Originally posted by muzzer
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What are you reading now?
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Originally posted by muzzer View PostMiddle England by Jonathan Coe. Highly recommended partly-comic take on the “events” of recent years, revisiting characters first seen in The Rotters Club.
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Originally posted by DracoM View Post'Falk' by Joseph Conrad.
Now time to re-try the biggies - to see if I can get to the end of Nostromo...
[ ... I see I was here back in 2016 -
Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... can't fault your taste, umslopogaas.
Yes, time to plunge in to Conrad again, I think.
I have to confess that last time I tackled Nostromo I never quite made it to the end - ( I was reassured when meeting an old university friend, now a Conrad scholar, who said that the ending of Nostromo was in any case an irresolvable mess ) - but I loved what I did manage to get through.
Heart of Darkness, just wonderful. And another favourite - The Secret Agent...
good reading!
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostI greatly enjoyed it, as I did the previous two - I take it you've read The Closed Circle? Have just started 'Paris Echo' by Sebastian Faulks.
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostI greatly enjoyed it, as I did the previous two - I take it you've read The Closed Circle? Have just started 'Paris Echo' by Sebastian Faulks.
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Originally posted by muzzer View PostYes I’ve read the previous two. I find Coe very readable, and I like the references to a quasi imagined British past of sit coms, which has to be at least partly mocking, and the shared past, typified by the 1977 Morecambe and Wise Christmas Show - which is genuinely affecting. This is a poor summary, of course. Where I part company is that I would like to believe that a novel of our times would be more innovative linguistically, but that of course marks me as trapped by a modernism which is no longer current ;) Where is today’s Nabokov, Bellow, Murdoch, Gaddis, Spark?
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Originally posted by Bella Kemp View PostI offer a challenge: can anyone here suggest a living writer whose identity might be revealed in a paragraph?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Bella Kemp View PostI might suggest that too many novels these days have been produced following MAs in Creative Writing and writing courses - yes, many of these books are pacy and exciting, the characters are well-drawn and the setting believable, but frankly they might all have been devised by a computer program. All the writers you cite here might be identified by a page of their writing as easily as you could distinguish between Haydn and Mozart, Beethoven and Brahms. I offer a challenge: can anyone here suggest a living writer whose identity might be revealed in a paragraph?
Antony Beevor
David Starkey
Garrison KeillorLast edited by LMcD; 24-10-19, 08:32.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostMartin Amis, Ali Smith, Toni Morrison, Jeanette Winterson, Colm Toibin ... (I've given five to respond to muzzer's last question, too I think I'd also recognise Nicola Barker and Peter Ackroyd in a few sentences.)
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostWhat does the icon above the beer indicate
and to which posting does the beer refer?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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