Livros aleatórios da biblioteca de berthirsch
Einstein's Dreams de Alan Lightman
Souls on Fire de Elie Wiesel
Paris Trout (Contemporary American Fiction) de Pete Dexter
Saturday de Ian McEwen
Blood and Grits de Harry Crews
Enemies A Love Story de Issac Beshevis Singer
Anatomy of Restlessness de Bruce Chatwin
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amigos: fergarcia1966, lriley
bibliotecas interessantes: bookoholic13, bostonbibliophile, CarlosMcRey, chrisharpe, claudiadias, dougwood57, emily_morine, fergarcia1966, Grammath, John, LolaWalser, TallyDi, tamara_gm3, TheTwoDs, tomcatMurr
Autores no LibraryThing: Dara Horn (darahorn), David Liss (davidliss), Richard Price (rixsal)
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ColeçõesSua biblioteca (283), Por ler (3), Todas as coleções (283)
Resenhas59 resenhas
TagsJewish Fiction (23), American Fiction (21), Fiction (21), Short Stories (11), Argentina (10), poetry (9), Biography (8), Memoir (8), British Fiction (7), fiction (6) — ver todas as tags
Nuvensnuvem de tags, nuvem de autores
Grupos1001 Books to read before you die, A Pearl of Wisdom and Enlightenment, Alexander the Great, ¡Literatura Argentina!, Bellow, Bestsellers over the Years, Biographies, Memoirs and Autobiographies, BookMooching, Books Compared, Books in Books — mostrar todos os grupos
Autores favoritosPaul Auster, Saul Bellow, Roberto Bolaño, Jorge Luis Borges, Arthur A. Cohen, Leonard Cohen, Gregory Corso, Charles Dickens, Roddy Doyle, James Ellroy, Allen Ginsberg, Joseph Heller, Hermann Hesse, Nick Hornby, Jack Kerouac, Milan Kundera, Gabriel García Márquez, Tomas Eloy Martinez, Cormac McCarthy, Philip Roth, David Remnick, Isaac Bashevis Singer, John Steinbeck, Antonio Tabucchi, Edith Wharton (Favoritos em comum)
Sobre mimI was born in 1948 in New York City and am a product of NYC public education through graduate school; I hold a masters degree in social work and for the last 20+ years have treated combat vets with PTSD.
My interest in books goes way back, first hooked on the Landmark Series of books for kids and Tom Swift graduating then to [Harold Robbins] I fell big time for [A Stone For Danny Fisher], [the Carpetbaggers] and [Nevada Smith].
Wasn't long till I got into the beats- Ginsberg, Corso, Burroughs and Kerouac and ever since have had a wide interest in reading and have kept an active journal since 1980 with many stories, reminiscence, reportage and personal reflections.
Always interested to see what others are reading and to explore ideas and the written word. I consider my books to be among my most important possessions.
Sobre a minha bibliotecaAfter my last move I had to wean my library and now have a smaller library made up of long time favorites and books intending to read. As I catalogue I am more aware that my interests are for contemporary american and british fiction, eastern european fiction, latin american fiction, history and memoirs.
Recent heightened interest in South America, specifically Argentina. Also long time interest in Jewish themes. Sports fan.
Adesão
LibraryThing Primeiros Resenhistas/Ofertas de Membros
LocalizaçãoNew York City and Buenos Aires
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yahoo.com
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URLs
http://www.librarything.com/profile/berthirsch (perfil)
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Conhecimento CompartilhadoSéries (25), Prêmios (145), Personagens (507), Lugares (118)
Membro desdeJul 6, 2006
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berthirsch resenhados, avaliados, adicionados:City of Thieves: A Novel de David Benioff (ler resenha) berthirsch avaliado, resenhado, adicionado:The Massacre of the Jews of Lithuania de Karen Sutton (ler resenha) | berthirsch avaliou:The Tao of Leadership: Lao Tzu's Tao Te Ching Adapted for a New Age de John Heider ![]() berthirsch avaliado, resenhado, adicionado:Strange Ways; of fremde Vegn de Rokhl Faygenberg (ler resenha) |





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Anyway I'm reading three books now--a re-read of David Beresford's Ten Men dead--which is about the 1981 Irish hunger strike in Long Kesh prison (about 80 pages to go)--Philip Roth's I married a communist (almost half done) and Ian McEwan's Enduring love (about half done). For xmas--I've got a few for myself--which include Buddha's backpack/A brief history of the car bomb (that one will be coming maybe after the 25th)--books by Manuel Vazquez Montalban, Jane Urquhart, Leighton Gage and Stuart Neville. Lot of stuff coming out in January/February including Bolano's Monsieur Pain and a short one by Louis Paul Boon. I'm also going to get Echenoz's Running sooner or later and I'm forgetting a couple others as well.
Don't know if I've ever mentioned Luther Blissett or Wu Ming to you. Blissett was a group of 4 Italian novelists working in collaboration on a historical novel Q set during the European reformation. I haven't read it yet but I have read Wu Ming's Manituana. Wu Ming is a group of 5 Italian novelists including the 4 who used to write as Luther Blissett. Manituana is a historical novel set in New York State beginning just prior to the American Revolutionary war and revolves around Iroquoisan historical figures particularly Joseph Brant who fought for the British. It was really excellnet. A lot of interesting historical stuff about upstate New York.
Anyway I'm not sure of your location right now or I might have sent you something. If you want I could even get you a Manituana but I'll need an address. I'll be back on half.com today trying to sell some of Tara's old textbooks. She had a very good first semester but she gets a little homesick.
escrito por lriley, às 9:07 am (EST) , Dec 20, 2009
escrito por lriley, às 1:09 pm (EST) , Dec 12, 2009
escrito por lriley, às 5:12 pm (EST) , Dec 11, 2009
Bill Bryson
A Short istory of Nearly Everything,
complemented by the Big Bang
Brian Greene's The Fabric of the Cosmos
which I did not understand at all...only got definitins of things I should understand
public library discard
Last chance thrift store
Star Guide by Kweeos
I am also reading a high school world history textbook to help my granddaughter...last niggt amazing take on exploration...Colubus and all that...who would have thought Ming dyasty going on the silver standard affected silver miners in Japan and Bolvia, trading in the Phillipines,and farmers prices in China.
Thanks for asking
escrito por carterchristian1, às 1:50 pm (EST) , Nov 16, 2009
My husband, Zeera (Zee) Charnoe, and I joined librarything a few days ago.
I've been reading the posts you made at the Humanities group topics (altered states)
and I've enjoyed reading your home page at librarything.
I've only catalogued 200 of about 4,000 books and journals we have.
We share many similar books and authors.
I am helped by everything Zee has ever written or spoken.
His source of inspiration offers purpose and hope for the soul.
I have had the pleasure of being his student, partner and assistant for 21+ years.
Zee has taught and studied gnosis, gnostic writings, Huna, Zen, Zen meditation, Tibetan Buddhism, hypnosis,
and a wide range of subjects and disciplines.
He was a physics professor of optics and acoustics, in Denmark.
He has been the CEO of numerous organizations dedicated
to environmental products and services (Life Essential Systems).
There are tens of thousands of pages
of short writings and short books at his website:
http://ecophysics.org
There are four actual books there,
with numerous more writings and books in process:
1. What Life Is and What Life Is For
2. Anaclysm
3. The Soul of a Poet-Philosopher
(poetry and short stories)
4. Language, Literacy and Intelligence:
Made For Each Other ! ? (1986 thesis) (draft)
There are also hundreds of audio recordings
of lectures, meditations and hypnosis scripts,
that are available on DVD's,
and are played (and archived) at a webcast:
ANACLYSM radio program
www.blogtalkradio.com
We live a very quiet, secluded life,
surrounded by plants and books.
We very much like to exchange
with others of like mind,
who seek to connect to a greater scheme.
Zee continues to write.
I would be happy to e-mail you current writings, as they become available,
if you are interested.
Thank you for your attention.
Kind regards,
Jennifer Gray Charnoe (ecohealth2003)
Zee Charnoe (ZeeCharnoe)
escrito por ecohealth2003, às 7:40 pm (EST) , Nov 15, 2009
http://news10now.com/cny-news-1013-conte...
escrito por lriley, às 5:01 pm (EST) , Oct 27, 2009
http://www.complete-review.com/new/new.h...
escrito por lriley, às 5:15 pm (EST) , Oct 7, 2009
No problem! Simply go to the "Edit Profile" section. From here you will be able to change your home location. To change your address for the member giveaways, simply visit http://www.librarything.com/er/profile to change your address. I hope this helps but please let me know if there is anything else I can help you with!
Cheers,
Dan
escrito por LibThingDan, às 2:14 pm (EST) , Oct 7, 2009
There's another novel by an Iraqi Shimon Ballas called 'Outcast' which is interesting. The book is narrated by a character named Haroun Soussan--a jewish convert to Islam and it covers a period going back into the 30's into the Saddam Hussein years where he's a civil engineer and a historian of a book called The Jews and history. I'm not very far into that either but I like the measured tone of the narration.
escrito por lriley, às 1:45 pm (EST) , Oct 7, 2009
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/new...
escrito por lriley, às 11:12 am (EST) , Oct 6, 2009
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20091002/stag...
escrito por lriley, às 2:59 pm (EST) , Oct 4, 2009
escrito por lriley, às 11:39 pm (EST) , Oct 3, 2009
escrito por carterchristian1, às 9:36 am (EST) , Sep 3, 2009
escrito por carterchristian1, às 9:36 am (EST) , Sep 3, 2009
Just letting you know that I have posted my review of 'Hope Abandoned' on my Club Read thread. My thread is here. I will also post a slightly edited one on the book's profile page.
Andy
escrito por depressaholic, às 12:49 pm (EST) , Sep 2, 2009
escrito por etrainer, às 7:02 pm (EST) , Aug 29, 2009
escrito por englishrose60, às 1:38 pm (EST) , Aug 26, 2009
We went online today and picked up some of her books for her Modern Jewish History course: There are 7 altogether for that course. We ordered 4: Out of Egypt--(memoir)--Aciman, The bread givers (novel)--Yezierka, The jew in the modern world (history)--Mendes Flohr and In the land of Israel by the world famous Amos Oz. The other 3 are History of the jews in modern times--Gartner, Holocaust--Niewyk and Between the Yeshiva world--Shapiro.
escrito por lriley, às 11:37 pm (EST) , Aug 15, 2009
Anyway what I'm reading right now--including Cultural Amnesia--about two thirds through that--a lot of stuff about the holocaust also about Stalin's mass murder sprees. Reading Marcus Zusak's 'The Book thief' which is nominally slotted as Young Adult fiction but I think that's a misnomer. It kind of bears a relationship to Gunter Grass's Tin Drum. It's very good. Also I'm re-reading J. M. Coetzee's Foe and have started on Martin Estrada's (a New York City born Puerto Rican poet)--Rebellion is the circle of a lover's hands. It's been a while since I've been reading four books at once. To be honest Coetzee (a favorite of mine) is the one in the bunch I'm struggling a little with.
Heading in a Latin American direction we have three that I hope to get to in the next month or so. An Argentine crime novelist Sergio Bizzio's 'Rage' which is being made into a movie starring Guillermo del Toro. A Mexican crime writer Enrique Serna--'Fear of Animals' and Vargas Llosa's Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter which jumps up the list after reading MVL's bio in Cultural Amnesia.
I'll have to look up 'Twenty fragments of a ravenous youth'--John's got me looking up Vollmann's 'Hotel Europe' as well.
escrito por lriley, às 1:27 pm (EST) , Aug 15, 2009
Reading 'Cultural Amnesia' by a Clive James--a 100+ biographical synopses of figures mostly from the 20th century. Some more obscure than others. A number of victims of Hitler's and Stalin's regimes. Also a number of literary figures including--Kafka, Proust, Camus, Borges, Sabato, Vargas Llosa, Celan, Akhmatova, Mailer, Freud, Gombrowicz, Thomas Mann, Paz, Rilke, Sartre, Saramago, Zweig. Jazz musicians, politicians, actors, historians, dictators, nazi sympathizers. It's very interesting and if you find the time you might want to look and see.
Also finished Le Clezio's newly translated Desert.
escrito por lriley, às 9:13 am (EST) , Aug 4, 2009
escrito por lriley, às 12:35 pm (EST) , Jul 4, 2009
Anyway that one guy in club read--Kidzdoc completely blows me out of the water with the pace he has. The other thing is I steal a bit of time here and there at work--not enough so that it gets in the way of what I need to do but not everyone will have the same freedom. Of course I'm getting up at 1115 pm to go to work at 1230 am to get out at 9 am and they're pretty crappy hours and since those changes anyway I probably average 5-6 hours a sleep a day which isn't that good. FWIW it's a good living though.
escrito por lriley, às 11:30 pm (EST) , Jun 12, 2009
escrito por lriley, às 1:17 pm (EST) , Jun 11, 2009
Anyway you're own son (I kind of remember his name as Logan(?) seems to be right on target and that's what I'm really hoping for with my own.
Any plans for Buenos Aires in the future? I picked up this very interesting looking novel by a Peruvian writer Santiago Roncagliolo titled Red April. I think I'm going to be starting it tonight. It's a noir mystery with a serial killer--and the background is the Fujimori regime of government corruption, Shining path terrorists and right wing death squads. The Argentine writers I've read recently are Cesar Aira and Alicia Borinsky. Both books were pretty good but I have an idea they were not their best and I think I'll be getting back in the near future.
Just snagged as well a book from LT's early reviewers--The spiders of Allah by one James Hider--a non fiction looking into middle eastern fundamentalism--that looks pretty interesting as well. Hope it shows up soon.
escrito por lriley, às 5:31 pm (EST) , May 28, 2009
Anyway his interests are really in mathematics and sciences and those are things he does very well in. He also is excellent at art--particularly drawing--I think architect but he'll smirk at that. He doesn't really think much of that. He does not take art seriously. Alfred U. is about an hour or two west of here and that might be a good school for him. Ithaca College he has some interest in. An offshoot of Syracuse University--through Suny (Syracuse is not actually a Suny school) offers a degree in forestry--which he seems to be enthusiastic about. Whatever he choose and wherever he goes we are going to be looking at the kind of support those schools can offer him. I think if he can get through a first year away and passes his classes he'll be on his way--but that first year is going to be so important for his psyche and for ours. Anyway that is pretty much my thoughts at this point in time. There may be a few more schools we look at but he will undoubtedly be in state as well--within in a couple hours anyway.
escrito por lriley, às 2:04 pm (EST) , May 21, 2009
escrito por lriley, às 2:08 pm (EST) , May 20, 2009
escrito por lriley, às 1:00 pm (EST) , May 1, 2009
escrito por lriley, às 9:42 am (EST) , Apr 29, 2009
Once on Montevideo Avenue
A young journalist believes he recognizes Borges
Pardon me sir, Are you Borges?
And the venerable old man replied
Some of the time...
On another occasion someone rang his apartment bell
It's a man of about 30 years of age
He's told by Norman Thomas di Giovanni
Who in those days was his secretary
How so? replied Borges
Are there still people 30 years old?
That was Borges
One time someone approached him
While he was strolling through the Florida quarter
Excuse me Mr. Borges
Could I ask you a question?
You already have!
Responded the venerable old man
And hurried away
escrito por lriley, às 4:17 pm (EST) , Apr 16, 2009
Anyway--I read Englander's Argentine novel right after it came out and he went straight into my favorites list here. Great book. I think you would like Montalban's book. He was a very literate crime novelist--he had a quirky private detective name of Pepe Carvalho--an ex-con, ex-communist, ex-CIA--and was quite the gourmand--lots of recipes with quite a bit of detail--this one being set in Argentina you might find some local dishes.
escrito por lriley, às 3:10 pm (EST) , Apr 16, 2009
On Aira--probably I'll start that in the next week or so. Just finished an Argentine writer today--Mean woman--Alicia Borinsky. It was interesting. A kind of strange book in a way--it draws a bit on the Peron era and a bit on the military dictatorship era. She has a quirky way of putting things which is often quite amusing.
Speaking of Argentina some more--ever read Manuel Vazquez Montalban's Buenos Aires Quintet?
Anyway to Tara's college sweepstakes contest. Her second visit to Hobart she didn't care for much. That is the most high falutin' one of them all and probably the one I preferred most because I think it would challenge her the most--more in a social than an academic sense though--many of Hobart's kids are prep and private school kids who may be ahead a bit on academics but I don't think that will be that big of a problem. We went back to Suny Geneseo yesterday (very high marks in Kiplinger's and US News etc) and she liked that a lot better. Tomorrow Mae (I work) takes her to Suny Binghamton and on Saturday back to Ithaca College. After that she makes her decision.
escrito por lriley, às 4:37 pm (EST) , Apr 15, 2009
Anyway Tara is still undecided on what school. She revisited Hobart on Sunday. Off to Suny Geneseo this coming tuesday the 14th, Suny Binghamton on the 16th and Ithaca College on the 18th. She has until May 1.
escrito por lriley, às 4:22 pm (EST) , Apr 8, 2009
Was wondering if you'd be interested in reviewing my new novel and posting your comments here as well as a few other book-related sites. Saw you liked Paris Trout, and I thought you might like my novel since it's also southern and a bit dark. I could e-mail you the novel in an e-book format if you'd like. Let me know if you're interested. Here's a link to a summary in case you're interested:
http://christophertusa.com/blog/?page_id...
Thanks,
Chris
escrito por cmtusa, às 9:17 am (EST) , Mar 20, 2009
Beautiful day.
escrito por lriley, às 3:22 pm (EST) , Mar 15, 2009
SUNY Binghamton is a great school no doubt about it and I wouldn't mind seeing her go there at all. I really liked our campus visit there. I did not make the trip to SUNY Geneseo but it ranks on the same level and I have a sneaking suspicion that if push comes to shove she likes Geneseo a little better. That's just my impression though. If I were to guess though it will be either Geneseo or Hobart with Suny Binghamton and Ithaca College the next two. If I were to root for one in particular it would be Hobart which would be a bit more expensive but all in all I think it would be the one she would benefit the most from. Whatever she does choose they're all very good ones.
escrito por lriley, às 5:28 pm (EST) , Mar 8, 2009
No decisions yet on the college front. She hasn't heard back from SUNY Binghamton yet but all the other schools--Hobart, Keuka College, Ithaca College, SUNY Geneseo and SUNY Oswego have accepted her.
Other than that things are quiet. The Rangers beat Boston today. I liked Renney a lot but the new coach Tortorella seems to be getting a much better effort out of them. This would be a team that I could go watch live. Not the February version. It's too late now though--there is always next year.
Reading two books now--Assia Djebar's Fantasia and Karen Connelly's The Lizard cage. Not very far into either but so far they're both very good. Djebar's novel set in her native Algeria segues between the present and the historical nature of France's role in that nation. Connelly's novel is set in present day Burma (Myanmar) is about the military dictatorship.
escrito por lriley, às 3:48 pm (EST) , Mar 8, 2009
I just posted The Moldavian Pimp on BookMooch and noticed that you had it wishlisted there. I'm reading it now and have it reserved for you if you want it. You'll just need to go there to select it, and I can have it in the mail to you in about a week.
I'm reading it for the Argentine Reading Globally theme. The book is small, but great!! More about it later on the group thread. If you don't want it, I'll just remove your name from the reservation list and send it along to someone else.
http://www.bookmooch.com/m/detail/184343...
Best,
SqueakyChu
escrito por SqueakyChu, às 10:44 pm (EST) , Mar 1, 2009
escrito por lriley, às 4:45 pm (EST) , Feb 18, 2009
Anyway I got the two Roth books today--Everyman and Indignation. They look good.
escrito por lriley, às 2:28 pm (EST) , Jan 26, 2009
We've been not too ostenatious since the economy started tanking (not that I think we ever were)--it's not necessarily just prices etc.--it's the downsizing going on--loss of jobs which seems to be effecting everything, and the college thing that is keeping us a bit more scrupulous. So it has a bit to do with the timing as well. I think both of us are safe as far as our jobs are concerned though the atmosphere coming from the above is much nastier than it has been.
2666 is brilliant and it's under 900 pages--as in 898. I'm about 300 pages in and if anything it's even better than the Savage Detectives. I just bought the 3 volume set of 2666 as well because the hardcover is just a bit too bulky to take to work. Sometimes this rating system of 5 stars just doesn't seem enough. 2666 reads very well. It's massive but it's not going to take forever. Infinite Jest was massive and did take forever. Even so it was a great, great book and I have since added a Wallace short story collection--Oblivion. I think you would be interested in his take on the various medications--legal and otherwise and the variety of states of the drug and alcohol abusers he has in his halfway house.
I'll have to look into the Argentinian thread--though probably tomorrow--new work hours and I'll be off to bed soon. I've been mostly at this club read 2009 group. It's interesting--a lot of different perspectives. I'm charting everything I've read so far this year there.
escrito por lriley, às 6:00 pm (EST) , Jan 25, 2009
Anyway Wao was great and I did a review on that a few days ago. Now I'm working on Bolano's 2666, Pelevin's A werewolf problem in central Russia and Ngugi's A grain of wheat.
escrito por lriley, às 12:01 am (EST) , Jan 25, 2009
Anyway I finally after months finished Wallace's Infinite Jest. I think it's shot to the top of my favorite American novel of all time. It's a great book.
escrito por lriley, às 4:35 pm (EST) , Jan 15, 2009
escrito por lriley, às 4:03 pm (EST) , Jan 6, 2009
escrito por lriley, às 2:48 pm (EST) , Jan 6, 2009
escrito por lriley, às 3:13 pm (EST) , Dec 31, 2008
I'm still working on Wallace's Infinite Jest. Also an Icelandic crime novel--Silence of the Grave (very good) by Arnaldur Indridason and Elfriede Jelinek's Lust. Once I've finished the Wallace book I'm heading towards 2666. That should take a while as well.
Post Office is going to punish us again--my hours will be changing and probably days off as well--though the days off are my choice. I'll be going in at 1230 am instead of 3 am. I really don't know if it matters much but they want to encourage as many of us as possible to retire early and this is the kind of stuff they think of. It's not that retiring is a bad idea--it's just that their timing is off. Another 6 years or so. I'm a glutton when it comes to punishment.
escrito por lriley, às 2:31 am (EST) , Dec 30, 2008
The Global Reading group is quite fun and very casual. Each month we have a themed read. Each of us selects our own book to read. Then we talk with others about the book we each chose and mainly talk about those things that may be of interest to others or may be a common thread in all of our books. I hope you come to join us.!
Take a look at some of the other themes we've done in the past to get an idea of what a themed month is like.
http://www.librarything.com/groups/readi...
We could probably use your input as to what Argentine writers we should try!
Best,
SqueakyChu
escrito por SqueakyChu, às 9:31 pm (EST) , Dec 29, 2008
The next big project though is Bolano's 2666. I also have his poetry collection--Romantic dogs.
On Eggers--I've not read anything by him yet. What/who would you compare him to?
escrito por lriley, às 12:09 pm (EST) , Dec 26, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 6:05 am (EST) , Dec 25, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 12:51 pm (EST) , Dec 1, 2008
The college trips for me are very interesting even if I'm not there to do much. At Hobart I sat in a chair waiting out her interview--took about 40 minutes. From where I sat I could look out on Seneca Lake. When the other kids being interviewed were all off I talked with the other parents--one woman, one man. Both from New England. The man coached hockey on the side. The woman had been all over the country over the summer doing college trips. According to her this was No. 30 and the last one. It was also the one she liked best and being only a 6 hour journey--the closest to home. I was like 'Holy smokes'. I had the impressions hers, possibly even his were prep school kids.
Anyway Tara enjoyed the interview though the interviewer may have been as nervous as the interviewee. She's kind of leaning towards History and/or English. Her interviewer was a history major--something both of them went on about.
On Obama--he's inheriting this mess. I'm not sure I'm that jazzed about some of his cabinet selections. I'm currently embroiled in somewhat of an argument with the founder of this site over monies going towards the military and monies going towards education--pointing out what are priorities are now and what I think they should be in the future. I take from where I can. And like Nader or a Ron Paul I don't think we need to have military bases all over the planet (it's over 100 different countries). There are maybe two countries--Russia, China that can pose a real actual military threat to us though I don't think either has any current inclination. There are some stateless threats for sure. Anyway maintaining or increasing the military services is fine. I think national service is a good thing and they provide good training to young people. I'd be more inclined to take my cost cutting measures out on the corporations and contractors who feed at the public trough.
escrito por lriley, às 8:41 am (EST) , Nov 30, 2008
I took Tara up for an interview at Hobart--William Smith College (Geneva NY) on Monday for a one on one interview. She likes it but it's a Ivy connected school and very expensive--although it has a lot of endowment/scholarship money. It's a possibility depending on---$. I expect she'll put in an application there.
The economy as well is terrible at this time--well I'm pretty sure we would blame basically the same people. Politicians particularly republican ones. The financial markets. Rebuilding infastructure, creating alternative energies would be a great help. Reregulation of banking and finance. Barack has his work cut out for him. They've left him a colossal mess and I wonder if anybody will be able to turn it around anytime soon. It will be his job though and hopefully he can pull a couple rabbits out of the hat.
escrito por lriley, às 1:57 pm (EST) , Nov 26, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 1:24 pm (EST) , Nov 18, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 2:25 am (EST) , Nov 14, 2008
http://www.electoral-vote.com/evp2008/Pr...
If you scroll down Electoral-vote has senate and congressional polls they posted on November 1--three days before the election Begich is leading Stevens 58-36--Berkowitz is leading Young 53-44. Sometimes polls can be off but considering that Stevens and Begich were more or less deadlocked before Stevens' convictions and that post conviction the polls all started heading Begich's way--two--three days later it was 7--9 points--something just doesn't seem right. Young had been running behind the whole year as well mostly due to not having enough space anymore for all of the skeletons in his closet.
escrito por lriley, às 1:00 pm (EST) , Nov 10, 2008
There's something really screwy going on with the Alaskan elections if you ask me. With %'s of voters very high everywhere else--Alaska declined by 14% from '04 to '08 and with their most popular of all governors on the republican ticket? Steven's opponent had a big lead on him (9 pts if I remember right) two--three days before the election. I don't buy it.
escrito por lriley, às 1:20 pm (EST) , Nov 7, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 9:54 am (EST) , Nov 5, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 9:12 pm (EST) , Oct 26, 2008
Echenoz is noirish but is a fun read. He has a very sly understated sense of humor.
escrito por lriley, às 5:39 pm (EST) , Oct 23, 2008
http://www.fivethirtyeight.com/
escrito por lriley, às 1:21 pm (EST) , Oct 15, 2008
There's a Christopher Hitchens article linked in the Pro and Con group here at LT--the thread title--the last cries of a desperate campaign or something to that effect. The link comes at #131 and is really worth reading. Hitchens just lambast McCain for picking Palin and then turns his club on her. Lots and lots of blood and gore. The pro-war Hitchens is all for Obama.
escrito por lriley, às 1:15 pm (EST) , Oct 15, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 8:17 am (EST) , Oct 5, 2008
suzanne
escrito por srubinstein, às 10:41 pm (EST) , Oct 4, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 5:18 pm (EST) , Oct 3, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 3:35 pm (EST) , Sep 24, 2008
In any case--just an opinion but our economy is not diverse enough. It has gutted the manufacturing and Industrial base and put all its eggs into service and financial sectors. This was an idea which originally tracks back to the Reagan presidency of top down trickle down deregulated economics. The bailout to me seeks to maintain the same trickle down economy. For me that is the fundamental error. The more diverse economy which includes a strong manufacturing/industrial base is a bottom up economy. I would use a foundation argument. If you're going to build a house it's crucial to have a good foundation. The money they're asking for in the bailout has nothing to do with correcting the problem only in maintaining a failed ideology.
escrito por lriley, às 3:33 pm (EST) , Sep 24, 2008
Watching the Wall St. debacle. I just don't see giving them a $700 billion blank check.
escrito por lriley, às 7:16 pm (EST) , Sep 23, 2008
Yes, I read The tango singer (very good), the only fiction by Eloy Martinez I read so far; I have Santa Evita in the queue, and I read a collection of his essays, Requiem para un pais perdido. I went on a mini-Argentine binge before my visit, lots of Arlt, and I'm currently wallowing in Macedonio Fernandez, who's shaping up as another favourite. I started his Adriana Buenosayres, then went back to the beginning of complete works, and was surprised at how much I liked his psycho-philosophical essays (in Papeles antiguos).
Well, buen viaje to you--and again and again...
escrito por LolaWalser, às 1:03 pm (EST) , Sep 19, 2008
escrito por fergarcia1966, às 5:54 pm (EST) , Sep 18, 2008
Just a note to thank you for the two novels you recommended, by Bolano and Tabucchi. I loved the Tabucchi for its drole dialogue--especially the character, Don Fernando. The Bolano book was deeper and darker with a lot of references to Latin American writers, so it was more difficult reading. But the woman's voice was well done by Tabucchi. I am starting Bellow's Him With His Foot in His Mouth next. Still no conversation on the Bellow chat. Has he become an anachronism?
suzanne
escrito por srubinstein, às 11:35 am (EST) , Sep 18, 2008
Messi is an excellent player, one of the best players in the world at present. The problem with any Argentinian player is Diego Maradona, everyone is always compared to him, which isn't fair - he's one of the greatest ever, basically winning the 1986 World Cup single-handedly - he also scored the greatest world cup ever against England, beating half their team before scoring. I saw him play live a couple of times - once when he was 17, against Scotland at Hampden: he mesmerised the whole Scotland team, scored a goal in a 3-1 win and got a standing ovation from the home fans.
The star of the last rugby world was Argentian as well - Juan Martin Hernandez - he plays rugby with the same panache as Messi does football.
escrito por jargoneer, às 9:57 am (EST) , Sep 18, 2008
Of the Schools we've visited I think her mind goes something like No. 1 and 2 are Suny Geneseo and Suny Binghamton both of which have big big reputations for academics. 3. Suny Buffalo--which is very good as well and the most economical 4. Suny Oswego. She did not like St. John Fisher. A Suny Geneseo rep is going to be at her high school Sept. 25th. Suny Buffalo has some e-mail thing for her to look at. At the moment she has marching band which she goes to at least two nights a week and goes to competitions on the weekends--usually only one day--so there's not a lot of time for now. That's going to last until the end of October. She is going to have to start applying in November. That's the scenario as far as I know. Not having gone to college it's all kind of new to me as well.
Anyway hope your move back to NYC works out. Manhattan? Always an exciting place and will probably cut down a lot on traveling back and forth to work. We're not really sure if we're doing a NYC trip this year. At least if we need the time to do secondary visits to shcools etc. it might come out of that. Have to make sure that gets squared away.
By the way I still think Obama is going to win despite the turnaround in the polls. I told you though I was paranoid about the Palin choice. She strikes a nerve for a lot of people notwithstanding that she doesn't seem at all qualified, that her record his being constantly misrepresented and her core beliefs are divisive. I have a problem with a lot of the polls--the national ones the most--for instance when they say likely voters sometimes they mean voters who have voted in at least the last two elections which would disregard the massive amounts of young first time voters who tend to be behind Barack. There is a question also about those who rely only on celluar phones as opposed to the more traditional home phone. Beyond that McCain really offers nothing specific policy wise. Anyway I've been spewing a lot of my nonsense in the Pro and Con group and back to Tara for a moment--one of her AP classes this semester is Government and Politics (GOPO) and she can get really pissed over some issues. Definitely doesn't like some of her republican classmates opinions.
escrito por lriley, às 12:55 pm (EST) , Sep 11, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 4:08 pm (EST) , Sep 6, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 6:25 pm (EST) , Aug 30, 2008
We can look at the problems our nation is facing--and we can make projections what kind of problems they will be in the future if nothing is done to rectify thems--health care, energy, job losses/outsourcing, decline of manufacturing, deregulation and the financial crisis that has caused, bad trade bills--a potential population explosion, the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, the education mess, the affordability of things that we are going to need to have for us to progress into the future, the breaking down of our influence around the globe and at the end of the day there are still going to be people who ignore all that to vote for someone who believes in creationism, against abortion of any kind (I'm not a fan of how flippant a lot of people are on either side of this issue, gay marraige and whether or not someone will take away their squirrel rifle. McCain is betting on there still being a lot of them and he's betting on the resentment of a lot of Clinton supporters who feel they've been robbed.
escrito por lriley, às 12:33 pm (EST) , Aug 30, 2008
We live in interesting times. I'm walking taller today because of Barack Obama's speech last night. I've been following the convention, so have not given much time to my library, but I've put the two books you recommended at the top of my "to read" list. A friend just sent me an article from the September issue online of Harper's Magazine and lo and behold Vivian Gornick wrote about Bellow and Roth in an article she titled "Radiant Poison: Saul Bellow, Philip Roth, and the end of the Jew as metaphor." I need to reread it in order to really get her message (although I doubt she has changed her mind about either of them). I recently salvaged some books from the shelves of the local Salvation Army; among them a paperback version of Harold Robbins Never Love a Stranger, another book from my past. I'll keep you posted when I get to those reads.
suzanne
escrito por srubinstein, às 8:52 pm (EST) , Aug 29, 2008
I've been lax as well about reviewing. There's a few I could do--Assia Djebar, Aharon Appelfeld, Martin Amis. The political thing sticks in my craw as well. It is strange to me how a Clinton supporter could vote for McCain. There seems to be a mean spiritedness to it. I'm very concerned that we are going to waste another 4 years when we really need to be moving on fixing our economy, knocking down debt, fixing energy, health and education. These things can not be put off much longer. I do not like McCain's ballistic nature in foreign affairs either. They would make a virtue about being 'right about the surge' when they were wrong about everything else to do with the occupation of Iraq.
Anyway I just finished Raymond Queneau's 'Eyeseas'--one of my favorite writers and the founder of Oulipo which also included Georges Perec and Italo Calvino. Reading Richard Price's 'Samaritan' which is very good and Margaret Laurence's 'The Stone Angel'. When I finish the Laurence book I'll probably get into the Castellanos Moya book.
escrito por lriley, às 7:33 pm (EST) , Aug 25, 2008
Would have gotten to you sooner, but this has been a banner weekend with Biden joining Obama, the Olympics, and my granddaughter's eleventh birthday. I also wonder why more Bellow fans don't put their two cents in at the Bellow group site. I just reread his introduction to Allan Bloom's book The Closing of the American Mind. It was mostly about him and academia and just a little bit about Bloom (characteristic of Bellow). Just can't get a handle on him. Maybe that is part of what he was aiming for--now he's gone and it is a question for the ages. I've included everything but the kitchen sink in my library and I think back with some fondness to reading roughshod in my teens, Mickey Spillane, Herman Wouk. I remember being totally undone by Margorie Morningstar. Still, I also see that my adult library is predominately "whitebread" and I'm trying to extend myself cross culturally with some French authors as well as some African American authors and some Asian women authors. There are, of course, books that I somehow feel I've read, but can't completely remember and I don't include them (especially Henry James) because I think that would be cheating! I've been told to just keep reading and see how my library grows. Good to know that a solid reader like you is in the 'hood.'
suzanne
escrito por srubinstein, às 5:59 pm (EST) , Aug 24, 2008
Just looked through your library and found A Stone for Danny Fisher mentioned in your profile. I read that book when my older brother brought it home at age 15. That along with The Amboy Dukes. Basically I read anything I could lay my hands on then. Not that I am more discerning now. Glad to have a reply on the Bellow site. My favorite of his is Herzog.
escrito por srubinstein, às 1:48 pm (EST) , Aug 21, 2008
escrito por tamara_gm3, às 2:34 pm (EST) , Aug 15, 2008
Back to the NYC? That will be expensive too I suspect but it will probably cut down on all the going back and forth. At least the Strand will be close by.
escrito por lriley, às 12:24 pm (EST) , Aug 9, 2008
Quiet on the home front. My brother out in Seattle has successfully finished his cancer treatments--it is in remission. He's been having some arrhythmmia however. Angioplasty possibly in the future. He needs to keep away from the diet soda and beer--at least chuck the diet soda.
Suny Buffalo trip on the 25th.
escrito por lriley, às 2:39 am (EST) , Aug 7, 2008
Kingsley seems like a natural though for a Roth-like character.
By the way signed my daughter up for another visit today. We have Suny Binghamton on the 16th. Suny Buffalo on the 25th.
escrito por lriley, às 3:41 pm (EST) , Aug 4, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 12:57 pm (EST) , Aug 3, 2008
Justin is very smart but he is socially backward. A lot can happen in the next couple years still but it is a concern. He does not relish interaction with others. His best friend has asperger's as well--is much, much better dealing with the social aspects of it but is basically a C average student--also takes some medication and I believe ritalin is at least part of it--or maybe is all of it. I'm not sure if that helps him interact better--but we decided early on to stay away from medications.
escrito por lriley, às 2:22 am (EST) , Jul 31, 2008
A few thoughts--rather than send her to a community college and the one in Corning is very good--I'd rather her be an hour, two hours, three hours away and I'd rather her grow with her freshman year. Her average dropped a little this year but it was in the 93-94 range and she had a very difficult AP class which the Suny schools will give her credit for. On her finals she got the highest grade possible for that class. Her Sat scores are pretty high as well. She's been working part time this summer cleaning rooms at a local motel which is her first real job. She's been doing that for about a month. Her driving is a lot better but she still needs to get her license and she's not getting that much practice although I think if she took a test now it would be 50/50.
My son is going to be more of a problem. He'll be a high school junior this year. He has asperger's although he's very high functioning--he'll get 90's without trying but he's capable of much better and he knows it. He shies away from anything that he considers personal and will skip assignments and refuse to participate in things that venture into these areas. He is not motivated towards people things--would rather watch TV or play his gamecube all day and he very much limits what games he will play as well and he has trouble making friends. A photographic memory. Limited interests but when he is interested in something like ornithology he's a regular Mr. Professor. Though not very interested in birds I've had some amazing discussions with him about them. It may be a shame but he is the one that might wind up in the community college at least his first two years and Corning's does have a very good reputation. We're not sure he won't blow things off just because--we think we can maybe keep a better handle on things he does by being nearer but if he can pick up his weak areas in the next year or so maybe we'll change our minds. Anyway have to go--Tara needs a ride.
escrito por lriley, às 1:16 pm (EST) , Jul 30, 2008
Sorry for the delay in getting back to you. It's the first time I've been on in a while. Sure, I'd be into that, discussing books, life etc. Feel free to write me any time. Glad to meet you.
Julian
escrito por Julian_Gallo, às 7:01 pm (EST) , Jul 29, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 6:11 pm (EST) , Jul 25, 2008
The Madness and Shame article?--on Jane Mayer's new book. I'm afraid the Bush administration is chock full of operatives such as Mr. Addington. Seton Hall study 55% of Guantanamo prisoners--no hostile acts. Does that surprise me? Not really. It's important to them no doubt to have plenty of bodies whether guilty or not. There's a sordid history of US training of torturers in South America as you're probably aware. I ran into something a couple weeks ago which about one of the Guantanamo detainees--the information they got from him they used as linkage to tie Al Quaeda to Iraq prior to the invasion. We (as in some kind of US authority in the matter) had given this detainee we considered important to the Egyptians because of course 'we don't do torture'--that is except when we do. Anyway this guy told them everything they wanted to hear--so it was off to Iraq. Afterwards when it was clear it was all bs and they confronted him again he said something along the lines of--'I didn't know what they wanted. What did you want me to do? They were killing me.'
We've seen this stupidity for 8 years in any case. Beyond that there are a lot of jackasses with guns, badges and an official seal (to do whatever they feel like) working for the US government. Not all of them--I imagine there are many good people(undoubtedly the majority) but it's not hard to find and put in place those you can manipulate willingly or not to push an agenda. That's a mark of this administration. You ever read anything on the Sibil Edmonds whistleblower case? That's another one of thiers that you don't hear too much about and it's pretty hair raising too.
escrito por lriley, às 3:51 pm (EST) , Jul 24, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 3:20 pm (EST) , Jul 24, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 12:47 pm (EST) , Jul 23, 2008
For me there are some good signs and to borrow from Thomas L. Friedman's op-ed article right next to the Rich one--he points out that the high cost of gasoline could be a good thing if our politicians would start addressing alternatives. For me that is only one part of the equation though--and from a positive standpoint there are good signs that at least some automakers are getting it. With Mercedes Benz announcing no more production of fossil fuel driven cars by 2015--with GM throwing its weight and innovation behind an electric/gasoline hybrid the Volt which it plans to put on the market in the next couple years and with Toyota announcing it will start manufacturing the Prius at a plant in Mississippi. There will be a market for alternatives like never before. People will buy them if they make them and that will break Opec's grip on our economy. Put enough of these cars out on the highway and we'll see who is controlling who. It will be great for our enviroment as well. Five years from now things may look a lot better.
escrito por lriley, às 6:02 pm (EST) , Jul 20, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 12:29 pm (EST) , Jul 18, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 2:37 am (EST) , Jul 18, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 8:46 pm (EST) , Jul 9, 2008
escrito por chrisharpe, às 7:05 am (EST) , Jun 29, 2008
From there I've gone into Ted Morgan's My battle of Algiers about the French-Algerian colonial war of the 50's and 60's is part history--part memoir.
Auster may be on my shortlist again--Brooklyn Follies. On a maybe even shorter list may be Roth's Operation Shylock which I hope to read over my two week vacation which starts next week. We will be gone for a few days in early July on an Ottawa trip--and also a trip to the SUNY Oswego campus. The Richard's Price and Powers I'd like to get back at again soon and Denis Johnson as well. Waiting impatiently for Bolano's 2666--our South American/Argentine group has been very silent for a long while.
On another note I continue to follow the election closely. Barack is moving back towards the middle--some of that movement makes me grit my teeth a little. It's typical though of how campaigns tend to play out. The FISA battle going on shows the democratic party not holding onto the high ground. Very frustrating to see them compromising on privacy rights. It does look good for a win in November.
escrito por lriley, às 6:43 pm (EST) , Jun 24, 2008
Reading Stephen Kinzer's Overthrow--a history of American attempts at regime change. It's interesting. Dos Passos' The Big Money and Beckett's Stories and texts for nothing. Bolano's 2666 should be coming out soon and there's another shorter work by Bolano coming from New Directions in October/November.
escrito por lriley, às 2:01 am (EST) , Jun 20, 2008
http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200807/ge...
escrito por lriley, às 5:13 pm (EST) , Jun 19, 2008
escrito por TallyDi, às 7:39 pm (EST) , Jun 10, 2008
Here's McCain's version. 1. Identify the enemy-Iran. 2. Refuse to talk to them. All he needs to follow through on 3. is to be elected.
escrito por lriley, às 1:58 am (EST) , Jun 7, 2008
Finished Khoury's Gate of the Sun--it's a 5*.
escrito por lriley, às 8:59 pm (EST) , Jun 5, 2008
All fired up? Ready to go?
escrito por lriley, às 2:19 pm (EST) , Jun 4, 2008
Anyway it's good to hear from you. I'm wondering when you're going to make your next trip to Buenos Aires? We're heading up to Ottawa at the beginning of July. We're figuring on hitting a couple colleges along the way--my daughter Tara is heading into her senior year next year. I'm meeting up with another LT'er in Ottawa. It should be interesting and fun as well. I'm reading the Israeli poet Yehuda Amichai at the moment--Selected poetry--about two thirds of the way through. It's very good--I wouldn't say great though a handful of them reach into greatness. Also reading Elias Khoury's Gate of the Sun. Khoury is a Lebanese Christian--whose sympathies are to the left and this novel looks at the conflict between the Palestinians and Israeli's through Palestinian eyes--going all the way back and focusing a lot on the late 1940's. Whereever ones sympathies lie it is beautifully written--a very humane look at the dislocation of peoples. Also Banana Yoshimoto's Kitche--which I really don't care for much but everyone should read at least one chick-lit book a year.
escrito por lriley, às 1:23 pm (EST) , May 28, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 2:41 am (EST) , May 22, 2008
Now our country doesn't need to be wasting its time like that. According to the Pew Research center our population is going to increase from the 300 million mark in '06 to 400 million sometime around 2035. We have a 30 year window to figure out and implement what we need to do. Throwing away 4 years on McCain would be ridiculous as I'd expect the economy to continue to slide then. We need a visionary and I hope Obama is up to the task. I think he is our best hope at this point. That population increase means we are going to have to create not bleed jobs--create them in the millions. It will call for re-investment in manufacturing, industry and infastructure. It calls for the frequently heard new generation of engineers which means making education affordable. And we are going to have to solve our energy/transportation problems which means 1) becoming independent from the OPEC cartel and 2) working on mass transit solutions. And finally we are going to have to make health care affordable. There are going to be a lot of major interests--banking, multi-nationals etc. who are going to try to block all that.
Which brings us to the war. Beyond the senselessness of Iraq in particular--the loss of men, the injuries--permament and otherwise we cannot economically afford to build another nation when our own is falling apart--our currency devaluing. Instead of 'following Bin Laden to the gates of hell'--as far as we know he's in Pakistan--we made the sidetrip into Iraq. Bush's entire legacy depends on it now and McCain and his pals like Lieberman will not let it go. I think the critique that a McCain presidency will mean 4 more years of Bush will stick precisely because of Iraq more than any other factor. Seeing and hearing McCain make claims about the future as he did the other day that Iraq will be a stable democracy, that Bin Laden would be killed or captured by the end of his first term without going into the details such as how Bin Laden was going to die sitting safe and sound up in the secure tribal areas of northern Pakistan? What McCain is offering is the same old, same old and trying to pass himself off as a maverick independent--tying himself to the Bush legacy I don't see it happening.
escrito por lriley, às 7:34 am (EST) , May 18, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 5:36 pm (EST) , May 16, 2008
Reading the Echo makers by Richard Powers. A novel about a man who after nearly dying in a car accident suffers from Capgras syndrome. It's very interesting and you might like it--a lot in it about cognitive psychology. It won the National Book award for fiction in 06. Have also won another book in Early Reviewers Ethan Canin's America America.
Rangers lost--not much to say except 'Wait until next year!'
escrito por lriley, às 2:26 am (EST) , May 6, 2008
As for the Rangers we won last night--stayed up and watch the whole thing--kind of tired now though. I still don't think we have much of a chance--though winning the next game would bring it back to MSG with a chance for us to tie it. Jagr after a subpar regular season is playing awesome now.
escrito por lriley, às 1:45 pm (EST) , May 2, 2008
escrito por mmignano11, às 7:05 pm (EST) , Apr 29, 2008
http://www.complete-review.com/reviews/b...
escrito por lriley, às 3:53 pm (EST) , Apr 26, 2008
Rangers as you probably know won. Very happy about that. Rooting for Boston tonight. That would mean we get the winner of Philadelphia/Washingtion + home ice if it's Philly. Otherwise it's Pittsburgh.
escrito por lriley, às 6:03 pm (EST) , Apr 21, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 1:18 pm (EST) , Apr 20, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 12:26 pm (EST) , Apr 19, 2008
escrito por mmignano11, às 11:47 am (EST) , Apr 19, 2008
At the moment I'm re-reading Marlene Van Niekerk's 'Triomf'-a long one and Emile Zola's 'The joy of life' which happens to be for me the last of the Rougon-MacQuart (20 novels) series. Of course I've read them all out of order but c'est la vie.
escrito por lriley, às 5:46 pm (EST) , Apr 18, 2008
escrito por mmignano11, às 11:40 pm (EST) , Apr 10, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 2:50 pm (EST) , Apr 8, 2008
As far as Iraq goes it will eventually become the Democrat's war if they don't get us out of it. Vietnam became as much Nixon's war as it was LBJ's. The thing with Iraq that too many of its supporters don't seem to get is there is no real strategy other than maintaining a status quo--so no end game as proposed by the Bush administration--that is why McCain's 100 years remark seems to resonate. Between Vietnam and Iraq there are similarities and dissimilarities. Instead of fighting one ideological invisible enemy we are fighting numerous ones. The main problems if and when we leave are 1. how to stage it and then 2. what comes after--it seems fairly likely a civil war with great potential to sweep across the entire Middle East which will drive the cost of oil out of the region through the roof--which is one of the big reasons we're there in the first place. I agree with McCain only on that much--that it will be ugly. But the truth is there are a number of reasons why we cannot sustain our presence there much longer and the sooner we realize it and act on the realization the better for us in the long run.
escrito por lriley, às 2:37 am (EST) , Apr 8, 2008
I see your Knicks changed GM's? Anyway it seemed long overdue. The Rangers made the playoffs tonight. Happy with that. They still have a shot at home ice advantage in the first round. Looks most likely that we'll be playing the Devils.
Starting the Rushdie book that LT sent me--this morning.
escrito por lriley, às 2:10 am (EST) , Apr 4, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 1:04 pm (EST) , Apr 1, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 5:24 pm (EST) , Mar 30, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 11:24 am (EST) , Mar 24, 2008
Graham
escrito por Grammath, às 7:11 am (EST) , Mar 23, 2008
CC is also one of my favourite characters, and Humboldt's Gift one of my all time favourite books.
Bellow and Anthro is a kind of personal question for me, as I was brought up in a very anthroposophical background: both my parents were practising Anthros within the Camphill movement, and I was educated in a Waldorf school. After an initial early phase of immersing myself in Steiner, I have spent a great deal of my intellectual life trying to break away from it.
Of course all the Anthros claim Bellow as one of their own, largely on the strength of Humboldt's Gift, and of course, why wouldn't they? A Nobel Prize winning author who is also an Anthro: what a public relations coup, right?! But I know how these people think and how they love to simplify matters. hence my posting in the Bellow group.
Anyway. It sure is nice to meet another Bellow fan! Although I own all his works, I have not read them all. I read them very sparingly, almost reluctantly, as I never want to be in the position where there is no new Bellow book to read for the first time!
All the best,
Murr
escrito por tomcatMurr, às 10:35 pm (EST) , Mar 20, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 2:29 am (EST) , Mar 20, 2008
Libby
escrito por reademwritem, às 2:20 pm (EST) , Mar 18, 2008
Libby
escrito por reademwritem, às 2:19 pm (EST) , Mar 18, 2008
You had recommended it to me about a month ago when I said (on the Jewish Fiction site) I couldn't finish All the Pretty Horses. Now I just read the passage where the judge buys two puppies, throws them in a river, and shoots them. On the next page about six people are shot to death for no reason (not even for scalps, which seems to be the main reason in the narrative).I mean, I get the point. Now I am just nauseated. I don't think I'm going to finish this one either! I consider myself a fairly well-educated person. I like Murakami and Atwood and Foer. I just don't get this guy! Is his main point that humans are shit, and we are polluting the world? Is he a Deep Ecologist? Enlighten me!
Libby
escrito por reademwritem, às 2:16 pm (EST) , Mar 18, 2008
I started on the Javier Cercas book by the way and like it a lot. It's going to be good.
escrito por lriley, às 12:53 pm (EST) , Mar 17, 2008
Anyway coming to NYC on the 26th--leaving on the 29th. We'll be staying at the Skyline hotel on 50th and 10th--a property on which the police once searched for bodies of Westies victims--none found. We will have my sister and brother-in-law in tow--I don't know if they are going to be following us whereever we go. I hate telling people what to do. I'm not sure I like being followed everywhere either--but I can live with it. Anyway if you are free and would like to meet at the Strand one of those days we can arrange that--OTOH if you're not open and/or do not want to get in the middle of all this family stuff I certainly understand that too. We have tickets to the Rangers--Devils game on the 27th and figure on seeing a play one of the other nights--might be Spamalot again (though we loved it that would be more for my sister/brother-in-laws sake)--kind of interested in Mamet's November--though I'm hearing he's turned a little bit conservative--my other thing would be to spend more than the hour we spent last year in the MOMA and maybe even we could go next door to the Folk Art museum you mentioned last year. Anyway it's something to look forward to--as I'm sure you look forward to your Buenos Aires trips. One of these days we might even make it down there though it doesn't look like it will be soon unless somebody turns our economy around. Still rooting for Obama.
escrito por lriley, às 8:56 am (EST) , Mar 16, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 1:43 pm (EST) , Mar 15, 2008
My daughter's 17th birthday on the 16th. I really haven't got her anything. I took her over to an electronics store today but she spent 90% of the time shuffling through the CD racks--not coming up with anything. She does have an ipod. Thinking of getting her the illustrated Life of Pi--she's really not being a lot of help. Kids!!?!!
escrito por lriley, às 5:33 pm (EST) , Mar 14, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 5:06 pm (EST) , Mar 13, 2008
escrito por rocketjk, às 5:19 pm (EST) , Mar 12, 2008
A lot going on in NYS today as I'm sure you're aware. It's too bad I had some hopes for Spitzer though I did vote in '06 for Malachi McCourt--green party telling myself that if Spitzer did okay I'd vote for him next time. I was intrigued by his going after numerous financial--Wall Street entities. It's got to be tough for his wife and his kids--one can also understand but emphasize less for him. It seems that sometimes you achieve a goal and then there is a vacuum afterwards and he has always struck me as a bit arrogant in one sense but at the same time someone who is so ambitious that he will never be satisfied. It's sad--though not really a fan--it leaves the door wide open for Michael Bloomberg who also seems to have an ambition--to become president some day. I can see him running for governor in 2010 with the idea of using it as a stepping stone--it makes sense to me anyway. If he truly has the ambition, he has the money, political savvy and a great opportunity now to go for it.
escrito por lriley, às 3:49 pm (EST) , Mar 12, 2008
escrito por rocketjk, às 12:50 pm (EST) , Mar 12, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 2:21 am (EST) , Mar 12, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 10:10 am (EST) , Feb 25, 2008
Anyway I just finished Roberto Bolano's 'Nazi literature in the Americas' yesterday--there was a review in the Book Review section of the NYTimes today. I've been speaking to Papalaz yesterday about it who was wondering if Roth's recent book about Charles Lindbergh would be a comparison. I saw more Borges--today the Times reviewer mentioned that kind of connection too.
escrito por lriley, às 5:53 pm (EST) , Feb 24, 2008
Anyway I'll check out the Englander conversation but here is the blurb from the back cover of Lobo Antunes 'Knowledge of Hell'.---'Like his creator, the narrator of this novel is a psychiatrist who loathes psychiatry, a veteran of the despised 1970s colonial war waged by Portugal against Angola, a survivor of a failed marraige, and a man seeking meaning in an uncaring and venal society. The reader joins Antunes on a journey both real and phantasmagorical as he travels by car from a vacation in the Algarve back to his hated work as a psychiatrist at a Lisbon mental institution.
In the course of one long day and evening, he carries on an imaginary conversation with his daughter Joanna, observes with surreal vision the bleak countryside of his nation, recalls the horrors of his involuntary role in the suppression of Angolan independence, and curses the charlantanism of contemporary psychiatric 'advances' that destroy rather than heal.
As a writer Lobo Antunes falls somewhere in between his two main literary heroes which would be Faulkner and Celine. Very black humor. If you've read Faulkner's The sound and the fury--that is one place to start. Celine's lyricism and biting sarcasm. Selby's 'Last exit to Brooklyn' might be another comparison. Antunes is adept at drawing lost souls.
escrito por lriley, às 2:29 pm (EST) , Feb 14, 2008
Nazi Literature in the Americas (Bolano) showed up today along with Knowledge of Hell (a new one by Lobo Antunes). Sometime later today I might comment on both of those. I don't have a lot of time right now.
Also yesterday I went from leaning towards Obama to a much stronger feeling of support. I ran into some excerpts of a speech he made in Wisconsin yesterday which made me feel real good.
escrito por lriley, às 2:23 am (EST) , Feb 14, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 2:03 am (EST) , Feb 12, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 3:05 pm (EST) , Feb 11, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 2:22 pm (EST) , Jan 27, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 2:19 am (EST) , Jan 25, 2008
Quoting from the book 'Wyatt Earp was called the Lion of Tomiston, he risked his life in the shootout at the O.K. corral and died years later, the mulatto Jane Kolb knows all the details of that bloodbath, Wyatt Earp worked as a gunfighter in the services of the Dodge City Peace Commission, all of them wore mustaches except Charlie Bassett who looked like a priest, Charlie was fat and white and killed people with great aplomb without ever losing his smile, the Litany of Our Lady is the breastplate that preserves us from sin, I say regina angelorum regina patriarcharum and you say ora pro nobis twice, Professor Licencia Margarita was romantically involved with Luke Short, the one who shot the ranch-hand Larry Riley in the back and then ordered his corpse hanged, the way to make sure hanged men don't kick is to hang them dead, look at Riley up there--what composure!,'
escrito por lriley, às 12:24 pm (EST) , Jan 24, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 9:22 am (EST) , Jan 14, 2008
On a better note--the entertainment section (page 11) has an article on Martin McDonagh the British/Irish playwright who has kind of changed careers and has produced his first full length movie from his own filmscript. Very black humor--that guy. The beauty queen of Leenane--hilarious. The guy is a self made genius.
escrito por lriley, às 2:33 pm (EST) , Jan 13, 2008
In any event there is one year left for this numbskull and his pals. Not too pleased that Pelosi and company took impeachment off the table. We should at least be getting to the conclusion of those proceedings right now. The questiion arises about Iran and what we will do there? What we have has more than its hands full occupying the much smaller Iraq (both in terms of population and land mass). The only obvious answer for them with Iran is to bomb it--maybe even using nuclear. I wouldn't put it past them though if I were to predict I'd say we're just going to wave our fists at them for the next year--but we'll see.
escrito por lriley, às 7:23 am (EST) , Jan 13, 2008
http://www.usnews.com/blogs/news-desk/20...
escrito por lriley, às 1:14 pm (EST) , Jan 12, 2008
As for "Exit Ghost," I haven't read it yet. I'm a big Philip Roth fan, but the subject matter is a little too close to home for right now.
Rebecca
escrito por rebeccanyc, às 8:08 am (EST) , Jan 12, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 2:39 am (EST) , Jan 12, 2008
On Ethan Canin--the name sounds familiar but I'm unfamiliar with what he does. Fiction? I'll check it out.
I have read one of the Bolano articles and it was fabulous. Very good find and I appreciate you sending it to me. The other article I have yet to read is the New Yorker--Alvaro Rousselot's journey. It helped make up mind about the book I'm going to start tomorrow which will be Bolano's Amulet. His Nazi literature in America which was mentioned in the one article I read comes out next month.
escrito por lriley, às 5:27 pm (EST) , Jan 10, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 2:25 am (EST) , Jan 10, 2008
Having said that I thought Bill Clinton's attack on Barack was unjustified and very ugly. On Hilary--the Sunday times of last ran down some of the issues of the contenders. Besides giving GWB authorization to go to war--she has always been IMO behind the curve on Iraq. The times has her getting us out of Iraq by 2013--or that is by the first year of what she figures to be her second term. That is just unacceptable. Clinton #1 may have done a pretty fair job with our economy but his trade bills etc. were horrible. I would expect the same from her. Push comes to shove the lobbyists for multi-nationals will always be first in line at the table. Both Obama and Edwards leave s lot more room for hope.
escrito por lriley, às 5:46 pm (EST) , Jan 9, 2008
Alas the Rangers are not doing very well. I love seeing my hockey team in person but if they're out of it by the end of March--MSG might seem more like a morgue. But I expect we'll come anyway. I always find visiting NYC to be very exciting.
Kind of surprised that Hilary won New Hampshire last night. Too bad in the sense that if Obama had won--her campaign would have been on the rocks. It may be that Barack has hedged a little too much--that a lot of people are unsure of where he stands on a number of things--or to say it another way they think they know Hilary better. He's at times an inspiring speaker--and maybe needs to add a bit more detail. I got into the middle of a kind of stupid argument about him today at work--two of my co-workers--both democrats who are sure that an Obama presidency automatically means Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton are going to be given cabinet positions. While they expect to vote for whatever democrat nonimee makes it anyway--it seems that some people can't let long held ideas about skin color pigmentation go. I found their assertions to be absurd--one thing that strikes me about Obama is that he's not divisive (something Sharpton at least at times is)--they think I'm naive. Oh well.
escrito por lriley, às 1:12 pm (EST) , Jan 9, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 12:22 pm (EST) , Jan 5, 2008
escrito por lriley, às 12:20 pm (EST) , Jan 5, 2008
I should say since I've brought up Paul who has absolutely no chance--that I should wander over to the Dems to the two candidates Obama and Edwards. I could see myself possibly voting for either. Hilary doesn't fit into my plans--her nomination means a third party for me. I like what Edwards says more--I don't think Obama is really far away from him but he seems a little more cautious and maybe it's because he's better positioned to get the nomination--I don't know. Beyond that the idea of breaking the stranglehold of white and male president's is appealing. Unfortunately Hilary is going to (that's if she gets the nomination) head her party right back to the center of things which political wisdom says is how you win--ideals be damned. I'm not convinced she will stop the insanity in the Middle East (Iran, Iraq) or with foreign policy in general for instance this campaign demonizing Venezuela is absolutely stupid. I don't think that her ideas about health care are nearly as good as Edwards. Anyway I guess we're going to find out soon enough but Edwards and Obama are two I might find some enthusiasm for.
escrito por lriley, às 1:00 pm (EST) , Jan 1, 2008
escrito por skf, às 4:12 pm (EST) , Dec 30, 2007
I understand just turning off whatever republicans say this time around but some of Paul's views are refreshing to see from that side. There are a number of things I've been disgusted with for a long time Bert--including programs like Nasa (money that could be used on issues like poverty get too little public support while sending it into outer space continues to be popular), the growing power of federal police forces like the FBI, the CIA has been fomenting trouble around the world for decades particularly in Latin America including our favorite country in that region-Argentina. This thing with the Venezuelans is absolutely ridiculous. His raising of these issues took me completely by surprise as nobody ever talks about them. This is not a guy that gets vetted. I don't believe there's any chance at all he's nominated but if he did have a chance he might be the type to get assassinated. I've watched the other republican candidates ganging up and just teeing off on him about Iraq. He sticks to his guns and I do admire that.
escrito por lriley, às 2:23 am (EST) , Dec 27, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 9:20 am (EST) , Dec 24, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 8:26 am (EST) , Dec 24, 2007
escrito por rebeccanyc, às 8:56 am (EST) , Dec 21, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 6:23 pm (EST) , Dec 16, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 3:44 pm (EST) , Dec 16, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:38 am (EST) , Dec 14, 2007
Reviewed a Leonardo Sciascia book today--noir--but very literary. I have not been reviewing as much. Maybe I'll begin to do more. The Rangers have been on a roller coaster all season long. Not much other than that happening around here. Anyway welcome back.
escrito por lriley, às 2:24 am (EST) , Dec 13, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 12:50 pm (EST) , Dec 9, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 1:52 pm (EST) , Nov 20, 2007
I haven't looked at your Kerouac--Bolano comparison yet but I promise to get back to you tomorrow about it. How soon are you heading off to Buenos Aires? If we come to New York it will most likely be in March again. Looks likely that in April I'll be heading out to see my brother in Seattle. He's been through his first run of chemo. He is very positive and it's hard to be too glum when someone is that optimistic--there is a chance though that I may end up being a bone marrow donor. If that's what it takes though that's what it takes.
escrito por lriley, às 7:56 pm (EST) , Nov 18, 2007
Anyway I should say again about Bolano's Savage Detectives--it's an amazing book.
As for McCarthy I might try to get another of his in before the new year. The question is do I read one of the two remaining border trilogy books or do I buy something else for instance--No country for old men (with the movie coming out--which might be a good one to see--though I don't know whether it would be good to see it before I read it) or go back in get some older book--Child of God for instance? So I'll have to sort this out--make a decision soon.
I'm only some 35 pages into the Counterlife. So far it's excellent and I love the idea behind it--that's if I've got it right--basically Henry decides to have a dangerous heart operation just so he won't to have to deal with the medicine which is keeping him symptom free but leaving him impotent--with several different outcomes examined including death. Roth is just a world class writer. Very subtle--understated, a sly sense of humor--he always manages to get the hook in--his characterization always very identifiable with the mainstream of American life--no gimmicks. The only time I can remember not be wowed by one of his books is 'The professor of Desire' which was the first time I read him many years ago and I'm not sure at this point of time that it wasn't me that was the problem. Even in that one he pointed me in the direction of Witold Gombrowicz which is something to be grateful for.
escrito por lriley, às 9:30 am (EST) , Nov 16, 2007
The Vargas Llosa book is very good and well worth reading but he has a few others that are better. Ever read anything by the Cuban Alejo Carpentier? I've read him several times and just got his dictator novel 'Reasons of State' in the mail yesterday. I'm looking forward to that too.
escrito por lriley, às 1:43 pm (EST) , Nov 14, 2007
On McCarthy--I've been thinking about buying that book lately but haven't acted yet. The Markson book I'm reading now was part of a Strand's regular promotion--book signing event which you can order the books online and it was a very reasonable price--less than the books normally would cost on their own. I was very pleased. As for Savage Detectives--I think it was the best book I've read all of last year. I've read Love in the time of cholera. It is a good book--though I no longer have it--the Vargas Llosa book just out The Bad Girl is somewhat similar in plot line.
escrito por lriley, às 2:33 am (EST) , Nov 14, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 5:47 pm (EST) , Oct 31, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:44 pm (EST) , Oct 16, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:23 am (EST) , Oct 16, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:15 am (EST) , Oct 12, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:21 am (EST) , Oct 10, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 6:15 pm (EST) , Oct 9, 2007
tell me, being a new yorker, did you ever share time, say in a park or walking down a sidewalk, with Ginsberg or Corso or one of the gang?
i always wanted to do that, to just walk along as if a passerby, allen would have been my first choice. gary snyder, of course,
Kenneth patchen if he were up and walking. i'd love to read your tales to tell.
a pleasure to meet you if i haven't already.
escrito por Tim_Watkinson, às 3:29 pm (EST) , Oct 9, 2007
Haruki Murakami, Antonio Tabucchi, Cormac McCarthy, Don Delillo are also given odds as are two Israeli writers Amos Oz and A. B. Yehoshua. A few Middle Easterners--Adonis, Assia Djebar, Mahmoud Darwish. Some Asians besides Murakami--Ko Un, Bei DaoNumber of other notables--Umberto Eco, Milan Kundera, Mario Vargas Llosa, Joyce Carol Oates, Michael Ondaatje, Margaret Atwood, Thomas Pynchon, Peter Carey, Ian McEwen, Harry Mulisch, Cees Nooteboom, Patick Modiano, John Banville, Julian Barnes, Salman Rushdie, Carlos Fuentes, Yves Bonnefoy, Alice Munro, Herta Muller, David Malouf, Michel Tournier, Adam Zagajewski, E. L. Doctorow, Chinua Achebe, John Updike--a favorite of mine J. M. G. Le Clezio and a number of others I haven't heard of--Gitta Sereny, Willy Kyrklund, Inger Christensen, Eeva Kilpi, F. Sionil Jose, Mary Gordon.
escrito por lriley, às 2:50 pm (EST) , Oct 9, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 10:51 am (EST) , Oct 8, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 7:14 pm (EST) , Oct 7, 2007
Anyway the Rangers opened their season with a come from behind win 5-2.
escrito por lriley, às 2:24 am (EST) , Oct 5, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 5:50 pm (EST) , Oct 4, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:47 pm (EST) , Oct 2, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 6:25 pm (EST) , Sep 26, 2007
Anyway I turned 50 yesterday and will probably update my personal info shortly. We're still working on the house. About 80% done. Mae seems to be flagging and at this point would rather put what's left off until spring. We're not really in agreement on that. Why give up when you're so close to the end? If the weather holds out maybe it'll get done but who knows at this point.
escrito por lriley, às 11:22 am (EST) , Sep 26, 2007
escrito por rebeccanyc, às 8:27 am (EST) , Sep 26, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 10:37 pm (EST) , Sep 23, 2007
The Del Vecchio book is going to be a 4 and a half I think. I liked it a lot--I liked particularly how he broke the unit down into squads--names, functions, the characterization of a diverse number of them is excellent. I also liked the philosophical and cultural discussions--though maybe hard to believe at times--it may be just my generation that came afterwards that began distancing itself from civics, ethics, literature and philosophy. It seems anyway that in the 50's and 60's people really did read and not just for entertainment all the time. Anyway I plan on reviewing the book over the weekend.
Other novels I have read would be Tim O'Brien's 'The things they carried' and 'Going after Cacciato' Stephen Wright's 'Meditations in Green' and Larry Heinemann's 'Paco's story' and 'Close quarters' and Kenn Miller's 'Tiger the Lurp dog' (the Miller being on a par with the Del Vecchio book IMO)--all good books. I have ordered James Webb's 'Fields of Fire' and another called 'The Barking deer' by an author who I can't remember his name right now--which is why I've said that book has perked my interest.
escrito por lriley, às 12:27 pm (EST) , Sep 21, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 3:19 pm (EST) , Sep 20, 2007
escrito por rebeccanyc, às 8:33 am (EST) , Sep 18, 2007
escrito por avaland, às 7:45 pm (EST) , Sep 13, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 9:13 am (EST) , Sep 10, 2007
Anyway it's good to hear that your wife Lisa is making the most of her new country. Mae just had a birthday though and I got her camera--to replace the one she broke in Macy's on are last NYC trip in March. I'm not going to buy her anything else for the time being after she's had me slaving all summer on the house. I just came in from being on the roof--yanking down some of the old fascia--it must be about 110' up there. 10 minutes up and my t-shirt was soaked through. You can't wear shorts up there unless you want to barbecue yourself. Anyway we're coming along a lot better with it. Still planning on March--though it might be the first week April. We have to decide what game we want to see.
escrito por lriley, às 1:13 pm (EST) , Sep 6, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 12:27 pm (EST) , Sep 5, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 12:07 pm (EST) , Aug 18, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 1:44 pm (EST) , Aug 16, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 8:15 am (EST) , Aug 13, 2007
Anyway there are a lot of other themes in the book--on race and public hypocrisy over morals. It's really well set up--a very fine piece of work.
escrito por lriley, às 12:14 pm (EST) , Aug 9, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 4:56 pm (EST) , Aug 7, 2007
Anyway The Savage Detectives is a great great book all the way through. I'm guessing we'll both think it the best book we'll read this year.
escrito por lriley, às 5:12 pm (EST) , Aug 3, 2007
Anyways trips are always fun. If nothing else planning for them gives you something to look forward to.
escrito por lriley, às 1:20 am (EST) , Aug 3, 2007
Anyway been looking up info on an Italian (?) or a Hungarian (?) writer named Giogio Pressburger. Seems interesting.
One reason I'm not getting too far reading these days is this damned house of ours. We finally turned a corner. Today we've been putting furring strips up around the windows. This siding business takes a lot of time, energy and thought.
You must be on your way to Buenos Aires pretty soon?
escrito por lriley, às 3:21 pm (EST) , Aug 2, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 3:27 pm (EST) , Jul 19, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 5:22 pm (EST) , Jul 17, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 12:39 pm (EST) , Jul 6, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 9:44 pm (EST) , Jul 5, 2007
Enjoy your trip to BA,
Z
escrito por zojo, às 8:36 am (EST) , Jul 5, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 8:10 pm (EST) , Jul 4, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 8:15 am (EST) , Jul 2, 2007
Anyway the Rangers are having quite a day of it--signing Scott Gomez off their arch rivals the Devils and Chris Drury from Buffalo. Lots and lots of money. We're off now for the next two weeks but not going anywhere--which is very unusual. We're re-siding the house. I'm capable enough to be able to do grunt work--hammering, unscrewing, screwing, climbing ladders and tearing things apart but when it comes to real figuring and mechanical aptitude I'm pretty much an imbecile. It's a good thing Mae's family is strong in that particular area.
escrito por lriley, às 8:33 pm (EST) , Jul 1, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 8:09 am (EST) , Jul 1, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 1:25 pm (EST) , Jun 30, 2007
I know it's summer--and very very hot to boot but the hockey business never really ends. The amateur draft on friday-saturday. More or less a very mediocre one with only a relatively few top notch prospects. The Rangers had no business getting one of them picking at 17 (they should have been all gone by 7 or 8) but as luck would have it they did--so in Rangerland we feel very fortunate at the moment. July 1st begins the free agent season.
escrito por lriley, às 2:11 pm (EST) , Jun 26, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 12:00 pm (EST) , Jun 22, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 1:31 am (EST) , Jun 22, 2007
escrito por virgingloves, às 11:58 pm (EST) , Jun 21, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 5:22 pm (EST) , Jun 21, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 1:28 am (EST) , Jun 21, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 11:23 am (EST) , Jun 20, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 6:38 am (EST) , Jun 17, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 5:21 pm (EST) , Jun 15, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 9:35 am (EST) , Jun 10, 2007
Delillo--I've read a few times. Libra but not End Zone. Mao II, Cosmopolis, The body artist and a play Love-lies-bleeding. Underworld and Great Jones Street lying around the house. I do like White Noise quite a bit. Have to get back to Roth on something soon too. I don't know what. I don't think I have anything of his around the house unread.
escrito por lriley, às 6:35 am (EST) , Jun 10, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 12:09 pm (EST) , Jun 9, 2007
The Zero train is almost like a fable. Set in the Stalin years--an orphan is plunked down in the middle of the wilderness with a few other people--their mission in life is to make sure all goes well along a railroad track. Once every day year at the same exact time year after year after year a train with 2 locomotives in front--100 sealed boxcars--two locomotives in back passes their small station. They are the ninth siding of station. The penalty for screwing up is death. It's a bit of a satire.
escrito por lriley, às 1:14 am (EST) , Jun 9, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 1:14 am (EST) , May 30, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 1:32 am (EST) , May 29, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 6:30 am (EST) , May 20, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 1:23 pm (EST) , May 18, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 1:08 pm (EST) , May 15, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 9:22 pm (EST) , May 12, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 9:21 pm (EST) , May 12, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:57 pm (EST) , May 11, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 12:10 pm (EST) , May 11, 2007
Anyway Bert if you find the time you should look up Propaganda Due on Wikipedia. Also take note that from that topic you can click on to "strategy of tension" their so called modus operandi described as--'a way to control and manipulate public opinion using, fear, propaganda, disinformation, psychological warfare, agents provacateurs as well as false flag terrorist actions (including bombings)'--sounds very much like the leadup to Iraq wouldn't you say? Dario Fo's excellent play Accidental death of an Anarchist describes the events after a bank bombing in Milan where an anarchist scapegoat was arrested and murdered to cover up just such an escapade by a violent right wing group and its benefactors to spread panic among the electorate. Fo's play--is very serious though presented in his usual very comical Marx brothers kind of way. He's a particular favorite of mine and his Nobel prize won in the late 90's had a lot of people grinding their teeth.
escrito por lriley, às 10:08 pm (EST) , May 10, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 10:03 am (EST) , May 10, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 6:38 pm (EST) , May 9, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 6:23 pm (EST) , May 7, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 6:23 pm (EST) , May 7, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 12:25 pm (EST) , May 7, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 12:23 pm (EST) , May 7, 2007
Started The Bride from Odessa by Cozarinsky. I'm not sure if you recommended him to me or if I just stole his name and title from spying on your library but anyway so far it is very very good--so many thanks. I'm also up to page 500 of The Savage Detectives and hope to finish tomorrow.
escrito por lriley, às 5:58 pm (EST) , May 5, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:35 am (EST) , May 5, 2007
Arlt takes you all over Buenos Aires too. You can follow a lot of the action with a street map. I think I like Pereira declares the best of the Tabucchi books I've read.
I'm about half way through The Savage Detectives. It's very very good. A lot of literary names being worked in throughout. A Spanish writer I like a lot Juan Marse makes an appearance on page 204. This is a book I can see myself reading again but I'm not so sure I could describe it very well--at least as of now.
escrito por lriley, às 8:23 pm (EST) , Apr 29, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:34 am (EST) , Apr 28, 2007
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roberto_Bol...
Anyway it seems he was a big fan of my Nicanor Parra. Also a big fan of Jorge Luis Borges. I noted a couple writers who were friends of his Enrique Vila-Matas who I've heard of and thought of buying something of his and Rodrigo Fresan. The other novel of his mentioned 2666 is supposed to come out sometime in the near future and it looks like a big one--maybe 1100 pages.
escrito por lriley, às 3:58 pm (EST) , Apr 27, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:44 pm (EST) , Apr 25, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:35 am (EST) , Apr 25, 2007
I know you've mentioned Cozarinsky to me before--I just went on the previous mentioned site and ordered the Bride from Odessa. The Moldavian Pimp came up at $50.79 there but its imprint is Harvill (British) like its translator Nick Caistor and it was published in 2006. It may take a year or two but usually those books make their way over here either as used imports or an American publisher picks the rights up on them. Harvill is a pretty classy publisher and I have to think that someone here has taken note of it.
escrito por lriley, às 4:49 pm (EST) , Apr 23, 2007
Thanks for your comment on Pearls of Wisdom. It seems we only have two books in common, but they are good ones.
Cheers from Oz,
Alana.
ps. my father was also born in NYC. He was a relative of Leo Gorcey, which was also my birth name (do you know of him? Involved in theatre I believe). Sadly I never new my father nor have I been to his city of birth, but would love to someday.
escrito por camelspit, às 10:25 pm (EST) , Apr 22, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 4:31 pm (EST) , Apr 22, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:32 am (EST) , Apr 21, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:22 pm (EST) , Apr 20, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 3:52 pm (EST) , Apr 18, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:28 am (EST) , Apr 18, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:16 am (EST) , Apr 17, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 9:43 am (EST) , Apr 16, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 6:26 pm (EST) , Apr 14, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 12:56 pm (EST) , Apr 13, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 9:45 pm (EST) , Apr 12, 2007
On another subject I finally broke down and ordere The Savage Detectives from Barnes and Noble--I had to figure what else to get to kick it over the $25 mark to get the free shipping and decided on Emile Zola's The fortune of the Rougons which was the first book of 20 in the Rougon-Macqaurt series about second empire France. I think I've read 16 or 17 of them but not the first of all.
escrito por lriley, às 8:32 am (EST) , Apr 11, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 12:06 pm (EST) , Apr 10, 2007
Anyway did my Russian thing on the Books combined group.
escrito por lriley, às 6:36 pm (EST) , Apr 9, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 7:30 pm (EST) , Apr 8, 2007
As for the Time's I've cut off my sunday subscription because I can get quite a bit cheaper at the local grocery store. I'll look up the article though at one of my sites--a lot of them hit on all the daily news stories.
escrito por lriley, às 3:06 pm (EST) , Apr 7, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 12:56 pm (EST) , Apr 6, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:10 am (EST) , Apr 6, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:00 pm (EST) , Apr 5, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 10:12 pm (EST) , Apr 1, 2007
To go back to Perez Reverte for a moment--the other book I liked of his was 'The Queen of the South'--that one seems to have some rather mixed reviews from others though. Most of his work is very good though. The Club Dumas though is the best one to start with. I started with the Seville Communion which was good but not good enough to bring me back to him very quickly. It was a good three years I'm thinking before I read him again.
escrito por lriley, às 12:46 pm (EST) , Apr 1, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 6:45 pm (EST) , Mar 29, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:35 pm (EST) , Mar 29, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 12:39 pm (EST) , Mar 29, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 12:36 pm (EST) , Mar 29, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:29 am (EST) , Mar 28, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 1:00 pm (EST) , Mar 27, 2007
Another article on Yahoo about the famous Vargas Llosa--Garcia Marquez flap--with apparently Mario punching Gabriel in the eye.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070322/ap_e...
Bolano seems to have made himself a few enemies in a rather abbreviated literary career. I like him though as a writer--from the two times I've read him and do plan on reading him again--just holding out because I believe eventually I'll get his books at a better price than what I'm seeing. One can still read (and enjoy) the other writers he didn't care for in any case.
escrito por lriley, às 12:59 pm (EST) , Mar 27, 2007
did you ever see the long review of Bolano in the recent New Yorker?
It was quite good.
escrito por berthirsch, às 7:39 am (EST) , Mar 27, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 1:56 pm (EST) , Mar 26, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 1:56 pm (EST) , Mar 26, 2007
The Rangers by the way are doing real well right now due mostly to defense and especially goaltending.
escrito por lriley, às 4:21 pm (EST) , Mar 25, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 1:01 pm (EST) , Mar 22, 2007
escrito por LouisBranning, às 7:48 pm (EST) , Mar 21, 2007
I've been playing your doors Cd's in my car although my daughter didn't want to hear them so off they went--a lot of good songs though--My eyes have seen you, Moonlight drive, Peace frog, Spanish Caravan, Five to one, Roadhouse blues, Texas radio. That was a very pleasant surprise.
escrito por lriley, às 5:34 pm (EST) , Mar 21, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:22 am (EST) , Mar 21, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 4:31 pm (EST) , Mar 20, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 4:31 pm (EST) , Mar 20, 2007
I'm still working on Ulysses but am making good progress now. I also started reading the Corso book today and am close to half way through. He has very good tone. I can see myself buying something else of his. Out of the Sixties the bands I like most are the Velvets, The Doors, CCR, The band. I have a friend who is a little whacky who makes me CD's whenever I want. His main thing is rap and hip hop but he listens to practically everything including modern country music (which I loathe) but for some reason he doesn't like the Doors. I gave him a request a couple months ago for an obscure Polish punk band Brygada Kryzys from around the time of Solidarity and he came back with two different CD's that he burned. As it works out I'd actually been looking at Doors CD's on half.com and considering instead of bothering him about it (I do have the Doors first album already and the case to LA Woman but no idea where the actual CD is) buying something so the CD's you've sent are very welcome and much appreciated.
escrito por lriley, às 1:46 pm (EST) , Mar 19, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 6:32 pm (EST) , Mar 16, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 4:23 pm (EST) , Mar 16, 2007
Anyway as far as one of the french writers. Georges Perec--Life: A user's manual. That is a book that I think you should definitely look for. Another of his--though not fiction would be Ellis Island--which was written in conjunction with a movie and is about the immigrant experience coming to America. Georges interviewing people (mainly of Jewish extraction) who came from either Eastern Europe or Italy around the turn of the century. Raymond Queneau also great. Louis Ferdinand Celine--very interesting--the absurdity of Joseph Heller's Catch 22 is to me anyway lifted somewhat from the opening 100 or so pages of LFC's Journey to the end of the night. I've found Celine references in all kinds of books--off the top of my head--J. M. Coetzee's Elizabeth Costello. Bellow's Ravenstein. Kenzaburo Oe's A quiet life--references from other writers Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg + William S. Burroughs visited after the war. Henry Miller was a huge fan and credited Journey for being the book that inspired him to go for being a writer. Bukowski. Kurt Vonnegut. Philip Roth. Antonio Lobo Antunes. William Vollmann have all wrote testimonials and/or book introductions. An important writer. A kind of alter-ego to him who writes in much the same way but from a decidedly left outlook would be the Belgian Louis Paul Boon. Boon has only 3 books translated into English though. Chapel Road. Summer in Termuren. Minuet. Fabulous writer though.
escrito por lriley, às 2:55 pm (EST) , Mar 15, 2007
We'll be in about 8:30-9 tonight. We've decided to drive instead of take the bus.
escrito por lriley, às 8:21 am (EST) , Mar 12, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 3:47 pm (EST) , Mar 10, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:09 am (EST) , Mar 9, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 6:10 pm (EST) , Mar 7, 2007
As far as getting together I'm pretty open to ideas but if it's just too inconvenient we can chalk it up to bad scheduling--a time will come hopefully. You can always call over to the hotel I mentioned if you find some free time. We'll probably be out and about now and again--shopping--maybe the Museum of modern art but I don't think we're going to be walking around all day like we did last time--winding up with shin splints from pounding all that pavement.
escrito por lriley, às 5:43 pm (EST) , Mar 6, 2007
Have to go to work in a couple minutes--so we can talk about the rest later on today maybe--I do have a dental appointment in the afternnoon though.
escrito por lriley, às 2:32 am (EST) , Mar 6, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:35 pm (EST) , Mar 5, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 1:44 pm (EST) , Mar 5, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 8:49 am (EST) , Mar 5, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 5:38 pm (EST) , Mar 2, 2007
Apart from that Arlt to me is just a fascinating personality. Basically a self-educated street kid who tried a lot of things--lots of jobs--a would be inventor--became a newspaperman--then a well known editorialist--writing books and plays and dropping dead at 42.
escrito por lriley, às 5:36 pm (EST) , Mar 2, 2007
'With his hat down to his ears and his hands touching thumbs across his vast expanse of belly, he sat nodding with a puffed-up, sour expression on his yellow face.
His glassy, protruding, toad eyes, his great hook nose, his flaccid cheeks, and pendulous lower lip all combined to make him look like a cretin.
His great hulking body inhabited a cinnamon-brown suit, and from time to time he would bend over and rest his teeth on the pommel of his cane.
That disgusting habit and his churlish, bored expression made him resemble a white slaver.'
Ergueta is no doubt the one front left but it's a little dicey on most of them.
escrito por lriley, às 12:54 pm (EST) , Mar 2, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:24 am (EST) , Mar 1, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 1:03 pm (EST) , Feb 28, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:57 pm (EST) , Feb 25, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 1:08 pm (EST) , Feb 16, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:26 am (EST) , Feb 9, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 12:40 pm (EST) , Feb 8, 2007
Anyway I think I liked 'The Joke' the best and have just written a review which might not be that great but c'est la vie.
escrito por lriley, às 4:53 pm (EST) , Jan 24, 2007
escrito por lriley, às 2:32 am (EST) , Jan 24, 2007
SIG
escrito por SigmundFraud, às 6:06 pm (EST) , Jan 4, 2007
Super to hear from you. I had spotted the Auster review in The Guardian. I've heard some not very complimentary reviews of "Travels in a Scriptorium" because Auster is so self-referential in it. It seems a lot of characters from his early books appear or are mentioned. I always think that the post-modernist element of his writing is part of the fun. It always reminds me of Borges and Nabakov; it's as though the author is playing a game as well as telling a story and if you don't pay attention you will miss out. I remember one short story of Nabakov's about the Vane Sisters where the last paragraph holds a secret ghostly message from the dead sisters. Have you read any Nabakov? He is brilliant!
I will definitely give "American Pastoral" a go soon because "The Human Stain" renewed my taste for Roth. I've just finished Sylvia Plath's "The Bell Jar" which is a very un-blokey book. I much prefer her gutsy poetry. I've just started some memoirs written by Peruvian writer and one time Presidential candidate Mario Vargas Llosa (a coincidence that lriley mentions him in yesterday's post to you; what a small world!) . They have been translated into English and entitled "A Fish in Water". I think it's going to give me a bit more to get my teeth into than the Plath!
Anyway have a great New Year's Eve and a prosperous New Year.
Yours Kevin.
escrito por dylanwolf, às 2:18 pm (EST) , Dec 31, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 10:38 pm (EST) , Dec 30, 2006
Anyway with the New Year coming along best wishes to you and your family in all its American and Argentinian adventures.
escrito por lriley, às 3:45 pm (EST) , Dec 30, 2006
Thank you very much for your comment. My favourite Auster book is also "The Book of Illusions". It seems to me to be generally universally underrated. I hadn't heard about Auster's memoirs so I'll be sure to hunt that one down. I'll send you a fuller reply soon as I'm quite busy at the moment with preparations for Christmas. Seasons greetings to you and yours from across the pond.
Cheers, Kevin.
escrito por dylanwolf, às 12:41 pm (EST) , Dec 22, 2006
As for Pynchon, I read V a very long time ago at about age 16 or 17 and of course I liked it then because it was strange and different and I was a teenager. I don't remember much of the story, but I do remember the circumstances of my reading it. If I didn't have so many other books I want to read, I might be tempted to go back and reread it. I also read The Crying of Lot 49 at about the same time, and I bought Vineland but haven't read it.
escrito por rebeccanyc, às 1:45 pm (EST) , Dec 18, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 2:37 am (EST) , Dec 16, 2006
And still looking forward to March when we come down to see them.
escrito por lriley, às 4:55 pm (EST) , Dec 15, 2006
escrito por rebeccanyc, às 3:10 pm (EST) , Dec 14, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 12:07 pm (EST) , Dec 13, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 6:17 pm (EST) , Dec 11, 2006
Among their titles are the 'The silver candelabra: A century of Jewish Argentine literature' compiled by Rita Gardiol ISBN 0935480889
also an Argentine writer Alicia Steimberg has a novel 'Musicians and Watchmakers'.
Another novel set in Mexico and written by Sabina Berman 'Bubbeh'.
escrito por lriley, às 12:39 pm (EST) , Dec 10, 2006
escrito por deargreenplace, às 4:02 am (EST) , Dec 8, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 1:02 pm (EST) , Dec 6, 2006
http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets.h...
Anyway this Seidel guy looks very very interesting. Do you know much about him? Anyway finished the Gutierrez book last night and am close to finishing Rushdie's Shalimar the Clown which is also quite good and have been leafing through a book of poetry by a German Hans Magnus Enzensberger which is also very interesting--which is kind of nasty and sarcastic and often politically motivated--definitely to the left.
escrito por lriley, às 9:15 am (EST) , Dec 4, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 8:20 pm (EST) , Dec 3, 2006
escrito por coloradoreader, às 7:06 pm (EST) , Nov 29, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 2:02 pm (EST) , Nov 28, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 6:31 pm (EST) , Nov 27, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 6:20 pm (EST) , Nov 27, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 5:49 pm (EST) , Nov 27, 2006
escrito por ibtuten, às 3:46 am (EST) , Nov 27, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 3:02 pm (EST) , Nov 26, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 11:21 am (EST) , Nov 26, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 12:46 pm (EST) , Nov 22, 2006
escrito por rebeccanyc, às 11:05 am (EST) , Nov 22, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 12:31 pm (EST) , Nov 21, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 2:21 am (EST) , Nov 21, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 5:26 pm (EST) , Nov 20, 2006
As for the election--it turned out well for the most part. The dems have a comfortable lead in the House---one always has to be wary of too large a swing one way or the other--really would be nice if we had more viable political parties. I was disappointed that Eric Massa who was running for congress came up short in our district. Kuhl ran some flyers which were pretty outrageous in the last week or so saying things like Eric was going to go after peoples social security--this from a guy who supported the presidents' social security plan. It was pretty close though but this has been a red district for a long time although when Houghton was the rep here he was very moderate for the most part and hardly a rubber stamp for anybody--didn't like his support of free trade bills though. Kuhl has been pretty much in line with the president on everything even went to Baghdad and made a nuiscance out of himself--google him with General Batiste--came back and said everything was going great there--it was just like walking down one of our own streets.
escrito por lriley, às 2:37 am (EST) , Nov 10, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 6:37 pm (EST) , Nov 6, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 1:40 pm (EST) , Oct 28, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 2:26 am (EST) , Oct 28, 2006
As for Hevesi--I've only glanced at it and have seen his name bandied about. I haven't been paying a lot of attention. Corruption? Fill me in if you can. I have been very interested in the congressional race in our district between the incumbent republican Kuhl and his democratic challenger Massa. The democratic party has been disappointing to me for a long time--however the republicans are even worse. I will say for Houghton--Kuhl's predecessor that he was somewhat independent of his party and for the most part affable and he would answer your letters or e-mails at least half the time. Anyway I have sent a small amount of money to Massa and plan on voting for him--I'm cautiously optimistic that he'll win but it will probably be close. Two of his main issues I support wholeheartedly--1)getting us out of Iraq (his idea is more or less the Murtha plan--mine would probably be more drastic--whatever the case the current situation is increasingly disastrous)--and 2) balancing the budget (which is probably going to be painful--spending cuts/increased taxes) both in terms domestic and foreign via trade agreements which to me should be done with other countries more or less on a Quid Pro Quo basis. I would like a National Health Care plan which should be designed from what has worked best in other countries--you might want this idea from England and that from Sweden. Anyway energy independence is big. I'd like to see us start up a mass transit system. I'd like to see us re-invest in manufacturing and industrial concerns. If we can borrow money from the future to sink it into a war in another country--we can borrow hypothetical money also to invest into our infastructure and I would move to protect those fledgling manufacturing concerns from being picked off by foreign investors and protect the jobs created from being outsourced. One great benefit there also you would be creating taxpayers to pay off the loans or whatever from that borrowed money. Basically we have to get off the war mentality and make sure people have hope for the future and the future of their children--which is not to say we should forget about Bin Laden but he seems to have disappeared for the time being. It would be nice to bring him to justice. They need to concentrate on that instead of Iraq. Anyway a President should be a trendsetter in some ways setting worthwhile goals for the public at large not just so a few of friends will get rich. If these goals are truly worthwhile I would think that the public at large would be supportive in the whole.
escrito por lriley, às 5:48 pm (EST) , Oct 27, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 2:20 am (EST) , Oct 27, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 3:43 pm (EST) , Oct 26, 2006
Hope this helps!
escrito por cabegley, às 10:24 pm (EST) , Oct 24, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 2:23 am (EST) , Oct 24, 2006
Anyway the other post I seemed to have missed is the one on Shanahan and to be honest he's been really really good. He looks like he's got a lot left and has been the Rangers best player so far.
escrito por lriley, às 9:17 am (EST) , Oct 23, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 10:01 pm (EST) , Oct 22, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 9:58 pm (EST) , Oct 22, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 2:35 am (EST) , Oct 21, 2006
I have become a fan of Stavans after reading his book " Borrowed Words" about growing up Jewish in Mexico and then being a mexican in the U.S. and his love affair with language, I also highly recommend his book dictionary days.
escrito por Eramirez156, às 11:52 pm (EST) , Oct 18, 2006
escrito por cabegley, às 6:45 pm (EST) , Oct 18, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 6:11 pm (EST) , Oct 18, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 1:45 pm (EST) , Oct 17, 2006
escrito por bluetongue, às 5:38 am (EST) , Oct 17, 2006
Furthermore, for your interest in things Jewish, I offer Nicholas Mosley--Hopeful Monsters, in case you've not read it.
escrito por jamy, às 10:42 pm (EST) , Oct 16, 2006
A political and aesthetic achievement without parallel in German literature--Bertolt Brecht
I am greatly indebted to Alfred Doblin... He will unsettle you; he will trouble your dreams; you will have difficulty swallowing him; you will find him unsavory; he is indigestible, gristly. He changes his readers. The self-complacent are hereby cautioned against Doblin--Gunter Grass
His is one of the great names among the German novelists... It seems to me that Doblin perceives the visible world as something incomplete and that he feels compelled to improve upon it with his writing--Franz Kafka
A people betrayed and Karl and Rosa follow the rise and fall of the German Weimar republic after the German collspse in the first world war. They are very tragic in scope and very compelling to read. Lots of pages though but they move very quickly. There is more of an hallucinatory quality to A people betrayed than K & R. I'm of the opinion that the revolutionaries Liebknecht and especially Luxemburg would not have turned out to be the kind of meglomaniacs that Lenin and Stalin turned out to be. That however was never to be seen. If they had got their republic off the ground--there may very never have been a fuhrer named Hitler. As for Berlin Alexanderplatz it is the book he's most famous for. I prefer the first two but they are all excellent.
Joseph Roth I've read 3 or 4 times and he has a much larger body of work. He was an Austrian Jew, a World War 1 veteran I believe and somewhat embittered--famous as a newspaper journalist and comparable to Doblin in style and somewhat in content. The Radetzky March is a very good book.
escrito por lriley, às 2:21 pm (EST) , Oct 14, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 2:35 am (EST) , Oct 14, 2006
Anyway I was looking that over and it's an interesting list. J. M. Coetzee is a great writer--I'd prefer 'Waiting for the barbarians' over 'Disgrace' though. Kelman's 'A disaffection' and 'How late it was, how late', Peter Carey's 'True history of the Kelly gang', Sebastian Faulks' 'Birdsong', Sebastian Barry's 'A long long way', and Ian McEwan's 'The comfort of strangers' are others that I liked a lot. Should mention Pat Barker's 'Regeneration trilogy' also.
Of the panel--Barry, William Boyd, Carey (like Coetzee a 2 time Booker prize winner), Jonathan Coe, Brian Friel (an Irish playwrights whose 'Faith Healer' was playing in NYC recently), McEwan and Rushdie among others I keep track of.
As for the list itself--like the NY Times it's opinion. A lot of things fall between the cracks. I'm not of the opinion that 'Beloved' is a great novel. Roth is a great writer but having 6 of the top 25 is really pushing it. There were others (Delillo and Cormac McCarthy) that had two or three. Really liked 'A confederacy of dunces'. If I were to add books to the NYT list one would be Danielewski's 'House of Leaves', other possiblities--William Kennedy's 'Ironweed', Tristan Egolf's 'Lord of the Barnyard', 'All souls' rising'-Madison Smartt Bell, and something maybe by a Paul Auster or a Kurt Vonnegut.
Of the Guardian list I don't know if I missed him but no Michael Ondaatje? Britian has a number of good writers--didn't see David Mitchell, Coe was on the panel but no books listed--he's very good. Louis de Bernieres, Paul West (maybe they don't think of him as British anymore as he's been living in Ithaca NY for some time), William Boyd, MacLaverty--who've I brought up before, and where is William Trevor? (thinking it over that's just about the biggest omission so far) and no Thomas Keneally or Janet Frame.
escrito por lriley, às 9:22 am (EST) , Oct 9, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 12:43 pm (EST) , Oct 8, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 8:12 pm (EST) , Oct 6, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 1:49 pm (EST) , Oct 6, 2006
Anyway Roth like Vargas Llosa has been a candidate several times before. I also liked seeing Le Clezio listed in the article. That's the first time I've seen his name mentioned.
escrito por lriley, às 2:38 am (EST) , Oct 6, 2006
J-M. G. Le Clezio a French novelist (I have a ton of his work and am very glad to hear it--he is pretty much unknown here), Assia Djebar and Algerian-French novelist and Doris Lessing a British novelist and essayist with ties to Africa. They're announcing either on the 5th or the 12th.
escrito por lriley, às 2:34 am (EST) , Oct 3, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 4:27 pm (EST) , Oct 1, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 5:58 pm (EST) , Sep 29, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 10:13 pm (EST) , Sep 27, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 9:35 pm (EST) , Sep 26, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 9:52 pm (EST) , Sep 25, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 1:24 pm (EST) , Sep 21, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 2:37 am (EST) , Sep 20, 2006
I have read one of his novels--'The Beach' which was okay. I've also read his diaries 'The burning brand'. He's very much the communist in that he's suspicious of anyone who isn't who are not only suspect but potentially fascists. This way of thinking is not unusual for party members of his era. They seemed to be his main obsessions--failed relationships and political preferences. If I remember correctly he was a good friend of Italo Calvino although I may be confusing Calvino with someone else. Pavese also did a number of translations particularly of American writers (Faulkner, Steinbeck, Melville, Hemingway and also the Irishman Joyce) into Italian. I prefer other Italian novelists of his era actually to him particularly Ignazio Silone (one of the founding members of the Italian communist party which he later repudiated), Curzio Malaparte (who was a very ardent fascist for a time), Calvino himself, Tommaso Landolfi, Primo Levi, Carlo Emilio Gadda and Paolo Volponi. Some of these I haven't read a lot of. Volponi once for instance though that was excellent 'Last act in Urbino'. Other contemporary Italian writers of his would be Carlo Levi, Alberto Moravia, Elsa Morante and Elio Vittorini.
To go from there to these days I know you're aware of Tabucchi who is excellent. I like Umberto Eco a lot also. Check out Leonardo Sciascia, Massimo Carlotto and Andrea Camilleri if you like police thrillers though in Sciascia's case they are more about the grip the mafia has on his native Sicily. And then there's the Nobel playwright Dario Fo--who has a Marx brothers kind of humor mixed in with his political activism. particularly good are 'Accidental death of an Anarchist' and 'Mistero Buffo'.
escrito por lriley, às 1:19 pm (EST) , Sep 19, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 2:33 am (EST) , Sep 19, 2006
Decided to join your group. I got a private invitation to join an Asian group but felt that since you asked me first the right thing would be to join yours first not that it matters all that much. I really do not know a lot about Asian fiction. I'm much more comfortable talking about Latin American. Anyways I read your profile and found it interesting and it's always nice to have a more concrete idea. Anyway I've never been much of a group joiner--a friend of mine always quotes Groucho Marx's remark which I find hilarious that goes something like this: 'I wouldn't belong to any organization that would have me as a member'.
escrito por lriley, às 2:57 pm (EST) , Sep 9, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 10:58 am (EST) , Sep 2, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 4:36 pm (EST) , Sep 1, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 4:35 pm (EST) , Sep 1, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 2:39 am (EST) , Aug 30, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 5:46 pm (EST) , Aug 29, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 2:20 pm (EST) , Aug 26, 2006
escrito por lriley, às 11:29 am (EST) , Aug 26, 2006
I'm going on vacation for a week and probably would not have an accesss to
the computer.
escrito por MarusiaK, às 4:00 pm (EST) , Aug 6, 2006