Literary treats - recommend great reads

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1 good short literary type book I read this year -- John Berger's The Red Tenda of Bologna. kind of a travelogue but mostly reminiscences and opinions on art and culture. short chapters and many are self-contained. available as a penguin mini, around 60 pages, 2007.

adam t. (abanana), Sunday, 21 November 2021 19:17 (two years ago) link

Omg Harriet trying to come up with a rhyme for her poem in The Long Secret is the best thing

Chuck_Tatum, Sunday, 21 November 2021 20:42 (two years ago) link

A saft ansuer tooneth away rat

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 21 November 2021 20:46 (two years ago) link

Harriet watching TV, as seen through Beth Ellen's eyes, is my favorite thing.

"Look at these things. Look at all these dumb people. Look at these rotten things. I never saw such dumb things. There isn't anything I'd like to see. There's never anything I'd like to see. What a bunch of ridiculous...HEY!" she suddenly yelled. "There's a GREAT Nazi movie on!"

She turned to Beth Ellen, who was flipping channels like a zombie.

"Quick," she screamed, "turn it to that!" She leapt across the room.

Beth Ellen looked over her shoulder at the program, then turned to the right channel. Some Nazis were beating up an old woman on the street.

"Look at those rotten things! Oh, boy!" said Harriet and sat down, stuffing a great gob of popcorn in her mouth.

Lily Dale, Sunday, 21 November 2021 21:26 (two years ago) link

Hup.

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 21 November 2021 21:32 (two years ago) link

I may have misunderstood the assignment here but I can definitely second Yellowback Radio Brokedown.

A lot of the time for comfort and quick serotonin hits I revert to fun creative nonfiction (Joan Didion, John McPhee or whatever) or Annie Dillard way before I open a novel.

popcornoscenti (Ye Mad Puffin), Sunday, 21 November 2021 22:19 (two years ago) link

1 good short literary type book I read this year -- John Berger's The Red Tenda of Bologna. kind of a travelogue but mostly reminiscences and opinions on art and culture. short chapters and many are self-contained. available as a penguin mini, around 60 pages, 2007.

Yes, that one meets the thread's remit. Little pages with paragraphs in the middle, portable, bite-sized. I don't appreciate food or textiles much in real life, but I felt like I did when I read this.

eatandoph (Neue Jesse Schule), Monday, 22 November 2021 01:07 (two years ago) link

Jon Fosse - Morning and Evening

115 pages. Gets you emotionally very quickly.

abcfsk, Monday, 22 November 2021 11:47 (two years ago) link

really appreciate all the recommendations!

do not personally care for John Williams, but I agree that if you like his style a book like Stoner must be a treat

Two of my favorite pure treat books, just 100% delightful to read, are Brat Farrar and The Singing Sands by Josephine Tey. Both classic mystery novels but with much more emphasis on the novel part than the mystery part.

intrigued by this (and the Maigret recommendation) as mystery/crime is a genre I like but where I have a hard time finding enjoyable books

corrs unplugged, Monday, 22 November 2021 13:39 (two years ago) link

I would highly recommend the Maigret novels; the vibe is quite a change of pace from the typical crime novel. I love the ones where he's just sort of hanging out at the fringes of a scene where shit went down/is about to go down, but not actually acting in any sort of official capacity.

cwkiii, Monday, 22 November 2021 14:01 (two years ago) link

Yeah, "Hey chief, big shoot-out here 10 minutes ago, Suspect B is all over the place." And he, like his creator, knows that he can't do his job like he's committed to if he isn't tuned into that human stuff, w/o gettin' snowflake--it's just that M. and S. have seen sooo much of this over the many years: the series is built for that, w/o getting to soap opera heroine w 7 spouses, 10 comas, x number gettin' into trouble for breakin' all the rules, like so many crime series.

dow, Wednesday, 24 November 2021 18:55 (two years ago) link

I mean usually there's more compartmentalization and repetition of big bravura SFX, none of that here.

dow, Wednesday, 24 November 2021 18:57 (two years ago) link

But I came here to say that mention of the xpost bite-size Berger reminds me of recently noticing a stand-alone of Michael Herr's "Illumination Rounds," an advance excerpt from Dispatches: got me going in New American Review, the mostly (?) 60s-published mass market paperback lit mag.

dow, Wednesday, 24 November 2021 19:02 (two years ago) link

seconding early ishmael reed & hard rain falling, will nom joseph mitchell joe gould's secret or even better the collection up in the old hotel - this is a whopper which is against the rules which are made to be broken, but it's a collection of smaller pieces tbf
(and skip the fiction probably)

another whopper the sot-weed factor is pure pleasure

muriel spark

coombination gazza hut & scampo bell (wins), Monday, 29 November 2021 22:09 (two years ago) link

i picked up 'at swim two birds' because of this thread

i lucked out and got this dalkey edition with this quote by dylan thomas on the cover

This is just the book to give your sister if she's a loud, dirty, boozy girl!

https://entertainment.time.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2011/07/t100_novels_atswimtwobirds.jpg?w=258

flopson, Tuesday, 30 November 2021 03:28 (two years ago) link

Forgot about that quote.

Duck and Sally Can’t Dance (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 30 November 2021 03:32 (two years ago) link

Wanna get back into my middle school fave Saki, but library only has Complete Works in one smallish (Modern Library-style) volume: tiny type!! I may read it anyway, 'til eyeballs rebel.

xpost Muriel Spark: o hell yes The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie is great gateway, and just the right length for this thread.

up in the old hotel - this is a whopper which is against the rules which are made to be broken, but it's a collection of smaller pieces tbf
(and skip the fiction probably)
Did Mitchell write fiction? Would like to check it if so.

dow, Tuesday, 30 November 2021 03:36 (two years ago) link

There has been some controversy in certain quarters over how much fiction may have crept into Mitchell's nonfiction. IIRC a few of the pieces in "Up in the Old Hotel" are labeled as fiction. Some others may have been "embellished". They are definitely treats though. Of books I've read recently the one that might best meet the criteria laid out for this thread is "Price of Salt" by Patricia Highsmith, i.e. an effortless, engrossing read.

o. nate, Wednesday, 1 December 2021 03:50 (two years ago) link

There are all sorts of shades of 'non-fiction', depending on the subject matter and how the author decides to present the material.

Embellishment is intrinsic to any kind of storytelling that pretends to convey a sense of life and action, no matter how strongly it is based in actuality. I guess the phone book (which soon will be completely obsolete as a thing known and familiar) would be a good example of minimally-embellished non-fiction, but even a phone book could be said to impose tiny amounts of imagination and coloration upon the bare facts.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Wednesday, 1 December 2021 04:00 (two years ago) link

Yeah, but I read (and skip the fiction probably) as distinguishing between two sets of publications, as if the author or someone since had straight-up designated, say, features over here, short storied over there.

dow, Wednesday, 1 December 2021 04:17 (two years ago) link

justin3 recommended “The Gone World” upthread & i read it last week

holy shit. a horror/scifi that really pushes the boat out. the horror is legit scary af, the scifi is v ambitious, really well written.

it was described as true detective meets inception but inception is wrong. maybe edge of tomorrow?

anyway, get into it, genre-nerds

terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Wednesday, 1 December 2021 06:04 (two years ago) link

xp yeah I was referring to the handful of short stories collected in up in the old hotel which were explicitly published as fiction

coombination gazza hut & scampo bell (wins), Wednesday, 1 December 2021 07:15 (two years ago) link

Thanks! Didn't remember that distinction, will have to re-read with it in mind, though was pretty sure he at least massaged some of his material. (In Joe Gould's Teeth, Jill LePore says that some documents have come to light which Mitchell couldn't have known about, but also 0 indication among his copious papers that he ever responded to several people who offered to be interviewed etc re Gould.)
The Wikipedia article on Mitchell incl. several pieces that have appeared in The New Yorker this century (think it was the most recent one that I read and liked):
Wiki page has links for each, though they're behind account wall; dunno if you can just sign up and view w/o having to pay)
2000–2015
Takes Takes (May 28, 2000)
Street Life Personal History (February 3, 2013)
Days in the Branch Personal History (November 24, 2014)
A Place of Pasts Personal History (February 9, 2015)

dow, Thursday, 2 December 2021 03:19 (two years ago) link

xxp i also read 'the gone world' on justin3's recommendation and it was v. good

however

as someone who grew up in southwestern pennsylvania at the same time as the protagonist (I was born a year later), i feel compelled to point out that teenage girls there in 1985 who dressed like madonna or had michael jackson jackets absolutely did *not* listen to AC/DC (especially not powerage, which didn't even have a hit?!)

otoh the author might have simply been heightening the contradictions? get out of my head

mookieproof, Thursday, 2 December 2021 03:39 (two years ago) link

I really wish someone would read Keith Maillard, perhaps only to disabuse me of the notion that he’s utterly fabulous. I and about a dozen other people think he’s a treasure - and his books are a treat. Anything, really, but I was knocked out by his latest novel, Twin Studies.

war mice (hardcore dilettante), Thursday, 2 December 2021 04:28 (two years ago) link

An English Murder, Cyril Hare - Cozy mystery, set at x-mas no less, but with real life 50's politics intruding - aristocratic family includes a cousin who is Chancellor of the Exchequer in the labour govt as well as a son leading a neo-fascist group; the Poirotesque outsider, a Hungarian Jewish academic, is a holocaust survivor. Breezed through it, great stuff.

Daniel_Rf, Wednesday, 8 December 2021 10:37 (two years ago) link

five months pass...

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

corrs unplugged, Monday, 16 May 2022 11:37 (one year ago) link


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