What are you currently reading?

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

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vers la flamme

Quote from: aligreto on July 24, 2021, 01:50:56 PM
If you are liking that one I can readily recommend "Keep The Aspidistra Flying" if you have not already read it.




I have not, and you are not the first to recommend it to me. Will definitely seek this one out ASAP.

SimonNZ

#11261


2/3 way through a second reading of Pale Fire

And feeling the same way I did when first read in my late teens: the poem itself is astonishingly beautiful and its a pity Nabokov didn't write more poetry, and the unreliable biographer/critic stuff is often good parody - but the seemingly endless "Land of Zembla" stuff kills my enjoyment and turns what should have been fun into a slog. No doubt the Zembla story all works on some higher level of meaning if I was willing to read numerous interpretations, but now as before I don't see why I should bother.

vers la flamme

Quote from: SimonNZ on July 24, 2021, 04:49:21 PM


2/3 way through a second reading of Pale Fire

And feeling the same way I did when first read in my late teens: the poem itself is astonishingly beautiful and its a pity Nabokov didn't write more poetry, and the unreliable biographer/critic stuff is often good parody - but the seemingly endless "Land of Zembla" stuff kills my enjoyment and turns what should have been fun into a slog. No doubt the Zembla story all works on some higher level of meaning if I was willing to read numerous interpretations, but now as before I don't see why I should bother.

Sounds fascinating. I never did read any Nabokov and this seems like an intriguing place to start.

aligreto

Lee & Andrew Child: The Sentinel





This is what it is, an entertaining page turner of a crime novel.

vers la flamme

Just spent the afternoon hours reading Georges Bataille's Story of the Eye



Well, that's about as fucked-up as it gets ;D I know people who call this their favorite book of all time—I certainly wouldn't go that far, but it was an intriguing and disturbing read.

Artem

Quote from: vers la flamme on July 25, 2021, 03:43:48 AM
Sounds fascinating. I never did read any Nabokov and this seems like an intriguing place to start.
I've read almost everything that Nabokov wrote in Russian and English, but for some reason I remember nothing about Pale Fire. Lolita was my introduction to this great author. Nabokov's lectures about Russian and European literature are also a fascinating read.

Dry Brett Kavanaugh

Quote from: vers la flamme on July 25, 2021, 12:20:41 PM
Just spent the afternoon hours reading Georges Bataille's Story of the Eye



Well, that's about as fucked-up as it gets ;D I know people who call this their favorite book of all time—I certainly wouldn't go that far, but it was an intriguing and disturbing read.

I read the story decades ago, and had a mixed feeling.

SimonNZ

Quote from: Artem on July 26, 2021, 07:34:56 AM
I've read almost everything that Nabokov wrote in Russian and English, but for some reason I remember nothing about Pale Fire. Lolita was my introduction to this great author. Nabokov's lectures about Russian and European literature are also a fascinating read.

Are there any neglected Nabokov works you feel deserve to be much better known and/or are personal favorites?


Artem

#11269
Quote from: SimonNZ on July 26, 2021, 11:15:12 AM
Are there any neglected Nabokov works you feel deserve to be much better known and/or are personal favorites?

Someday I will attempt to reread Nabokov in chronological order. It's been probably 10 years or so since I last read anything by him.

I like when Nabokov mixes playfulness with despair. Laughter in the Dark explores similar theme to Lolita, but predates it and was written when Nabokov was living in France. It is kind of pulp fiction.

The Real Life of Sebastian Knight and Pnin from his American period are must reads.

Ada or Ardor: A Family Chronicle is an epic Nabokov. I remember being deeply touched by it as a piece of literary art in addition to it being an enjoyable book to read overall.

The books considered to be part of his American period, starting with The Real Life of Sebastian Knight, are his best works to me. The earlier Russian period may not be the best place to start.

SimonNZ

#11270
Thanks for that. I'll add those recommendations to the queue.

I started his much praised autobiography Speak Memory some years back but found it unengaging and stopped.

Recently someone mentioned Look At The Harlequins as the autobiography fictionalized and viewed as though through fun house mirrors, which sounded intriguing


TD: started Kawabata's Thousand Cranes.



Which opens with an unexpected and striking visual image.

vers la flamme

Quote from: SimonNZ on July 26, 2021, 02:13:55 PM
Thanks for that. I'll add those recommendations to the queue.

I started his much praised autobiography Speak Memory some years back but found it unengaging and stopped.

Recently someone mentioned Look At The Harlequins as the autobiography fictionalized and viewed as though through fun house mirrors, which sounded intriguing


TD: started Kawabata's Thousand Cranes.



Which opens with an unexpected and striking visual image.

Really loved this book when I read it in April or so. I've enjoyed everything I've read from Kawabata, some four books now, but I do think this was my favorite. I have the same edition.

Quote from: Dry Brett Kavanaugh on July 26, 2021, 09:02:41 AM
I read the story decades ago, and had a mixed feeling.

I was particularly curious to know your reaction to this book, something told me for sure that you'd read it  ;D

vers la flamme

I like all the Nabokov talk, getting me curious to read some of his work. I think I will start with Pale Fire which seems the most interesting to me.

Quote from: The new erato on July 26, 2021, 11:39:06 AM
The Sun Also Rises.

One of my favorites!

Dry Brett Kavanaugh

Quote from: vers la flamme on July 26, 2021, 03:12:14 PM
Really loved this book when I read it in April or so. I've enjoyed everything I've read from Kawabata, some four books now, but I do think this was my favorite. I have the same edition.

I was particularly curious to know your reaction to this book, something told me for sure that you'd read it  ;D

There was a revival of Georges Bataille when I was young, and I read several books by him. I like somethings by him while I don't care other things.

As for Kawabata, the Cranes and Izu Dancer are my favorite ( if I have to choose.) Because of his simple writing, Kawabata is not as popular as Mishima, whose writing is flamboyant, intellectual, and paradoxical. But Kawabata was always revered by Mishima. Kawabata's subtle writing is exquisite. He gives readers more freedom (and responsibilities) in imagination, nuances, interpretation, etc. We make stories and pictures with Kawabata.

Dry Brett Kavanaugh

The Canterbury Tales. Geoffrey Chaucer.

vers la flamme

William S. Burroughs, Junky



A reread. Orwell's Down & Out had me in the mood for something similar, and I think this is certainly that, but with several key differences; namely, I am much more convinced with Burroughs fitting into this underworld, even though he entered into it as an outsider, a person of privilege, or even a "tourist" much as did Orwell. Still, it's an intriguing and often hilarious read. I have long admired Burroughs, though I have read little of his work.

The new erato

Quote from: vers la flamme on July 26, 2021, 03:13:54 PM

One of my favorites!
Rereading The Sun Also Rises. Haven't read any Hemingway since the 1970'ies, but Ken Burns' documentary on the author has rekindled my interest and have me dig out my old books. Only half way through, but pondering A Farewell to Arms for the next. Great book.

aligreto

Hesse: Siddhartha





This is the story of a precocious young boy who leaves his father to find his own way in and the essential meaning of Life. The story narrates this physical and spiritual journey and its final outcome.

vers la flamme

Quote from: The new erato on July 27, 2021, 01:26:50 AM
Rereading The Sun Also Rises. Haven't read any Hemingway since the 1970'ies, but Ken Burns' documentary on the author has rekindled my interest and have me dig out my old books. Only half way through, but pondering A Farewell to Arms for the next. Great book.

I read A Farewell to Arms for the first time maybe three months ago. I loved it so much, I finished it in a day. While ultimately it didn't have the same impact on me that The Sun Also Rises did when I read it several years ago, there are moments from the book that will stick with me for a long time to come. I was on a bit of a Hemingway kick a few months ago. There are still a handful I have yet to read, including some major ones like For Whom the Bell Tolls; I guess I am saving them for the right moment. I consider him a very fine author even if not everything he wrote is quite a success.

The Ken Burns doc was a good watch. I didn't hear about it at first, and was wondering why I could never find any Hemingway at any used bookstores for a good month or so  :laugh:

vers la flamme

Quote from: aligreto on July 27, 2021, 01:27:13 AM
Hesse: Siddhartha





This is the story of a precocious young boy who leaves his father to find his own way in and the essential meaning of Life. The story narrates this physical and spiritual journey and its final outcome.

Another old favorite, one I ought to reread.