What are you currently reading?

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

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Mandryka

Quote from: DavidW on August 16, 2024, 09:30:15 AM

When you've finished, explain me what happens in the toilets at the end. That's the key.
Wovon man nicht sprechen kann, darüber muss man schweigen

AnotherSpin


vers la flamme

Quote from: Mandryka on August 16, 2024, 09:44:58 AMWhen you've finished, explain me what happens in the toilets at the end. That's the key.

Glad I'm not the only one who found it ambiguous.

LKB

Quote from: ritter on August 16, 2024, 09:27:16 AMJust started John Steinbeck's Cannery Row...



I'm a bigger fan of Steinbeck's non- fiction, but l read that one a few years ago and enjoyed it greatly. 8)
Mit Flügeln, die ich mir errungen...

AnotherSpin


ShineyMcShineShine

AN ELEMENTARY SPANISH READER
BY  E. S. HARRISON
FIRST ASSISTANT IN MODERN LANGUAGES IN THE COMMERCIAL HIGH SCHOOL, BROOKLYN, NEW YORK
COPYRIGHT, 1912
https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/22065/pg22065-images.html

I'm learning Spanish.

SimonNZ

Has anyone here read Tolstoy's Resurrection?

Does it really deserve its relative neglect?

AnotherSpin

Quote from: SimonNZ on August 19, 2024, 10:29:25 PMHas anyone here read Tolstoy's Resurrection?

Does it really deserve its relative neglect?

I read it several decades ago, in Russian, of course. So, I have no idea about the quality of the translation. As with all of Tolstoy's works, it's very powerful. If you've already read War and Peace and Anna Karenina, then Resurrection is worth reading. It's his last completed novel, in which the author's religious and philosophical views are strongly reflected.

Florestan

Quote from: SimonNZ on August 19, 2024, 10:29:25 PMHas anyone here read Tolstoy's Resurrection?

Does it really deserve its relative neglect?

I have, and concur with AS's assessment.
"Beauty must appeal to the senses, must provide us with immediate enjoyment, must impress us or insinuate itself into us without any effort on our part." - Claude Debussy

San Antone

Quote from: DavidW on August 16, 2024, 09:30:15 AM

Could be my favorite book. McCarthy has been a favorite writer of mine for decades, but his late works have not been for me.  Blood Meridian, though, I find simply masterful and I never tire of re-reading it.  Just did so earlier this year, which I do most years.

Enjoy!   :)

Dry Brett Kavanaugh

Quote from: SimonNZ on August 19, 2024, 10:29:25 PMHas anyone here read Tolstoy's Resurrection?

Does it really deserve its relative neglect?


My favorite among Tolstoy's works. The description of social problems and dysfunction in the book is a little too much, but the core (love) story is very artistic.

Tolstoy was one of my favorite authors when I was a teenager. Interestingly he is not anymore.

AnotherSpin

Quote from: Dry Brett Kavanaugh on August 20, 2024, 07:27:57 AMMy favorite among Tolstoy's works. The description of social problems and dysfunction in the book is a little too much, but the core (love) story is very artistic.

Tolstoy was one of my favorite authors when I was a teenager. Interestingly he is not anymore.

I'm not sure Tolstoy wrote his novels for teenagers. However, not all teenagers are the same.

Henk79

Quote from: Dry Brett Kavanaugh on August 20, 2024, 07:27:57 AMTolstoy was one of my favorite authors when I was a teenager. Interestingly he is not anymore.

+1

Henk79


Spotted Horses

Recently read Small Mercies, a potboiler from Dennis Lehane, the author of Mystic River. Before that, The Man in my Basement, by Walter Mosely (a black man who owns a large house without the resources to maintain it gets an offer from a wealthy white man who wants to be secluded in the basement to contemplate and perhaps atone for his sins). Before that Human Voices by Penelope Fitzgerald (a story about the BBC broadcasting house during WWII)

ShineyMcShineShine

Quote from: Spotted Horses on August 21, 2024, 11:00:09 AM(a black man who owns a large house without the resources to maintain it gets an offer from a wealthy white man who wants to be secluded in the basement to contemplate and perhaps atone for his sins).

Sounds like the premise for a low-budget horror movie.

DavidW

Quote from: Spotted Horses on August 21, 2024, 11:00:09 AMRecently read Small Mercies, a potboiler from Dennis Lehane, the author of Mystic River. Before that, The Man in my Basement, by Walter Mosely (a black man who owns a large house without the resources to maintain it gets an offer from a wealthy white man who wants to be secluded in the basement to contemplate and perhaps atone for his sins). Before that Human Voices by Penelope Fitzgerald (a story about the BBC broadcasting house during WWII)

I like Dennis Lehane. I've only read Mystic River and Shutter Island though.

I read The Murder of Roger Akroyd, one of the most satisfying mysteries I've ever read. What makes it so good would not work on TV or film. (I know it has been adapted; that is not my point).

I read the public domain version, which was free of any interference from the sensitivity readers the publisher employed for Agatha Christie (that is factually true, not paranoia on my part).


JBS

Quote from: DavidW on August 21, 2024, 04:02:12 PMI like Dennis Lehane. I've only read Mystic River and Shutter Island though.

I read The Murder of Roger Akroyd, one of the most satisfying mysteries I've ever read. What makes it so good would not work on TV or film. (I know it has been adapted; that is not my point).

I read the public domain version, which was free of any interference from the sensitivity readers the publisher employed for Agatha Christie (that is factually true, not paranoia on my part).



When I read it, I was not impressed. The plot device Christie used was a novelty then, and impressed lots of readers,  but it is not a novelty now.

I admit I read it quite a long time ago, but I don't remember anything that might set off any sensitivities.

Hollywood Beach Broadwalk

DavidW