Just started Colditz by Ben Macintyre. I had it for Christmas 2022 but only now got round to reading it!
What are you reading now?
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Originally posted by Belgrove View PostEvery decade or so I re-read Robert Irwin’s Arabian Nightmare in the vain hope of disentangling the real from the dream worlds it creates, and fail. ... Irwin is a specialist of Arabian literature and has written a scholarly tome on The Thousand and One Nights, which is clearly a model for the novel’s nested dreamscapes.
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Originally posted by Belgrove View PostEvery decade or so I re-read Robert Irwin’s Arabian Nightmare in the vain hope of disentangling the real from the dream worlds it creates, and fail.
I had an 'Arabian Nights' period when I was based in the Middle East - Robert Irwin's The Arabian Nights : A Companion was invaluable
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Originally posted by Belgrove View PostSad to learn that Irwin died earlier this year.
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostJust started Colditz by Ben Macintyre. I had it for Christmas 2022 but only now got round to reading it!"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by groovydavidii View PostPercival Everett’s novel ”Erasure,” a hilarious plot, narrated at an acerbic witty pitch. Now a major film–“American Fiction.”
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Not right now, as only just ordered and due next week.
Somehow this passed me by:
The Cambridge Stravinsky Encyclopedia: buy this book online. Published by Cambridge University Press. Editor: Campbell, Edward. Editor: O'Hagan, Peter.
I'm astounded at the price difference between the hardback (£126) and paperback (£28) editions, but no doubt ts could explain.
Presumably once the initial print run has been done/sold, it's time to consider wider circulation at a much reduced price.
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'Great Morning' I think was my favourite. All four volumes are beautifully-written and his depiction of his father and Henry Moat is a classic of literature in a way. It's only fair to point out that Sacheverell Sitwell claimed repeatedly that Osbert's portrait of their father was inaccurate and that Sir George was a kinder, more pleasant man than Osbert implies. Of course one does not expect autobiographies to be strictly accurate, let alone 'the whole truth', and particularly when it comes to a son describing his father, well-exemplified by Matthew Spender's character-assassination of his own famous father in 'A House in St. John's Wood' , for all that it is a delightful read. I may say that that is the main reason I've delayed writing mine; the old boy is no longer here to put his side of the story.
I'm coming to the end of a re-read of Indiana, George Sand's first novel . It's a very odd book and I can't say I found it as enjoyable as Trollope, but I think it did me good to read it ; like listening to Womans Hour, it's a wayof broadening one's horizons.
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