of similar to Amelia Earhart, in that her legacy was more to have existed in the public mind and challenged stereotypes than anything she did directly. Her writing was less florid and cliché-filled than other leading journalists of her day, but it was still journalism.

I've picked up Keegan's The Price of Admiralty, which so far is a bit helter-skelter and not well-focused, but has a certain interest in that it tries to address naval history through the lens of global military strategy, starting with the Napoleonic Wars.

A is for (Aimless), Friday, 8 June 2018 21:56 (five years ago) link

Sorry, I was thinking of Sara Lownds. Really.

And Nobody POLLS Like Me (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 8 June 2018 22:13 (five years ago) link

I finished Sergio Pitol's The Magician of Vienna (the last in the trilogy to be translated) - its effectively a brilliant, sometimes moving and disturbing (both go hand-in-hand), strangely put reading (Pitol was a reader, writer and translator who knew Russian, Polish, English) and travelling (got to do that as part of the Mexican diplomatic service) diary, that zig-zags from one point in his life to another. I can't remember ever encountering someone's passion for literature (which I find it to be a bit boring in comparison to a passion for music, say) in this way - to the detriment of other people (I think he has a wife, and maybe children, his grandmother was a passionate reader of Tolstoy). Here, for this person, books are his way of engaging with the world, of forming friendships - which then dissolve back to the writing desk where you are alone reading, writing or translating. Very little like it.

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 9 June 2018 12:30 (five years ago) link

Wolfgang Hilbig's I is his way of processing the years of surveillance, collaboration and backstabbing within artistic circles in the former East Germany. I often think things like this are best collected via a non-fictional framework as no transformation takes place. This isn't true here, Hilbig is steeped in a Gothic mood spread over these labyrinthine sentences. I've spent much of this late spring day with it. Flipping between this and Joseph Wrinkler's Graveyard of Bitter Oranges. I loved the books of his I've read so far - and they are all very similar. Tableaux like descriptions of what can only be described as Dante-ian hell circles transplanted to the Austrain countryside. The difference is the 400 pages of it (as oposed to the usual 150 pages) so its another type of challenge.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 10 June 2018 10:31 (five years ago) link

I suppose you mean Joseph Winkler, who writes nightmarish stories about rural Austria.

Ich bin kein Berliner (alex in mainhattan), Sunday, 10 June 2018 10:40 (five years ago) link

Josef Winkler, sorry.

Ich bin kein Berliner (alex in mainhattan), Sunday, 10 June 2018 10:41 (five years ago) link

lol sorry yes, always make that mistake when I google him.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 10 June 2018 10:43 (five years ago) link

Actually quite a few excerpts available, he is such a singular writer (at a stretch there are snatches of Genet crossed with something like Claude Simon): https://bodyliterature.com/2014/02/15/josef-winkler/

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 10 June 2018 10:52 (five years ago) link

I am going to do the Boston Public Library challenge this summer. It is hokey, but I’m into it.

https://bpl.bibliocms.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/30/2018/05/BPL-2018-ONE-MILLION-MINUTES_English_Bingo.pdf

I need recommendations for books

A) set in summer
B) audiobook (decent reader)

rb (soda), Sunday, 10 June 2018 20:08 (five years ago) link

Reminder: it's getting on time for the quarterly WAYR change of season. think of your clever thread titles now and avoid the rush.

A is for (Aimless), Sunday, 10 June 2018 20:14 (five years ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.