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What Are You Reading Now?
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Amyjzed
(last edited Nov 13, 2022 07:18PM)
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Nov 13, 2022 07:18PM

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L'Immoraliste was a re-read for me. I first read it at school 40 years ago. Returning to it was a revelation. I was expecting just sickly pederast apologism, but Gide's novel transcended this. The narrator Michel certainly is a sickly pederast apologist, but Gide is a masterful exploiter of narratorial unreliability, laying bare the ugliness of Michel's twerpish egoism.
Nostromo is similarly a re-read for me. My first read must have been 15-20 years ago, and I have mentioned to one or two friends that I never quite got it in the way that I got other novels by Conrad, e.g. Under Western Eyes and The Secret Agent. However, one friend's insistence has persuaded me to revisit Nostromo, so that's what I'm doing. I must confess I'm enjoying it so far.

Interesting! It seems quite lyrical and reminds me of an opera. I guess there is one based on the story, which I will have to look into when I finish!

LOL! I had not thought of it like that!

The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat and Other Clinical Tales. Enlightening and funny.


Travels with Charley: In Search of America by John Steinbeck
Rating: 4 stars
Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
and I started reading

To Die in California by Newton Thornburg

You are not alone in that thought."
I had the same feeling.

You are not alone in that thought."
I had the same feeling."
Cool! :)

But i forced myself to do a bit more today and ended up managing to read quite a lot, finishing




Mildred Pierce by James M. Cain
Rating: 4 stars
Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
and I started reading one of the first collections of Sherlock Holmes "pastiches," this one with some stories written by Arthur Conan Doyle's son

The Exploits of Sherlock Holmes by Adrian Conan Doyle and John Dickson Carr


Now I am reading Iris Murdoch's novel The Philosopher's Pupil. Also violent and vivid in a primitive way.

This is a good weekend for reading books of survival.


Mildred Pierce by James M. Cain
Rating: 4 stars
Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show..."
I want to read Mildred Pierce. I love the 1945 film with Joan Crawford and Ann Blyth. <3

It's a good read, but the film is a little different from the book. I understand the HBO miniseries a few years ago stayed more true to Cain's original story.


No idea what its about or how it ended up on my ereader but i did notice another book with the same name

Anyway whether its a mixup or not it seems like it might be interesting :) .


Wreade1872 wrote: "Also started
Irene Iddesleigh by Amanda McKittrick Ros (1897), reputedly awful in a purpleprose way, i'm liking it already :) ."
I learned another new term: purpleprose. LOL I like it.

I learned another new term: purpleprose. LOL I like it.

After 7 days of reading, I report that I am indeed reading Inferno: The World at War, 1939-1945. After the usual enthusiastic start, the reading experience has grinded to a glacier like speed.
Having read a third of the book, I'm yet to be shown the fullest horrors of Nazism.
Also, and this shows the limits of my mind more than anything else, there are only so many times one can wrap one's head round stats such as 'at least 2000 people were killed'. Millions have never been more abstract.

Also finished Rabeah Ghaffari's extraordinary tale set in the times of Iran's 1979 revoluation, To Keep the Sun Alive. And I finished Foundation and Empire, a fun light read.
Now, I'm reading The Blithedale Romance by Nathaniel Hawthorne. I'm only 6 chapters in, but I've somewhat pleasantly surprised. I was worried it would be only a philosophical allegory with characters serving as props to demonstrate ideas and that it would bore me slightly . . . but Hawthorne's writing has kept me well engaged, at least so far. I'm enjoying the symbolic, metaphoric and suggestive language and images.
I'll probably also pick up The Night Tiger and/or Nutcracker and Mouse King and the Tale of the Nutcracker soon.

Thanks for this recommendation, Greg. Neruda is a favorite, and this edition translated by Reid is available from my library, so it's going to the top of my list!

Wonderful Kathleen! I do really love it! It's nice in that it has the original Spanish as well as the English translation too in this New Directions copy - my Spanish is quite poor, but I understand enough of it that I enjoy seeing the original Spanish alongside.







Which translation are you reading? I've read the Waley and the Tyler translations. The Waley translation reads more like The Tale of Genji by Arthur Waley based on the text by Lady Murasaki. The Tyler translation seemed to be a pretty good one and provided me with a terrific cultural experience (with all the footnotes). I plan to read the Washburn translation next (hopefully in 2023). I'll get around to the Seidensticker translation eventually.

It's the Waley one. See? I knew there was a reason that a book from 1001 was reading so easily. It's the only one I could get from the library that was unabridged. I am happy to get through this one, and try for something better someday.


Never heard of it but it looks essential! On the list now.

I heard that Bleak House was considered one of Dickens best written books, and at 56% I am still wavering in my opinion. It does have some powerful descriptive language of the sooty fog of London and Dickens puts you right into the milieu. But there are dozens of characters to start with, and I am finally at the point where connections are being made between them and a stronger central plot line is appearing. Any one else read this book? How does it compare to say Great Expectations in your mind?


The book was first published in 1939. There is an English translation.

It certainly started creepy enough, but the big section set in England really reads like a mystery, which I do love. I'm also liking that Count Dracula and his powers weren't explained up front, so I have to figure them out as the story goes along. As a plus I love epistolary books. So all in all I'm enjoying this a lot, taking my time at a chapter a day. Or two, if it's really tense.
I'm also rereading The Tempest and have two Agatha Christie's going. I'm rereading Miss Marple's Final Cases and listening to Evil Under the Sun.
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