2019 Sum-Sum-Summertime: What Are You Reading, My Good People?

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J.P. Nettl - abridged version of his (originally two volume) biography of Rosa Luxemburg

Seany's too Dyche to mention (jim in vancouver), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 23:04 (four years ago) link

i am starting on my first thomas bernhard by reading his last novel: extinction

previous to that i read david markson's wittgenstein's mistress

no lime tangier, Thursday, 12 September 2019 07:03 (four years ago) link

I am now reading The Beginning of Spring, Penelope Fitzgerald.

A is for (Aimless), Friday, 13 September 2019 16:52 (four years ago) link

Finished Daniel O'Malley's "The Rook". Liked it better than the Starz series, which dilutes and changes the novel's world, characters and plot.

Now reading "Major Dudes / A Steely Dan Companion". A chronological selection of reviews and interviews. Learning some stuff, and surprised with how easily the deep cuts come to mind. Now on the solo years, before they got back together. Got me to pull out China Crisis' "Flaunt the Imperfection" for today's commute.

Next two in the stack are follow-ons to these. "Stiletto", sequel to "The Rook", and "Reelin' in the Years", a Steely Dan biography.

the body of a spider... (scampering alpaca), Friday, 13 September 2019 17:37 (four years ago) link

Henry James: Search and Destroy

the pinefox, Monday, 16 September 2019 08:16 (four years ago) link

I'm on the third book (Death's End) of Cixin Liu's Three Body Problem trilogy. Really enjoying the series, even if there are some parts that urge me to reach for the salt and take a large pinch

frame casual (dog latin), Monday, 16 September 2019 13:21 (four years ago) link

I gave up on that after book 1 as the aliens, when revealed, turned out to be really dull. Do they get more interesting?

Tsar Bombadil (James Morrison), Monday, 16 September 2019 23:49 (four years ago) link

I dunno, they haven't arrived yet

frame casual (dog latin), Monday, 16 September 2019 23:51 (four years ago) link

XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXpost Hi Aimless, if you come across the Katherine Mansfield collection unhelpfully titled Stories, with a not particularly helpful intro by KM biographer Jeffrey Meyers----it's a Vintage Classic, and a good demonstation of how her writing developed over the years, incl. acquiring and repurposing and sometimes discarding manners and influences, but always with a drive that seemed to come from experience, as a girl and young woman and less young woman in New Zealand and Europe. Not always at her best here, but plenty of momentum.
Good quote from omg Elizabeth Bowen:
We to her the prosperity of the 'free' story: she untrammeled it from conventions and, still more, gained for it a prestige till then unthought of. How much ground Katherine Mansfield broke for her successors may not be realized. Her imagination kindled unlikely matter; she was to alter for good and all our idea of what goes to make a story.

dow, Tuesday, 17 September 2019 02:03 (four years ago) link

We owe to her, that should have been. As a prodigious teenager, Bowen was checking in while Mansfield was checking out, and the inspiration to her personally might have been particularly strong.

dow, Tuesday, 17 September 2019 02:08 (four years ago) link

I spent last December plowing through three Bowen novels, The Death of the Heart the best among them.

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 17 September 2019 02:10 (four years ago) link

Cool. Need to do that, I've only read the dynamic doorstop Collected Stories.

dow, Tuesday, 17 September 2019 03:00 (four years ago) link

Please Look After Mother, Shin Kyung-sook. The titular mother disappears on a trip to Seoul; novel follows the various family members as they process their guilt over having neglected her. Written almost entirely in the second person. It's got that good family guilt a la Tokyo Story, and a certain sparseness that I encounter a lot in....South East Asian? (struggling to find a non-offensive word for something I've found in Chinese, Korean and Japanese fiction...post-confucian?) writing. I'm probably making it seem like a bit of a chore but actually it's quite the page-turner!

Daniel_Rf, Tuesday, 17 September 2019 12:48 (four years ago) link

That sounds good, I'm gonna check it out.

jmm, Wednesday, 18 September 2019 15:38 (four years ago) link

reading two books I found on the street:
I Claudius (Graves)
Annihilation (Vandermeer)

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 18 September 2019 15:41 (four years ago) link

I read a bunch of stuff over the summer - a list that makes me look well parochial. Ho hum.

Alan Moore - V for Vendetta. The concept is enough to make it a classic but it's stretched out pretty thin by the end.

Robin Ince - I'm A Joke and So Are You. I find Ince kind of annoying but this is gently wise and funny enough to mitigate the worst of his excesses.

Caryl Lewis - Martha, Jack & Shanco. I went to Anglesey so wanted to read some Welsh-language literature. This aims for a Steinbeckian universalism but doesn't quite have the courage of its convictions. The nature writing was beautiful.

Richard King - The Lark Ascending. This should have been my *thing* - activism, music and landscape - but it never quite, well, took flight.

Robert Macfarlane - Landmarks. I fell out with Macfarlane around the time of The Old Ways but, compared to the above, the existential nature of Macfarlane's commitment mattered again. Beautiful.

Russell Hoban - Riddley Walker. As a reading experience, I found it tough but my brain has been like a huge resonating chamber since I put it down.

Keiron Pym - Jumpin' Jack Flash: David Litvinoff and the Rock and Roll Underworld. This was the *one*. During an obsessive pursuit (to use Richard Holmes' phrase) of his quarry across the world and down the toilet of London's 60s underworld, Pym ravels and unravels the riddle of Litvinoff and with it the history of the Jewish East End, the Krays, the Chelsea set, Performance. Litvinoff comes across as manic, inventive, borrowed from death.

Life is a meaningless nightmare of suffering...save string (Chinaski), Wednesday, 18 September 2019 16:11 (four years ago) link

I finished The Beginning of Spring last night. It was a very fine novel and a pleasure to read. More so than any of the authors I read, Fitzgerald achieves her effects so subtly and organically that it is impossible for me to put my finger on the artifice that supports her art. She is economical of details, but there is no sense of sparsity or strain. She frequently chooses the precise word needed to carry an exact meaning, but her prose is never fussy. Her characters emerge clearly and well-formed, and do not seem overdone or underdone. I stand in awe of her excellence and cannot explain it.

btw, the autumnal equinox is almost upon us. A new thread of books, mists and mellow fruitfulness shall soon be in order.

A is for (Aimless), Wednesday, 18 September 2019 16:28 (four years ago) link

I'm now reading another novel by Sicilian author, Leonardo Sciascia. This one is To Each His Own.

A is for (Aimless), Friday, 20 September 2019 18:06 (four years ago) link

The next 'What Are You Reading' thread here:

2019 Autumn: What Are You Reading as the Light Drifts Southward?

Check out ILB's exciting all-new lineup for Fall!

A is for (Aimless), Sunday, 22 September 2019 18:56 (four years ago) link


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