Bob Mortimer autobiography 'And Away...'
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Originally posted by Mal View PostUlysses - still going, with lots of (needed) help from Sam Slote. I'm not allowing myself any Trollope, or any other novelist, until I finish.
I read it in August, while I was recovering from COVID and nursing a perforated ear-drum. An interesting experience ....
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I've begun rereading Patrick O'Brian's 19 Aubrey/Maturin novels, which I have read at least once, some already twice. A comfort read, in that the authentic descriptions of naval life in the 'Napoleonic Wars'*, and of the relationship between Aubrey and his friend and surgeon Maturin are well done; while I don't necessarily remember what happens in each book.
* (Inverted commas because O'Brian uses author's licence to stretch the time frame in order to accommodate all his stories.)
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostI've begun rereading Patrick O'Brian's 19 Aubrey/Maturin novels, which I have read at least once, some already twice. A comfort read, in that the authentic descriptions of naval life in the 'Napoleonic Wars'*, and of the relationship between Aubrey and his friend and surgeon Maturin are well done; while I don't necessarily remember what happens in each book.
* (Inverted commas because O'Brian uses author's licence to stretch the time frame in order to accommodate all his stories.)
Just finished Angus Wilson 'Hemlock and After' (1953). Wasn't sure at first but very much enjoyed it. Will keep on with him.
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Originally posted by Historian View PostAnd just before that Arnold Bennett's 'The Old Wives' Tale' which someone else mentioned some way down the thread I seem to remember. Think he has turned up in the unfashionable books (?) thread: well worth reading, as was 'Anna of the Five Towns'.
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A curiosity. Straw without Bricks: I visit Soviet Russia by EM Delafield, pub 1937. I doubt anyone here will be acquainted with the never-out-of-print Diary of a Provincial Lady, the twee semi-fictional journal of a genteel upper middle-class lady living with her family in rural Devon. I like the Wiki detail that on moving to Devon: "At the initial meeting of the Kentisbeare Women's Institute, Delafield was unanimously elected president [of course she was], and remained so until she died.' .
I picked up a copy of Straw without Bricks for 25p, and the first and possibly only edition being something of a rarity, it's apparently now worth £40. Delafield (Mrs Dashwood) was persuaded - against her inclinations - by her publisher to visit Russia and work there for six months in 1936. Improbably she lived and worked on a collective farm.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostA curiosity. Straw without Bricks: I visit Soviet Russia by EM Delafield, pub 1937.
I'm reading Middlemarch, as if for the first time.
For John Banville admirers (Richard B?) there's a piece in today's Observer Review: Books.
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Originally posted by Padraig View PostFor John Banville admirers (Richard B?) there's a piece in today's Observer Review: Books.
I just finished a recent novel by an author I hadn't previously heard of: Chris Beckett (no relation). It's called Tomorrow, and it's one of the most original pieces of fiction I've read for a while, up there with other recent and more generally acclaimed favourites like Susanna Clarke's Piranesi, Madeline Miller's Circe and Ishiguro's Klara and the Sun.
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