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I have at last found a copy of Paperweight by Stephen Fry. I havent read it since it was published and it is far and away his best book, being a collection of 'wireless essays' from radio, and columns he wrote for the Telegraph around 88-92. The fact it is now not quite as hilarious and fascinating as it was then is i think a testament to his influence on society as a whole, or at least in the field of entertainment; by which i mean his style and approach have become absorbed into popular culture. I, for one, was certainly captivated and began to imitate his style.
I'm reading the new Mary Quant - Autobiography ....talk about being written simplistically - this is not how I remember the sixties London and I was there too! However, I shall stick with it as on page 151 there's a black and white picture of a dress that Royal Mail turned into a stamp in 2009, and which I have hanging in my vintage wardrobe - as long as the moths that invaded the West End last year haven't eaten. I can hear her voice as she writes - but this really could have done with better editing though. This is one hardback I'm glad I didn't pay the full price of £25 for! ...
I remember enjoying Religion and the Decline of Magic when I read it an age ago, Globaltruth. Thomas was a fine and versatile historian. His Man and the Natural World is also well worth reading.
Having almost completed E P Thompson's epic The Making of the English Working Class, I am about to reread Richard Holmes' Shelley: The Pursuit.
Alessandra Comini: The Changing Face of Beethoven.
Interesting read on how the great man's image, as it has come down to us, has been manipulated and appropriated by a host of interested parties, not least Beethoven himself. I particularly enjoyed Schindler's description of the famous Kloeber portrait as making Beethoven look like a "master brewer", "without a trace of intellect". Paradoxically perhaps, Schindler was taken with the Schimon portrait in which Beethoven's eyes have practically rolled out of his sockets, giving him a somewhat demented air.
Have just finished reading again John Steinbeck’s “The Grapes of Wrath”; a wonderful book as most readers will know.
I read somewhere that reading a book for the second time gives more pleasure than the first time. The gap is some four decades (!) and the re-reading most certainly well worth it.
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