2019 Winter: The What Are You Reading thread that came in from the cold

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For the Eric Vuillard readers, he responded to criticism in the NYRB about his approach to writing history--I uploaded it here:
https://www.scribd.com/document/397893674/Pages-From-2019-02-07-the-New-York-Review-of-Books

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Monday, 21 January 2019 09:01 (five years ago) link

Looking at the Wikipedia list of Comyns novels, it appears I've read the four dating from before the sixties and the four dating from after the sixties but none of the four from the sixties. I have enjoyed them all, I think maybe I liked The Vet's Daughter best.

Tim, Monday, 21 January 2019 09:52 (five years ago) link

completed the complete saki

Does that include, like, his jingoistic novel about Germany invading the UK? Always wondered how he fared outside of the comical short story mold (in which he's awesome).

Daniel_Rf, Monday, 21 January 2019 11:51 (five years ago) link

His what now? I had never heard of this.

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Monday, 21 January 2019 11:52 (five years ago) link

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/When_William_Came

Daniel_Rf, Monday, 21 January 2019 11:59 (five years ago) link

ooh, that's available on project gutenberg. will add it to my todo list.

koogs, Monday, 21 January 2019 12:06 (five years ago) link

it did indeed include it... totally bizarre mix of social comedy & pre-wwi invasion anxiety! his other novel the unbearable bassington was much more readable, though that doesn't come close to the sharpness of the stories. less said about the plays the better.

no lime tangier, Monday, 21 January 2019 12:57 (five years ago) link

recommend who was changed and who was dead

yes! I want to read that and/or the Veterinarian's Daughter next... I've read Sisters by a River, Our Spoons Came from Woolworths, and the Juniper Tree. Have you read any of her four books from the 60s?

the girl from spirea x (f. hazel), Monday, 21 January 2019 21:05 (five years ago) link

(I'm in the same boat as Tim it seems, mostly because the pre/post 60s Comyns books seem to be the ones that are reprinted)

the girl from spirea x (f. hazel), Monday, 21 January 2019 21:07 (five years ago) link

Started Devil's Advocates book on The Shining.

nathom, Tuesday, 22 January 2019 14:57 (five years ago) link

Finished Susan Orlean, The Library Book, which is a warm blanket of a read, highly recommend it. Started Rachel Kushner, The Flamethrowers, which is starting off like a knife trick.

I have measured out my life in coffee shop loyalty cards (silby), Tuesday, 22 January 2019 17:48 (five years ago) link

The Veterinarian's Daughter sort of passed through me when I read it but it's grown in my imagination. It's like a perfect Gothic doll's house of a book. I totally twin it with We Have Always Lived in the Castle in that respect.

Good cop, Babcock (Chinaski), Tuesday, 22 January 2019 20:03 (five years ago) link

Against my better judgement I bought John Lanchester's 'The Wall', mostly because I used to dig utopian/dystopian literature. So I just finished the Decipherment of Linear B, which I enjoyed a lot, and I'll get to the Wall after Sartre's 'the Ghost of Stalin'.

Leaghaidh am brón an t-anam bochd (dowd), Wednesday, 23 January 2019 00:46 (five years ago) link

Toni Morrison, PARADISE.

If anything, it seemed better than ever on this ... 3rd reading? Probably one of her strongest novels. The late sequence where the women all reappear is quite mysterious and touching.

(Accidentally, I appear to have started 2019 reading only female authors, a change from 2018.)

the pinefox, Wednesday, 23 January 2019 09:42 (five years ago) link

nora ephron, HEARTBURN. it's a trip so far

||||||||, Wednesday, 23 January 2019 18:18 (five years ago) link

Love that book.

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Wednesday, 23 January 2019 20:33 (five years ago) link

I finished Lives of the Saints last night. ftr, St. Brendan's life was so phantasmagoric as to be unconnected to any recognizable reality, St. Cuthbert came across as a fairly good-hearted ascetic, and St. Wilfred came across as a calculating and self-enriching church politician. Chateaubriand's memoir might be the perfect foil with which to follow this crew, but I haven't really decided what to read next.

A is for (Aimless), Wednesday, 23 January 2019 20:37 (five years ago) link

Aargh sorry big pic

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Wednesday, 23 January 2019 23:47 (five years ago) link

Finished Human Voices by Penelope Fitzerald. Perhaps the most purely enjoyable of the 5 or so books of hers that I've read, but still I'm left feeling I'm not quite the right reader for her and that I enjoy her work less than I should given that it's the kind of thing I tend to like and obviously brilliant. I keep hoping things will click into place with her but it hasn't quite happened yet.

frankiemachine, Thursday, 24 January 2019 17:11 (five years ago) link

Giorgio Bassani: Within the Walls -- first of the Ferrara books, but the 4th I've read, because they were retranslated into English out of order -- 5 long stories/novellas

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Friday, 25 January 2019 00:17 (five years ago) link

xpost

I get that! Offshore was a very "nothing quite clicks" book for me, but like every other book of hers it's haunted me for reasons I can't explain, in a pleasurable way

Chuck_Tatum, Friday, 25 January 2019 00:22 (five years ago) link

Having read two (maybe three) of Bassani's novels over the years, and enjoyed them, it hadn't occurred to me that he thought of them as a single work. Excited to read the rest by and by.

I read "Normal People" by Sally Rooney and "Dusty Answer" by Rosamund Lehmann - it wasn't deliberate but they're an interesting pair, ninetyish years apart stories of progress through adolescence (and university) to a messed-up adulthood of sorts. Both VG, don't think either will make it to an ongoing home on the shelves.

Tim, Friday, 25 January 2019 09:46 (five years ago) link

THE COLLECTED LETTERS OF FLANN O'BRIEN

the pinefox, Friday, 25 January 2019 09:48 (five years ago) link

I heard that starts great and then deteriorates

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Friday, 25 January 2019 11:22 (five years ago) link

As do we all

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Friday, 25 January 2019 11:23 (five years ago) link

Still only 2/3 through rereading TO THE LIGHTHOUSE.

I can revere Woolf and trust that she is a magnificent artist, and what she tries to do in this novel is remarkable; eg spending pages in going beyond the human and trying to show how space and nature subsist over time without people in the picture.

BUT I am still doubtful about her tendency, often when doing that very thing, to go for a 'grand style' which is, maybe one could say, too 'Victorian' or 'Romantic'. She falls back a lot into dodgy (especially personifying) metaphors of eg 'And now night donned his cloak and swept all about him', which seem below the level of the best of what she is trying to do.

― the pinefox, Saturday, January 19, 2019 3:03 PM (six days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

that middle section might be interesting to reread in the light of the recent turn towards ecofiction or whatever we're calling it: the mission it perhaps shares with the powers novel from last year

the ghost of tom, choad (thomp), Friday, 25 January 2019 11:25 (five years ago) link

Some of us start bad and then deteriorate. xp

Tim, Friday, 25 January 2019 11:26 (five years ago) link

James Morrison: fair observations on both counts.

the pinefox, Friday, 25 January 2019 11:43 (five years ago) link

PS I had not seen Tim's important addendum. Also accurate.

the pinefox, Friday, 25 January 2019 11:43 (five years ago) link

We are all born mad. Some remain so.

I've started Robert Saviano's Gomorrah - partly because I've always wanted to know more about Naples and partly for some background for the Ferrante novels (of which I've read the first). It's gripping enough, so far.

Good cop, Babcock (Chinaski), Friday, 25 January 2019 14:04 (five years ago) link

Back on Iris Murdoch, UNDER THE NET. Going very slowly with this, though. Coincidentally and rather randomly Michael Wood recently reviewed it for the LRB.

the pinefox, Sunday, 27 January 2019 21:56 (five years ago) link

Outline by Rachel cusk

flopson, Sunday, 27 January 2019 22:18 (five years ago) link

a couple John Scalzi novels: The Collapsing Empire and The Consuming Fire

Giorgio Scerbanenco's 1966 Milan-based noir novel A Private Venus, which was very simple in its story but pretty exceptional I thought.

omar little, Sunday, 27 January 2019 22:28 (five years ago) link

Read Harry Martinssons epic poem 'Ainara' about a spaceship that gets thrown off course and hurtles towards infinity. It's been adapted to the big screen. It's good.

Frederik B, Sunday, 27 January 2019 23:38 (five years ago) link

Currently reading Homer's The Iliad in the Robert Fagles translation.

o. nate, Monday, 28 January 2019 01:31 (five years ago) link

I read Ainara--it IS good--and had no idea it had been filmed. Not even sure how that would work!

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Monday, 28 January 2019 23:11 (five years ago) link

Now Gregory Benford is arguing with me on Goodreads about my view of his book.

Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Tuesday, 29 January 2019 03:11 (five years ago) link

I read Ainara--it IS good--and had no idea it had been filmed. Not even sure how that would work!

― Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), 29. januar 2019 00:11 (fourteen hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

It doesn't really work, at least not perfectly. But it's an interesting film. And it turns out it's 'Aniara', not 'Ainara', had to ctrl-f 15 instances of that mispelling in my review :(

Frederik B, Tuesday, 29 January 2019 13:30 (five years ago) link

You have to admire the neck of people still convinced German car manufacturers will force Merkel to see sense, when May has turned a deaf ear to every single business leader here.

gyac, Tuesday, 29 January 2019 13:33 (five years ago) link

Balls! Wrong thread, no idea how that happened guys.

gyac, Tuesday, 29 January 2019 13:34 (five years ago) link

I just read Lorrie Moore's A GATE AT THE STAIRS (2009) for maybe the fourth time - carefully, over a day or so.

I must have written about this book here every time I've read it before, and the posts would show my views going up and down, my doubts and praise mixed. This time it won me over again. So it's mainly just a lesson in the vagaries of rereading, the mystery of how you see different things.

There are one or two bad things, but as I knew they were coming they didn't bother me. Other, good things still worked. And a surprising amount, especially in the latter half, felt new to me - as though I had read it too fast before. Much of it the detail of landscape, weather etc that I knew was there but perhaps hadn't focused on; but also scenes, phrases, conversations, impressions.

The scene where Tassie goes to the restaurant is poignant and loaded; I hadn't recalled that it came before her brother was killed. It's odd that LM doesn't make more of what the bill comes to at the end of this feast, as that's surely part of the point of the place. Then there is a whole scene with Tassie driving home on her scooter, in a rainstorm, that I had quite forgotten.

Her neglecting to read the brother's fateful email still doesn't ring very true, but the brother's death and the emotional impact and grief was powerful for me this time round.

On balance I now can't but feel that this is more a very good novel than a notably flawed one.

the pinefox, Tuesday, 29 January 2019 17:51 (five years ago) link

I finished "heartburn" which I enjoyed but cooled on majorly by the end. her narrator was very astute and funny but it never really coalesced into that compelling a narrative

continuing my moomins reading next with "finn family moomintroll"

||||||||, Tuesday, 29 January 2019 21:43 (five years ago) link

I would like to go back to Moomins!

It might not be so far from Lorrie Moore.

(In fact coincidentally on my own bookshelves all my Lorrie Moore is literally next to the first Moomin book.)

the pinefox, Tuesday, 29 January 2019 23:19 (five years ago) link

I needed something simple, so I'm reading The Killer Inside Me, Jim Thompson. It subscribes to the 'bad seed' theory of serial killers, but that was a commonly held idea in 1954. Apart from that, its plot is damn well put together and it's psychologically perceptive.

A is for (Aimless), Thursday, 31 January 2019 20:36 (five years ago) link

The Anubis Gates
Jean Renoir book on Pierre Renoir

So, This Leaked (Capitaine Jay Vee), Thursday, 31 January 2019 20:38 (five years ago) link

That would be Pierre-Auguste Renoir, his painter pops.

So, This Leaked (Capitaine Jay Vee), Thursday, 31 January 2019 20:39 (five years ago) link

Finally started on Bad Blood. Hurrah

nathom, Friday, 1 February 2019 10:30 (five years ago) link

I read "The Living Are Few, The Dead Many" by Hans Henny Jahnn - really good and convincingly unnerving. the back of the book says (something to the effect that) it's halfway between German gothic and German expressionist, and I have no reason to doubt that.

Then I re-read Carl Wilson's 33 1/3 book about "Let's Talk about Love" by Celine Dion, which is maybe even better than I remember it, a (the?) genuine classic of self-consciously anti-rockist music criticism.

Tim, Friday, 1 February 2019 10:31 (five years ago) link

Really need to read that Wilson book

nathom, Friday, 1 February 2019 10:38 (five years ago) link


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