Just finished (for the 5th time) Eco's Island of the Day Before - still my least favourite of his novels, with many passages that I find myself having read through two or three times without actually reading them once: not something I ever find in his other works. But, even so, the world of Eco's language, of his vast imagination, of his humour, of the Mahlerian embracing everything the world of culture has to offer - within a few sentences I'm in that brighter, joyous universe, and I shall miss being there for the next few days.
What are you reading now?
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostJust finished (for the 5th time) Eco's Island of the Day Before - still my least favourite of his novels, with many passages that I find myself having read through two or three times without actually reading them once: not something I ever find in his other works. But, even so, the world of Eco's language, of his vast imagination, of his humour, of the Mahlerian embracing everything the world of culture has to offer - within a few sentences I'm in that brighter, joyous universe, and I shall miss being there for the next few days.
But Eco now , I've not read any. Where should one start?
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My favourite (the one I have ready next) is The Mysterious Flame of Queen Loana - a man recovers his memory after suffering a stroke by going over the things his parents kept from his childhood: a glorious celebration of popular culture; wonderful insights into Fascist-era Italian history; intensely funny and poignant - one of the great literary works of my lifetime.
My second favourite is Foucault's Pendulum - a remarkable novel in that it is a parody of Dan Brown's Da Vinci Code; just written 14 years before it! Mischievous in its depiction of Vanity Press publishing firms and merciless in its parody of occultists. (Eco's final novel, Numero Zero covers similar territory - but is much shorter, which might appeal to some readers more than his other work. Eco needs readers who share his love of language, and of exploring connections between different types of writing and learning. Many readers attracted to The Name of the Rose [my third favourite] after seeing the Sean Connery film were disappointed that there was so much more to the book than "the plot" - his books are around 600 pages long, but they are such good company.)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post.
... I confess I gave up on The Prague Cemetery.
I have enjoyed his essays : I particularly remember Faith in Fakes -
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostMy second favourite is Foucault's Pendulum - a remarkable novel in that it is a parody of Dan Brown's Da Vinci Code; just written 14 years before it! Mischievous in its depiction of Vanity Press publishing firms and merciless in its parody of occultists. (Eco's final novel, Numero Zero covers similar territory - but is much shorter, which might appeal to some readers more than his other work. Eco needs readers who share his love of language, and of exploring connections between different types of writing and learning. Many readers attracted to The Name of the Rose [my third favourite] after seeing the Sean Connery film were disappointed that there was so much more to the book than "the plot" - his books are around 600 pages long, but they are such good company.)
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostMy favourite (the one I have ready next) is The Mysterious Flame of Queen Loana - a man recovers his memory after suffering a stroke by going over the things his parents kept from his childhood: a glorious celebration of popular culture; wonderful insights into Fascist-era Italian history; intensely funny and poignant - one of the great literary works of my lifetime.
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I've just re-read Ayn Rand's We The Living, for the first time since 1991.
I remember the book making a big impression on me back then, particularly for its Soviet villains. I remembered Pavel Syerov and Comrade Sonia but had forgotten Morozov the speculator.
I think this may be the best of Ayn Rand's novels, though she'd certainly disagree on that point. You don't have to agree with her politics to get that tyranny of any kind is being attacked here.
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I was reading Paul Griffiths's Olivier Messiaen and the Music of Time which for the first time explained to me clearly how all those otherworldly harmonic progressions actually work. Don't ask me to explain it though! Griffiths also goes into many interesting arguments about how one might think about the birdsong and the music's theological apparatus as well. The sections on harmony are I suppose a little specialised, but nevertheless the book would be food for thought for anyone interested in this composer and his work. After that I moved on to Anthony Gottlieb's The Dream of Reason, a history of philosophy from its beginnings to the middle ages, which is so far quite informative but sometimes annoyingly glib and patronising, tending to give the impression that the pre-Socratic Greeks were blundering around in the darkness grabbing any vaguely plausible idea they could get hold of. But that's an area I already knew a certain amount about. I'm looking forward to learning more about Aristotle who is quite an unknown quantity to me. I'm also looking forward to moving on to some fiction once I get to the end of it.
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Re-reading Stolen Journey by Oliver Philpott, one of the three escapers in the famous Wooden Horse escape from Stalag Luft III in 1943. Long out of print, I picked up a 1950 edition on Amazon in reasonable condition. Philpott gives a vivid impression of life as a POW and of his escape and tells his story well. It's a book that could well do with re-issue.
Best Second World War POW book, in my opinion, is A Crowd is not Company by Robert Kee."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostRe-reading Stolen Journey by Oliver Philpott, one of the three escapers in the famous Wooden Horse escape from Stalag Luft III in 1943. Long out of print, I picked up a 1950 edition on Amazon in reasonable condition. Philpott gives a vivid impression of life as a POW and of his escape and tells his story well. It's a book that could well do with re-issue.
Best Second World War POW book, in my opinion, is A Crowd is not Company by Robert Kee.
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Keith Rowe: The Room Extended by Brian Olewnick.
I've known Keith for half a century but this biography has been a real eye-opener. I had no idea what a chequered and strife-torn early life he experienced. The writing style may not be of the very best but the content is both relelatory and wholely engaging. Strongly recommended to those who know Keith's music.
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