What are you currently reading?

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

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Cadenza

I've been reading The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas for awhile and hope to finish before the summer's over.

André

Back to reading the short novels of Maupassant, from the Contes normands collection. I had stopped reading mid way last year.

j winter

Quote from: Cadenza on April 05, 2020, 07:58:21 PM
I've been reading The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas for awhile and hope to finish before the summer's over.

Dumas is an excellent choice for times like these -- a fun story, well-told, at great length.  Loved that book, though the Count of Monte Cristo was always my favorite.

Welcome aboard!
The man that hath no music in himself,
Nor is not moved with concord of sweet sounds,
Is fit for treasons, stratagems, and spoils.
The motions of his spirit are dull as night,
And his affections dark as Erebus.
Let no such man be trusted.

-- William Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice

Kaga2

A book on causal inference in statistics. It's been a long time since stats class ..

A pleasant little mystery by William DeAndrea with TR as detective, The Lunatic Fringe

Still working on my history books I was reading a couple weeks ago ... :(

aligreto

Henry James: The Spoils of Poynton



André

For a period Henry James was my favourite novelist. I read this in its french translation (Les dépouilles de Poynton) many, many years ago. I had just finished The Bostonians. When I picked it up again (The Bostonians) a decade later, the magic had somehow disappeared and I didn't finish it  :(.

aligreto

I can readily understand what you say André. He is a good story teller but his writing style is now cumbersome for me. It is an effort to read him. You may or may not have noticed above that I interspersed some Hemingway for major stylistic contrast.  ;D

j winter

Still sticking largely with the classics at the moment.  I'm approaching mid-point on War and Peace, and have pulled down two volumes of short stories -- Nathaniel Hawthorne and Rudyard Kipling -- and have been diving back and forth between the three.  I have to admit, the prospect of not being able to go out this weekend and staying in with a pile of books (and CD's of course) is not particularly upsetting... :) 
The man that hath no music in himself,
Nor is not moved with concord of sweet sounds,
Is fit for treasons, stratagems, and spoils.
The motions of his spirit are dull as night,
And his affections dark as Erebus.
Let no such man be trusted.

-- William Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice

Ratliff

Quote from: j winter on April 10, 2020, 05:57:06 AM
Still sticking largely with the classics at the moment.  I'm approaching mid-point on War and Peace, and have pulled down two volumes of short stories -- Nathaniel Hawthorne and Rudyard Kipling -- and have been diving back and forth between the three.  I have to admit, the prospect of not being able to go out this weekend and staying in with a pile of books (and CD's of course) is not particularly upsetting... :)

Hawthorne short stores and sketches are a favorite of mine. I seem to appreciate them more as the years go by. Rappaccini's Daughter has been a favorite.

SimonNZ



One of the few positive things about lockdown is I'm finally able to find time for this brick. Currently 250 pages in, 1000 to go. And every bit as good as I'd heard.

For slightly lighter reading have also finally started this:


Ratliff

I haven't been listening to music recently, but I've been reading more. Most recently book completed has been Bruno's Dream, by Iris Mordoch. Bruno is an elderly man dying of the old age, obsessed with spiders, his stamp collection and his past. His dream is more or less his view of life, or perhaps the hallucination he has at the end of the novel. Most of the action involves the characters that revolve around him, including his son, son-in-law, daughter-in-law, nurse, housekeeper, and some others. A general theme of Murdoch's fiction is that intense feelings of love can be felt by and for people who are not young, attractive, or appropriate mates. The intensity of desire and love overrules all else. A fine book.

Christo

Quote from: SimonNZ on April 10, 2020, 02:08:48 PM


One of the few positive things about lockdown is I'm finally able to find time for this brick. Currently 250 pages in, 1000 to go. And every bit as good as I'd heard.

Right up my alley, ordered for a copy.  :D
... 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

Kaga2

A stats refresher before I plunge into a (graduate level) book on causal inference in studies. Theoretically I know the stuff. That theory assumes my memory is better than it is! Roussas.

Dry Brett Kavanaugh

''Quantum and the Lotus" Mattieu Ricard and Trinh Xuan Thuan.
French Ex-Biologist now-Buddhist and Asian physicist discuss nature of reality, and similarity and differences between Buddhist theories and quantum physics theories.

Brian

The Proud Tower, Barbara Tuchman's majestic and elegantly opinionated survey of pre-WWI Europe and the USA. The writing is exquisite: it sweeps across the landscape but everything that falls under her eye is cut down precisely to size. It should be possible for a reader inclined to disagree with Tuchman's political sympathies to read past her interpretation and glean important facts, but such a reader would be missing out on most of the fun.

aligreto

J.S. Le Fanu: Ghost Stories and Tales of Mystery





Le Fanu was quite a famous Irish writer of Victorian ghost stories. His fame has somewhat subsided over time; perhaps his stories and themes are not quite shocking enough in these modern times but they are still excellent examples of their particular genre. He was an excellent storyteller and this is why I like his writing. His stories are very well told and his characters are well rounded and quite believable and his stories make for very good reading. I have lived in a part of Dublin where there was a street/road named in his honour close to the setting of a story in this compilation.

pjme

yesterday: a short story by Doris Lessing. 'The grandmothers". Sharp, cruel satire....

Now, inspired by corona, two books are waiting: Mary Shelley's The last man (1826 - cholera) and Aldous Huxley's 1949 - post nuclear/chemical warfare "Ape and essence".
I see that I bought "The last man " in London / 1985 and haven't reread it since. Huxley I found (translated) in a second hand shop, recently.
It just may be too much ....

Ps: I must have some Le Fanu short stories somewhere.

Alek Hidell

Quote from: SimonNZ on April 10, 2020, 02:08:48 PM


One of the few positive things about lockdown is I'm finally able to find time for this brick. Currently 250 pages in, 1000 to go. And every bit as good as I'd heard.

Finished that a few months ago. Often difficult reading (due to the violent subject matter, not the writing), but immensely powerful. I came away from it feeling that I'd just finished one of the best books I've ever read.

Have started this (I think upon your recommendation, SimonNZ!):



The subsequent two volumes have just arrived, so they will be next, of course.

And I'm also a little way into this:



Just a little light reading ... :D
"When I give food to the poor, they call me a saint. When I ask why they are poor, they call me a communist." - Hélder Pessoa Câmara

SimonNZ

Quote from: Alek Hidell on April 21, 2020, 06:21:19 PM
Finished that a few months ago. Often difficult reading (due to the violent subject matter, not the writing), but immensely powerful. I came away from it feeling that I'd just finished one of the best books I've ever read.

Have started this (I think upon your recommendation, SimonNZ!):



The subsequent two volumes have just arrived, so they will be next, of course.

And I'm also a little way into this:



Just a little light reading ... :D

Yes, I was very impressed by the Evans set. I'll be very interested to hear any thoughts once you finish. I also read Dispatches just 2 or 3 months ago.

TD: still slowly working through the superb Fisk, but its had to focus on it while there's uncertainty about possible/probable redundancies at my work.

In the meantime am half way through this:


Pohjolas Daughter

Quote from: aligreto on April 21, 2020, 04:53:57 AM
J.S. Le Fanu: Ghost Stories and Tales of Mystery





Le Fanu was quite a famous Irish writer of Victorian ghost stories. His fame has somewhat subsided over time; perhaps his stories and themes are not quite shocking enough in these modern times but they are still excellent examples of their particular genre. He was an excellent storyteller and this is why I like his writing. His stories are very well told and his characters are well rounded and quite believable and his stories make for very good reading. I have lived in a part of Dublin where there was a street/road named in his honour close to the setting of a story in this compilation.
Oh, that sounds like a fun distraction for these days and times (particularly after listening to too much news).  I hadn't heard of him before now and must admit that it's been a while since I've read ghost stories; I did love them growing up and was a big fan of Poe (had to keep a dictionary next to me whilst reading his stories as some of the Victorian words and/or meanings were unknown to me).  Also, loved watching the Poe movies with Vincent Price.   :)

I did have fun (a few months ago...ish) reading some early short stories of George R.R. Martin's ...trying to recall the title now.  Hold on please, I'll try and find it.  I think that it was Dreamsongs, Volume I.  It was a combo of Sci Fi and Horror.  A number of really well-written (and scary!) stories.

At the moment, reading too much news(!), some articles and fun things too about what is going on in the tennis world, a couple of books that I have about birds...how to identify, their habits, how to attract them, etc.

Best,

PD