Reading the 20th Century discussion
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What books are you reading now? (2024)

That sounds promising Judy, I built up a vivid picture of her from reading Testament of Youth but apart from South Riding haven't read anything else of hers, and know very little about her life other than with Vera.

Didn't he avoid trial by admitting guilt and paying a fine? I consider this equivalent to a prosecut..."
Thanks Ben, will definitely read that. I heard about the Supreme Court decision in an extended World Service report and was completely gobsmacked. Very, very disturbing.

www.goodreads.com/review/show/6631645655"
Read your review. I haven’t read it myself. Starmer ..."
I can see 'wishy washy' on one level, but on another he's a decent, grown-up with an excellent track record in his legal work. Just having someone mature and sensible who believes in social justice has to be a vast, vast improvement on what we have right now. As for predictions I just hope they don't make voters complacent and affect actual turnout.
Agree. A grown up with a track record of public service is all I want after 14 years of self serving grifters
Like Alwynne I have only read Testament of Youth and South Riding - both of which I loved, so would be interested in any of Vera's other work is up to this level

Too right Nigey! If they got in again then heaven help us all...

Link to my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


I live in Clacton-on-Sea so it will be a 'media circus' here on Thursday.

Alwynne wrote: "I know you weren't that keen R. C. but I really responded to the debut novel from art critic and queer cultural commentator Hanna Johansson Antiquity"
Glad this worked so well for you. I rounded down from 3.5 as there was much I liked but I think the writing style didn't completely do it for me. I liked the provocation though.
Glad this worked so well for you. I rounded down from 3.5 as there was much I liked but I think the writing style didn't completely do it for me. I liked the provocation though.
Martin wrote: "I live in Clacton-on-Sea so it will ..."
Gosh! I think Clacton is supposed to be a late declaration, about 4.00 am if I recall correctly.
Gosh! I think Clacton is supposed to be a late declaration, about 4.00 am if I recall correctly.

Ben wrote: "Can anyone comment on the difference between Labour and the LibDems in this election? Putting aside the question of tactical voting against the Tories, for a centre-left voter without a historic co..."
Lib-Dems are centrist, Labour still has left-wing members.
The Lib-Dems also tainted their reputation for some of us by propping up the 2010 Tory government by going into coalition with them: they were thus enablers of the ideologically-driven austerity from which we're still suffering.
But tactical voting is the most important thing, I'd say, in this election.
Lib-Dems are centrist, Labour still has left-wing members.
The Lib-Dems also tainted their reputation for some of us by propping up the 2010 Tory government by going into coalition with them: they were thus enablers of the ideologically-driven austerity from which we're still suffering.
But tactical voting is the most important thing, I'd say, in this election.
Stephen wrote: "I usually try to stay up but currently have Covid. Not sure how long I will be able to keep my eyes from resting."
Sorry to hear that, hope it's not too horrible.
I wouldn't be able to sleep anyway. I was too young in 1997 to appreciate it... but am still nervous it could all go wrong!
Sorry to hear that, hope it's not too horrible.
I wouldn't be able to sleep anyway. I was too young in 1997 to appreciate it... but am still nervous it could all go wrong!

Yesterday was a tough day. Our rights disappear one by one and the felon gets a permanent get out of jail free card. We can only hope that the New York verdict stands. He could get up to 4 years for the 34 counts he was convicted on. Right now he has a motion that some of that should be disallowed because some of it was done while he was president. All that was done while he was president was to sign the checks. Any other president would not have signed them in the oval office, but in the residence.
Alwynne wrote: "Judy wrote: "I'm currently reading Letters to a Friend by Winifred Holtby, a collection of letters she wrote to her friend Jean McWilliam, ... That sounds promising Judy, I built up a vivid picture of her from reading Testament of Youth but apart from South Riding haven't read anything else of hers, and know very little about her life other than with Vera."
You might like Vera Brittain's book about Holtby, Testament of Friendship, Alwynne - it's a few years ago now that I read it, but I remember finding it fascinating and moving. Interesting to read a biography by someone who was such a close friend of Holtby and who was such a great writer herself.
Holtby does write beautifully - I think South Riding is her best, but I also liked The Land of Green Ginger (Virago Modern Classics, Anderby Wold and The Crowded Street. They are all novels set in the north although not as long and multi-layered as South Riding.
I had to laugh at a bit in one of Holtby's letters in the collection I'm reading, where she quotes a newspaper review of her first novel, Anderby Wold. "It wound up: 'I found nothing remarkable in Anderby Wold, the picture wrapper of a hay-cart by C. Leighton is excellent; the novel not so'."
You might like Vera Brittain's book about Holtby, Testament of Friendship, Alwynne - it's a few years ago now that I read it, but I remember finding it fascinating and moving. Interesting to read a biography by someone who was such a close friend of Holtby and who was such a great writer herself.
Holtby does write beautifully - I think South Riding is her best, but I also liked The Land of Green Ginger (Virago Modern Classics, Anderby Wold and The Crowded Street. They are all novels set in the north although not as long and multi-layered as South Riding.
I had to laugh at a bit in one of Holtby's letters in the collection I'm reading, where she quotes a newspaper review of her first novel, Anderby Wold. "It wound up: 'I found nothing remarkable in Anderby Wold, the picture wrapper of a hay-cart by C. Leighton is excellent; the novel not so'."

Second the recommendation for … And What Do You Do?: What The Royal Family Don't Want You To Know. The king is above the law. Needs t..."
I have also found Robert Reich's comments in his substack to be thought provoking. He's doing a series -- in between responding to the crises of the last couple of weeks -- debunking a number of the economic myths that the far right trot out regularly. He launched the series to educate his readers, so that we in turn can educate the people we know who still believe them. I've found the couple that I've paid attention to really helpful. Also, a couple of months ago Richardson mentioned Mississippi Free Press as a worthy news site, and so I started following it. Who would have thought that the state with the country's oldest public university for women would also produce such a gem? Quite a lot of their coverage is specific to Mississippi, but they are all out reporting on the anti-democratic activities of the right. Very worth checking in on, or subscribing to their newsletter summary, then reading the handful of stories that you may find interesting.

I've been wondering about 'Testament of Friendship' thanks for the recs, think I'll bite the bullet and track down a copy, and prioritise those novels. I loved 'South Riding' too.


I read it +/- 40 years ago and really liked it. At that point I had no idea who Holtby was, and of course I've forgotten almost everything by now, but I do remember how much I enjoyed the account. It was in an omnibus edition with Testament of Youth and Testament of Experience, which is how I stumbled on it.

Link to my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2024...

Also, an article about Munro’s daughter’s revelation that her stepfather abused her, and after, as an adult she told her mother, Munro stayed with him. https://www.nytimes.com/2024/07/07/bo...

Also, an article about M..."
I'm steering clear of the 'abuse' debate, since Munro not around to give her side of the story.
I enjoyed Nanako Hanada's bestselling memoir The Bookshop Woman an unchallenging, episodic read but lots of insights into Japanese book culture and women's lives. As well as packed with interesting book recommendations, quite slight but nicely upbeat, good holiday read for bookaholics.
Link to my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Link to my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Link to my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Link to my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I finished an ARC of the latest Mariana Enríquez stories, A Sunny Place for Shady People. More gothic-y body horror as vehicles to carry political and social commentary on Argentina with some stand-out pieces:
www.goodreads.com/review/show/6652271874
www.goodreads.com/review/show/6652271874
Stephen wrote: "Just finished Troubles by J G Farrell. Late to the group read, but I thought a great novel that though dragged a little in places was a very well written satire an..."
I thought this sagged a bit in the middle, too, but still pointed and funny.
I thought this sagged a bit in the middle, too, but still pointed and funny.

What a cover
"
It's great, they actually reused the original Korean design.

I think The Siege of Krishnapur is undoubtedly the most accomplished of the trilogy but problematic in other ways!

I have that one awaiting so glad you liked it R. C. and thanks for the review of the Plath book think will try to read that one soon-ish.
There are some stand-out pieces in the Enriquez - I think my favourite collection of hers, to date. And I grabbed the Plath off the new arrivals shelf in the Library before they'd even registered it! Looking forward to your thoughts on both.
Oh, and I have the new Rachel Kushner ARC, Creation Lake which I'm so excited about.
Oh, and I have the new Rachel Kushner ARC, Creation Lake which I'm so excited about.

Here's my review of v. 1
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I've requested the Kushner too, I like her in interviews and loved her debut, wasn't as sure about her last novel. But this one sounds promising.
G wrote: "I just finished The Complete Mapp & Lucia: Volume One. It has been a superb antidote to the steady beat of horrendous news. On to volume 2!
Definitely up there with Wodehouse when it comes to solace for the soul 😄
Definitely up there with Wodehouse when it comes to solace for the soul 😄

I had some familiarity with Celan before picking this up and enjoyed tracing his influence on the text, as an intro to Celan it's great. But as a novel it felt artificial, overly contrived - as with other books by Tawada I found the concept intriguing but the execution frustrating and undercooked.
Link to my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


Surprisingly not dry, interesting, but a looong account of the construction of the Panama Canal. For those who hesitate at the 700- pages hardcover, there an abridged audiobook that's less than 9 hours.
My Review - https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
I've read Chronicle of the Murdered House, one of this month's buddy reads - it worked at the level of Gothic melodrama for me but I think Ben and Hester are getting more out of it:
www.goodreads.com/review/show/6433265024
www.goodreads.com/review/show/6433265024
I read The God of the Woods by Liz Moore: I'd recommend it to fans of Donna Tartt and Tana French: www.goodreads.com/review/show/6688886286
Next I'm reading an ARC of the new Rachel Kushner, Creation Lake.
Next I'm reading an ARC of the new Rachel Kushner, Creation Lake.
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Second the recommendation for … And What Do You Do?: What The Royal Family Don't Want You To Know. The king is above the law. Needs to end.
Thanks Ben and G for the substack recommendations. I have been resorting to substack for takes on stuff too. Have you got anymore for staying informed on current events? Or the news? Or anyone else got any? I have been losing a bit of faith in legacy media recently.