If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
Just finished re-reading : christ recrucified by nikos kazantzakis, and Zorba the Greek [by the same author]....two of my favourite books, they always hit the spot....full of vitality....a great writer in my opinion....
Just finished William Dalyrymples : Return of a King, about the disasterous first Afghan War....what a arrogant nation we were/are .... the egos and machiavellian thrusting of the British elite in 1840's
Just finished William Dalyrymples : Return of a King, about the disasterous first Afghan War....what a arrogant nation we were/are .... the egos and machiavellian thrusting of the British elite in 1840's
I agree eighth0 - should be required reading for all politicians with interventionist ambitions
It's very short, and I was reminded of the comic description (strange thing, humour ) of Miloš's grandfather, the professional hypnotist, standing in front of the advancing convoy of German tanks as it rolls into the village and 'spraying with his eyes' the thought, 'Turn round and go back'.
The film doesn't sound quite the same as the book.
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.
Not yet, but I have handled it 'live' and it weighs a fair bit
Tempted but like you Throppers I'd like to hear from someone who's read it
Currently wending my leisurely way through the final volume of Henri-Louis de la Grange's Mahler biography with Mitchell still to go! Weighty tomes all. Couldn't manage another one just now.
"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
Currently wending my leisurely way through the final volume of Henri-Louis de la Grange's Mahler biography with Mitchell still to go! Weighty tomes all. Couldn't manage another one just now.
That strikes me as a huge effort, Pet both in terms of volume of reading and cost - well done!
Just finished Vol 3 of Alan Walker's magnificent biography of Liszt. The fourth biography of him I've read - a composer who has always fascinated and puzzled me, both as man and musician.
I read Ernest Newman's disgraceful and wholly misleading character assassination "The Man Liszt" many years ago, and more recently inherited an old copy of Sacheverell Sitwell's affectionate but similarly inaccurate one. Earlier this year I read Eleanor Perenyi's, picked up in a second hand bookshop, again loads of inaccuracies, no good on the music, and it stops dead at the end of the Weimar years in 1861, with a large chunk of Liszt's life and work still to come. I'm grateful to ostuni, up-thread, for alerting me to the Walker which somehow I'd missed. At last Liszt leaps into focus, over three fine volumes, the seeming mysteries and inconsistencies in his life making sense at last. The scholarship is immense, many topics which would slow down the narrative are continued in absorbing footnotes. A central, pivotal figure in 19th century musical history - the importance of his relationships with Berlioz and Wagner cannot be exaggerated.
Comment