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After this, I will read The Imperfectionists by Tom Rachman [a novel about a struggling newspaper in Rome].

Speaking as a former journalist, that's the best novel, maybe the best book period, about journalism I know. Sad, touching, hilarious. Every character in that book is damn close to a person I know or knew.

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After this, I will read The Imperfectionists by Tom Rachman [a novel about a struggling newspaper in Rome].

Speaking as a former journalist, that's the best novel, maybe the best book period, about journalism I know. Sad, touching, hilarious. Every character in that book is damn close to a person I know or knew.

Great. Looking forward to it.

In a totally different life I was the managing editor of a poetry magazine (an undergrad one). Very different culture than a newspaper, but yeah there were some characters... I actually managed to climb up to editor in about a semester. Didn't seem so odd at the time, but I imagine there were a few people that were a little put out... I did that for two more years, then quit when the integrity of the editorial board was impugned. Probably not the best response (though I thought maybe some fresh blood wouldn't be a bad thing), but I was also a senior and starting to really fret about what I was going to do for a living...

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James M. McPherson - Battle Cry of Freedom

As a kid I recall collecting a set of highly graphic bubble gum cards about the American Civil War. Along with movies of the time it etched that bit of history on my brain.

I studied the historiography of the origins 40 years back and have read more general things about it but fancied something more substantial. A good read so far - nicely balanced between narrative and analysis.

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I've just started Sugar Street, the final book in Mahfouz's The Cairo Trilogy. Yea!

After this, I will read The Imperfectionists by Tom Rachman [a novel about a struggling newspaper in Rome].

I actually wasn't that crazy about The Imperfectionists. I particularly didn't like the last two stories. I don't think it was solely because the troubles at the paper have piled up and that influences the tone. Maybe I just thought Rachman was trying too hard by the end. Just about the only story that I could really relate to is that of the corrections editor who realizes that this friend who he has looked up to his whole life is kind of an empty shell (though not quite a fraud).

Anyway, I had a lot of time on the bus to and from Seattle, so I read almost all of Mahfouz's Children of Gebelawi (there's actually a competing translation titled Children of the Alley). This is pretty didactic stuff, retelling the stories of Adam, Cain and Abel, Moses, Jesus and Mohammed as lived by villagers on the outskirts of Cairo. It has its moments, but it is definitely a novel I won't be rereading. I should wrap it up today.

But I am looking forward to the next two on the list: Love and Garbage by Ivan Klima and Faulkner's Light in August, which I've never read. And then for the first time ever, I will tackle Proust...

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James M. McPherson - Battle Cry of Freedom

As a kid I recall collecting a set of highly graphic bubble gum cards about the American Civil War. Along with movies of the time it etched that bit of history on my brain.

I studied the historiography of the origins 40 years back and have read more general things about it but fancied something more substantial. A good read so far - nicely balanced between narrative and analysis.

I read that book, The Battle Cry of Freedom, when it came out. Recently gave my son a copy and he's reading it now. Hope he likes it.

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Just got 300 pages in and they've just started shooting. Exemplary explanation of the tensions and misunderstandings that led up to the war. I never knew about the early claims on Cuba or the filibuster raids there and on Nicaragua (well I might have done 40 years back!).

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