Bright Remarks and Throwing Shade: What Are You Reading, Summer 2022?

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Gets kinda lush later, at least some of the imagery does. His screenplay for Downhill Racer(1969) came across very well, with championship skiers in the wild blue yonder and daily grind, like his fliers in The Hunters. But the skiers get to enjoy themselves a bit more, in the Alps and the 60s.

dow, Wednesday, 7 September 2022 03:33 (one year ago) link

Cassada also good. Believe it was a rewrite of his second published novel The Arm of Flesh and one of his flying books like The Hunters and not one of his relationship books. Oh yeah, his memoir Burning the Days is really good too. Haven’t gotten around to reading some of the last things published.

Jean Arthur Rank (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 7 September 2022 03:40 (one year ago) link

table, interesting! i found the prose itself very academic in the formal and literally boring sense. that's despite it being quite plain and accessible at the sentence level to someone like me with no experience reading serious humanities or theory. i certainly struggled over 500 pages. the same book written by a good non-fiction journalist and half the length would have been great.

thank you all for the salter thoughts.

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Wednesday, 7 September 2022 04:15 (one year ago) link

A Quick Ting On Afrobeats, Christian Adofo - Was intrigued by a book on such a recent genre, and one I follow mostly via clicking on youtubes in its dedicated threads on here. First few chapters were an engaging read on growing up in the UK coming from Ghana and how Afrobeats helped the author embrace his heritage. It then turns into an attempt to map out the origins of the genre via Fela, burger highlife (a genre I'll confess I never heard of) and hip-life (and probably others, but that's where I stopped). The writing's very clumsy, could def have used an editor, and while Adofo's dilligence on interviewing artists is appreciated, he doesn't employ much skepticism in parsing their statements; there's a section on a guy who claims to have released "the first rap record" in 1973 and admitidely I haven't heard it but colour me skeptical that it's somehow more valid than Jamaican deejaying, scatting, the Last Poets or any of the other many pre-Sugarhill Gang things that exist. Also a big focus on how songs express cultural values, which I'm not against but it comes at the cost of little focus on the actual musical evolutions. Don't think I'll continue, tho I'm sure a younger, more obsessive music geek than myself could derive hours of enjoyment from checking out all the artists mentioned. Good that it exists.

Daniel_Rf, Wednesday, 7 September 2022 13:55 (one year ago) link

I am reading Ubik and wondering about advertising and writing for copy and their effect on language in the 1950s and subsequently (cf. meme).

youn, Wednesday, 7 September 2022 17:25 (one year ago) link

Reading Seven Gothic Tales. First time. Advise?

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 7 September 2022 17:29 (one year ago) link

xpost a little more about Downhill Racer, from NYTimes review by Roger Greenspun (will have to check more of his)

Writing about the lead character David Chappellet, Greenspun observed, "His world is that international society of the well-exercised inarticulate where the good is known as 'really great,' and the bad is signified by silence. In appreciating that world, its pathos, its narcissism, its tensions, and its sufficient moments of glory, Downhill Racer succeeds with sometimes chilling efficiency."
Also: fun cinematography. Wonder if Salter's screenplay has been published? Not seeing it so far.

dow, Wednesday, 7 September 2022 20:57 (one year ago) link

Never came across it anywhere, so I doubt it.

Jean Arthur Rank (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 8 September 2022 10:38 (one year ago) link

Penelope Fitzgerald's short story collection The Means of Escape. I really like the three novels of hers I've read but these stories were far too slight and enigmatic. They're full of her typical dry humour but pushed almost to the point of snideness, and I didn't feel like there was any fondness for the characters beneath the surface.

ledge, Friday, 9 September 2022 08:12 (one year ago) link

Johannesburg Katrin Fridriksdottir Valkyrie
A look into the female role in Viking society. By one of the advisors to The Northman. I think I also heard her as a guest on Kate Lister's podcast Betwixt the Sheets
Pretty interesting. She is using sagas and things as source material.
Quite enjoying it anyway.

Augusto Boal Games For Actors and Non-Actors.
Theatre for the oppressed author's book on methodology for his theatre work. He is taking leads from people like Stanislavski to apply work based in the thought of Paolo Freire to a new medium.
Bought this a few years ago and about time I read it. Plus thete is a workshop based on it next week.

Stevolende, Friday, 9 September 2022 08:25 (one year ago) link

Autocorrect hitting me when I thought I was keeping an eye on it. Valkyrie author first name is Johanna.

Stevolende, Friday, 9 September 2022 08:26 (one year ago) link

Cold Comfort Farm

Daniel_Rf, Friday, 9 September 2022 10:04 (one year ago) link

i read meg forajter 'interrogating the eye' - great new poetry collection. i can't quite match the pyrotechnics of the people who blurbed the book - olivia cronk, joyelle mcsweeney, jay bessemer - but it does do what they say it does, which is to look at the gaze, the body, writing, in a way that feels contemporary, and it's much more tender than those blurbs suggest

also 'deceit' by yuri felsen, published in 1930 but only translated into english this year and put out by prototype. felsen was apparently described as the "russian proust" by his contemporaries... maybe! the book is very intense, written in the form of a diary and a quite self-conscious one (lots of passages about writing the diary, how the writing relates to the real experience it's describing etc). i don't know that that is proustian exactly, but he does have that deep, sumptuous engagement with emotion, action, conventions

'bonsai' by alejandro zambra, a very short meta love story (meta in the sense that he write say something like, "they had a friend called jorge, or perhaps it was tomas... let's say it was jorge." that kind of thing

helen dewitt's new one, 'the english understand wool', which i think has already been discussed here. i remember years ago reading a story, never published, by someone i knew in which the protagonist has an altercation with someone, they almost get hit by someone on a bike, something like that, and in the story the protagonist pulls the cyclist off their bike and beats him up. clearly this - the part before the cyclist was beaten up - was a real incident that had happened to the writer and they were writing out what they wished they could have done. the dewitt book is like that, but good

dogs, Friday, 9 September 2022 13:43 (one year ago) link

I recently read "Germania: In Wayward Pursuit of the Germans and Their History" by Simon Winder. It's a long book, 400+ pages, and covers German history from roughly the end of the Roman empire up to the eve of Hitler's rise. Although it roughly follows a chronological order, it's structured around personal stories by the author about his visits to Germany and travel stories about interesting places to visit there. This makes it rather less stuffy and formal than a typical history book. The author is determined to strike a whimsical tone and although sometimes the humor feels a bit strained (like a speaker at an accounting convention who has been instructed to leaven his material with jokes, however distantly related the subject), it also sometimes finds its mark, especially when he throws moderation to the winds and takes his axe to a sacred cow. Clearly the author is very knowledgeable on his subject, and the sociohistorical analysis to me felt both wise and refreshingly opinionated.

o. nate, Friday, 9 September 2022 20:55 (one year ago) link

Pat Conroy is the wrong name for that character in Ubik. It is not dangerous enough and it is too white. She should look like M4r13 Ch4rl0t*23 P1n3t*21.

youn, Saturday, 10 September 2022 15:36 (one year ago) link

She should be how one might imagine R4ch3l C(-90sk. I apologize for not seeing beyond the surface, but I figure that is what names are for.

youn, Saturday, 10 September 2022 15:43 (one year ago) link

The character's name is Pat (Patricia) Conley.

the pinefox, Saturday, 10 September 2022 20:12 (one year ago) link

I finished Chester Himes' A RAGE IN HARLEM, which had taken me a week - longer than usual of late. As noted before, it was much more light-hearted or at least comedic than expected - a 'caper' is the word. It also includes extreme violence on a proto-Tarantino sort of level. As the book goes on, Himes seems to include more local knowledge about Harlem, lots of specific places, though I get the impression he didn't even know Harlem so well, and I wonder if, writing from Paris, he was actually doing this from books or documents -- a bit like (but also unlike, as Joyce did remember) Joyce in Paris on Dublin. Or this might be over-thinking a book that doesn't feel like a hugely serious creation.

the pinefox, Saturday, 10 September 2022 20:15 (one year ago) link

Heat 2, which has short chapters but seems very long. The story is playing itself out as a new Mann film in my head, so I’m loving it

calstars, Saturday, 10 September 2022 21:26 (one year ago) link

xpost - I stand corrected and apologize for those idiotic posts.

youn, Saturday, 10 September 2022 21:44 (one year ago) link

Was intrigued by PKD naming one of his characters after the author of The Great Santini etc., and can totally see R4ch3l C(-90sk in that context as well.

dow, Monday, 12 September 2022 05:03 (one year ago) link

Twice removed of course, via the imaginations of youn and myself, appropriately enough for PKD's ontological concerns w process and procedure.

dow, Monday, 12 September 2022 05:06 (one year ago) link

Reading some new smaller things I got in the mail, including an amazing document for any fans of country music and/or concrete poetry:

Constraint based dismantling of two plus decades worth of hit contemporary country lyrics by Texas born & raised, Coleman Edward Dues. By isolating phrases/words/letters & then grafting them to electrical schematics, these concrete & minimal poetry inspired pieces unpeel & expose varying levels of artifice, even as they somewhat hilariously manage to embody a sense of the author's place & persona.

WHAT FOLLOWS HAS BEEN COLLAGED FROM EVERY BILLBOARD NUMBER ONE COUNTRY SONG OF THE YEAR FROM THE YEAR OF MY BIRTH (1996) TO THE MOST RECENT YEAR AVAILABLE (2019). I INDICATE THE TITLE AND DATE OF THE SOURCE SONG FOR EACH SCHEMA IN THE TOP LEFT-HAND CORNER OF EACH PAGE.

broccoli rabe thomas (the table is the table), Monday, 12 September 2022 18:57 (one year ago) link

Robert Hare Without Conscience
One of the books by the Canadian Forensic Psychologist who devised the Psychopathy Check list which is what Jon Ronson refers to as the Psychopath Test in his own book on the subject. I met the author 20 years ago at a talk he gave to the PsychSoc at the local university when I was studying there. He was pretty good that night. THis book is pretty good too but it really shouldn't have taken me 20 years to get around to reading it.
Interlibrary loan getting way too many of those right now and need to get through a few and return them since I'm letting things buiild up too much. Keep ordering books when I do booksearches and suddenly a backlog is coming through.

Finding the Mother Tree Sue Simard
Book on intercoennection of forests as communication networks etc. Like a non verbal community with signals fro chemicals etc spreading messages about activity in the vicinity. Mycelium, chemicals and a few other methods. Interesting anyway;. Talks about some ideas i've come across elsewhere. I'm just reading the author talking through family history in relation to the Canadian forest she learnt from.

Astral weeks : a secret history of 1968 Ryan H. Walsh
book on musical activity in Boston in 1968 as Van Morrison devises his classic lp and a few other bands work through things.
So far read the first chapter and then checked out the band teh Bead Game that the young guitar prodigy he hired went onto once discarded.

Augusto Boal Games for Actors and Non-Actors
book on the methodology on the Theatre of the oppressed. Bought it a few years ago, now trying to get it read by end of the week when there is a workshop based on it.

Insurgent empire : anticolonial resistance and British dissent Priyamvada Gopal,
book on rise of native revolt to empire over late 19th century and 20th century. Very interesting, I get qu8ite into it when I can concentrate on it. So need to get away with overloading how many books i have out.
Need to get it finished by the 21st so not sure that is gooing to happen.
Anyway good recommendation in response to some comments i made on decolonisation in a webinar last year.

Stevolende, Monday, 12 September 2022 20:54 (one year ago) link

I hesitate to bring this up because I feel a bit of a scold but was there any discourse about the class implications in the portrayal of country folk in Cold Comfort Farm? Or is it understood that it's deliberate caricature/from the 1930's so who cares/a comedic riff on earlier similar portrayals (from I guess Hardy, whom I haven't read much?).

Daniel_Rf, Tuesday, 13 September 2022 09:41 (one year ago) link

I started Gerald Griffin, THE COLLEGIANS (1829): a long Irish novel from pre-Victorian and pre-Dickens times. I gather that it was popular. It was also, I believe, later adapted by Dion Boucicault.

The narration flows quite well, though it's garrulous and is very happy to digress into local speech and folklore at any time. Many words are italicised as if to emphasise how the Irish speaker is saying them. It is somewhat metafictional in the casual way that a lot of old fiction was; chapter titles are called things like 'In which a tale becomes probably too long for the reader's patience'. There is an element of withheld information, suspense, dots deliberately not being joined up yet, which also says something about authorial craft and the sense of how a prose narrative is to be pieced together and how a reader can be manipulated or left waiting.

People often talk about BLEAK HOUSE or THE MOONSTONE, or Poe, as key early crime novels, but this one is actually marketed as a crime novel in a modern reprint series. I daresay it lacks a detective. I'm only 1/4 through.

the pinefox, Thursday, 15 September 2022 10:22 (one year ago) link

True Deceiver by Tove Jansson, again. I only realized I'd read it after starting, but I think there has been enough time in between for the reading to be different.

Just finished Diary of a Void by Em Yagi, which reminded me of the containment of Happy Hour by Ryūsuke Hamaguchi, and The Family Chao by Lan Samantha Chang. The latter has various stereotypes about Asians that are encountered with varying intensity depending upon locale and to which I feel increasingly vulnerable as I seem to shrink and age and become an easy target. It was a page-turning week.

Also, the essays be Carlo Rovelli in There Are Places in the World Where Rules Are Less Important Than Kindness.

youn, Saturday, 17 September 2022 18:04 (one year ago) link

Emi, not Em.

youn, Saturday, 17 September 2022 18:05 (one year ago) link

by, not be. Sorry for the typos. I need a copy editor.

youn, Saturday, 17 September 2022 18:06 (one year ago) link

Nevada, by Imogen Binnie. A third-person narrative, although it feels like first person, about a transgender woman living in New York, trying to understand what it means for her to be trans and struggling to stay engaged with life. I had some trepidation based on the Goodreads reviews, but so far it's well-written and engaging.

immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Saturday, 17 September 2022 18:11 (one year ago) link

I recently finished The Outward Urge by John Wyndham. Originally published in 1959, later editions (including the one I read) add a last chapter which was originally published as a separate story. The novel imagines the gradual expansion of human exploration into space with chapters set at 50 year intervals, starting in a space station orbiting Earth and ending with mining trips to the asteroid belts. All feature descendants of the hero of the initial story (set in 1994). The central conceit of the novel, perhaps a bit old-fashioned, is that there is something like a natural aristocracy of space explorers, whose intelligence and high-minded idealism runs in their blood. This is good old hard sci-fi, interested in teasing out the logical implications of the physical challenges posed by space and the outlines of possible future technologies. There is some unresolved tension between the largely unquestioned patriotism and sense of duty depicted among the ranks of cosmic adventurers, and the grim account given of the effects of nationalism and the "space race" on the planet.

o. nate, Monday, 19 September 2022 18:24 (one year ago) link

I recently finished Farley Mowat's The Boat Who Wouldn't Float, which tries very hard and mostly succeeds in being a comic light entertainment, in spite of several incidents where Mowat was obviously in extreme peril of dying. After the success of his more lighthearted books, such as The Dog Who Wouldn't Be, it's obvious he and his publisher felt the need to follow up with what his audience wanted and expected and carefully guarded against letting the serious side of the material show through. Mowat delivers. He was an excellent storyteller.

Now I'm nearly done with Camus' The Outsider, as translated by Stuart Gilbert and published by Penguin. My copy is old enough that the price on the cover is in shillings and pence. I found the pivotal scene of the murder rather unconvincing, in spite of Camus selling his description of that event as hard as he possibly could. However, in the end, my skepticism about the realism of that description hasn't detracted from the book's overall impact, so it's kind of moot.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Monday, 19 September 2022 19:37 (one year ago) link

Is it bizarre that, before just now, I have never seen or even heard the title of <<L’étranger>> translated as “The Outsider”?

broccoli rabe thomas (the table is the table), Monday, 19 September 2022 21:26 (one year ago) link

According to the all-knowing web the Gilbert version was the first to appear in English, in 1946. It was published concurrently in London (as "The Outsider") and New York (as "The Stranger").

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Monday, 19 September 2022 21:37 (one year ago) link

Nevada, by Imogen Binnie. A third-person narrative, although it feels like first person, about a transgender woman living in New York, trying to understand what it means for her to be trans and struggling to stay engaged with life. I had some trepidation based on the Goodreads reviews, but so far it's well-written and engaging.

― immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Saturday, September 17, 2022 11:11 AM (two days ago) bookmarkflaglink

fantastic book

flamenco drop (BradNelson), Monday, 19 September 2022 21:45 (one year ago) link

A Brief History Of Neoliberalism David Harevy
as the title says, 2005 book on a negative political trend that still seems to be wrecking things . I wanted to have a better understanding of the term after knowing the term for a while and meeting a few people who seemed to be leaning that direction. Would be nice if the resultant mess from the trend could be cleaned up but may just have lasting destructive effect,

Astral Weeks A Secret History of 1968 Ryan H Walsh
Several stories from the alternative side of Boston in the late 60s with Van Morrison threading through a lot of them.
Quite interesting book, I knew some of this stuff now know more of it. Would like to see some of the David Silver stuff, hear the acoustic live stuff Peter Wolf recorded of Van and find the previous electric band had some recordings miraculously appear.
GLad I've finally got to read this after it came out about 4 years ago.

Augusto Boal Games For Actors and Non-Actors
The methodology for his theatre practise which is based in Stanislavski and I think Brecht and a few other influences.
HIs theatre work was based in an application of Paulo Freire's thought on education.
I attended a workshop on this last week then bumped into a friend who had read a lot more of his work as it applied to the non theatrical world and saw how it applied to politics etc. Seems to be a far cry from the watered down version I had as a partial introduction to him that I had from a local supposedly pro human rights group that really just seemed to be pretty hypocritically white saviour/white privileged bunkum more grounded in management training than Boal's radicalism.
I'm hoping to read a lot more of his work.

Stevolende, Monday, 19 September 2022 22:54 (one year ago) link

Trust by Hernan Diaz was interesting, an historical novel about a NY finance magnate in the 20s told from four different narrators' perspectives, with increasingly divergent and ultimately ethereal points of view.

Dan S, Tuesday, 20 September 2022 01:15 (one year ago) link

I discovered the late Javier Marias.

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 20 September 2022 01:28 (one year ago) link

Coolidge’s ‘Far Out West’ was a fun paratactic poetic romp through old western films. Fun book and a little foreboding, too .

Reading Prynne’s ‘Brass’ for reading group and also thinking of reading a James Purdy or non-fiction book as a palate cleanser— been reading a ton of poems for work and pleasure, the relative ease of a strange novel seems like a good idea.

broccoli rabe thomas (the table is the table), Tuesday, 20 September 2022 01:43 (one year ago) link

I'd thought that THE COLLEGIANS would prove stodgy but actually it rollicks along well enough. Protagonist Hardress Cregan becoming increasingly manic as his actions work out badly. I suppose that this novel is close to an 18th-century world of the hard-riding Irish gentry, roguish squires, whiskey-swilling peasants and the like.

Occasionally the novel falls into first-person-plural oratory about humanity - 'We always find it easiest to love that which is far, and neglect that dear treasure that is close at hand', etc - which reminds me that Proust and George Eliot constantly do this and massively annoy me.

the pinefox, Tuesday, 20 September 2022 12:08 (one year ago) link

whiskey-swilling peasants

aiui, Irish peasants back then were far too poor to swill much whiskey, even poteen, so that it was considered a personal triumph if one ever managed to become drunk.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Tuesday, 20 September 2022 14:55 (one year ago) link

table, I've been reading Prynne's The White Stones with pleasure

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 20 September 2022 14:59 (one year ago) link

Nice, we just finished that a few weeks ago. Amazing book, we sort of sussed out that Prynne considers love a sort of elemental force at odds with a world that ignores "long time" in favor of a crass immediacy and fealty to, well, the commodity form. That's a simple take, but it was really helpful reading it with others. I also highly encourage reading them out loud, they have a real aural force that is lost on the page.

broccoli rabe thomas (the table is the table), Tuesday, 20 September 2022 15:19 (one year ago) link

Good call, all of you who recommended Teenager by Bud Smith.

Les hommes de bonbons (cryptosicko), Tuesday, 20 September 2022 22:28 (one year ago) link

I also finished Teenager. At first I thought it seemed too heavily influenced by Denis Johnson and it was kinda bugging me, but after a while it started to seem more Coen Bros. Or maybe a Coen Brothers adaptation of Denis Johnson. Anyway, it ends strongly.

Chris L, Wednesday, 21 September 2022 20:49 (one year ago) link

Anyone read Thackeray's Henry Esmond recently?

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 22 September 2022 16:42 (one year ago) link

Stuart Hall (ed) Representation
Looks like this was done as a text book for an Open University course but is a good introduction to the subject of Representation on several levels. How language works, citing de Saussure. How things are mediated through various media.
I should have this read now but have a stack of books going on at the same time. THink I'm geting pretty heavily underway anyway. Just read teh section on Documentaries this morning. Hoping to get it read while I still have time to do so. Think I have a full time course starting soon which is going to make the amountof reading I can do dip heavily.

God is Red Vine Deloria
INdigenous American writer writes about teh subject of belief among the peoples of the Americas . Attempts to correct some misinformation passed on by pseudo native writers and various other popular misconceptions. There is some overlap with the writing in Thoams King's the Inconvenient Indian but they are different enough writers that this remains fascinating.
I just heard in a webinar Roxanne Dunbar ortiz held last week that he had been the individual who got her interested in Indian affairs , got her in for a court case he was working on .
Another great book that I'm not giving enough attention to. Think I will try to read more by him after this

Insurgent Empire Priyamvada Gopal.
great book on native radical attempts to get rid of the British Empire over the 19th & 20th centuries.
very interesting and again should be spending more time dedicated to it. I think I'm about half way through it and should have got through it a few months ago. Focused on other things instead and now yet another one I want to get finished before something else starts or possibly never will.
I think it is well written and if I was reading a book at a time instead of double figures i would be very into it. Recommended if you are into the subject.

Just finishing Augusto Boal the end note added material to his Games For Actors and NOn-Actors which explores problems he encountered while practising his craft. Have now been listening through several podcasts on Theatre of the Oppressed which gives me a lot of background on him.

Stevolende, Thursday, 22 September 2022 19:06 (one year ago) link

Equinox today. About time for a new 'What are you reading?' thread, as per long standing ILB tradition.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Thursday, 22 September 2022 19:51 (one year ago) link

Floored by vaccines, I turn to the one thing I feel able to read: Ross Macdonald. THE BARBAROUS COAST in 24 hours and straight on to THE GOODBYE LOOK.

the pinefox, Thursday, 22 September 2022 20:50 (one year ago) link


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