What are you currently reading?

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

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ritter

First approach to the work of Roland Barthes, with his Mythologies (from 1957).



I remember my mother reading (and talking admiringly of)  Barthes almost 50 years ago now. So far, quite interesting in its analysis of the creation of modern myths.

 « Et n'oubliez pas que le trombone est à Voltaire ce que l'optimisme est à la percussion. » 

Papy Oli

In the last fortnight:

- Completed "The Honjin Murders" by Seishi Yokomizo. Eventually a well written whodunit, een if a bit tenuous and a sluggish start.

- Also read and completed The third volume oF Edna O'Brien's trilogy The Country Girls, i.e. "Girls in their Married Bliss". Told from the perspective, mostly, of the other girl, Baba (instead of Kate in the first two parts), This remained a bleak but gripping journey. Thank god for the occasional flippant and sarcastic remarks by Baba to lighten the tone at rare times. Yet, a trilogy that shall stay with me for a long while and is therefore recommended.

- "Amsterdam" by Ian McEwan - Ok-ish thriller of sorts in the journalistic/political world involving three former lovers of a famous writer/artist. Got this as an entry point to Ian McEwan as it won a Booker Prize but was left a bit underwhelmed. Subsequently read some reviews that thought that they couldn't have chosen a worse book of his for a prize..  ;D  What else would you recommended ? "Atonement" maybe? Anything else ?

- At the moment, about a quarter of the way through "La fortune des Rougon" by Zola. So far so good but I have spent some time on the wiki pages (and will do some more) of the French historical situation of that period to have a sense of the context of the book/cycle. 
Olivier

San Antone

Quote from: Ganondorf on April 22, 2025, 09:12:54 AMThe last fifth of Huck Finn is just one big sadistic game played at Jim's expense. I think even Hemingway commented on it. Otherwise it's excellent.

Twain interrupted the writing of Finn for a number of years, six or more, and the change in tone/style is obvious.  For me the book could have ended with Huck's decision to "go to hell" instead of doing what he was taught as the right thing to do, i.e. inform the authorities about Jim and have him returned.   

This moment in the book is for me the apogee of American literature up until the time of its writing, and as far as I am concerned nothing written (from the USA) since is better.

But I don't read current fiction; I just keep re-reading the great books of the past I love: Twain, Faulkner, and the most recent author for me is Cormac McCarthy (but not even his late career books).

SimonNZ



"For a decade Alice Sheldon produced an extraordinary body of work under the pseudonym James Tiptree Jr, until her identity was exposed in 1977. HER SMOKE ROSE UP FOREVER presents the finest of these stories and contains the NEBULA AWARD-winning LOVE IS THE PLAN THE PLAN IS DEATH; HUGO AWARD-winning novella THE GIRL WHO WAS PLUGGED IN; HOUSTON, HOUSTON, DO YOU READ? - winner of both the HUGO and NEBULA - and of course the story for which she is best known: THE WOMEN MEN DON''T SEE."

ritter

Hans Arp's and Vicente Huidobro's collaborative Trois Nouvelles exemplaires.



These three short, humorous Dadaist novellas were written in French by Arp and Huidobro in Arcachon in 1931. Later, to make publication more likely, Huidobro translated them onto Spanish and added two more texts of his own. The result was published as Tres novelas inmensas (Three Huge Novels, the irony being that they were not three, not huge, and not novels).
 « Et n'oubliez pas que le trombone est à Voltaire ce que l'optimisme est à la percussion. » 

Florestan

Quote from: ritter on April 29, 2025, 01:19:53 PMHans Arp's and Vicente Huidobro's collaborative Trois Nouvelles exemplaires.



These three short, humorous Dadaist novellas were written in French by Arp and Huidobro in Arcachon in 1931. Later, to make publication more likely, Huidobro translated them onto Spanish and added two more texts of his own. The result was published as Tres novelas inmensas (Three Huge Novels, the irony being that they were not three, not huge, and not novels).

Reminds me of the Holy Roman Empire...  ;D
"Great music is that which penetrates the ear with facility and leaves the memory with difficulty. Magical music never leaves the memory." — Thomas Beecham

ritter

Louis-René des Forêts: Ostinato.

 « Et n'oubliez pas que le trombone est à Voltaire ce que l'optimisme est à la percussion. » 

SimonNZ

#14227


and have this ready to start for something lighter:



(the Hagia Sophia seems to be missing a couple of minarets in that cover illustration)

AnotherSpin

Quote from: SimonNZ on May 01, 2025, 04:41:17 PM[..]

(the Hagia Sophia seems to be missing a couple of minarets in that cover illustration)

From the Golden Horn and the Bosphorus, you can see many different mosques. The illustration on the book cover reminded me of the Süleymaniye Mosque.

Christo

Quote from: Florestan on April 29, 2025, 01:31:50 PMReminds me of the Holy Roman Empire...  ;D
No. It reminds you of Voltaire, who in 1756 in his Essais sur les mœurs et l'ésprit des nations famously described the Roman Empire as "Ce corps qui s'appelait, & qui s'appelle encore, le Saint-Empire Romain, n'était en aucune manière, ni saint, ni romain, ni empire."  :)
... music is not only an 'entertainment', nor a mere luxury, but a necessity of the spiritual if not of the physical life, an opening of those magic casements through which we can catch a glimpse of that country where ultimate reality will be found.    RVW, 1948

AnotherSpin

A charming little book by a Belgian author who, beneath a fair bit of cynicism, seems to hide a rather sensitive soul. Or so it struck me, at any rate. Haven't the faintest idea where or how I stumbled across a mention of this author and his delightful book — though there's a fair chance it was here on the forum. In any case, my thanks for the recommendation!


Christo

Quote from: AnotherSpin on Today at 04:42:22 AMA charming little book by a Belgian author who, beneath a fair bit of cynicism, seems to hide a rather sensitive soul. Or so it struck me, at any rate. Haven't the faintest idea where or how I stumbled across a mention of this author and his delightful book — though there's a fair chance it was here on the forum. In any case, my thanks for the recommendation!

At least the title, for those who do not recognize it, is a reference to James Ensor's famous 1888 painting: The Entry of Christ into Brussels in 1889.
... music is not only an 'entertainment', nor a mere luxury, but a necessity of the spiritual if not of the physical life, an opening of those magic casements through which we can catch a glimpse of that country where ultimate reality will be found.    RVW, 1948