What are you currently reading?

Started by facehugger, April 07, 2007, 12:36:10 AM

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AnotherSpin

#13220
Quote from: DavidW on April 16, 2024, 10:52:50 AMThere is a spectrum though.  In high school, teachers usually expose students to short, easier reads like The Great Gatsby and not some gigantic Russian doorstop (at least in the US, it looks like the Ukraine is a different story).

It was in USSR. There are no Russian doorstops in school program in Ukraine anymore.

steve ridgway

Quote from: AnotherSpin on April 16, 2024, 04:26:48 AMIn Soviet schools we were not only forced to read, but also to make correct conclusions, in full accordance with Lenin's testaments.

That sounds frustrating; I found an hour's indoctrination at Sunday School once a week bad enough  :'( .

Florestan

@AnotherSpin  @DavidW @steve ridgway

It's all a thing of the past, anyway. What with the internet, the e-books and the AI, reading books and thinking them over will become as obsolete as listening to vinyls: the province of a minority of fanatics.  ;D
Si un hombre nunca se contradice será porque nunca dice nada. —Miguel de Unamuno

Mandryka

#13223
Quote from: Florestan on April 13, 2024, 03:41:47 AMJoseph Conrad was published in Romanian translation in the 1960s: Lord Jim, Heart of Darkness, Nostromo. He's one of my favorite writers, a truly unique style and a sumptuous use of English, despite him being Polish.


I watched the Alastair Reid film of Nostromo last night -- very good. Tragic figures -- Nostromo and Martin Decoud. @vers la flamme -- this is one for you!


I'm turning into a Leavisite, reading James and Conrad!
Wovon man nicht sprechen kann, darüber muss man schweigen

Florestan

Si un hombre nunca se contradice será porque nunca dice nada. —Miguel de Unamuno

Florestan

Si un hombre nunca se contradice será porque nunca dice nada. —Miguel de Unamuno

Mandryka

#13226
Quote from: Florestan on April 13, 2024, 10:48:50 AMWhich only proves that Twain was much more palatable to the Soviet censorship than Conrad;D



Why is that? I mean Nostromo is so abused by the colonial capitalists that they even deprive him of a name - he's not a person for them, he's just a tool. I see it as a cautionary tale - workers of the world, unite - or they'll milk you till you end up a wreck like Giovanni Battista.
Wovon man nicht sprechen kann, darüber muss man schweigen

Florestan

Quote from: Mandryka on Today at 04:46:51 AMWhy is that?

Because as a lesser Polish aristocrat he was a Russophobe and an anti-socialist.  ;D

Quote from: Joseph ConradAs to discussing Russia it's the most chimeric of enterprises since it is there for anyone to look at. La Russie, c'est le néant ... Anybody can see it

Quote from: Joseph ConradI must be excused from joining in the ecstasies about the Russian Revolution... Russia was an untrustworthy ally before – and it remains so still. The immediate result is to eliminate it as an active factor from the war. It counted for little – and now it counts for nothing.

Quote from: Joseph ConradThe great thing is to keep the Russian infection, its decomposing power, from the social organism of the rest of the world.

Quote from: Joseph Conradwhere's the man to stop the rush of social-democratic ideas?... Socialism must inevitably end in Caesarism... the whole herd of idiotic humanity are moving in that direction at the bidding of unscrupulous rascals and a few sincere, but dangerous lunatics. These things must be. It is fatality.

https://culture.pl/en/article/joseph-conrads-forgotten-relationship-with-political-activism





Si un hombre nunca se contradice será porque nunca dice nada. —Miguel de Unamuno

Mandryka

Ah yes - I remember The Secret Agent now. That was the first book by him I ever read - though I'd seem Apaocalypse Now of course.
Wovon man nicht sprechen kann, darüber muss man schweigen

Florestan

Quote from: Mandryka on Today at 05:08:06 AMAh yes - I remember The Secret Agent now.

Under Western Eyes as well.

I must say, I'm quite sympathetic to his views.  :D
Si un hombre nunca se contradice será porque nunca dice nada. —Miguel de Unamuno

AnotherSpin

Quote from: Florestan on Today at 12:20:07 AM@AnotherSpin  @DavidW @steve ridgway

It's all a thing of the past, anyway. What with the internet, the e-books and the AI, reading books and thinking them over will become as obsolete as listening to vinyls: the province of a minority of fanatics.  ;D

I like e-books. As the meaning of home is blurred for me right now, I can't carry a lot of paper books with me any time, however I can feed as many as I may want to my computer. Not to mention subscription services like Scribd/Everand. I think I read a single paper book this year only.

DavidW

Quote from: Florestan on Today at 12:20:07 AM@AnotherSpin  @DavidW @steve ridgway

It's all a thing of the past, anyway. What with the internet, the e-books and the AI, reading books and thinking them over will become as obsolete as listening to vinyls: the province of a minority of fanatics.  ;D

Well people said that about tv, but people still read books!

DavidW

Quote from: AnotherSpin on Today at 05:24:38 AMI like e-books. As the meaning of home is blurred for me right now, I can't carry a lot of paper books with me any time, however I can feed as many as I may want to my computer. Not to mention subscription services like Scribd/Everand. I think I read a single paper book this year only.

Everytime I rebel against ebooks my presbyopia ends up pulling me back to the large fonts on my Kindle.  And no matter what when I travel I'm packing a Kindle and not several books.

vers la flamme

Quote from: Mandryka on Today at 02:47:28 AMI watched the Alastair Reid film of Nostromo last night -- very good. Tragic figures -- Nostromo and Martin Decoud. @vers la flamme -- this is one for you!


I'm turning into a Leavisite, reading James and Conrad!

Conrad—like James, another writer I've been meaning to get around to for ages. I have Heart of Darkness, which I've tried before but never finished. Maybe that short book will prove as effective an introduction as Turn of the Screw had for James. Anyway I shall check this out, thanks.

I finished Turn of the Screw. I was blown away by the author's use of ambiguity. Truly unlike anything else I've ever read. Can't wait to read more James... I have Portrait on the way to me, though I understand it's a completely different kind of book.