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I started with Philosophical Investigations, and found it something like a philosophical equivalent of Calvino's If On a Winter's Night a Traveller. It seemed as if Wittgenstein were forever about to say something really quite interesting, but never actually getting around to saying it. Maybe the interesting thing was precisely that which he says in the Tractatus that we "must pass over in silence". In which case, I wished he would stop insinuating it so relentlessly.
Anyway, I resorted to Grayling for guidance, as a result also picked up the Tractatus, and might have persevered with it, if not for that fact that the reading of Wittgenstein combined with Grayling's pretty lucid commentary, gave me a sinking feeling of, "I know where this is going, or rather, not-going," and I was somewhat gratified to see that Grayling's summing up echoed significantly my own experience of Wittgenstein.
Hampton looks interesting! I might investigate further.


Harrison is, of course, generally on my list as an author. I've got Light on my shelves somewhere, but haven't got round to it. I shall make a note of this one.

What a great title! I take it it lives up to it?
I'm currently working my way through a brilliant text titled, Romanticism and the Re-Invention of Modern Religion by Alexander Hampton. I often think of your novels and short stories when I'm reading it.