Catching up on Classics (and lots more!) discussion
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What Book(s) have you just Bought, Ordered or Taken Delivery Of?
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BAM doesn’t answer to her real name
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Aug 12, 2018 03:36PM

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The secret to my success is that I usually only visit the sales of libraries located in the cities where I can't afford to live. Rich people are sometimes generous with their library donations :p

The secret to my success is that I usually only visit the sales of libraries located in the cities where I ..."
Absolutely. For me, I would add to that, university towns. The books that are sold to used book stores or donated to library sales are far more interesting and diverse than one finds elsewhere, on average.

(actually, that statement applies to everybody! ;o) )


Yup. Where I live, the university, the community college, and the local libraries all have a symbiotic relationship and work together to share the profits.
I once managed to pick up Mimesis for 25 cents at one of the university's book sales, among other bargains and finds (although that one still remains one of my best).

That's fun, isn't it? I got THE LIBERAL IMAGINATION in Evanston for fifty cents about 15 years ago.

That's fun, isn't it? I got THE LIBERAL IMAGINATION in Evanston for fifty cents about 15 years ago."
Wow Allen, that really was a bargain! I actually coughed up the full price for my copy of The Liberal Imagination.
But I have to admit, the fact that Mimesis was such a deal added to my enjoyment of the book.

Auerbach -- Oh yeah. Reading him has changed people's lives.
Mimesis: The Representation of Reality in Western Literature - Fiftieth-Anniversary Edition

Mimesis: The Representation of Reality in Western Literature - Fiftieth-Anniversary Edition "
What's even more amazing is that he wrote it largely from memory while living in exile.
And I enjoyed it so much that as soon as I was finished, I ordered his earlier work, Dante: Poet of the Secular World. It's on my TBR shelf for now.

Mimesis: The Representation of Reality in Western Literature - Fiftieth-Anniversary Edition "
What's even more amazing ..."
I can't really speak to the excellence of Mimesis, except that literally everyone who's read it is wild about it, but the fact that he wrote it from memory while in exile was probably good for the writing, not bad for it.
“There are many modern biographies and histories, full of carefully authenticated fact, which afflict the reader with a weight of indigestion. The author has no right to his facts, no ownership in them. They have flitted through his mind on a calm five minutes'
passage from the notebook to the immortality of the printed page. But no man can hope to make much impression on a reader with facts which he has not thought it worth his own while to remember. Every considerable book, in literature or science, is an engine whereby, mind operates on mind. It is an ignorant
worship of Science which treats it as residing in books, and reduces the mind to a mechanism of transfer. The measure of an author's power would be best found in the book which he should sit down to write the day after his library was burnt to the ground.”
― Walter Alexander Raleigh, Six Essays On Johnson

That's actually a very good point, but that's also what makes it all the more impressive, given the circumstances.
So many writers who were fortunate enough just to get out in time (Auerbach's appointment by the University of Istanbul was at the expense of, among others, Victor Klemperer) struggled to even function through such upheaval and uncertainty. Auerbach was one of the very few during that time who not only functioned, but flourished.


Mimesis: The Representation of Reality in Western Literature - Fiftieth-Anniversary Edition."
Chris, I wonder what Clive James has had to say about Eric Auerbach?

Does anybody know if he has written anything specifically dedicated to Auerbach?
He praises Mimesis briefly in Cultural Amnesia, but the essay itself was originally centered upon Ernst Junger. I enjoy reading just about anything James writes, but I think an essay specifically dedicated to Auerbach would be utterly fascinating.

So many people I know around these parts are huge C.J. fans.

Nonetheless it's self-evident to me that Eric Auerbach will live forever with or without Clive James' imprimatur."
Absolutely.
Although based upon what he wrote in Cultural Amnesia, there's a very good chance that it would be glowing with praise.



I agree with the both points. I've lost count of the number of times I've had to walk to the front of a store to get a better connection and load my shelves.
For the second point, I also have a "look for at store" shelf, and if I have a copy but want to replace it with a better one, I put it on that shelf

I don't know what I'd do without GR to prevent my buying dupes. My shelf, books-I-own, is the most important one I maintain. YMMV

He's right of course, but he never lived to see the 21st Century . . .

Allen, I've bought dups of books I've already read before. It's rare, but it does happen - especially in those genres where books all kind of sound the same.

He's right of course, but he never lived to see th..."
He also hasn't experienced books being reissued with different titles, lol. I bought and read (partially - maybe 25 pages the second time) the same mediocre Scandi mystery twice. A pox on the reissuing publisher's soul.

I think Kindle and its kindred should post: "Satisfaction guaranteed, or double your Kilobytes back."
You may say I'm a dreamer . . .

Today my wife dropped me off at Barnes and Noble for an hour and called me at the end of that time and returned with the $25 gift card that my brother in-law gave me for my 55th birthday, combined with a 20% educator's discount from her best friend. In the interim I got four books:
Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave by Frederick Douglass (1818-95)
The Story of King Arthur and His Knights by Howard Pyle (1853-1911)
The Federalist by Alexander Hamilton (1755-1804); James Madison (1751-1836); and John Jay (1745-1829)
The Jungle by Upton Sinclair (1878-1968)
I have $2.20 left on the gift card.

Received


I did exactly that, Allen. I got The Federalist and The Jungle off a table that had a sign stating "B & N Classics 2 for $10" (the latter book resonates with my wife--who is not a reader--because she worked in the meat industry with her father when she was in her 20's). The King Arthur was on a shelf labelled "Build Your Classics Library" for $7.98. It also contained several Collectible Editions. The Knickerbocker Classics Frederick Douglass is bound in a brown plaid pattern and published by Quarto/Race Publishing. Regularly $9.98, it was on sale for $5.00.
The Federalist contains all 85 Federalist Papers written 1787-8, not just a few, which satisfies my completest tendencies.
Jim


@984: Howard Pyle was a late-Victorian author who wrote primarily for kids, but is enjoyed by adults too. I read the book you mentioned about fifteen years ago. If THE STORY OF KING ARTHUR AND HIS KNIGHTS moves you to pick up T.H. White's The Once and Future King, so much the better. There's a lively discussion, full of digressions of the kind I like, of that tetralogy's first book (THE SWORD IN STONE) going on here at "Catching Up on Classics."
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...



Parallel Stories: A Novel by Péter Nádas
Ordered a collection of his essays not long ago and loved it. Having read his Book of Memories beforehand, I knew I would. So in for a penny, in for a pound (which is about what this book probably weighs).


The last major piece in my League of Extraordinary Gentlemen puzzle.
Thanks very much to Melanti for the kind offer of assistance and a HUGE thanks to... (eh.. actually are we being discreet about who got me a copy? In case we are) i will just say a HUGE thanks to my mysterious benefactor :) :) :D .

Home and Exile by Chinua Achebe
Clotel: or, The President's Daughter by William Wells Brown (!!!)
A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan
The Laramie Project and The Laramie Project: Ten Years Later by Moisés Kaufman
Rosalind Franklin: The Dark Lady of DNA by Brenda Maddox (!)
The Corpse Walker: Real Life Stories, China from the Bottom Up by Liao Yiwu (discard from my favorite public library :( )
All of these were already on my TBR list! Score! Barring my sadness over how the last book came into my possession, this was a very good haul. I'd nominate Clotel: or, The President's Daughter as a pre-1900s group read, but alas. It's not nearly mainstream and/or apolitical enough.

Swansong 1945 "by" Walter Kempowski 😍
The Collected Poems of Galway Kinnell
The Great Enigma: New Collected Poems by Tomas Tranströmer
New Collected Poems of Marianne Moore
I'm thrilled with all four (particularly Galway Kinnell), but Swansong is absolutely the pick of the bunch.
It's a very small selection from Kempowski's monumental magnum opus, Echolot ('sonar' in German, but sometimes called Echo Soundings in English), focusing on the year 1945. It's an accumulation of autobiographical documents that chronicle just about every facet of German life during the years of the Second World War. In German, it runs to over 10 volumes and I've been desperate to get my hands on any piece of it, even if it wasn't translated, and now I finally have, regardless if it's just a sliver (and in English, too!).
Hopefully this is just the beginning, and one day this masterwork in its full entirety will be translated. There's an entire section of my bookshelf just waiting for it.

I know you didn't ask me :) but my favorite is abebooks. Great selection, vendors from all over the world, each listing allows you to ask the seller questions about the item, etc.

I love that movie!
Henry II: I marvel at you after all these years. Still like a democratic drawbridge: going down for everybody.
Eleanor of Aquitaine: At my age there's not much traffic anymore.
And this:
John: A knife! He's got a knife!
Eleanor of Aquitaine: Of course he has a knife, he always has a knife, we all have knives! It's 1183 and we're barbarians! How clear we make it. Oh, my piglets, we are the origins of war: not history's forces, nor the times, nor justice, nor the lack of it, nor causes, nor religions, nor ideas, nor kinds of government, nor any other thing. We are the killers. We breed wars. We carry it like syphilis inside. Dead bodies rot in field and stream because the living ones are rotten. For the love of God, can't we love one another just a little - that's how peace begins..

Lucky you :)

The Art of War by Sun Tzu (544-496 BC)
The Constitution and Other Documents of the Founding Fathers by Andrew S. Trees
Walden and Civil Disobedience by Henry David Thoreau (1817-62)
Leaves of Grass: First and "Death-Bed" Editions by Walt Whitman (1819-92)
Jim


Charles Bovary, Country Doctor: Portrait of a Simple Man by Jean Améry
After such a tremendous sequence of titles they published earlier this year, I felt that some of the NYRB Classics' summer releases lulled a bit in comparison, but this is one that I've been waiting for.

I was browsing the shelves when I came upon The Complete Idiot's Guide to the Ultimate Reading List by Shelley Mosley. While I didn't check it out, I did use it to pick up my next reads. Each chapter is devoted to a different genre and lists the authors' picks for classics and other great reads. I had not read any mysteries for awhile and was confused as to where to start. So I went to the chapter "Get a Clue" which covers mysteries, and got a few detective novels, namely:
Murder at the Vicarage (1930) and The Mysterious Affair at Styles (1921) by Dame Agatha Christie (1890-1976). Christie (the name is not a pseudonym; she actually married a man named Robert Christie) wrote the latter book when her sister Martha told her that she (Christie) couldn't write a detective novel. It's the first Hercule Poirot mystery.
Fer-de-Lance (1934)/The League of Frightened Men (1935), the first two Nero Wolfe mysteries, by Rex Stout (1886-1975).
I also borrowed *Autumn* by the Norwegian author Karl Ove Knausgaard. This is the first of four books, translated into English from the Norwegian, that he wrote to his daughter, consisting of a letter and several short essays about nature and the world she will face in each season. I found it in the biography section on the library's second floor, and the other three books (Spring, Summer and Winter) on the New Books shelf on the first floor.
How the States Got Their Shapes by Mark Stein. An interesting bit of US history.
Jim

I love looking at those types of books as reference. It’s always interesting to see what people picked as “you must read these”...
I happen to find Agatha Christie overrated (I know, I know, blah blah blah. Same goes for Stephen King).
I have a few Nero Wolfe stories on my Kindle. They were freebies :)

Considering the weight of the books sitting on the dining room table (homeschool resources, books my dad just gave me, and textbooks I'm evaluating, in addition to all my book sale finds) actually broke my dining room table yesterday, I'll be lucky if my husband doesn't kill me. Of course, he is fixing the table (the finger joints in the supports underneath gave way because they were never glued properly - only a minor ding to one chair after he repairs and reinforces the joints).
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