Fiction: I'm reading for the third of fourth time Stephen King's 'Different Seasons'. 'Apt Pupil' is one of his best and most chilling stories.
I tried re-reading Tom Clancy. No go.
I intend to go back to Square One with both Elmore Leonard and Ed McBain and am thinking of reinvesting in a couple of 'Golden Age' science fiction anthologies: Asimov, Simak, Pohl, Bester etc.
The Dickens, Conan Doyle, even Evelyn Waugh, have been set aside for now.
Non-fiction: a huge, fat biography of Irving Berlin.
I forgot to mention Wodehouse. Jeeves and Wooster exclusively.
Stephen King ‘Mr. Mercedes’ trilogy is highly recommended crime fiction.
William Dalrymple ‘The Anarchy’ charting the history of The East India Company is very interesting; as is ‘The Last Mughal’ his more detailed study of the Seige of Delhi in 1857 and the subsequent exile of said Mughal to Burma ending his dynasty.
I'll look into that trilogy. I'd more or less given up on King having groaned my way through about a third of 'From A Buick Six' in the staffroom in 2009.
I took to carrying a copy of Clancy's 'Red Storm Rising' around with me in my first year at University - just to annoy the trendy middle-class students.
'The Hunt For Red October' was quite an entertaining movie. Sean Connery as a Lithuanian submarine commander with a broad Scots accent. And Tim Curry, giving one of the worst performances of his career.
India - watching 'The Jewel In The Crown' during 'lockdown' rather put me off. I never managed to get on with John Masters. I read the Pan paperback on the Mutiny more years ago than I care to remember.
I keep glancing guiltily at ‘New York’ by Edward Rutherfurd. Laying unopened next to the bed.
I read and loved ‘London’ a few years ago. ‘Paris’ I recently got some way through but lost interest.
I used to be a huge reader. But time hasn’t allowed the last few years and I seem to have genuinely lost the ability to just sit, and read.
It doesn’t help that both my wife and child translate the sight of me reading as some kind of sign that I’m bored and want conversation.
Reading the The Lord of the Rings trilogy right now. I'm at the end of the second book. Haven't read it since I was 15. Never been a big fan, if you can believe it. I like them better now than what I did then.
Before that I read Stendhals The Red and The Black, Michael Kohlhaas by Heinrich von Kleist, A Man in Love by Martin Walser, two novels by Christian Kracht, Lá-bas by Huysmans, a short story collection by ETA Hoffmann, First Love by Ivan Turgenev, Wolf among Wolves by Hans Fallada. That's all that I've read this year, its been a slow year for reading I'm afraid.
I can believe it. I can well believe it.
I read 'Scarlet And Black' (I think it translates as in English) in 1984, around the same time I was reading Hugo, Balzac and Voltaire.
It's taken me well-nigh twenty five years to persuade my wife to remove her framed Tolkien Exhibition poster (Oxford, 1987) from the wall and consign it to the outer darkness (well, a spare bedroom in reality). I was taught English by a member of that family - a nice lady who never could pipe down about 'grandfather'.
Finished the third book today. Final thoughts: Elves are a bunch of pretentious sons of bitches. Now I'm either going to read something modern (as in 21th centhury) German, or... Scandinavian (even race between Knausgårds Morning star and Collected Works by Lydia Sandgren).
Last edited by DuluthandBackAgain (2022-03-26 13:33:31)
I'm currently reading Zero Minus Ten.It's the first Raymond Benson James Bond book. It no where near as good as Fleming.
Next up is Maigret. I struggled with the first book in the series but then read Maigret In New York that was much better..
I can recommend the second Thursday Murder Club book - probably more enjoyable if you've read the first book.
Stanley Tucci's book on Italian Cuisine was recently started but due to interruptions needs revisting.
Sitting amongst a pile of art books thee's also the Real Animal House that Richard Press mentioned in one of his articles.
I read one of the John Gardner Bond books during 'lockdown phase one', after coming across Philip Larkin's damning review. Larkin was right, it was shite. I remember handing over to the League Of Friends just before my wife saw her oncologist and I tore skin off some leftie for sticking his 'Guardianista' nose in where it was least required. But I'd trotted through Fleming beforehand and found that only a few of the originals were really up to much. Fleming, in truth, was a snob and something of a bore. 'Thrilling Cities' bears that out. I'm going back to Chandler and Elmore Leonard, Ed McBain and Jim Thompson.
I'm becoming increasingly obsessed by Cole Porter, George and Ira Gershwin, Irving Berlin, Jerome Kern and all those other wonderful American composers; reminding myself that I first heard their songs - 'Smoke Gets In Your Eyes', for example - as a dim teenager. I already have a fat biography of Irving Berlin and am expecting one on Porter to turn up any day now.
It's also high time I re-read the biographies of Anita O'Day and Art Pepper.
Ira Gershwin's Lyrics on several occasions is a very good insight into the art of lyric writing.
The Gershwin Years by Edward Joblonski is well worth hunting out too.
Extend this thread to summer.
I've just finished James Gavin's 'Intimate Nights', a history of the New York cabaret scene. Good in part but only in part. I love the story of Bobby Short, a black man who lived in one of the wealthiest areas of Manhattan. Something to celebrate. But I could have done without all the crap about Streisand, Bette Midler etc.
I'm now rereading Lenny Bruce's 'autobiography' for the first time since around 1979. I'm no more a fan of all that counter-cultural shit than Woody Allen - but Bruce was funny.
His shtick about flies. Why has everybody got it in for flies? They say they spread disease. Listen, I've got a cousin who gave two guys the clap but no-one ever whacked her with a newspaper...
Two things in Gavin's book that made me piss myself laughing. Two comedians, one whose entire act was based on knocking the Eisenhower administration, the other who socked it to Joe Kennedy and his tribe. First found himself out in the cold when JFK became President, the second when JFK was murdered.
'The truth is what is, not what should be. What should be is a dirty lie'.
Did Lenny Bruce say that? I believe he did.
AFS
With Intimate Nights you do get the superb discography at the back.
This has lead to me to acquire a variety of artists I wouldn't of previously purchased. Hugh Shannon, Matt Dennis and Bobby Scott. It also helped focus on some artists I was familiar with but not their best recordings such as Torme's Encore at Martys
The Erteguns compilation mentioned is good.
Yes, it's a terrific discography. I ordered one of the Julie Wilson CDs just a couple of days ago.
I bought the book mainly for the snippets on Blossom Dearie. Who remains something of an enigma. Evidently, though, a much tougher cookie than she's usually given credit with being. She survived when others didn't.
All the gay/AIDS stuff bored me rigid.