Originally posted by vinteuil
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What are you reading now?
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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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Plots & Parallel Powers.
I have just read an unusual and good novel on the Gunpowder Plot. by Robert Neville.
I think the thing I noticed about it was how well written it is and I guess you would call it a literary kind of novel.
There are some actual and fictional characters in it. I liked an old wizard that he invents called Vasco. What I would say is that as a novel it does look at the plot from a deeper an even an inside way, which I found very unusual. A rare and interesting read.
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Anyone here read the Mortdecai Trilogy by Kyril Bonfiglioli? I was put onto it by a German singing colleague and it's wonderful. Article about it here http://www.economist.com/blogs/prosp...tdecai_trilogy
I'm reading it on my Kindle but am definitely going to buy a proper copy for future re-reads.
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Originally posted by Chris Watson View PostAnyone here read the Mortdecai Trilogy by Kyril Bonfiglioli? .
Originally posted by vinteuil View PostKyril Bonfiglioli, anyone? - The Mortdecai Trilogy - where the central character is a cross between a Bertie Wooster with the brain of Jeeves, Raffles, and Falstaff...
"It was still only nine o'clock when I set off on the last leg of my journey, feeling old and dirty and incapable. You probably know the feeling if you are over eighteen."
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Originally posted by Thropplenoggin View PostOuf! Have we just saved ourselves 1200 pages of indigestible omphaloskepsis, FF?
To think, 22 years, and all Musil got out of it was a doorstop.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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... very struck by aeolium's comment :
"Originally posted by aeolium View PostI sometimes think long Mitteleuropean novels acquire a spurious and undeserved gravitas simply by virtue of being long and Mitteleuropean. I was put off reading anything Mitteleuropean for quite a long time after enduring Musil's The Man Without Qualities
If you can't face the 1770 pages of the Musil, or even the 1330 pages of Heimito von Doderer's "The Demons", - you might like to think of that lightweight, Hermann Broch's "The Sleepwalkers", a paltry 648 pp...
Enjoy!
EDIT - or even :
Originally posted by vinteuil View Post- Miklós Bánffy's Transylvanian Trilogy - (They Were Counted, They Were Found Wanting, They Were Divided), just published in Everyman's Library.
There is a tempting blurb : "an elegy on empire to rival Joseph Roth's, with the epic sweep and drama of Tolstoy and a tinge of Proustian nostalgia. Yet the blend of criticism, compassion, and humour is all his own. An undoubted twentieth century classic."
I think I'm up for another plunge into the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Empire - but it is some 1,450 pages...
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... very struck by aeolium's comment :
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I confess to having several of these on the shelves. Mostly unread, but they do look good...
If you can't face the 1770 pages of the Musil, or even the 1330 pages of Heimito von Doderer's "The Demons", - you might like to think of that lightweight, Hermann Broch's "The Sleepwalkers", a paltry 648 pp...
Enjoy!It loved to happen. -- Marcus Aurelius
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostI'd not heard of this work/author french frank and I look forward to hearing how it goes in due course.
I turn instead to 'Closely Observed Trains' by Bohumil Hrabal, which in comparison is a picnic.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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amateur51
Originally posted by Thropplenoggin View PostI sampled Broch's The Death of Virgil via the Big River folk. It's stream-of-consciousness writ large, eschewing paragraphs a la Thomas Bernhard...I was overwhelmingly underwhelmed. 'Meh', I bleated. 'Meh, and thrice, meh.'
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amateur51
Originally posted by french frank View PostThus Kaputt by Curzio Malaparte. I have to confess that after approximately half of it, I could face no more. Kaputt, as far as I'm concerned. Too harrowing. Not recommended unless you can stomach nonchalant, mindless inhumanity.
I turn instead to 'Closely Observed Trains' by Bohumil Hrabal, which in comparison is a picnic.
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