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What Are You Reading Now?

In my opinion Trollope takes care of his readers and you will be pleased.





The Kreutzer Sonata by Leo Tolstoy
Rating: 4 stars
Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
and I started reading the French psychological thriller, which I understand inspired a movie by some fellow named Hitchcock

Vertigo by Boileau-Narcejac




still reading an awful pulpy espionage adventure thing




I was interested to learn that Steinbeck’s book is on the list of most banned books in the US. I promptly Googled the list and was pleased to see I had already read several and added several others to my wishlist.

Tony wrote: "i just started A Dog's Journey
by W. Bruce Cameron"
I love that book so much!! Very, very good. If you like dog books another one I liked - a contemporary - was Finding Gobi: The True Story of a Little Dog and an Incredible Journey.
Oh, one more animal book The Travelling Cat Chronicles

I love that book so much!! Very, very good. If you like dog books another one I liked - a contemporary - was Finding Gobi: The True Story of a Little Dog and an Incredible Journey.
Oh, one more animal book The Travelling Cat Chronicles

Though I have not fully ascertained as to my suspicion, I really think that I have cracked one of the major surprises in the book. It was obvious but maybe it is so because this is a middle grade book. I hope to look back fondly on this book in the future.

it is so good that I am already boring everybody I know with recommendations without even having finished it yet!



After numerous attempts earlier in life, audiobooks gave me access to what has become the great literary love of my life. I spent the first half of 2014 reading/listening with a small group here on Goodreads. I found it confusing but amazing and, at times hilarious. When I finished in July, I posted that, while I had come to enjoy it and found it marvelous and funny, I still did not understand why is was so often cited as the greatest novel in the world. A woman in New York who was well-steeped in all things Proust, replied to my post to “immediately go back and begin again.” I did and the scales dropped from my eyes and I was amazed at the literary treasure that was revealed.
The key is to “live” the first half of narrator’s life by reading it the first time, and then go back and realize that you cannot appreciate the text until you are remembering the life of the narrator as he relates it in the text from a point in time years after the book ends. All the “nonsensical, free floating memories” are mixed together in the narrative and time, events, people and places seem jumbled, until you go back are re-remember them as the narrator relates them. Then wherever the narrator goes in time and space, the reader can realize “this will happen in Volume 3 or that is a memory from Volume 5.
When I sorted all this out, I marveled that, while Proust wanted to get the book published and be well-reviewed, he seems to have been indifferent that so few would bother to read a story 3747 pages long, much less figure out the key to understanding was to read it again for the first time.
But there are readers who reread it again and again as they age.

After..."
Dave, this is a great tip. Thank you for sharing!

After..."
Thanks Dave, It took me twelve years to read. I will have to reread it. You remind me of my favorite quote by Nabokov "Curiously enough, one cannot read a book: one can only reread it. A good reader, a major reader, an active and creative reader is a rereader."

An excellent quote Kevin, and true to my own experience with Proust and other books. Did Nabukov write that in one of his books? I love reading books about books and reading. Never mind, I answered my own question here: https://www.themarginalian.org/2013/0...

There are a bunch of folks that focus on linking the book to Proust’s life, discussing translation issues, etc. My second reading, in the latter half of 2014, was supplemented by reading biographies of Proust, and books about Proust’s book that I ordered from all over the world.
Although I never read what Nabokov had to say, he would have saved me a lot of time. I gave all those biographies and commentaries to my public library when I came to the same conclusion Nabukov mentions above in 2015.

Great quote! Trust a fine mouche to trust Nabokov :)

;) “ “Our imagination flies -- we are its shadow on the earth.”


Well, a fan of his fiction, I have totally overlooked his role as a teacher of literature. Something to look forward to. Thanks Kevin!

I’m not sure what you are transcribing, but Lectures on Literature has a lecture on Ulysses by Joyce.


I’m not sure what ..."
Dave wrote: "Kevin wrote: "Well, it seems like we might have a few Nabokov fans here, including me. I am reading his "Lectures on Ulysses", but it is slow going transcribing the manuscript."
Well, a fan of his..."
The book I am transcribing is called "Lectures on Ulysses" it is a hardbound book with photocopies of Nabokov's handwritten lectures with crossed out sections, diagrams, etc. Only 500 copies were printed. Bruccoli Clark Publishers. I can't remember where or when I got it. The section about Ulysses in "Lectures on Literature" is based on these lectures.

I have not yet read Ulysses.



Gavin wrote: "Reading The Space Opera Megapack: 20 Modern and Classic Science Fiction Tales and Wolves of the Calla"
I love those Sci Fi Megapacks. They are so much fun.
I love those Sci Fi Megapacks. They are so much fun.
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I'm reading The Last Chronicle of Barset right now! I plan to start the Palliser series probably in June. I've loved the Barset series so, so much - I'm sad it's ending but wow, so far Trollope is ending the series really well.