The Magnificent Goldberg Posted April 30, 2013 Report Posted April 30, 2013 Michael Ayrton - Tittivulus, or the verbiage collector One of my old favourites. I've read it dozens of times and it still makes me laugh. A lot. Ayrton's drawings of the demonic fiends are as funny as the text. The executive cttee of hell - l-r Ashtaroth, Behemoth, Belphegor, Lucifer (Chairman), Nickegen, Mammon, Asmodeus Tittivulus meets Dr Johnson If you remember Ayrton's many appearances on 'Late night line-up' in the 60s, Tittivulus looks like Ayrton MG Quote
A Lark Ascending Posted April 30, 2013 Report Posted April 30, 2013 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Warlock Quote
Jazzmoose Posted May 2, 2013 Report Posted May 2, 2013 A friend loaned this to me. In all honesty, so far (halfway through), it seems to be basically warmed over Watership Down. Okay, by the end it was more of a "Richard Adams does Tolkien but confuses rabbits with cats". Not recommended. Quote
ejp626 Posted May 2, 2013 Report Posted May 2, 2013 About halfway through Steinbeck's Travels with Charley. It is a pretty good read. Steinbeck's basic decency shines through his somewhat wry observations about the people he encounters on his trek.The book I am reading on the bus is Lolita (fortunately no lurid cover!). I made it halfway through and stopped maybe a couple of years ago, so I decided to restart from the beginning. I am enjoying it a bit more on the second go-around, but I still don't think I'll ever really warm to Nabokov as a writer. Quote
Matthew Posted May 5, 2013 Report Posted May 5, 2013 Inside Scientology: The Story of America's Most Secretive Religion. Interesting book on something I've never paid any attention to, some of the financial figures that people spent on their "auditing" are astounding. Quote
porcy62 Posted May 6, 2013 Report Posted May 6, 2013 Elmore Leonard, The complete western stories, in italian. Quote
A Lark Ascending Posted May 8, 2013 Report Posted May 8, 2013 (edited) Really enjoying this. 1944-5. The D-Day landings have failed, Moscow and Stalingrad have fallen and Hitler's revived armies have invaded Britain. A story built round a small group of German soldiers who arrive in a remote Welsh village where only the women remain, the men having disappeared into the resistance. Beautifully evocative of the seasons and the impact of war on both the conquerors and the conquered. The counterfactual historic events are relayed lightly and at a distance, heard through rumour and occasional radio reception. Very impressive. Edited May 8, 2013 by A Lark Ascending Quote
jlhoots Posted May 8, 2013 Report Posted May 8, 2013 Ben Fountain: Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk Quote
BillF Posted May 9, 2013 Report Posted May 9, 2013 Really enjoying this. 1944-5. The D-Day landings have failed, Moscow and Stalingrad have fallen and Hitler's revived armies have invaded Britain. A story built round a small group of German soldiers who arrive in a remote Welsh village where only the women remain, the men having disappeared into the resistance. Beautifully evocative of the seasons and the impact of war on both the conquerors and the conquered. The counterfactual historic events are relayed lightly and at a distance, heard through rumour and occasional radio reception. Very impressive. The movie is great! http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1391116/?ref_=fn_tt_tt_1 Quote
sgcim Posted May 10, 2013 Report Posted May 10, 2013 "The Letters of William Gaddis", new on Dalkey Archive Press. Quote
A Lark Ascending Posted May 12, 2013 Report Posted May 12, 2013 (edited) Having read the fiction of the D-Day landings failing I pulled this off the 'to read' shelves: Very impressive. I've read 'Stalingrad' and his Spanish Civil War book. Might give his WWII overview a go in the summer. When I read things like this I'm reminded just how lucky I am to have been born when and where I was. I cannot imagine jumping out of that landing craft. *************** Read this one a week or so back: I recall an earlier poster not caring for it but I enjoyed it. Especially the Vienna part - can't get enough of fin-de-siecle Vienna. Edited May 12, 2013 by A Lark Ascending Quote
BillF Posted May 12, 2013 Report Posted May 12, 2013 Le Carré's latest - from the public library. Quote
ejp626 Posted May 12, 2013 Report Posted May 12, 2013 Nearing the end of Lolita. Still not my cup of tea. Despite Nabokov's protests in the Afterword (and his obfuscations in the text itself), this is still basically pornographic lit. I can't see ever warming up to Nabokov, given that I haven't liked any of his earlier novels either. So the question is do I even bother to crack open the later novels in the Library of America series, or do I just take them to a used bookshop now. I am leaning towards taking them to the bookshop. Next up is Steinbeck's The Short Reign of Pippen IV, which is somewhat out of character with his other novels. I think the Library of America made the wrong call in not including it in the volume of his later writings (the one with Travels with Charley in it). Quote
ejp626 Posted May 14, 2013 Report Posted May 14, 2013 Next up is Steinbeck's The Short Reign of Pippen IV, which is somewhat out of character with his other novels. I think the Library of America made the wrong call in not including it in the volume of his later writings (the one with Travels with Charley in it).Actually, Pippin IV is a quick read, and definitely a light-hearted romp. I've really enjoyed reading some of Steinbeck's later work where his basic decency shines through. About the only time he ever gets really riled up is after a trip to New Orleans where he sees the white mothers coming in to scream racist abuse at the Black girl who had the temerity to integrate a public school. Still sick at heart, he picks up a hitch-hiker who turns out to be a horrible racist. Steinbeck dumps him at the side of the road, while the man keeps screaming he [steinbeck] is a n***er-lover. Way to stay classy. And really, who doesn't have the sense to pipe down while catching a ride from a stranger? But emotions certainly ran high back then, overriding common sense (and certainly basic decency). And in some parts of the US today, emotions are just as high, with people who want America to live up to its better nature are called Muslim-lovers.Anyway, I am clearly doing things all wrong, since the way my book pile worked out, I have all the really tough books coming up in the summer, so up next are Dostoevsky's The Idiot, Tolstoy's Anna Karenina, Mahfouz's The Cairo Trilogy, and topping it off with Proust! This will probably last me through the fall, but I'll have a lot of key works on my bucket list crossed off... I'm sure I'll have to add in a few shorter books just to cleanse the pallet as it were. Quote
John Litweiler Posted May 14, 2013 Report Posted May 14, 2013 One of the most accurate book covers ever. The book is a gigantic feast. I may decide to start writing like it. Quote
ejp626 Posted May 14, 2013 Report Posted May 14, 2013 One of the most accurate book covers ever. The book is a gigantic feast. I may decide to start writing like it.I've really tried to get into this a few times and decided it just isn't for me, at least for now. I do know that the recorded versions (Joyce reading some excerpts) are supposedly quite entertaining. There is even a Restored Version that just came out (http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/0141192291/ref=olp_product_details?ie=UTF8&me=&seller=), and I came very close to buying it (an impulse buy) but realized it would just sit on my shelves for ages. I might as well not add another book that is sure to gather dust until I am ready to read it. Quote
ejp626 Posted May 17, 2013 Report Posted May 17, 2013 (edited) There have been enough negative reviews of the Restored Finnegan's Wake (with the worst decision being to completely reset and change the pagination of the work!) that I won't go that way. If I ever do get a new copy, I will probably go with the Oxford Press edition, which has some emendments and a better appendix at the back, discussing the editorial changes. But I am not super likely to get this any time soon. I think the Library of America made the wrong call in not including it [Pippin IV] in the volume of his later writings (the one with Travels with Charley in it).Speaking of odd editorial judgements, I just picked up this book:It contains the text of America and Americans, which has long been out of print (basically since the late 60s), as well as a number of other essays. But it doesn't have any of the photos that accompanied Steinbeck's text. I believe in many cases, Steinbeck actually refers to specific images. I suppose this is a case where the rights-holder(s) couldn't be reached or wouldn't deal. And consequently it will be another 50+ years until the complete work can be released to the public. Very unfortunate, though I assume the essays are generally of more interest than the photos. It looks like the local library does have a copy of the original, so I'll borrow that (and probably scan the photos that grab me).Anyway, I have finished both Lolita and Pippin IV and have just begun Dostoevsky's The Idiot, which will probably take a few weeks. Edited May 17, 2013 by ejp626 Quote
jlhoots Posted May 17, 2013 Report Posted May 17, 2013 (edited) Kimberly McCreight: Reconstructing Amelia Edited May 17, 2013 by jlhoots Quote
sgcim Posted May 19, 2013 Report Posted May 19, 2013 "The Letters of William Gaddis", new on Dalkey Archive Press. Just reviewed favorably in today's New York Times Book Review Quote
A Lark Ascending Posted May 28, 2013 Report Posted May 28, 2013 (edited) Finished the Beevor D-Day book which was excellent. The chapter on the liberation of Paris brought a tear to my eye; at the same time making me think a lot about human nature - the jealousies of the military commanders, the determination of the French military to be first there regardless of any wider strategic concerns and the behaviour of the liberated towards one another. Having lived a life a million miles from what people experienced in those years you just wonder how you would have reacted. Two new ones on the go: That last one is full of fascinating details. Has a bit of a smug 'aren't we special' feel to it (I suspect most countries feel like that about themselves), but I do like its celebration of the irregular, slightly shabby. Edited June 2, 2013 by A Lark Ascending Quote
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