Originally posted by french frank
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What are you reading now?
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Just finished Arthur Ransome’s non-fiction tribute, Bohemia in London (1907), which he published when he was only 23 and just starting to make a name for himself. It paints a considerably cheerier picture of the New Grub Street lifestyle than Gissing does in his famous novel (but then, Gissing really piles on the misery).
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An item of news from Australia last week reminded me of John Lanchester’s debut novel The Debt to Pleasure, which I am re-reading (again) with pleasure. Ostensibly a seasonal recipe book, it turns into something very different. It’s laugh out loud funny (the recipe for Lemon Tart is priceless).
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Originally posted by smittims View Post'Growing', Leonard Woolf's memoir of his year in Ceylon at the start of the twentieth century. Written up to sixty years after the events it describes, I imagine it gave him some pleasure; today it's a valuable picture of a vanished era.
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Originally posted by Belgrove View PostAn item of news from Australia last week reminded me of John Lanchester’s debut novel The Debt to Pleasure, which I am re-reading (again) with pleasure. Ostensibly a seasonal recipe book, it turns into something very different. It’s laugh out loud funny (the recipe for Lemon Tart is priceless).
Sadly, I don't think any of John Lanchester's subsequent works have lived up to earlier expectations
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Just started Guy Shrubsole's The Lost Rainforests of Britain. Apparently England/Britain has a large percentage of the world's existing temperate rainforests which require moderate temperatures and plenty of rain. I have become enthusiastic about reintroducing a rainforest to our Common - under which there are several streams and fresh water springs. Unfortunately the council seems to favour planting exotic ornamental species ('it depends what trees they have available') which might create something else. Apparently the sign of the remnants of temperate rainforest is the number of species (epiphytes - ferns, lungworts, liverworts, lichens) which grow on other species,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 smittims View PostHopefully a lot of woodland (and associated wildlife habitats) north of Birmingham will now be saved as HS2 has been cancelled. The Woodland Trust has been campaigning in this direction.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostHopefully a lot of woodland (and associated wildlife habitats) north of Birmingham will now be saved as HS2 has been cancelled. The Woodland Trust has been campaigning in this direction.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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... to accompany the current Maigret series with Bruno Cremer on Talking Pictures I am re-reading Maigret a Peur and l'Affaire Saint-Fiacre. I know that they are not as 'deep' as Simenon's romans durs - but I still find them very impressive, in terms of atmosphere, locality, psychology. I was struck by how closely the telly version of Maigret a Peur followed the book - almost all the dialogue was verbatim (even if it was filmed in the Ain rather than Fontenay-le-Comte.. )
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It's time I re-read some Walter Scott, probably the Antiquary as I've read it only once, unlike the famous Waverleys which are perennial favourites. Scott may be unfashionable today as he doesn't fit into today's waiting-for-the-next-text, channel-hopping instant gratification culture, but if one is willing to take the time he can be immensely rewarding.
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