Leeway Posted March 21, 2015 Report Posted March 21, 2015 (edited) Mark Twain: Roughing It Twainians might appreciate this review by Michael Dirda of a new Twain bio (focusing on his travels): http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/books/a-new-biography-of-the-most-famous-american-of-his-time-mark-twain/2015/03/18/f5b9a48e-cbf7-11e4-a2a7-9517a3a70506_story.html Edited March 21, 2015 by Leeway Quote
Leeway Posted March 21, 2015 Report Posted March 21, 2015 A GOOD MAN IN AFRICA - William Boyd Naipul's In a Free State has launched me on a bit of an African fiction tour. Boyd was born and raised in West Africa, Ghana. The novel focuses on the First Secretary, Morgan Leafy, of the bumbling British Legation in fictional Kinjaja. This is really a plot driven book, featuring all kinds of mad and zany events. I thought of calling it "Lucky Jim in Africa." Boyd was definitely studying his Kingsley Amis. The plot devices I found too contrived, and the author never met a stereotype he didn't like. I found his insights into African life surprisingly superficial and often obtuse. Boyd, in another context, uses the term "unreflecting intimacy," and I think that fits this book quite well. It's an amusing read for a plane ride, but yields no great insights. In this regard, Boyd is far below Naipul in literary merit. Quote
BillF Posted March 21, 2015 Report Posted March 21, 2015 A GOOD MAN IN AFRICA - William Boyd Naipul's In a Free State has launched me on a bit of an African fiction tour. Boyd was born and raised in West Africa, Ghana. The novel focuses on the First Secretary, Morgan Leafy, of the bumbling British Legation in fictional Kinjaja. This is really a plot driven book, featuring all kinds of mad and zany events. I thought of calling it "Lucky Jim in Africa." Boyd was definitely studying his Kingsley Amis. The plot devices I found too contrived, and the author never met a stereotype he didn't like. I found his insights into African life surprisingly superficial and often obtuse. Boyd, in another context, uses the term "unreflecting intimacy," and I think that fits this book quite well. It's an amusing read for a plane ride, but yields no great insights. In this regard, Boyd is far below Naipul in literary merit. Read that about 25 years ago and fond it moderately entertaining and reasonably well written. Then moved on to Boyd's Ice-Cream War and Brazzaville Beach, both with African settings. Of the three, Brazzaville is the most memorable. Quote
Leeway Posted March 22, 2015 Report Posted March 22, 2015 A GOOD MAN IN AFRICA - William Boyd Naipul's In a Free State has launched me on a bit of an African fiction tour. Boyd was born and raised in West Africa, Ghana. The novel focuses on the First Secretary, Morgan Leafy, of the bumbling British Legation in fictional Kinjaja. This is really a plot driven book, featuring all kinds of mad and zany events. I thought of calling it "Lucky Jim in Africa." Boyd was definitely studying his Kingsley Amis. The plot devices I found too contrived, and the author never met a stereotype he didn't like. I found his insights into African life surprisingly superficial and often obtuse. Boyd, in another context, uses the term "unreflecting intimacy," and I think that fits this book quite well. It's an amusing read for a plane ride, but yields no great insights. In this regard, Boyd is far below Naipul in literary merit. Read that about 25 years ago and fond it moderately entertaining and reasonably well written. Then moved on to Boyd's Ice-Cream War and Brazzaville Beach, both with African settings. Of the three, Brazzaville is the most memorable. "Moderately entertaining is about right. I do want to read Ice Cream War. Just finished: Mister Johnson - Joyce Cary -1939 Set in Nigeria and western Sudan during pre-WWII British colonial rule, this is the story of the larger-than-life African Mister Johnson and his roller-coaster fortunes in the colony. I can see some objections to its picture of life in the colony but overall I think his view is unsparing but not ungenerous, towards both Africans and British, black and white (including Moslems). I found it more rewarding that Boyd's A Good Man. Quote
ejp626 Posted March 22, 2015 Report Posted March 22, 2015 About 2/3 done with 49th Parallel - the first in Dos Passos's USA Trilogy. It does get a bit easier as you get deeper into it. At times it feels like a somewhat spicier Drieser or maybe a more scattered Steinbeck. It's quite interesting that over time, Dos Passos swung very far to the right, briefly backing McCarthy! and even campaigning for Goldwater and Nixon! I'm assuming this is pretty closely related to why English professors act as if Dos Passos never wrote a thing after the USA Trilogy... Anyway, at my current rate, I think I'll be done in just over two weeks. Quote
BillF Posted March 23, 2015 Report Posted March 23, 2015 A GOOD MAN IN AFRICA - William Boyd Naipul's In a Free State has launched me on a bit of an African fiction tour. Boyd was born and raised in West Africa, Ghana. The novel focuses on the First Secretary, Morgan Leafy, of the bumbling British Legation in fictional Kinjaja. This is really a plot driven book, featuring all kinds of mad and zany events. I thought of calling it "Lucky Jim in Africa." Boyd was definitely studying his Kingsley Amis. The plot devices I found too contrived, and the author never met a stereotype he didn't like. I found his insights into African life surprisingly superficial and often obtuse. Boyd, in another context, uses the term "unreflecting intimacy," and I think that fits this book quite well. It's an amusing read for a plane ride, but yields no great insights. In this regard, Boyd is far below Naipul in literary merit. Read that about 25 years ago and fond it moderately entertaining and reasonably well written. Then moved on to Boyd's Ice-Cream War and Brazzaville Beach, both with African settings. Of the three, Brazzaville is the most memorable. "Moderately entertaining is about right. I do want to read Ice Cream War. Just finished: Mister Johnson - Joyce Cary -1939 Set in Nigeria and western Sudan during pre-WWII British colonial rule, this is the story of the larger-than-life African Mister Johnson and his roller-coaster fortunes in the colony. I can see some objections to its picture of life in the colony but overall I think his view is unsparing but not ungenerous, towards both Africans and British, black and white (including Moslems). I found it more rewarding that Boyd's A Good Man. Now I do remember that as a good one, though it's lain unopened on my bookshelf for decades. On this African theme, you'll have to read (re-read?) Graham Greene Burnt Out Case, etc. Quote
Leeway Posted March 23, 2015 Report Posted March 23, 2015 (edited) A GOOD MAN IN AFRICA - William Boyd Naipul's In a Free State has launched me on a bit of an African fiction tour. Boyd was born and raised in West Africa, Ghana. The novel focuses on the First Secretary, Morgan Leafy, of the bumbling British Legation in fictional Kinjaja. This is really a plot driven book, featuring all kinds of mad and zany events. I thought of calling it "Lucky Jim in Africa." Boyd was definitely studying his Kingsley Amis. The plot devices I found too contrived, and the author never met a stereotype he didn't like. I found his insights into African life surprisingly superficial and often obtuse. Boyd, in another context, uses the term "unreflecting intimacy," and I think that fits this book quite well. It's an amusing read for a plane ride, but yields no great insights. In this regard, Boyd is far below Naipul in literary merit. Read that about 25 years ago and fond it moderately entertaining and reasonably well written. Then moved on to Boyd's Ice-Cream War and Brazzaville Beach, both with African settings. Of the three, Brazzaville is the most memorable. "Moderately entertaining is about right. I do want to read Ice Cream War. Just finished: Mister Johnson - Joyce Cary -1939 Set in Nigeria and western Sudan during pre-WWII British colonial rule, this is the story of the larger-than-life African Mister Johnson and his roller-coaster fortunes in the colony. I can see some objections to its picture of life in the colony but overall I think his view is unsparing but not ungenerous, towards both Africans and British, black and white (including Moslems). I found it more rewarding that Boyd's A Good Man. Now I do remember that as a good one, though it's lain unopened on my bookshelf for decades. On this African theme, you'll have to read (re-read?) Graham Greene Burnt Out Case, etc. I'm reading A Bend in the River at the moment, then hope to move on to Chinua Achebe (I've read Things Fall Apart but I want to read the trilogy this time), and perhaps some other African authors. I've read the Greene book, and might very well read it again in this new context. Thanks for the good suggestion. Edited March 23, 2015 by Leeway Quote
ejp626 Posted March 23, 2015 Report Posted March 23, 2015 A GOOD MAN IN AFRICA - William Boyd Naipul's In a Free State has launched me on a bit of an African fiction tour. Boyd was born and raised in West Africa, Ghana. The novel focuses on the First Secretary, Morgan Leafy, of the bumbling British Legation in fictional Kinjaja. This is really a plot driven book, featuring all kinds of mad and zany events. I thought of calling it "Lucky Jim in Africa." Boyd was definitely studying his Kingsley Amis. The plot devices I found too contrived, and the author never met a stereotype he didn't like. I found his insights into African life surprisingly superficial and often obtuse. Boyd, in another context, uses the term "unreflecting intimacy," and I think that fits this book quite well. It's an amusing read for a plane ride, but yields no great insights. In this regard, Boyd is far below Naipul in literary merit.Read that about 25 years ago and fond it moderately entertaining and reasonably well written. Then moved on to Boyd's Ice-Cream War and Brazzaville Beach, both with African settings. Of the three, Brazzaville is the most memorable."Moderately entertaining is about right. I do want to read Ice Cream War. Just finished: Mister Johnson - Joyce Cary -1939 Set in Nigeria and western Sudan during pre-WWII British colonial rule, this is the story of the larger-than-life African Mister Johnson and his roller-coaster fortunes in the colony. I can see some objections to its picture of life in the colony but overall I think his view is unsparing but not ungenerous, towards both Africans and British, black and white (including Moslems). I found it more rewarding that Boyd's A Good Man.Now I do remember that as a good one, though it's lain unopened on my bookshelf for decades. On this African theme, you'll have to read (re-read?) Graham Greene Burnt Out Case, etc.I'm reading A Bend in the River at the moment, then hope to move on to Chinua Achebe (I've read Things Fall Apart but I want to read the trilogy this time), and perhaps some other African authors. I've read the Greene book, and might very well read it again in this new context. Thanks for the good suggestion.Have you read Alan Paton's Cry the Beloved Country? I thought it was really interesting.A somewhat more obscure novel is Ayi Kwei Armah's The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born (though apparently it inspired a Branford Marsalis album...).For a really obscure post-apartheid novel, you might try Phaswane Mpe's Welcome to Our Hillbrow, though it is awfully depressing. Quote
ejp626 Posted March 23, 2015 Report Posted March 23, 2015 Tom Stoppard's ArcadiaI really like that play. I've seen it in 3 different productions! Quote
paul secor Posted March 24, 2015 Report Posted March 24, 2015 Tom Stoppard's Arcadia I really like that play. I've seen it in 3 different productions! I'd love to see a production. The closest I can probably come right now is to pick up a performance on CD from our library system. I see there are some scenes available on You Tube, so I'll those out also. Quote
ejp626 Posted March 24, 2015 Report Posted March 24, 2015 Tom Stoppard's Arcadia I really like that play. I've seen it in 3 different productions! I'd love to see a production. The closest I can probably come right now is to pick up a performance on CD from our library system. I see there are some scenes available on You Tube, so I'll those out also. One of the coolest features out there (for theatre lovers) is Now Playing at Samuel French: http://www.samuelfrench.com/now-playing (I see 6 or 7 productions in the US, mostly this spring). Also DPS page-to-stage: http://www.dramatists.com/pagetostage/productions.aspx But French is the agency representing Stoppard. Quote
Jazzmoose Posted March 24, 2015 Report Posted March 24, 2015 About 2/3 done with 49th Parallel - the first in Dos Passos's USA Trilogy. It does get a bit easier as you get deeper into it. At times it feels like a somewhat spicier Drieser or maybe a more scattered Steinbeck. It's quite interesting that over time, Dos Passos swung very far to the right, briefly backing McCarthy! and even campaigning for Goldwater and Nixon! I'm assuming this is pretty closely related to why English professors act as if Dos Passos never wrote a thing after the USA Trilogy... Anyway, at my current rate, I think I'll be done in just over two weeks. I'm trying to decide if I liked that. I seem to remember enjoying the first two, but I lost the third and never had any desire to go back and finish. Not a rousing endorsement... Quote
ejp626 Posted March 24, 2015 Report Posted March 24, 2015 About 2/3 done with 49th Parallel - the first in Dos Passos's USA Trilogy. It does get a bit easier as you get deeper into it. At times it feels like a somewhat spicier Drieser or maybe a more scattered Steinbeck. It's quite interesting that over time, Dos Passos swung very far to the right, briefly backing McCarthy! and even campaigning for Goldwater and Nixon! I'm assuming this is pretty closely related to why English professors act as if Dos Passos never wrote a thing after the USA Trilogy... Anyway, at my current rate, I think I'll be done in just over two weeks. I'm trying to decide if I liked that. I seem to remember enjoying the first two, but I lost the third and never had any desire to go back and finish. Not a rousing endorsement... It's funny because Dos Passos starts out by just mocking Horatio Alger a bit in the first book and clearly has some understanding that massive structural forces are what cause mass unemployment and that the deck is stacked against workers, and yet he still has individuals triumph against the odds and most of his labor leaders are humans with serious foibles (as opposed to the almost inhuman overachievers). And somehow he turns so far against leftist movements that it is like he repudiates everything he once wrote. That is pretty sad. I do think the last section of the 49th Parallel where he talks about the mood of pro-War near-hysteria surrounding the US entry into WWI is quite good. FWIW, I'll definitely finish the trilogy. Quote
Head Man Posted March 24, 2015 Report Posted March 24, 2015 Just finished reading this and liked it very much. Now moving on to the last of his WW II trilogy.... Quote
Leeway Posted March 24, 2015 Report Posted March 24, 2015 Have you read Alan Paton's Cry the Beloved Country? I thought it was really interesting. A somewhat more obscure novel is Ayi Kwei Armah's The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born (though apparently it inspired a Branford Marsalis album...). For a really obscure post-apartheid novel, you might try Phaswane Mpe's Welcome to Our Hillbrow, though it is awfully depressing. I have a copy of the Paton right here and may include it too, but would like to read some African voices first. The Armah and Mpe sound interesting. Thanks for the suggestions. I'd like to read some Soyinka. Also, Sembene Ousmane, "Xala". Some others too besides Achua. Depressing seems to be the quality they have in common so far, but interesting nonetheless, seeing the same places from differing angles. Quote
BillF Posted March 24, 2015 Report Posted March 24, 2015 Have you read Alan Paton's Cry the Beloved Country? I thought it was really interesting. A somewhat more obscure novel is Ayi Kwei Armah's The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born (though apparently it inspired a Branford Marsalis album...). For a really obscure post-apartheid novel, you might try Phaswane Mpe's Welcome to Our Hillbrow, though it is awfully depressing. I have a copy of the Paton right here and may include it too, but would like to read some African voices first. The Armah and Mpe sound interesting. Thanks for the suggestions. I'd like to read some Soyinka. Also, Sembene Ousmane, "Xala". Some others too besides Achua. Depressing seems to be the quality they have in common so far, but interesting nonetheless, seeing the same places from differing angles. Wole Soyinka studied in the English Department at Leeds University that I attended, though I was later so never met him. I met a woman who said she'd refused him when he tried to date her, but later wished she'd said yes when he became famous. Quote
ejp626 Posted March 25, 2015 Report Posted March 25, 2015 Have you read Alan Paton's Cry the Beloved Country? I thought it was really interesting. A somewhat more obscure novel is Ayi Kwei Armah's The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born (though apparently it inspired a Branford Marsalis album...). For a really obscure post-apartheid novel, you might try Phaswane Mpe's Welcome to Our Hillbrow, though it is awfully depressing. I have a copy of the Paton right here and may include it too, but would like to read some African voices first. The Armah and Mpe sound interesting. Thanks for the suggestions. I'd like to read some Soyinka. Also, Sembene Ousmane, "Xala". Some others too besides Achua. Depressing seems to be the quality they have in common so far, but interesting nonetheless, seeing the same places from differing angles. Wole Soyinka studied in the English Department at Leeds University that I attended, though I was later so never met him. I met a woman who said she'd refused him when he tried to date her, but later wished she'd said yes when he became famous. For African writers, Zakes Mda is interesting, though I've only read two of his novels. The library here has most of them, so I'll probably get around the rest one of these days. For non-fiction, Can Themba's Requiem for Sophiatown is quite good. Sophiatown was one of the few townships where Colored and Blacks could buy property near Johannesburg, so of course that couldn't be permitted. The entire place was razed with many forced evictions, and a white-only township (for lower income Afrikaaners) was put up in its place. This place was called Triomf. Very charming. Bloke Modisane's Blame Me on History is a good memoir covering these times as well, though I like Requiem for Sophiatown a bit better. Quote
Leeway Posted March 25, 2015 Report Posted March 25, 2015 Have you read Alan Paton's Cry the Beloved Country? I thought it was really interesting. A somewhat more obscure novel is Ayi Kwei Armah's The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born (though apparently it inspired a Branford Marsalis album...). For a really obscure post-apartheid novel, you might try Phaswane Mpe's Welcome to Our Hillbrow, though it is awfully depressing. I have a copy of the Paton right here and may include it too, but would like to read some African voices first. The Armah and Mpe sound interesting. Thanks for the suggestions. I'd like to read some Soyinka. Also, Sembene Ousmane, "Xala". Some others too besides Achua. Depressing seems to be the quality they have in common so far, but interesting nonetheless, seeing the same places from differing angles. Wole Soyinka studied in the English Department at Leeds University that I attended, though I was later so never met him. I met a woman who said she'd refused him when he tried to date her, but later wished she'd said yes when he became famous. For African writers, Zakes Mda is interesting, though I've only read two of his novels. The library here has most of them, so I'll probably get around the rest one of these days. For non-fiction, Can Themba's Requiem for Sophiatown is quite good. Sophiatown was one of the few townships where Colored and Blacks could buy property near Johannesburg, so of course that couldn't be permitted. The entire place was razed with many forced evictions, and a white-only township (for lower income Afrikaaners) was put up in its place. This place was called Triomf. Very charming. Bloke Modisane's Blame Me on History is a good memoir covering these times as well, though I like Requiem for Sophiatown a bit better. A BEND IN THE RIVER - V.S. Naipul -1979 Sometimes the pervasive melancholy, glumness, moroseness can threaten to sink the narrative, but the craft of the prose, the play of ideas, and the sharpness of the insights make this a powerful read. Although I've been focusing on race in these readings, the issue of sex and gender is always powerfully there in these fictions, with women frequently assaulted and otherwise misused, forming a pattern of victimization both within and without the race construct. Quote
BillF Posted March 25, 2015 Report Posted March 25, 2015 Still with the albeit flawed novels of Stanley Middleton. Perhaps it's because he writes of the middle-class life of northern English cities that I know so well. Quote
Matthew Posted March 25, 2015 Report Posted March 25, 2015 How is this book? I'd like to read something about Capra that delves a little deeper than the usual "Mr. Optimism" take. Quote
Leeway Posted March 25, 2015 Report Posted March 25, 2015 Still with the albeit flawed novels of Stanley Middleton. Perhaps it's because he writes of the middle-class life of northern English cities that I know so well. Not read any of Middleton, but sounds like he has affinities to Arnold Bennett (stories of the Five Towns, etc) ? Quote
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