Originally posted by Petrushka
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What are you reading now?
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clive heath
On a recent visit to Tuscany to pick olives (our labour was not needed because of the fly that has attacked olive trees Europe-wide as you may have read in the papers recently) we spent one of our free days visiting "La Foce", a residence with gardens designed by Cecil Pinsent. We bought there a book "War in Val d'Orcia" which is a diary of the events in and around the villa during 1943/4. As regular visitors to this part of Tuscany (between Montalcino and Montepulciano roughly) it was salutary to read of the deprivations caused by the bombing by the Allies, the Italian political chicanery, the Germans who were turned from allies to occupiers and culminating, after the British had arrived and the Germans were retreating north, in the appalling behaviour of the Goums. Maybe nothing compared to the Blitz but the fortitude and cunning of the owners of the house in giving aid to refugee children from Genoa and Turin, to escaped prisoners of any and all nationalities, and to the farmers on their estate makes for "a gripping read".
I'm also reading on line "Paul Ferroll" by Catherine Clive which was quite notorious in its day. Published in 1855, it could be described as an early sensation novel with a strong element of psychological drama. Muscular damage meant that the authoress had to use a stick to get about from an early age and she was also not a looker. By a Hardy-esque set of circumstances she ended as "Lady of the Manor", the property being Whitfield in Herefordshire, home of descendants of Clive of India. She produced a considerable amount of verse published under a pseudonym ("V") some of which was well received .
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Originally posted by Stanfordian View PostI'm reading the most stunningly amazing endurance story I could ever imagine. It's a true WW2 story about Jan Baalsrud a British trained Norwegian soldier escaping from the Germans. It's titled 'Escape Alone' (a perfectly fine children's edition) or 'We Die Alone' by David Howarth."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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I'm currently reading Nairn's London, a book of impressions about London and its buildings derived from Ian Nairn's travels through it in the 1960s. It reads like a piece of cultural history now, with so many of the places he describes having undergone complete transformation, but is still interesting for the picture it paints of that city and that time and also for Nairn's idiosyncratic approach, intensely interested in the unusual, the characterful, the personal, the communal life of buildings and places (including not a few pubs). Nairn was a sort of early forerunner of Jonathan Meades in his approach (and Meades is a great admirer of his work), though his prose style is more earthy and punchy than Meades', with unpredictable insights and arresting phrases. I recommend this, especially to those who knew and lived through the London of that period as I did not:
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Anna
Originally posted by Petrushka View PostCharles Dickens: A Life by Claire Tomalin.
I've read a few Dickens biographies over the years but this is head and shoulders above the rest. A brilliant read.
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostCharles Dickens: A Life by Claire Tomalin.
I've read a few Dickens biographies over the years but this is head and shoulders above the rest. A brilliant read."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostFinished this a couple of days ago. Great read but she does give some of the novels a bit of a critical pasting. I came away admiring the life but not that enthused about picking up the novels if truth be told.
By coincidence, I've just finished A Christmas Carol - it's been about twenty years since I last read it, and there are so many details that I'd forgotten, including (unbelievably) this gem:
In came a fiddler with a music-book, and went up to the lofty desk, and made an orchestra of it, and tuned like fifty stomachaches.
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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