What Are You Reading? (11)

This is a continuation of the topic What Are You Reading? (10).

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What Are You Reading? (11)

1NLNils
Feb 12, 2022, 2:00 am

It's time for the eleventh installment of this topic!

2podaniel
Feb 14, 2022, 10:15 am

I am reading With the Old Breed: At Peleliu and Okinawa by Eugene Sledge. I wish FS would come out with it own edition--probably the best book I've read of what actually happens in combat.

3NLNils
Feb 14, 2022, 11:29 am

>2 podaniel: Good to hear. Don’t miss the series The Pacific, Eugene Sledge is portrayed by Joseph Mazello.

4podaniel
Feb 14, 2022, 12:14 pm

>3 NLNils:

Thanks for the tip.

5Dropkickerbob
Feb 14, 2022, 12:44 pm

For myself, I am reading Journey to the center of the earth & hp lovercraft's short stories. Also reading the library edition of Hellboy when my eyes need a break from novels.

For my baby girl, reading her The house on pooh corner & the blue fairy book.

6BionicJim
Edited: Feb 15, 2022, 1:29 pm

I am also reading Journey to the Centre of the Earth (FS 2001). A friend was jealous of this beautiful edition and purchased a second-hand copy, only to discover that a printing error gave him 8 blank white pages between pages 74-90. It became a learning moment when I was able to share about how books are printed with multiple pages on a sheet, then the sheet is folded, gathered, tied, and finally trimmed. One of the sheets had apparently not been printed on one side and, after folding, it was a strange situation of some pages printed and others not, all in one signature. I encouraged him to make the book even more one-of-a-kind by handwriting the missing pages, or even better, pencil in the words with Arne Saknussemm’s runes.

Edit: Got the spelling right in Arne’s name

7A.Godhelm
Feb 16, 2022, 12:26 am

>6 BionicJim: I encouraged him to make the book even more one-of-a-kind by handwriting the missing pages
I buy a lot of used books and finding this would have kept me scratching my head for years.

8L.Bloom
Feb 26, 2022, 12:48 pm

The Vision of Piers the Plowman (FS, 2014)

It's really a lovely book but very awkwardly sized and uncomfortable to handle as a result. Attempting to read the middle English for fun but relying heavily on the facing page translation.

9Eumnestes
Feb 26, 2022, 1:50 pm

>8 L.Bloom: That’s with the Donaldson translation, right? I didn’t realize it had facing page original Middle English. Do you know if it’s the B-text or the C-text?

10L.Bloom
Feb 26, 2022, 3:49 pm

>9 Eumnestes: From the intro it says it is based on the B text

11Watry
Feb 26, 2022, 6:36 pm

I'm reading The Library: A Fragile History, which is probably of interest to most active members of the site. I'm nearly 150 pages in and we've barely hit the 1600s, so naturally most of the material is about personal or monastic libraries, rather than public or lending libraries.

12Xandian97
Feb 26, 2022, 6:46 pm

I've been reading through Daphne du Maurier's works: read Jamaica Inn, Frenchman's Creek, and My Cousin Rachel so far, just starting Rebecca now. Frenchman's Creek definitely my favourite so far - making me rethink my attitude towards historical romance.

...thinking of giving the Outlander series a go, maybe even some of the Bridgerton books too - the show was entertaining enough!

13L.Bloom
Feb 28, 2022, 4:03 pm

>9 Eumnestes: I'll add something to this that I've noticed as I've tried to read Langland's middle English. I'm no scholar but I have found that though Chaucer and Langland were contemporaries, the middle English in, "The Vision of Piers the Plowman" is nearly impenetrable to me while, "The Canterbury Tales" is intelligible to a much greater degree. Not sure of the reason for this.

14Eumnestes
Feb 28, 2022, 4:53 pm

>13 L.Bloom: It's because Chaucer wrote London English, the dialect that dominated the formation of early modern English, and subsequently modern English. Langland wrote in a West Midland dialect, which seems less familiar to us now than Chaucer's English.

I share your experience of reading the two authors. Chaucer's language is easy enough that I will not purchase a modern verse translation (unfortunately, fine press editions with the original are expensive). By contrast, I welcome some help with Langland's English. Based on your description, I ordered the FS edition. A little worried about the awkward size, but otherwise it looks excellent.

15Jayked
Feb 28, 2022, 7:10 pm

>13 L.Bloom:
Language apart, the content and approach of both authors are quite different. Chaucer makes occasional criticisms of classes and systems through humour. Langland criticises the state of religious and secular government relentlessly through metaphor which is difficult to appreciate without a knowledge of the turbulent history of the period. PP spawned a number of other works which called for revolutionary changes, and is essential to an understanding of the period, but a bit of a slog for the casual reader.

16StephenHorsfall
Mar 7, 2022, 12:13 am

'The Decline ad Fall', volume three of 'Byzantium' by John Julius Norwich - I'm about half-way through, and up to 1270 (year, not page number!).
'Joseph Andrews' by Henry Fielding.
Non-FS: 'Anna Karemina' by Tolstoy, translated by Rochelle Townsend, Everyman's Library, 1960. God, it's boring! however, I've made it to about three-quarters of the way through, so I'll plough grimly on to thhe end. Pity - I loved 'War and Peace'.

17PartTimeBookAddict
Mar 7, 2022, 12:39 am

FS: "Meditations" Marcus Aurelius and "As I Walked Out One Summer Morning" by Laurie Lee.

Non FS:
"Maigret and the Man on the Bench" and " A Gentleman in Moscow" by Amor Towles.

18Hamwick
Mar 7, 2022, 2:18 am

>17 PartTimeBookAddict: I have not read any Laurie Lee for a long time, I think I will pick up “Cider with Rosie” next.

At the moment I am reading “On War”, by Carl Von Clausewitz (the Michael Howard and Peter Paret translation). I have been meaning to read it for a while now, it is easier to read than I was expecting, with lots of little nuggets to examine and think about.

19trentsteel
Mar 7, 2022, 8:19 am

Lost world - whatever they used for the cover material has a really soft nice feel to it. Also, had read JP earlier in the year. This is similar enough that I'm glad I took a break and didn't go back to back. So far a fun and fast read. Overall both JP and Lost world are great values and I hope the do some more Chricton books in the future.

20Kainzow
Mar 7, 2022, 11:52 am

Oryx and Crake
Can't put the book down

21L.Bloom
Mar 7, 2022, 4:57 pm

The Eric Gill LE of Canterbury Tales (with the aid of a large lap pillow, a table, and a second hand copy of the penguin edition for the notes)

22LBShoreBook
Mar 7, 2022, 5:01 pm

>21 L.Bloom: I learned about him through Golden Cockerel, really like his art and starting to collect a few books with his engravings. I like that LE.

23Lady19thC
Mar 15, 2022, 4:28 pm

Revelations of Divine Love~Dame Julian of Norwich
Old English Medical Remedies~Sinead Spearing
Clara's War~Clara Kramer

Just finished a reread of A Traveller in Time, by Alison Uttley.

24Cat_of_Ulthar
Mar 16, 2022, 4:25 am

Just finished Folio's edition of Queen Lucia. A very amusing tale of rivalry, pretension, and one-upmanship in an English village. I hope the rest of the series is as good.

Staying with the period feel, I also revisited a couple of my old PG Wodehouse paperbacks: The Code of the Woosters and Much Obliged, Jeeves.

25amp123
Mar 16, 2022, 9:29 pm

>24 Cat_of_Ulthar: I just finished The Code of the Woosters in the Everymans Library edition of The Best of Wodehouse. The first time I read any of his works. Never laughed so hard reading a book. Pure comedic genius. I'm grateful to the FSD who recommended him. I can't wait to read more.

26UK_History_Fan
Mar 17, 2022, 6:03 am

>25 amp123:
I can also highly recommend the movie
“Wodehouse In Exile” which I recently watched on Amazon Prime. Well acted and interesting story based on real events.

27N11284
Mar 17, 2022, 6:20 am

>25 amp123:
You are entering another dangerous and slippery slope here. I bought The Code of the Woosters in the Everymans Library edition last year and now have 20 of these editions. Lovely easy reads with humour on every page and indeed almost every sentence. Very well presented hard backed editions and all costing around €10.00 each with free shipping from Book Depository. I'm only afraid that I will keep going and buy all 100+

28ironjaw
Mar 17, 2022, 7:37 am

>27 N11284: my foray started with a collection of 25 Wodehouse books that I purchased from a hospice on ebay in January for £65 - bargain I thought - only to find out when it was delivered that about ten of them had coffee spilled on them and were damp and wet even in the box. The rest had coffee rings on the covers but otherwise perfect. I was angry and appalled that a charity/hospice would do such a thing and not include this in the description. The pictures were taken in an angle so as not to show the coffee spills and I left a neutral feedback. Should’ve left a negative one but I am a kind person by nature.

I’m a sucker for Everyman’s Library books. They are so lovely especially the PG Wodehouse covers. It would have been far better to pick them up individually. Hatchards has a lovely collection - a whole bookshelf in London’s Piccadilly.

29N11284
Mar 17, 2022, 7:43 am

>28 ironjaw:
Agree about the covers.They look wonderful on the shelf.

30woodstock8786
Mar 17, 2022, 6:17 pm

I am reading War and Peace, it was my New Year’s resolution to finally read it. Started in January, but it has been going quite slowly.

I am reading it in German as the translation is a very new one which was lauded very highly as very close to the original and with a lot of very good notes on the text.

31coynedj
Edited: Mar 18, 2022, 12:14 am

>30 woodstock8786: I'm also reading War and Peace, in English. I'm approaching the half-way point, trying to read 200 pages per week, so with the book clocking in at over 1300 pages it's taking some time. I'm quite enjoying it, the multitude of characters haven't been awfully difficult to keep straight, but there does seem to be a good amount of superfluous rumination - I thought the other day that with some judicious editing, it could be an even better 1100-page novel!

32woodstock8786
Mar 18, 2022, 5:36 am

>31 coynedj: Is it true that the reading and the flow of the story starts getting better after 200 pages or so? I am still at a point where there are so many different people and it is difficult to keep them all straight in my head

33Joshbooks1
Mar 18, 2022, 7:47 am

>32 woodstock8786: I enjoyed the book but do find it to be overrated and doesn't stand the test of time as say something like Don Quixote. It's more in tune with a long winded Dickens novel that reads more like a soap opera than anything else. I found Anna Karenina to be more enjoyable and his last novel, Resurrection, to be my favorite. I love Tolstoy for his short stories, and, although I don't consider myself religious, his books on Christianity are one of a kind and in my extensive readings he is the only individual who has made me question whether I should become more religious. Gandhi attributes Tolstoy's The Kingdom of God is Within You as heavily influencing his thought and becoming a pacifist. Maybe it's ignorance but I just don't get why War and Peace is considered one of the best novels ever written especially considering his contemporary, Dostoevsky, is a far superior novelist. I even enjoyed The Adolescent, unanimously considered Dostoevsky's worst novel, more than War and Peace. I enjoyed War and Peace and Anna Karenina but I think the genius of Tolstoy lies in his later works on Christianity and his short stories / novellas.

34coynedj
Mar 18, 2022, 9:31 am

>32 woodstock8786: For me it was fairly easy to follow right from the start, which is unusual as I often get lost in keeping track of people. Tolstoy usually does a fairly good job of reminding you who characters are when they come back into the story. I found it best to identify who the main characters are and pretty much ignore the rest - I'm sure there's a family tree of the important ones somewhere on the internet. Some of them have me very curious how they'll turn out.

Like Joshbooks, I so far don't see why it's considered the greatest novel ever written, though it is undoubtedly quite good. Anna Karenina may have been better (I'll wait until I finish War and Peace before making that judgment) and I also love Dostoevsky, though his books certainly aren't quick reads. Somehow I've read all of his novels except The Brothers Karamazov, a travesty which I need to rectify. My favorite so far is The Possessed, also titled Demons depending on the translator.

35Eumnestes
Mar 18, 2022, 9:39 am

>32 woodstock8786: Yes, it is true: after the first several hundred pages it becomes much easier to distinguish characters and events. The reader learns through familiarity, and the plot lines resolve themselves into more distinct pathways. Just keep going.

>33 Joshbooks1: I think the reason that so many people have considered WP on a par with AK, or even greater, is that they treat it as a different kind of novel. AK is a polished gem: the problems intimated in the early parts of the novel are precisely developed by a story arc that creates the impression of both progress and repetition. You can almost encapsulate the story in a single view. The philosopher Bernard Williams exemplified the fundamentals of his "moral luck" theory with a compressed account of the plot of AK.

WP is not like that. Tolstoy himself opined that it was "certainly not a novel." It is a set of loosely related plots accompanied by a series of ruminations about the philosophy of history. But these plots are just fascinating, and the juxtaposition of the fiction with the philosophy always resonates. For example, many times Tolstoy the philosopher will tell us that historical determinism makes the choices of individual Russian soldiers irrelevant. But then follows a chapter in which Tolstoy the storyteller presents characters whose decisions and actions appear genuinely to impact what happens in a given battle. It's mixture contradiction, irony, and development. But if one is not able to enjoy the bagginess of the whole affair, one is likely to find WP lacking in comparison to something like AK.

36woodstock8786
Edited: Mar 18, 2022, 11:21 am

Thank you everyone for the detailed answer. I read Anna Karenina two or three years ago and that was a great read.

My thoughts were a bit along that line with W&P, that it seems not like a structured novel, but more like a lot of loosed threads but I haven’t come far enough to judge.

I will definitely keep going and see.

Thanks everyone for the good insights

37Joshbooks1
Mar 18, 2022, 11:41 am

>35 Eumnestes: I'll have to look more into the Bernard Williams theory regarding AK. It's probably just personal preference but I found both WP and AK to be overrated. They are great stories and fun reads (especially AK which I will probably reread one day - never WP) but I found both stories lacking the philosophical moral brilliance and courage of older Tolstoy with Resurrection, his later Christian philosophy, and several shorts stories. Even for instance Levin in AK who philosophizes throughout the book and is a portrayal of Tolstoy himself; he has good points but his thoughts are quite simple and basic. Later in life Tolstoy really dug deep with all his moral fiber to better understand humanity, the world around him and life itself and I believe this is where he shined as a writer and why he is up there with Dostoevsky. Tolstoy is one of my favorite authors, and I'm probably in the minority, but it isn't because of WP or AK. I'm not bashing these books and I enjoyed both immensely, I just don't think AK or WP should be in the category of best novels and it's a shame people only remember him for these two books when he has so much more to offer.

38vestigialtrumpet
Mar 18, 2022, 3:51 pm

>37 Joshbooks1: I knew nothing about Resurrection until I read this post and just did some quick online research. Any suggestions about the best edition/translation to read? I'm trying to avoid a Print on Demand copy or shoddy translation. If you have any thoughts about Tolstoy's Calendar of Wisdom or Hadji Murad I'd love to hear those as well.

39Joshbooks1
Mar 18, 2022, 4:58 pm

I believe it was the Maude translation which was either Penguin or Oxford. I've always enjoyed Maude but then again I've never been too picky when it comes to translations so someone may be of better assistance. It has less of an exciting plot than his other two novels but much more philosophical in his beliefs and about Russian society in the late 19th century and certainly relevant today. As for Hadji Murad, it's great along with most of his novellas (when I was in college first reading The Death of Ivan Ilyich I was completely in shock and it truly changed my outlook on life). Maybe fifteen years ago I picked up Great Short Works of Leo Tolstoy by Perennial Classics which has an amazing collections of short stories and novellas which I highly recommend (700+ pages for $15 - can't do much better than that). I do have the Folio boxed set, but, ashamedly, it's still on the shelf in shrink wrap; I'd be surprised if they didn't have those stories and suspect with typical Folio fashion the translations are superb.

40stopsurfing
Mar 18, 2022, 5:00 pm

Currently reading Possession by A. S. Byatt. Definitely high-brow, literary, and a romance. It’s a fine read, but it’s taking a while to get through, and my TBR pile is sitting there slightly impatiently, waiting for me to finish…

41PartTimeBookAddict
Mar 18, 2022, 5:43 pm

"Into Thin Air" by Jon Krakauer. The illustrations are a little dull, but the story is so engrossing.

42adriano77
Mar 18, 2022, 10:34 pm

>25 amp123:

Always glad to see someone discover Wodehouse. Especially Bertie Wooster's world. Echo the recommendations of the EL editions. Love them.

Having said all that, if audiobooks are your thing at all, you may want to check out Jonathan Cecil's narrations of the Wodehouse books. As a general rule, I prefer text, but these are incredible. Phenomenal voice acting. When working, I keep them playing in the background and find myself laughing so often.

43Atheistic
Mar 18, 2022, 11:41 pm

Are the 1st World Library Wodehouse hardbacks of good quality? Is anyone familiar with them?

Thanks

44Eastonorfolio
Mar 19, 2022, 1:22 am

I just finished "All Quiet On the Western Front". What a memorable read. I don't know why I waited so long to read it. Highly recommended.

45Kainzow
Mar 19, 2022, 4:35 am

>44 Eastonorfolio: I have the Folio edition sitting on my shelf for nearly 6 years! Really need to read it this year...

46ubiquitousuk
Mar 19, 2022, 5:28 am

>45 Kainzow: Yes, you really do!

47Eumnestes
Mar 19, 2022, 12:22 pm

>38 vestigialtrumpet: Hadji Murad (or Hadji Murat in the P&V translation) is probably my favorite Tolstoy short story /novella. Nineteenth century Russians dealing with ethnic minority separatists in Chechnya. It initially seems a bit less focused than some of Tolstoy's more famous short stories, but it develops a fantastic set of characters and interesting thematics. Tolstoy treats the protagonist as a "noble savage," but also creates complicated affinities between the Russian and the Caucasian separatists. Unlike many of his shorter stories, Tolstoy based it on archival material about historical events. It's also longer than most of his short stories, over a hundred pages.

48abysswalker
Mar 19, 2022, 5:05 pm

>47 Eumnestes: Hadji Murat is also the story Harold Bloom highlights as the pinnacle of Tolstoy in his book The Western Canon.

(The Maudes' translation is part of the Everyman's Library volume 2 of the short fiction, which I find attractive and convenient.)

49Jeremy53
Mar 21, 2022, 5:53 pm

>44 Eastonorfolio: Agree - so powerful and real. I've heard there are two notable translations which are quite different, and worth reading both. (I've only read the Folio one)

50ubiquitousuk
Mar 21, 2022, 6:19 pm

I am now reading the Folio edition of Middlemarch. Superb writing so far. We definitely need more Victorian and early C20th literature from Folio !

51podaniel
Mar 22, 2022, 10:17 am

Difficulties by Ronald Knox and Arnold Lunn. The book is a collection of letters between a Catholic priest and a non-Catholic on various objections to the Catholic church. Spoiler alert: the non-Catholic (Mr. Lunn) becomes a Catholic convert shortly after this book was published.

Msg. Knox was crazy brilliant and this is probably one of the best books of Catholic apologetics that I've read. Highly entertaining and informative.

52LesMiserables
Apr 1, 2022, 7:32 am

>51 podaniel:
Having just read 'Enthusiasm' I am in full agreement.

Knox I would say was in a realm of higher intelligence than the common brainiac.

Waugh writes a profound biography of him.

53podaniel
Apr 1, 2022, 6:38 pm

>52 LesMiserables:

Yep--thanks for the enablement to finally read the Waugh biography.

54RRCBS
Apr 5, 2022, 9:25 am

Just started the Ash Tree Press collection of Mary E Braddon ghost stories. Really enjoying both the content and the edition itself. (Bonus, Ash Tree Press is a Canadian company!)

55LesMiserables
Apr 6, 2022, 3:36 am

Talking of EW, I've just today completed 'Put Out More Flags'.
Waugh delivers again. A genius comic.

56LesMiserables
Apr 6, 2022, 3:42 am

Just starting this evening: A Time to Keep Silence by Patrick Leigh Fermor.

57CarltonC
Apr 6, 2022, 2:17 pm

Just finished Ali Smith’s new novel Companion piece, which is wonderfully playful and contemporary, whilst playing around in time, with time for an open ended historical tale. Always love the wordplay.

58Jean-Louis
Apr 6, 2022, 2:33 pm

>42 adriano77: the recordings by Martin Jarvis are wonderful. When I read the printed text I cannot help hearing Jeeves and Bertie's voices

59PartTimeBookAddict
Apr 6, 2022, 8:54 pm

I’ve been on an Ian McEwan kick, having read this week:
Cockroach
Enduring Love
The Comfort of Strangers
Amsterdam
and Nutshell

Now on to FS Edmund Crispin books!

60coynedj
Apr 6, 2022, 9:12 pm

>59 PartTimeBookAddict: Looks like you're a full time book addict. None of this part time balderdash at all.

61PartTimeBookAddict
Apr 6, 2022, 9:20 pm

>60 coynedj: Ha ha! They are very short novels, more novellas really.
If you haven’t seen the movie version of “Comfort of Strangers” it is pretty weird, but hypnotizing. Christopher Walker’s Italian accent alone is worth the price of admission.

62Kainzow
Apr 6, 2022, 10:09 pm

>59 PartTimeBookAddict: I have quite a few books by him at home. I started with Enduring Love and found it meh. So, I haven't been reading anything by him since...

63LesMiserables
Apr 7, 2022, 5:05 am

The Life of the Mind by James V. Schall

64ironjaw
Apr 7, 2022, 9:59 am

>56 LesMiserables: Hello, LesMis! Been a while my friend!

I’ve read A Time to Keep Silence back in January. Bought it from Hatchards in Piccadilly. It was listed as a Hatchards Special Edition with a striking cover. Much enjoyed it but needed to brush up latin and French 😂

65LesMiserables
Apr 7, 2022, 11:34 pm

>64 ironjaw:
Faisel, I thoroughly enjoyed it: Fermor is a brilliant writer.

66LesMiserables
Apr 8, 2022, 4:58 am

I've just discovered someone called Meghan Markle is attempting to trademark a word.

'Archetypes' I believe.

Best we all get reading before we are reduced to an ever decreasing circle of vocabulary!

Oh, and I'm reading One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest.

67stopsurfing
Apr 9, 2022, 6:21 pm

Have just now finished The Dispossessed, by Ursula Le Guin. I enjoyed the book and saw it, among other things, as an observation of how the way we organise ourselves as idealist humans in society always ends up as being oppressive to human freedom and how those ideals need to renew themselves every few generations and how each individual needs to find or claim their own freedom for themselves. Quite a hopeful book actually. That’s my initial response but it’s much more than that of course, it’s a novel! I will read it again - it’s deceptively simple, but I think rich as well.
I enjoyed the read and adore the FS treatment of this book, especially the cloth cover, that shimmers like silk and feels so good in the hand. It’s a keeper.
Before this I read Possession by A. S. Byatt (I just realised now how the titles relate!). It turned into a truly great read, well worth it. The FS version is nice enough but is not a ‘precious object’ like The Dispossessed. It’s just a book, a carrier of content well worth reading…

68adriano77
Apr 9, 2022, 9:14 pm

Halfway through a reread of Master & Margarita.

Starting Deadhouse Gates. Anyone read the entire Malazan series? Worth investing the time?

69Hamwick
Apr 10, 2022, 12:56 am

>68 adriano77: obviously personal tastes are exactly that, but for what it is worth I do recommend the Malazan series. Whisky Jack and the Bridge burners are definitely one of the more memorable literary creations that stick in my mind. It can be dark in places, not too dark though. The characters are not shining beacons of light and honour, they are gritty and interesting.

70strangenews
Apr 10, 2022, 4:39 am

This message has been deleted by its author.

71adriano77
Apr 10, 2022, 5:19 am

>69 Hamwick:

I've read Gardens of the Moon and it took until beyond the midpoint to get me even vaguely interested. However, from what I see elsewhere, it's widely thought of as the worst of the series and things get exponentially better in all respects (writing style, characters, so on). Was hoping to confirm that here.

As >70 strangenews: says, it's quite the investment of time!

72Chemren
Apr 10, 2022, 12:19 pm

>70 strangenews: When I read them, only the first 8 books were out. It still took me 3 months to get through the 8; a much slower pace than normal for me. When the 9th book came out a couple of years later, I found I couldn't remember the details well enough to get a full appreciation of the story. I did enjoy them, so one of these years I will reread the first eight and the final two.

73L.Bloom
Apr 10, 2022, 3:44 pm

Everyman's Library edition of Shakespeare's Histories Volume I. Much as I would prefer the FS version, this is my first time reading the bard and I wanted the excellent introductions and footnotes. Sadly I missed the boat on the FS printings of the Oxfords and the secondary prices are, well... typical.

74Hamwick
Edited: Apr 11, 2022, 12:36 am

>71 adriano77: The problem for me with Gardens of the Moon, is that you feel like you have joined halfway through the story. You are straight into it and are expected to just run with it. You end up having to piece it all together, as you get more of the background through the later chapters and books.

It definitely improves though and becomes quite memorable, although it has so many different characters it can get a bit confusing if you take a break between books.

If I was to recommend a fantasy series to someone at the moment, it would be the Spellmonger series, by Terry Mancour. Book 1 was great, book 2 was a bit frustrating (I think Terry Mancour was playing around with some styles, which did not work for me), but after that anomaly, each book has been a real pleasure. He writes them as fast as Sanderson. The best way I can describe the series (now on book 14 of 20) is a combination of Anne Mcaffrey’s Dragons of Pern, with the Lord of the Rings and Terry Pratchett’ Discworld.

Edit: I accidentally typed Spellsinger, instead of Spellmonger.

75coynedj
Apr 11, 2022, 12:48 pm

Well, I finally finished War and Peace. It's a tremendous book of course, though I'll withhold judgment on whether it's the best novel ever written. I do disagree with some of his historical-philosophical views, and it could have been edited a bit (after mentioning "three men", did we really need to be told "There were three of them" in the same paragraph?). Quibbles.

I also finished The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs, as mentioned in the Spring Collection thread. It's a fine book but I was quite content to read a copy from the library - I don't really need a lavishly illustrated high quality copy.

So, on to new things. As for fiction, I need something light after War and Peace. I'll be delving into the world of Wodehouse. For non-fiction, it's another library volume, Calling Bullsh*t.

I also finished the video series of Horatio Hornblower. I don't know how closely the series followed the books, but I found the episodes very formulaic. Based on this, I find it unlikely that I'll read the books.

76adriano77
Apr 11, 2022, 1:38 pm

>74 Hamwick:

Didn't mind the dropping-in-midstream thing so much. More so the workman-like prose and flat characters. The ending fizzled actually, thinking about it. With that said, would be interested in learning more about Laseen.

Not heard of Terry Mancour. Will take a look.

77Lady19thC
Apr 11, 2022, 2:40 pm

Sense & Sensibility~Jane Austen FS Edition
The BFG~Roald Dahl FS Edition
The English Patient~Michael Ondaatje Everyman's Edition

78CarltonC
Apr 11, 2022, 4:28 pm

Just finished Dorothy L Sayers’ Strong Poison (FS 2009) and started Dracula (FS 2008), which I had never read as I don’t like horror, but enjoyed the historical novel about Stoker, Shadowplay by Joseph O’Connor, so thought I really should read the famous book.
Strong Poison is a reread, but I hadn’t read the following two Wimsey and Harriet Vane novels, so thought I should start at the beginning of their story. The plots in the Wimsey books tend to be improbably convoluted, but the period detail and humour is fantastic for a light comfort read (only Wodehouse does it better >75 coynedj:).

79jfkf
Apr 11, 2022, 5:25 pm

In the past few months I have read Power of the Dog, Handmaids Tale, All the Light You Cannot See, A Tale of the Terror, Folio version, The Stranger, The Orchard Keeper, American Sphinx about Thomas Jefferson, and The Orchid Thief. I have just started Folios Kafka on the Shore and The Black Death. I would highly recommend any of these to read and would buy a Folio treatment of all except maybe The Orchid Thief, funds permitting. I know Folio has published Handmaids Tale, but I dont have it yet.

80abysswalker
Edited: Apr 11, 2022, 5:47 pm

>74 Hamwick: >76 adriano77: I believe the Malazan series was based on the author's GURPS campaign.

Yeah, here we go, I remembered correctly:

https://malazan.fandom.com/wiki/Role-playing_Game_Origins_of_the_Malazan_Series

I think it was also heavily influenced by Glen Cook's The Black Company.

I read the first few books and enjoyed them (a while ago), but it read like exactly that to me (someone's Black Company inspired D&D game).

81uncledaveh
Apr 13, 2022, 5:19 pm

Brat Farrar by Josephine Tey. It was published by The Folio Society in 2010.

82Jeremy53
Apr 13, 2022, 7:05 pm

>62 Kainzow: I agree re: Enduring Love - it had McEwan's usual great opening, then faded quickly.

But if you haven't read Atonement, I heartily recommend. A wonderful novel.

83LesMiserables
Apr 14, 2022, 5:24 am

>75 coynedj: Bravo. Indeed, a wonderful book. I often get a sense of prolonged elation on finishing the big books.

Clarrisa, Poor Fellow my Country, Lord of the Rings, David Copperfield, Les Miserables, Atlas Shrugged etc. All left me deeply satisfied.

84abysswalker
Apr 15, 2022, 1:36 pm

About 2/3 through The Classical World, by Robin Lane Fox. Lovely binding by Folio in full Buckram with a small inset image on the front board of a bas relief.

This is not a narrative history, but rather a (long) collection of (short) topical essays which switch between historiographical modes. For example, one essay might focus on cultural history while the next might focus on political history, the next on philosophical trends, and so forth. This is nice both because the essays are short enough that they can be read in a brief sitting, and also because it also avoids one of the common pitfalls of much recent academic historical writing, which is to totally ignore more traditional "kings and battles" history in favor of cultural quirks and marginal voices. (If all one had was older works, kings and battles alone would indeed be tiresome and incomplete, but the pendulum has swung too far in the other direction; to be educated one still needs to know who conquered whom, when, and how.) This approach allows Fox to attend to both priorities (obviously in a survey manner due to the sweep of time and space covered).

At first I was slightly put off by his overly conceptual framing device (he wants to see everything in terms of three vaguely platonic ideals: freedom, justice, and luxury), and I still think this is procrustean, but on balance these are important themes and the way he handles it is not too intrusive.

85LesMiserables
Apr 19, 2022, 5:24 am

So just finished The Life of the Mind by James V. Schall, and have embarked upon:

A Time of Gifts by PLF.

86cronshaw
Apr 19, 2022, 5:34 am

I've just begun China by John Keay, in Folio's magnificent edition which is certainly enhancing the pleasure.

87RRCBS
Apr 20, 2022, 10:00 am

Half way through the FS Eleanor of Aquitaine. Will likely follow that up with the FS Thomas Becket by Frank Barlow.

88PartTimeBookAddict
Apr 20, 2022, 7:29 pm

Just finished Italo Calvino's "Invisible Cities."

It was very charming and imaginative. The proper illustrator could have a field day with an FS version!

89DanielOC
Apr 20, 2022, 8:36 pm

Boswell’s London Journal in the FS 1985 edition.

90Jeremy53
Apr 20, 2022, 8:42 pm

Took me a while due to general busy-ness, but I've just finished Trollope's Barchester Towers.

I loved The Warden, and loved the first half of BT, but I started to struggle with the slow pace of developments, and there just wasn't enough tension and character intrigue to keep me enthralled. Having said that, I did enjoy it, and most of the time I felt like I was in the hands of a master writer. Some very funny moments too. The Folio edition was a delight too, even though simple in comparison to some of their recent offerings.

Will I keep reading the Barchester series? Yes, but won't resume until next year, I think. By then, hopefully my brain will be clearer of work things, which have been challenging over the last couple of years for obvious reasons. These longer, slower paced reads do require some head space, I find.

I'm now reading All Our Shimmering Skies by Aussie author Trent Dalton. A dramatic change in style, to say the least. So far, so good. I really enjoyed his debut Boy Swallows Universe.

91RRCBS
Apr 25, 2022, 3:02 pm

Read The Doomsday Book , absolutely devoured it, though very sad. Now reading Seward’s The Wars of the Roses.

92jillmwo
Apr 27, 2022, 8:54 am

I'm reading the Folio edition of Phantom of the Opera and am loving the presentation of the print volume overall. The layout is good, paper stock is lovely, and the artwork does not detract! Particularly, I like the full chapter opening pages that lead in with artwork AND the printed page edges (black and orange -- quite striking). Excellent work with this one!

93ubiquitousuk
Apr 27, 2022, 11:22 am

>92 jillmwo: glad you like it. I've had my eye on that edition for a while, but some here give it a bad rap

94Macumbeira
Edited: Apr 27, 2022, 3:23 pm

L.F. Celine : Journey to the end of the night
with illustrations by Jacques Tardi

95LesMiserables
Apr 27, 2022, 3:23 pm

I'm continuing with my maiden reading of A Time of Gifts. If you haven't read Patrick Leigh Fermor, you might want to.

96brokenwolf
Apr 27, 2022, 8:10 pm

I just finished A Conspiracy Of Dunces for the first time. I couldn’t tell if I loved it going through but in hindsight it’s been staying with me. I think I’ll have to read it again at a later date.

97rsmac
Apr 27, 2022, 10:16 pm

>96 brokenwolf: I re-read A Confederacy of Dunces a couple weeks ago. The parts with the factory owner and his wife kind of dragged, but overall pretty good.

I found a cheap copy of the original hardback from 1981 and passed on the Folio as the art on that one I thought was too much like a kid's book and not a good fit for that story.

98stopsurfing
Apr 28, 2022, 2:29 am

I have just finished Night Soldiers by Alan Furst (as recommended by English Bookseller in another thread) and it was excellent - thank you English Bookseller. Have just started The Last Samurai by Helen DeWitt (also recommended here by someone) and it’s looking promising. Both books would be good publishing options for Folio IMO. The Furst book is the best WWII war novel I’ve ever read, and the Dewitt is the kind of unique/intelligent/surprising book that awakens parts of the mind that are rarely stimulated, like an interesting conversation with someone who knows far more and is far more intelligent than I am. This is what I often wish for but rarely find, so it’s nice to have it in book form

99CobbsGhost
May 4, 2022, 2:52 pm

Moby-Dick. Great book, I'm surprised more people haven't heard of it.

100boldface
May 4, 2022, 8:14 pm

>99 CobbsGhost:

What's it about?

101coynedj
May 4, 2022, 10:34 pm

>100 boldface: I think it's a fishing story.

102Jeremy53
May 5, 2022, 1:22 am

>101 coynedj: It's a famous DJ's exotica song.

103CobbsGhost
May 5, 2022, 9:20 am

>100 boldface:
I'd hate to speculate whilst only 15-20% complete.

>101 coynedj:
There are fish involved, so far, but as many or more clams than fish as well.

>102 Jeremy53:
Led Zeppelin?

104Cat_of_Ulthar
May 6, 2022, 11:28 am

Non-Folio.

Some more P. G. Wodehouse: Something Fresh. It's fun and kept me turning the pages but I did feel the third-person narrative was a little less engaging than the first-person approach of the Jeeves and Wooster stories. (It's part of a Blandings omnibus and Summer Lightning is next up.)

Folio.

I had begun Lucia in London but it has been put aside for now because I am getting stuck into the LoTR LE and enjoying meeting some old friends again :-)

105cronshaw
May 6, 2022, 6:36 pm

>104 Cat_of_Ulthar: Tesoro, no-one pushes Lucia aside. Mrs. Mapp tried and paid molto caro.

106LesMiserables
Edited: May 7, 2022, 5:51 am

Reading Victory over Vice by Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen.

107ubiquitousuk
Edited: May 7, 2022, 5:38 am

I finally finished Middlemarch (latest Folio edition) after about six weeks. Even though not a lot actually happens in the book, this was really an impressive and intricate portrait of late Georgian England. Definitely lives up to its subtitle, A Study of Provincial Life, and, in my view, earns its spot on all those "best novels of all time" lists. I have mixed feelings about the illustrations in this edition, but there's a generous helping of them at least.

108coynedj
May 7, 2022, 11:10 am

Still working on my reserved list at the library. I finished Calling Bullsh*t by Carl Bergstrom and Jevin West. Much of the information was familiar to this inveterate skeptic, but there were some useful parts.

Currently reading T: the Story of Testosterone, the Hormone that Dominates and Divides Us, by Carole Hooven, and Project Hail Mary, by Andy Weir. The T book seemed well received but the topic attracts a lot of polemicists in addition to the occasional scientist, but I'm happy to report that it seems quite scientific and shoots down the politically-driven theories with (gasp!) the evidence. Project Hail Mary is wonderful - I have been putting off other tasks so I can spend more time with it. His book The Martian was made into an excellent film, and I can't imagine that a film of this book isn't already in the works.

109rsmac
May 8, 2022, 7:05 pm

Not a Folio, but sort of Folio-adjacent - I'm reading The Prague Cemetery by Umberto Eco.

It is sort of a mix of late 19th century elements like psychiatry, mesmerism, anti-semitism and freemason/satanism conspiracies. The 125th anniversary of the exposure of the (real life) Taxil hoax was last month so I had been reading up on that and happened to run across Eco's book where Taxil (and one of Taxil's fictional characters) are fictionalized characters in Eco's story.

I noticed that there are already a couple Eco books Folio has released, including Foucault's Pendulum, which also appears to be playing with historical conspiracies. Anyone here have that one and is it worth picking up?

110BionicJim
May 8, 2022, 8:03 pm

>109 rsmac: I’ve been trying to find a copy of the FS Foucalt’s Pendulum in my price range for awhile to no avail. It’s a match to the remarkable FS The Name of the Rose, which I was lucky enough to acquire at a second hand bookshop for $25. There seems to be more of these that come available and it certainly is about an historical conspiracy, if you didn’t already know.

111rsmac
May 8, 2022, 8:13 pm

>110 BionicJim: I've really been enjoying The Prague Cemetery so it looks like I'll be looking for the FS Foucault's Pendulum, too. I guess we're now Ebay rivals! Lol.

112Caput_Lupinum
May 8, 2022, 8:20 pm

Currently reading the FS edition of The Man Who Mistook His Wife For A Hat by Oliver Sachs.

113LesMiserables
May 9, 2022, 5:05 am

Just finished A Time of Gifts by Patrick Leigh Fermor and starting Between the Woods and the Water by same.

Outstanding literary talent.

114podaniel
May 9, 2022, 3:02 pm

They Are People, a collection of modern (for the thirties) short stories of nuns, monks and priests compiled by Sister Mariella Gable. She oversaw three such collections and this one is quite good.

115AHub
May 10, 2022, 1:38 am

I just finished If This is a Man by Primo Levi. It was an extraordinary account made all the more impactful by the light hand with which the author retells his experiences in the concentration camp.

At one point he describes a dream filled restless night, attempting to share the top of a bunk bed with another prisoner. I got drawn into it, evocative as it was of trying to sleep with a fever, heady and overwrought. Then, he wakes up - in an Auschwitz work camp - and a new horror begins anew. It was quite a startling moment, to read of him transition from one nightmare straight into another. And such an interesting moment to highlight out of all the possible moments of horror, waking up in Auschwitz.

The Folio edition isn't much to my liking but it can be picked up at low prices. I'll definitely be purchasing the sequel, The Truce.

116Jeremy53
May 10, 2022, 6:40 pm

>115 AHub: It's an amazing read, isn't it? Not sure I could do a re-read, though. Extremely dark, of course.

There's a copy of the Folio Truce on eBay atm, I've been thinking about getting it, but with postage it's $34 AUD. Not a King's ransom, but not a bargain either.

117Macumbeira
Edited: May 11, 2022, 2:02 am

If you want to have an idea how it is to survive a concentration camp, you should read Marguerite Duras' La Douleur ( The Pain ).
I don't think there is a Duras in Folio.

118LesMiserables
May 16, 2022, 1:23 am

After finishing A Time of Gifts by Patrick Leigh Fermor, I moved quickly onto Between the Woods and the Water snd finished it in no time. I've just started the third of the trilogy, The Broken Road.

Just can't get enough of PLF at the moment. What a talent!

119English-bookseller
May 16, 2022, 6:46 am

One of the more well known escapades of PLF's life was his leading the SOE party that in 1944 captured and evacuated to Allied territory the German commander in Crete, Major General Heinrich Kreipe.

Unknown to PLF at the time was that on the evening of the kidnapping, the remaining German officers on Kreipe's staff toasted their missing general as an old fusspot. The replacement to the missing Kreipe was a much more effective and brutal German leader in Crete.

The film 'Ill met by Moonlight' deals with the kidnapping but perhaps not surprisingly does not reflect the German staff officers' views of their former Commander.

120LesMiserables
May 27, 2022, 6:05 am

Almost finished The Broken Road by Patrick Leigh Fermor, and probably would have done so earlier, but broke off to re-devour Waugh's Brideshead Revisited , Scoop, and Decline and Fall in double quick time.

121ubiquitousuk
May 27, 2022, 7:57 am

>119 English-bookseller: In a shameless plug, I review the Folio Society edition of Ill Met By Moonlight here for those who might be interested: https://ubiquitousbooks.wordpress.com/2022/01/29/ill-met-by-moonlight/

It is readily available in the secondary market at low prices and makes for quite a story.

122HugoDumas
May 29, 2022, 3:45 pm

Dismayed over the absurd price of the LE of LOTR I secured an oversized 10” x 8” Houghton Mifflin edition of LOTR and the Hobbit with the illustrations of Alan Lee at a fraction of the cost. Finishing it now while reviewing Jackson’s cinematic interpretations.

123LesMiserables
May 30, 2022, 6:53 pm

Embarking on the FS Mani.

124brokenwolf
Jun 2, 2022, 12:05 am

Just finished Moonraker. Loved it.

125adriano77
Jun 2, 2022, 1:50 am

Rereading Brothers Karamazov while I look to find a FS copy. They should just reprint it anyway.

126LesMiserables
Jun 2, 2022, 4:47 am

>125 adriano77: I have only read it once, but a great epic prolonged delight.

127chrisrsprague
Jun 2, 2022, 10:08 am

After putting it off for years (on my TBR pile), I'm finally reading Gone With the Wind (1968 2-volume LEC edition), after just having finished the EP 2-volume Dr. Zhivago.

128adriano77
Jun 2, 2022, 8:00 pm

>126 LesMiserables:

Fantastic book, yes, though not my favourite Dostoevsky - that will remain C&P. Worthy of a reread at least, IMO.

129PartTimeBookAddict
Jun 5, 2022, 7:07 pm

I just finished the Gormenghast trilogy in anticipation for the LE release. A much different "fantasy" experience than LOTR, which it is often ranked alongside of. Certainly not what I was expecting.

I found it very imaginative and the writing was very expressive, but there were many times when I had to reread a passage to clarify what was happening or who was doing what. And too often I felt that a scene would drag on much longer than it needed to with rococo descriptions. The characters and their motivations always felt at arm's length. The plot never drew me in. The third book "Titus Alone" fizzled out and left the whole trilogy with a flatness.

Having said that, there were a lot of interesting elements and I think if I reread them I'll be going in better prepared for the style and probably have a more enjoyable experience.

Did anyone have this same reaction? If there are any fans of these books, I would like to know what you love about them and what I may have missed.

130LesMiserables
Jun 5, 2022, 10:47 pm

Swimming against my own advice, I'm juggling a few books at the moment:

Mani
Men at Arms
Enthusiasm
Victory over Vice

131CarltonC
Edited: Jun 7, 2022, 5:20 pm

Currently reading The Real and the Romantic: English Art Between Two World Wars as I seem to have been enjoying this period for the last couple of years.
Recent reads especially recommended by me are
Hons and Rebels (I read the Slightly Foxed edition rather than the FS). This has a light hearted first half, but I found the second half rather poignant, which took me off guard.
Sea of Tranquility, the latest Emily St John Mandel, which I really enjoyed for its playfulness, including characters from her otherwise unconnected previous book, The Glass Hotel, and an author on a book tour before a pandemic, where the book is about a future pandemic (shades of her earlier Station Eleven). I think I especially enjoyed the clarity of Mandel’s writing having just read Woolf’s To the Lighthouse.

132BionicJim
Jun 18, 2022, 8:47 pm

I just finished reading the FS Dickens II edition of The Mystery of Edwin Drood. I'd avoided this since it's famously an unfinished mystery, however, it was very rewarding. Dickens was still at the top of his game, introducing eccentric and memorable characters right to the end. Can anyone recommend a quality follow-up book where the mystery is resolved? I've heard there are literally hundreds of attempts, but has anything floated to the top?

133Lady19thC
Edited: Jun 18, 2022, 10:45 pm

I just finished reading A Passage to India, by E.M. Forster (FS), which seems to get both better and more heartbreaking with each passing read, and now reading Lolita, which honestly reads like rich-honeyed poetry. Nabokov sure had a way with language.

134Pellias
Jun 19, 2022, 6:13 am

The Pendulum. Eco liked long sentences. Doesn't matter. I like Eco.

135Joshbooks1
Jun 19, 2022, 8:54 am

The Books Of Jacob by Olga Tokarczuk. This is my third book by her and the past two I enjoyed but was always wondering what made her special enough to win the Nobel Prize. This book is why. Nearly 1,000 pages but absolutely fantastic and brilliant.

136coynedj
Jun 19, 2022, 9:37 am

>135 Joshbooks1: I've also read two of her books (I absolutely loved Flights, but felt that Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead was not quite as good). I've been putting off reading The Books of Jacob due to it's size - I have a tendency to read big books in winter and shorter books in summer. It's good to hear that the time investment should be well rewarded.

137snottlebocket
Jun 19, 2022, 11:38 am

Treasure Island. I was surprised to find it's not playing out on some Caribbean island swathed in Jungle but a terrific adventure nonetheless.

138LesMiserables
Edited: Sep 16, 2023, 11:34 pm

>137 snottlebocket: Agreed. Stevenson is a master of his craft.

139Pellias
Jun 20, 2022, 9:58 am

>137 snottlebocket: If you want the caribbean version you could also just play Monkey Island on the computer. X marks the spot.

140Cat_of_Ulthar
Jun 20, 2022, 11:08 am

Folio:
I've finished the first two books of the LoTR LE. They are large volumes but I haven't found that to be a problem and the reading experience has been lovely. I knew some of Lee's illustrations from a calendar I had many years ago but most are new to me and they are beautiful, especially his landscapes.

Non-folio:
More P.G. Wodehouse. I've been exploring the world of Blandings Castle. Leave it to Psmith was fun, with Psmith himself being an interesting character - a bit off-putting at first but then I warmed to him. I am now getting into Summer Lightning.

I think it's fair to say that Wodehouse sometimes recycles jokes or that his characters (and, indeed, plots) might be variations on a number of themes but he makes up for it with some beautiful turns of phrase which make me laugh out loud at times.

141coynedj
Jun 20, 2022, 11:47 pm

I finished Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir some time ago. It was a lot of fun, but it did have one flaw toward the end, in my opinion. I won't say what it was because it would give away too much. But, it's a worthwhile read - few books have no flaws, and this one was far from fatal.

I have also recently finished Why We're Polarized, by Ezra Klein. It was very good, and disheartening - there was little hope of a reversal any time soon. I also finished (about ten minutes ago) On the Yard by Malcolm Braly, an NYRB publication. It was superb. NYRB has a tendency toward publishing good books.

I continue to work my way slowly through a few short story collections. One is pulp fiction, another is Wodehouse, and a third is Nabokov. I'm enjoying them all.

142stopsurfing
Jun 30, 2022, 2:37 am

After hearing (from Timothy Snyder) that nazi Germany murdered about 1.5 million Ukrainians in 1941/2 (mainly Jews) I thought I’d read The Wannsee Conference and the Final Solution. The ex-soviet states have been largely undifferentiated in my mind till this war, so it’s good to educate myself now, learning that East Galicia for example is western Ukraine (Galicia itself include southeast Poland). Perhaps this type of naming has helped obscure things for me. Luckily we have google now.
The book is short enough to read in a few sittings (lots of notes in the back) and what you’d expect, an academically credible yet readable examination of how the mass murder perpetrated by the Nazis turned into systematic genocide, how the ‘problem’ of the Jews was manufactured and how the ‘solution’ evolved. The book doesn’t leave out the Poles, disabled and other groups that were murdered by the Nazis, but the focus is naturally on this conference, this turning point, when the holocaust really became the holocaust.
Highly recommended.

143Joshbooks1
Jun 30, 2022, 7:52 am

I'm not trying to get political but a lot of Ukrainians assisted the Nazis in killing those 1.5 million Jews in their country. Many Ukrainians, like many other European countries, were more than happy when the Nazis invaded and took over their land. Obviously this wasn't universal and it's easy to understand why when Stalin's land reforms resulted in anywhere from 6-10 million Ukrainians starving to death in the 30's. But, they weren't all innocent and actually quite brutal during those years.

144Eumnestes
Jul 3, 2022, 4:09 pm

Just finished reading the FS Rob Roy; not the new LE, but the regular edition from 2001, which is actually quite lovely, with buckram binding and marbled paper covers. It takes a while for the adventure plot to get going, but once it does the writing is very solid. We're reading it to our son now, who's really enjoying it, despite Andrew Fairservice's authentic Scots dialect.

Non-Folio: Freud's Beyond the Pleasure Principle. Have long been familiar with its argument, but never read the text until know. Very engrossing, and the degree to which Freud concedes the speculative nature of his comments is noteworthy.

145kcshankd
Jul 13, 2022, 12:28 am

I've recently completed a re-read of The Sun Also Rises courtesy of the recent Century Press edition. I fear thirty years may have passed between my reads, but the young drunks and bullfighters still held their own.

I have followed it up with one from the TBR pile Everybody Behaves Badly and why yes, yes they do. Glad to finely complete the couplet.

146Tamachan00
Jul 13, 2022, 3:20 am

>144 Eumnestes: I just bought the same edition on ebay last week - looking forward to reading it now!

147stopsurfing
Jul 16, 2022, 4:52 pm

>143 Joshbooks1: I think it’s fair to say that the ‘holocaust by bullets’ (as it is called) in the Ukraine and surrounding area probably occurred with the cooperation and assistance of locals (there are examples of this from colonial takeovers everywhere, from Algeria to New Zealand) but it’s not fair to imply that their responsibility was anywhere near equivalent to that of the Nazi invaders! The fact remains that the killing was carried out almost exclusively by German Sonderkommandogruppen or Einsatzgruppen. They started by only killing Jewish male bureaucrats, ie men who had been part of the murderous (and hated - I’m speculating here) soviet apparatus. The killing escalated within months to the killing every Jewish man woman and child they could round up (to an astounding total of about 1.5 million people). I guess some rejoiced at and helped with the first killings at least. There are different planes of responsibility here though, and shining a spotlight on local collaborators (as you have here) can seem a bit like straining out gnats while swallowing camels, especially when Ukrainians are once again suffering terribly at the hands of an outside regime.

148Joshbooks1
Edited: Jul 18, 2022, 2:45 pm

This message has been deleted by its author.

149coynedj
Jul 21, 2022, 7:56 pm

Recently finished:
Saving Us: A Climate Scientist's Case for Hope and Healing in a Divided World, by Katharine Hayhoe - definitely a worthwhile read, though it only gave me a little hope.

Recently tried, but gave up on:
The Pyrates, by George MacDonald Fraser - he couldn't less more than three sentences go without some snarky comment or pop culture reference.

Currently reading:
Kim, by Rudyard Kipling (Folio Society 2016 edition) - it was good to get back to real literature, after The Pyrates. Most excellent so far.
Russian Roulette: How British Spies Thwarted Lenin's Plot for Global Revolution, by Giles Milton - it concentrates on India rather than any global plots, but it's quite well written and informative.

150Jeremy53
Jul 22, 2022, 3:54 am

Just finished Amor Towles’ latest - The Lincoln Highway. A bit of a disappointment. Great writing as usual, such a talent, but the plot is a bit of a mess and not really tied together thematically very well…

Now reading Thea Astley’s It’s Raining in Mango. Fairly dense writing but I love it. Powerful.

I recently tried to read Black Beauty for the first time (Beehive Books illustrated edition) and gave up halfway through. I can see why kids and horse people love it, but it was a bit obvious. I much preferred Steinbeck’s The Red Pony as a kid - although I may have also loved this!

151LesMiserables
Jul 23, 2022, 6:48 pm

Rereading 12 Rules for Life by Jordan Peterson.

Started reading Crime and Punishment by Dostoevsky.

152Kainzow
Jul 23, 2022, 11:09 pm

The Intelligent Investor.
It's a pretty big book, so I'm taking my time with it.

I want to read a Fiction book at the same time. Might be the time to finally read All Quiet on the Western Front.

153LesMiserables
Edited: Jul 24, 2022, 6:19 am

Shall I be a Priest? Fr William Doyle.

154jillmwo
Jul 24, 2022, 9:09 am

>149 coynedj: Rudyard Kipling is out of favor these days for a variety of reasons, but I still find him to be enjoyable. In particular, Kim is a remarkably colorful read, just amazing in how Kipling was able to describe the country and the culture.

155CarltonC
Jul 24, 2022, 11:24 am

>154 jillmwo: Agree that Kim is a wonderful read.
Currently reading Faber & Faber, which is enjoyable and amusing name dropping, as well as an insight into an unusual publishing firm.
Recently finished Imagining Rome: British Artists and Rome in the Nineteenth Century, an old exhibition catalogue which I hadn’t got round to reading for over twenty years, but which was remarkably enlightening as to reasons for changing art styles.

156snottlebocket
Jul 24, 2022, 3:24 pm

Just finished the left hand of darkness. Just starting the first Earthsea book.

157jsg1976
Jul 25, 2022, 3:35 am

Currently reading the FS LE Lord of the Rings, the LEC Count of Monte Cristo, and The World of Ice & Fire (to get ready for House of the Dragon next month)

158Eumnestes
Jul 26, 2022, 11:49 am

Non FS: Just finished Miron Bialoszewski's Memoir of the Warsaw Uprising. Really impressive first-person account of a catastrophe. Almost no introspection, with a massive emphasis on physical details and events. And utterly candid about his own lack of heroism.

FS: Just started reading Descartes's Meditations and Other Writings (FS 2011), translated by Desmond Clarke with spot-on illustrations by Shout. Not a spectacular edition, but the usual high quality and good common sense I expect from Folio. And I'd forgotten how much Descartes's "meditations" echo (in form) the tradition of religious exercises by people like Ignatius of Loyola.

159Cat_of_Ulthar
Jul 26, 2022, 12:42 pm

Just finished Folio's LoTR LE. By pure chance I was listening to the closing section of Liszt's Dante Symphony (when the choir comes in) while reading the final chapter. Brought a few tears to my eyes, but in a good way.

I am continuing with a bit of Wodehouse as bedtime reading each night, sending me off to sleep feeling that all is right with the world, if only for a while.

I also reread Dave McKean's Cages, having been reminded of it recently, and can heartily recommend it. Among other things, it's got music and cats. What's not to love ;-)

160assemblyman
Jul 26, 2022, 1:09 pm

I have recently started my first Trollope with The Warden. I have been meaning to give him a go for a while now having mentioned it in a previous post last month. I was pleasantly surprised to see the most recent FS edition in a Dublin bookshop going cheap while away on a break with my family for a few days which made it an instant buy. It is an easy and enjoyable read so far and I do like the book design and the Bill Bragg illustrations. I will most likely be keeping an eye out for Barchester Towers in the same design though I know that’s where this series ended.

161CJDelDotto
Jul 26, 2022, 10:38 pm

Because this year marks the centenary of the publication of The Waste Land and Ulysses, I'm teaching a course on the two works in the fall as part of the noncredit, senior citizen/retiree adult education program run by the university where I went to grad school. So, yesterday, I started rereading Joyce' Dubliners, which I last read 25 years ago. My goal is to reread it, reread A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, and reread Ulysses before the start of the term in September.

162HuxleyTheCat
Aug 1, 2022, 5:46 am

Like many, the only R.D. Blackmore novel I have ever read is Lorna Doone, but recently I picked up a copy of the Maid of Sker, which is of local interest to me. Although not very far into the book I am enjoying it a great deal and I'd be quite happy to see a Folio edition.

163RRCBS
Aug 1, 2022, 6:55 am

Doing a reread of the Cemetery of Forgotten Books series. Halfway through the final book and will be sad to finish! One of those series to be savoured.

164HuxleyTheCat
Aug 1, 2022, 7:27 am

>163 RRCBS: Absolutely agree. In the absence of a Folio edition I went with Subterranean Press and it is one of the highlights of my library.

165podaniel
Aug 1, 2022, 9:59 am

>162 HuxleyTheCat:

I recently read the FS edition of Lorna Doone and thoroughly enjoyed it. I would certainly buy other FS productions of Blackmore's works.

166RRCBS
Aug 1, 2022, 11:09 am

>164 HuxleyTheCat: Same! This read is my first time reading from the SP set and I love it. Only complaint is that the last book is so big and heavy that I can’t have one of my cats on my lap when I read at night! But they are definitely a set to treasure.

167assemblyman
Sep 3, 2022, 1:00 pm

I just finished Lost Illusions by Honore de Balzac in the gorgeous FS edition. A beautifully written book. Themes on ambition, morality and corruption are as apt today as they were then.

168Eumnestes
Sep 3, 2022, 1:24 pm

>167 assemblyman: I own the same edition and am eager to read it; it's a really lovely volume. There apparently is a recent film adaptation, but I think I might wait to watch it until I read the novel.

169Lady19thC
Sep 3, 2022, 1:40 pm

Something Wicked This Way Comes....Ray Bradbury, FS edition.

170assemblyman
Sep 3, 2022, 2:31 pm

>168 Eumnestes: Definitely worthwhile and that binding really adds to the enjoyment.

171Macumbeira
Edited: Sep 3, 2022, 3:59 pm

Aeschylus, The Persians La Pléiade edition

172Betelgeuse
Sep 4, 2022, 12:39 pm

The Master and Margarita, FS edition.

173podaniel
Sep 5, 2022, 10:41 am

The FS edition of Arendt's Origins of Totalitarianism. I am thoroughly enjoying the book and the FS picture choices are brilliant.

174Lady19thC
Sep 5, 2022, 11:12 am

Cozying up to The Woman in Black, by Susan Hill, on this wonderful rainy day. Perfect read for the spooky season. Just a paperback copy. Fine with me.

175red_guy
Edited: Sep 5, 2022, 11:29 am

>174 Lady19thC: Wouldn't a diminutive set of Susan Hill's (five?) ghostly novellas be a treat!

edit: I've just seen there is a hardback omnibus, but Folio might do it better

176Lady19thC
Sep 5, 2022, 11:40 am

>175 red_guy: Yes, I could get into that, assuming it doesn't cost a fortune and is bound/illustrated nicely. My paperback has some great memories for me, though. Won't replace that one!

177Forthwith
Edited: Sep 8, 2022, 3:10 pm

I am restarting a journey of sorts. After a couple of previous starts interrupted by life events, I am going with Gibbon's "The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire" with the 8 volume FS set. After waiting for a possible new set from the FS (LE?) with the complete Footnotes, I am going ahead and reading along with an audio version that includes all of the Footnotes.

I am anticipating a pleasurable and certainly enlightening experience.

With my luck a complete FS version will soon appear.

178Jeremy53
Sep 8, 2022, 6:58 pm

>177 Forthwith: Good luck. That's quite a commitment, but as you say, will no doubt be enlightening.

I just re-read Greene's Stamboul Train. When I started I'd forgotten I'd already read it (years ago) - as an 'Entertainment', I'd describe it as 'mildly entertaining'; it just doesn't hold together well enough, I think...

Now I'm off to read Rooney's latest, Beautiful World, Where Are You - loved her first two.

179PartTimeBookAddict
Sep 8, 2022, 8:28 pm

I have been on a Penelope Lively kick set off by the delightful FS production of "The Ghost of Thomas Kempe."

Finished "Family Album", "The Photograph" and "Life in the Garden" this week. Nice, but a little lightweight.

Can anyone recommend a really good book of hers? Or are those a fair sample of what she can offer?

180boldface
Sep 9, 2022, 12:55 pm

I'm currently re-reading Trollope's six Barsetshire novels - Barchester Towers just now, in the FS typeset/Trollope Society edition (1995).

Also on the go:
H.M. Bark Endeavour : Her Place in Australian History, with an Account of her Construction, Crew and Equipment and a Narrative of her Voyage on the East Coast of New Holland in the Year 1770. With Plans, Charts and Illustrations by the Author. Melbourne University Publishing/The Miegunyah Press, Third Edition 2020.
This is an extraordinary book by an extraordinary author (look up Ray Parkin). The bulk of the book charts Parkin's mission to document in great detail Cook's famous ship. Along the way, this former seaman offers his own philosophical insights into the sailor's symbiosis with ship and ocean, in some passages almost recalling Melville himself. The 2020 edition corrects the egregious misprinted cross-references of the 1997 limited edition.

Also re-reading after decades, My Early Life: A Roving Commission by Churchill. A memoir full of incident, brilliantly told and with much wit in the early chapters recalling his less than distinguished education.

181CarltonC
Sep 9, 2022, 7:52 pm

>179 PartTimeBookAddict: have you tried Moon Tiger by Lively? It is the only one I have read, but enjoyed it.

I think that shortly after reading the Lively, I read The Beginning of Spring by Penelope Fitzgerald, thought it was wonderful so started reading her novels, and perhaps that was enough Penelopes for me!

The latest Slightly Foxed quarterly featured The World My Wilderness, which I have just finished reading. Very evocative of the ruins of bombed London in 1946, but left the reader to do a lot of work with the plot (unresolved storylines).

182PartTimeBookAddict
Sep 10, 2022, 1:08 am

I have the FS copy of "The Blue Flower" from Penelope F. I will give that a try soon. And I will be on the lookout for a copy of Moon Tiger. Thanks!

183red_guy
Sep 10, 2022, 6:12 am

Penelope Fitzgerald is wonderful. Everyman do an excellent two volume set which contain her seven best known works that is well worth investing in and very reasonably priced.

184RRCBS
Sep 10, 2022, 6:23 am

Just finished the first volume of CS Wedgwood’s set on the English Civil War. Very interesting and I like the Folio treatment except for the paper thin spine. I’ve been reading a lot of FS history lately and really enjoying it. Citizens was also excellent. It (fortunately or unfortunately) resulted in more acquisitions, specifically the FS bios on George Washington and Benjamin Franklin, the Everyman edition of Rousseau’s The Social Contract and the LEC Confessions.

185Jayked
Sep 10, 2022, 7:27 am

>184 RRCBS: I was disappointed in the FS bio of Franklin. It inevitably uses the Autobiography as a basis, but in reordering it loses some of its personality, and removes some of old Ben's zingers, including his dismissal of men of disputacious Turn.
"Persons of of good Sense, I have since observ'd, seldom fall into it, except Lawyers, University Men, and Men of all Sorts that have been bred at Edinborough."
As a university man bred at Edinburgh I couldn't be without that one, so I supplemented the FS version with the Franklin edition of the Real Thing.

186Diomed
Sep 10, 2022, 7:32 am

I am currently reading ‘The Aztecs’ by Richard Townsend, published by FS. The names of places and people are almost impossible to pronounce!

187RRCBS
Sep 11, 2022, 5:48 am

>185 Jayked: interesting! I may have to add his autobiography to my next LOA order!

188RRCBS
Sep 25, 2022, 7:27 am

Finished the Wedgwood trilogy, now following that up with Antonia Fraser’s book on the Restoration and Charles II. Probably follow that up with Churchill’s Marlborough, which I recently acquired. Really enjoying devoting more time to non fiction lately.

189assemblyman
Sep 25, 2022, 8:02 am

I recently finished Lord Jim by Joseph Conrad which I really liked. Im loving Conrad’s use of language so I will continue with more of his books in the future having only read Heart of Darkness previously. I’m currently reading Dostoevsky’s Short Stories which I’m reading as a bit of a primer before I start reading his larger works at some point in the future.

190Eumnestes
Sep 25, 2022, 10:28 am

This entire month I've been reading the FS edition of William of Malmesbury's Deeds of the English Kings (2014). Not a deluxe edition, but very solid with the usual Folio production quality. The illustrations, presented on coated paper, come from contemporary or near-contemporary illuminated manuscripts. The translation is by R.A.B. Mynors, who wrote it for an Oxford UP edition in 1998-99. His notes and scholarly apparatus are perfect for the interested non-expert. I continue to be impressed with the way that FS can combine attractive presentation with scholarly good sense. Excellent reading experience.

191coynedj
Sep 25, 2022, 10:44 am

I haven't listed anything for a while.

Recently finished:
The Shadow of the Wind, Carlos Ruiz Zafon - I quite enjoyed this one, but to be honest not enough to continue with the series. That said, I couldn't wait for my next reading session, to see what happened next.
The Dawn of Everything, David Graeber and David Wengrow - this took issue with a lot of the common narrative regarding the development of civilization, and quite effectively (if you read it, don't ignore the footnotes in the back). Sometimes it gets ahead of itself and draws conclusions that aren't very well supported, but it was well worth reading and has stuck with me.
Sea of Tranquility, Emily St. John Mandel - I really enjoyed Station 11, so figured I'd try this. Very interesting, very short, and I read it in two sittings. It has one issue that all books dealing with its topic have, but does fairly well with it.
Those Terrible Middle Ages!: Debunking the Myths, Regine Pernoud - also takes issue with a common narrative. Very good at doing so, written by a French researcher so her examples come mostly from France but that doesn't spoil the story at all for this English speaker who is far less familiar with French history than English.

Currently reading:
Ema, the Captive, Cesar Aira - I think someone here pointed me in Aira's direction. I've only recently started it, but I love the style.
American Republics: A Continental History of the United States, 1783-1850, Alan Taylor - this one also takes issue with a lot of the common narrative, which seems to be a thing for me recently. I'm not very far into it, so I'll give a more thorough review at some future time, but it's very informative so far.

192CarltonC
Sep 25, 2022, 12:36 pm

>191 coynedj: thanks for your comments on The History of Everything, which I intend to read. Agree with your thoughts about The Shadow of the Wind and Sea of Tranquility (Station Eleven is a very high standard to follow).
Currently reading Lost Realms, about the less well known kingdoms of Britain in the 400-800 period (“Dark Ages”), but am finding it hard going as there is so little available evidence.

193PartTimeBookAddict
Sep 26, 2022, 3:09 pm

Just finished "Rogue Male." Maybe not high literature, but sure hit a sweet spot for me. I really like how the David Rooney illustrations spillover and are incorporated in the text. There is a similar effect with "The Ghost of Thomas Kempe" and "Day of the Jackal."

Are there any other books the FS have done with this illustration layout?

194Pellias
Sep 26, 2022, 4:26 pm

I loved 'Rogue Male' too when I read it some years ago. Read FS 'Day of the Jackal' during this summer. Just as Maggie Thatcher, I loved it. Naturally saw the movie many years ago which is why I held back. Kestrel for a knave had the same spread out illustrations, and quite a few more books have the same. Deserves it's own thread, one of the det subjects that hasn't been focused on in the FS book breakdown - maybe.

195PartTimeBookAddict
Sep 26, 2022, 5:07 pm

>194 Pellias: "Day of the Jackal" is great. Both the book and film. I would love FS to do some more Forsyth: "Dogs of War" and "Odessa File." Potboiler fun!

196podaniel
Sep 27, 2022, 8:47 am

>193 PartTimeBookAddict:

Anansi Boys has a similar illustration layout.

197PartTimeBookAddict
Sep 27, 2022, 5:38 pm

>196 podaniel: Thanks! Good to know. I'll check it out, but probably will stick with my old paperback.

199Jayked
Sep 28, 2022, 5:42 pm

Starting vol 3 of the Chips Channon Diaries, to be taken in small doses. Odd how fascinating the dirt dished by politicians you wouldn't want to stand next to in a queue. He lacks the guts and the brio of Alan Clark, who dissed his colleagues with relish while still alive to enjoy the exercise, but he did live with more important figures than Maggie Thatcher. I was a child when the events described took place, but politicians of that era aren't quickly forgotten.
Vol.3 has the most pages of the set, but is a full half-inch thinner than vol.2. The paper is thinner and dingy, the spine so mean that it barely reaches the boards, and the page-block sags like an alderman's belly. All three volumes are the same price. The first two were made to a high standard in Latvia by a Scandinavian-based company, the last by the "English" company Clays. I suppose the thinking is that as there is to be no fourth volume, you won't lose any sales if you bait and switch on this one.

200PartTimeBookAddict
Oct 8, 2022, 6:10 pm

Finished Pym’s “Excellent Women” and listened to a few more of her novels:
“Jane and Prudence”
“No Fond Return of love”
“A Glass of Blessings”

Interesting, small mid-century slice of life stories. And so much tea drinking!

201RRCBS
Oct 9, 2022, 5:51 am

Just finishing the first volume of Churchill’s Marlborough. Really enjoying it, beautiful writing. Also really like the paper in the FS edition.

202Jeremy53
Edited: Oct 10, 2022, 6:23 am

I’m dipping in and out of As I Walked Out One Midsummer morning, and the Alice B Toklas cookbook. It’s a very pleasurable thing - like time traveling, but oh so gently.

Lee is such a beautiful writer, and Toklas has all the inside stories on Stein and co. and delivers it with that cheeky, side-glancing, slightly sullen wit.

And I really like both Folio editions - nice in the hand, easy to read. After finishing a new release paperback, thank God I’m back.

I’m eyeing off a Folio copy of Heart of darkness (blue edition from 90s) but just can’t get excited about the look of it…woodcuts yes, cover, no.

203Kainzow
Oct 10, 2022, 7:48 am

I finished Maus over the weekend. What an incredible book that I wish I had read earlier.

I'm now currently reading Charlotte by David Foenkinos. That too is beautiful. I'm reading some pages over and over, such is their beauty.

204CJDelDotto
Oct 13, 2022, 8:48 am

>203 Kainzow: In a different thread, someone suggested that FS should do Maus. I couldn't agree more.

205coynedj
Oct 21, 2022, 2:56 pm

Recently finished:
Ema, the Captive, Cesar Aira - In the end, it merits a meh. Some interesting bits, but it never came together and amounted to anything.
Something Wicked This Way Comes, Ray Bradbury, FS edition - I had read another of his books, Farenheit 451, and found it to have a tremendous premise but poor execution. This one, though, was great all around. Every other sentence has evil portent until Something Wicked arrives and then every other sentence has evil, which I thought was masterfully overdone. And despite the bright yellow cover, I found this to be a fine example of what FS can do when they're not publishing comic books or overblown LEs.

Still working on:
American Republics: A Continental History of the United States, 1783-1850, Alan Taylor - it's always good in these difficult times to find that there were equally or more difficult times your country's history. People have acted in vile ways for a long time, which of course doesn't excuse their vile actions today. It would be nice if we could learn from history, but I dare say this type of history is rarely taught.

206kcshankd
Oct 22, 2022, 1:04 am

FS Magic Mountain - about 100 pages in, waiting for impact. Finally reading in advance of the upcoming double-barreled blast of Cormac McCarthy releases.

Non-FS, recently finished Granta 159 & Young Mungo. The Granta was fine as usual, Young Mungo was better than I expected - rated three stars.

207SimB
Oct 23, 2022, 4:06 am

Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy

One of the supercomputers is named Googleplex Star Thinker. Written well before that Internet search engine existed. And then there was a reference to Bob Dylan's "Blowin' in The Wind". The answer is 42 to "how many roads must a man walk down".
I like seeing those connecting strands to other pieces of my life.

208jillmwo
Oct 23, 2022, 12:14 pm

FS Browning's Dramatic Monologues with the lengthy intro by A.S. Byatt. Really interesting form of delivering a narrative.

209SyllicSpell
Oct 26, 2022, 11:01 am

I've just finished the FS version of Knut Hamsun's Pan. I found the older McFarlane translation used by FS more powerful than the recent Lyngstad version, although perhaps lacking a little of Hamsun's lyricism.

I'm now starting Einhard's Life of Charlemagne.

What an interesting and varied selection works there are to be found in the FS back catalogue!

210SpoonFed
Oct 26, 2022, 6:09 pm

I’ve just started on Cormac McCarthy’s The Passenger. I’m enjoying it so far, but I suspect it will take me some time to fully immerse myself in the prose.

211cronshaw
Edited: Oct 26, 2022, 6:47 pm

A.S. Byatt, Possession. A beautifully written novel and a magnificent edition by Folio. Size, paper, type-setting, binding design and illustrations all perfect.

212CJDelDotto
Oct 26, 2022, 9:37 pm

>210 SpoonFed: I have my copy of The Passenger, but I'm going to wait until Stella Maris comes out so that I can read them back to back.

213Jeremy53
Oct 27, 2022, 1:01 am

>211 cronshaw: I recall Possession appeared on a few FSD's 'least favourite' editions a while back, but I agree with you, a beautiful tome. (But I'm yet to acquire one!)

214cronshaw
Oct 27, 2022, 11:29 am

>213 Jeremy53: There's nowt queer as folk!

215N11284
Nov 3, 2022, 7:07 am

Just started Parade's End and disappointed to see that all of the notes are at the end of volume 2. It's a real pain having to have both volumes open at the same time, especially as there are so many notes, 13 on page 1 alone. Not sure if I can keep this up.

How important is it to read the notes to get a full experience of the novel?

216CobbsGhost
Nov 3, 2022, 4:40 pm

I just finished Jane Eyre - latest FS edition - and I doth believe Charlotte to be a heart thief of the rarest sort. The book is worth every penny! As a fella who typically reads non-fiction, I can honestly say that the book was much more compelling than I dare admit. Great production, with great and fitting artwork.

On to Defoe's Plague.

217Jeremy53
Edited: Nov 3, 2022, 10:49 pm

Jane Eyre is a true classic - a wonderful work, one with a big beating heart and the kindest of spirits. Maybe time for a re-read over Christmas...

I just finished As I Walked Out One Midsummer Morning - really enjoyed it (ignoring the occasional, casual...weirdness...). Colourfully written.

Now a little way into Big Chief Elizabeth, which I - like *many* FSD's - got as a bonus 'mystery book' a few years ago (2017 ish?). Not my usual genre, but really liking it so far, 80 pages in.

218ubiquitousuk
Edited: Nov 7, 2022, 4:09 pm

The part of Jane Eyre that really stuck with me was the account of destitution after Jane runs away from Thornfield. Quite powerful.

I have started on the Folio edition of Rebecca. Seems like quite a nicely made and designed edition, given it's price point. So far the story is holding up too.

219Lady19thC
Nov 7, 2022, 4:14 pm

I've started my 2nd read of Neverwhere, with the new beautiful FS copy. It is big, cumbersome and heavy, especially when reading in bed, but I am still loving it!

220RRCBS
Nov 17, 2022, 5:18 am

Finished Churchill’s Marlborough, which I thoroughly enjoyed both in terms of style and insight into a historical period I didn’t know much about.

After that, read some fantasy: Feist’s Silverthorn and A Darkness at Sethanon, then Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik. Enjoyed all, but loved the Novik.

Finally, read Reunion by Fred Uhlman (new Everymans Library release) and enjoyed it. Beautifully written novella.

Not sure what’s next, maybe some Romantic poetry.

221Cat_of_Ulthar
Nov 17, 2022, 2:31 pm

The last few bedtime readings have been Bill Bryson's Notes From a Big Country. Hilarious and still largely valid, I suspect, even though they are getting on now.

Before that I enjoyed Angela Carter's Magic Toyshop. Very, very good.

222jillmwo
Nov 26, 2022, 5:38 pm

Revisiting my Folio Society edition of Possession by A.S. Byatt. Kind of a follow-up to the Folio edition of Browning's Dramatic Monologues.

223kcshankd
Nov 27, 2022, 11:52 pm

Finished FS Magic Mountain, have had it on the shelf since it was published.

It was... fine. Ponderous. The narrator breaking the fourth wall to comment on the length of the book is as much a review as any.

224Tambien
Nov 28, 2022, 3:44 pm

I’m doing a reread of Rendezvous with Rama, but my first time reading the Folio edition. I wasn’t sure about the texture of the bookcloth covering the boards at first, but somehow it feels “modern” and complements the contents exceedingly well. And, of course, the text itself is just as good as always.

225CarltonC
Nov 28, 2022, 4:02 pm

>223 kcshankd: congratulations on your perseverance. I am about half way through, having started and stalled last year.

Currently reading The Tomb of Tutankhamun (FS edition) and have just started Great Circle by Maggie Shipstead.

226JessieJim
Nov 28, 2022, 10:05 pm

This user has been removed as spam.

227Jeremy53
Nov 29, 2022, 6:55 pm

>226 JessieJim: That novel rocked my boat back in Uni, almost 30 years ago. I subsequently read all of his works - loved them. I re-read GoW a couple of years ago, and while I still thought it was excellent writing, it didn't really do it for me anymore...

228Lady19thC
Nov 29, 2022, 8:32 pm

Rereading Jane Eyre, by Charlotte Bronte, FS edition (most recent one). Still remains one of my favourite books!

229Joshbooks1
Dec 4, 2022, 11:12 am

I've been on a incredibly lucky streak of novels as of late.

Salka Valka by Laxness. Archipelago published this book I think last year and, boy, does it live up to Laxness' reputation. For those of you who have read and enjoyed Independent People, this is as good. I can't get over how talented Laxness was and the way he describes certain people and scenes is unparalleled as an author.

Porius by John Cowper Powys. I'm quite shocked this book isn't on the list for one of the best books of the 20th century and why it isn't more popular in the English speaking world. It's a tough and incredibly long read, and maybe that's the reason, but it is an absolute masterpiece. I found it similar to Broch's The Death of Virgil (but better) where at times it is difficult, confusing, and even a slog, but it is worth it and Porius is one of the most beautiful books of literature I have ever read.

After Lives and The Last Gift by Abdulrazak Gurnah. The Nobel Prize winning author in 2021 does not disappoint. Both books were wonderful, insightful, short, and easy reads which I think is also part of his Hemingwayesque style.

230boldface
Dec 5, 2022, 10:53 am

>229 Joshbooks1: "Porius by John Cowper Powys."

It really is time for John Cowper Powys to be recognised more widely as one of the great novelists of the twentieth century. May I ask which edition you were using? I originally bought the 1994 Colgate University Press edition which has now been shown to contain numerous inaccuracies and misprints in what is, as you say, a difficult text. I now have the Overlook Duckworth edition of 2007, edited by Judith Bond and Morine Krissdóttir, which I believe is much improved. The Powys Society have links to some very helpful notes on various Powys novels (including this one) by W. J. Keith. https://powys-society.org/keithcompanions.html

231davidjbrown10
Edited: Dec 5, 2022, 2:52 pm

>229 Joshbooks1: >230 boldface: I couldn't agree more about the greatness of John Cowper Powys. I have both the Colgate UP and Overlook Duckworth editions of Porius, as well as the original cut edition published by Macdonald in 1951. At some point I really must "compare and contrast" the three texts, but it will be a long job!

232Joshbooks1
Dec 5, 2022, 4:14 pm

>230 boldface: I have the 2007 Overlook Press hardcover edition. I can't find anything I dislike about the edition and found it invaluable with the list of names in the front since I'm not the best with names and kept going back to it as a reference.

>230 boldface: >231 davidjbrown10: Have either of you read anything else by him? I think I need a little break since it took an incredibly long time to finish, but how does Glastonbury Romance compare to Porius? Maiden Castle? My favorite part of reading is every now and then discovering a hidden gem, such as Porius, and somehow it will forever be a part of you.

233Bourne360
Dec 5, 2022, 7:02 pm

I'm currently reading Travels With Charley - Steinbeck FS. Dream buy is hardback Beowulf by Seamus Heaney (translation)

234boldface
Dec 5, 2022, 8:40 pm

>232 Joshbooks1:

A Glastonbury Romance is also a great novel and an easier read than Porius. It is one of Powys's so-called Wessex novels: Wolf Solent (1929), 'A Glastonbury Romance' (1932/33), Weymouth Sands (1934) and Maiden Castle (1936). It got JCP into a lot of trouble, though, when the then (1933) owner of Wookey Hole Caves (near Glastonbury) sued for libel, as Powys had included a controversial character in his novel, depicted as the owner of the Caves. It meant that subsequent editions suffered cuts to the text and his English publishers insisted that all real names of both characters and places in his next novel, 'Weymouth Sands', should be replaced with fictional ones. Thus, while the American edition was published as 'Weymouth Sands', the UK version was renamed after one of his fictional characters, Jobber Skald and all references that could identify the town of Weymouth were excised. Recent editions have restored the original names. The University of Wales 1990 edition of 'Maiden Castle' is described on the title page as "The first full authoritative edition". The Overlook Press 1987 edition of 'A Glastonbury Romance' has a list of characters at the front.

All the 'Wessex' novels are very good and full of allusions to history, philosophy, mysticism, religion, etc., but 'A Glastonbury Romance' is generally held to be the best. The underlying theme in all of them is the ethos and spiritual aura of a particular place and its effect on the many and various characters who inhabit it. In 'A Glastonbury Romance', those characters who are stirred by the old legends of King Arthur, the Holy Grail and Joseph of Arimathea find themselves pitted against the industrial modernisers in a struggle not only for the future of their town, but also for their own souls. Think of an episode of The Archers set on Summerisle.

235Joshbooks1
Dec 5, 2022, 9:09 pm

>234 boldface: Thank you kindly! I will look tomorrow at several editions and am looking forward to read more of JCP. After Porius, do you have any recommendations on what to read next?

236kcshankd
Dec 5, 2022, 11:14 pm

Held off a few weeks after publication, but finished The Passenger.

Now when I get my hands on Stella Maris shortly I'll have to decide how long to let the final McCarthy linger on the TBR pile.

237davidjbrown10
Dec 5, 2022, 11:40 pm

>232 Joshbooks1: Everything >234 boldface: said about "A Glastonbury Romance" and then some. I first read it more than 50 years ago and it was a life-changer, and I have returned to it every couple of decades since. "Wolf Solent" is almost as fine, though every time I've read it I've found that having everything seen and felt just through the viewpoint of the titular character gets a little oppressive—the antithesis of what he achieved with "Glastonbury" where he ranges across the feelings and motivations of a huge cast of characters. I recently read "Weymouth Sands" for the first time, and though it somehow peters out towards the end, it's full of variety, atmosphere, and insights. I've only read "Maiden Castle" once, many years ago, and found it oddly unsatisfactory, certainly compared with "Glastonbury" and "Wolf Solent". However it turns out that it was cut for its original publication, which I didn't know at the time, so I'm looking forward to getting to grips with the full version now available from Overlook.

238boldface
Dec 6, 2022, 12:29 pm

>235 Joshbooks1: "After Porius, do you have any recommendations on what to read next?"

>237 davidjbrown10: sums up the relative merits very well. While they all make for rewarding reading, I would go straight to 'A Glastonbury Romance', which distils all the writer's talents in an epic tale.

239Pepys
Dec 6, 2022, 12:50 pm

Just finished Ralph the Heir by Anthony Trollope in the FS 1996 edition, which I found very pleasant to read. But, if I dare telling you what I lately read, this is because I could not understand the meaning of an abbreviation I found a couple of times through the book.
So, for those of you who read this book or who own it: the abbreviation "B. B." appears several times in relation with a place called "the Moonbeam", where horses were kept at the disposal of rich gentlemen keen on hunting, and where one could eat and sleep.
Two examples on p. 234 (4th page of chapter XXVII, FS 1996 edition):
"Lieutenant Cox was there, and with the lieutenant a certain Fred Pepper, who hunted habitually with the B. B."
"But he was to have one more winter with the B. B."
I tried to find "B. B." in every reference book I have, and also on the Internet. But could not find any relevant meaning. It cannot be simply "bed and breakfast", can it?

I usually never read books twice, but I'm doing this just now with Death on the Installment Plan by Louis-Ferdinand Céline, which I first read 40 years ago. Once you've been warned that the first 50 pages should be skipped because they are really unreadable (I read the book in French; I don't know how it can be in English), the rest of the book is a pure delight: a very dark, stinking, but humorous description of Paris at the beginning of the 20c. seen through the eyes of a poor boy who gets daily earbashing. (This is actually Céline's romantized childhood.) I recommend it warmly.

240Jayked
Dec 6, 2022, 1:23 pm

>239 Pepys: The Berkshire and Buckinghamshire Hunt, under B&B on p.33 of the Oxford Reader's Companion to Trollope. It doesn't appear anywhere else, apparently.

241Pepys
Dec 6, 2022, 1:28 pm

>240 Jayked: Ah! Thanks for this quick reply. I knew I could find the answer within the group.

242Joshbooks1
Dec 6, 2022, 10:25 pm

>237 davidjbrown10: >238 boldface: I just purchased A Glastonbury Romance. I do need a little break as Porius took 3-4 months to finish since I put it down to read other books in between. In a few months I'll give it a go. If it's half the novel as Porius is I will be reading happily for many more months to come.

243RRCBS
Dec 7, 2022, 4:56 am

>238 boldface: do the overlook volumes have sewn bindings? Intrigued, had not heard of Powys.

244terebinth
Dec 7, 2022, 5:29 am

>243 RRCBS: do the overlook volumes have sewn bindings?

My Overlook Porius, a second impression hardback, doesn't: unlike the 1974 Village Press paperback which introduced me to the work, but that's a photographic reprint of the severely cut 1951 Macdonald edition.

I'll put in a word for Powys' Autobiography while we're here, an exuberant sprawling confession quite as singular as anything else he wrote. It might be the book of his that I'd retain if all but one had to go.

245PartTimeBookAddict
Dec 7, 2022, 1:59 pm

I'm halfway through, and really enjoying, The Guns of Navarone. It is slightly different from the movie (which may be better) and a great WWII adventure story.

If the FS published this in the same style of "Day of the Jackal" and "Rogue Male" I think it would be a really great production. With a fold-out map!

246boldface
Dec 7, 2022, 9:36 pm

>243 RRCBS:
>244 terebinth:

My Overlook Porius, also a second impression, has started to brown slightly round the edges. It is the best text, though, as far as I can ascertain, and so will have to be endured! There was a time when a publisher called the Folio Society might have contemplated publishing a volume or two of JCP.

I second the Autobiography as a juicy (in places) but literary read (he manages to slip in a Periclean reference while describing an encounter with a Birmingham prostitute). It's on my shelf, not far from the Confessions of Aleister Crowley.

247terebinth
Edited: Dec 8, 2022, 6:38 am

>246 boldface: ...It's on my shelf, not far from the Confessions of Aleister Crowley.

Crowley is perpendicular to my Powys shelves, but they are within spitting distance of each other, with Louis Marlow's slim Seven Friends (a memoir including Oscar Wilde, Crowley and three Powyses) somewhere between them. In Powys matters I'm more of a Theodore devotee, but John Cowper, by far the more prolific, exceeds him in shelf-inches even here.

Oh, and, yes, my Overlook Porius is waxing yellow. Odd that a book of obvious lasting value produced so recently in the USA doesn't use acid-free paper, I think in general America was well ahead of us in implementing that standard. As you say, its place is safe since there's no good alternative.

248RRCBS
Dec 8, 2022, 6:25 am

>246 boldface: thanks for the info…I’ll look into a Kindle version!

249Jeremy53
Jan 8, 2023, 4:19 am

Just finished the Folio edition of Birdsong - really loved it. And a great intro from the author…

250coynedj
Jan 17, 2023, 6:14 pm

Recently finished, or not:

Lonesome Dove, Larry McMurtry - an excellent read. McMurtry is superb at drawing up his characters - two pages after they're introduced, it's like you've known them for years. Now I need to watch the TV miniseries.

Ministry for the Future, Kim Stanley Robinson - I read the first 350 pages, then had to return it to the library. When I got it back, it didn't seem to be going anywhere I hadn't already seen. I skipped to the end, and it seems to end just as predicted.

Indigenous Continent, Pekka Hamalainen - excellent, though he did overstate things on occasion. It gives a wholly different view of the first centuries of European settlement in North America than what I learned in school, that's for sure.

The Once and Future King, T.H. White - Folio Society edition, and an excellent edition it is. I read this after Lonesome Dove, and missed the depth of character that book provided, but I eventually got over it. The early books are the strongest; I felt that the last book, The Candle in the Wind, was the weakest, as White rambled a bit and showed his political leanings too much.

An Untouched House, Willem Frederik Hermans - after all the discussion in another thread about Archipelago Books, I checked my local library for what examples they might have. This was one of the two. It's very short and very bleak, giving us another in a long and storied line of books about the cruelty of war.

Next up:

The Philosophy of Modern Song, Bob Dylan
Journey to the Center of the Earth, Jules Verne, in the relatively new Frederick Paul Walter translation

252coynedj
Jan 30, 2023, 7:40 pm

First up, a report on a TV miniseries. I mentioned before that I finished Lonesome Dove, and was planning to watch the series. I've finished it and was startled to see how faithful it was to the book. Such things are rare, and while there inevitably were some things left out (distilling an 850-page book down to 6 hours of screen time makes some cuts unavoidable), the major story lines were presented quite well. Kudos to those involved.

As for book, here's what I've read:

Journey to the Center of the Earth, Jules Verne - well, here's a case of a screen adaptation that deviated wholesale from the source material. The book was very enjoyable. Not deep, but fun.

The Philosophy of Modern Song, Bob Dylan - while it really doesn't present any philosophy of modern song, it was a good read, discussing a wide ranging selection of songs and (not in every case) specific recordings of them. Dylan either really knows his stuff, or has a top notch research team informing him. I'd guess that both apply in this case.

Next up:
The Structures of Everyday Life, volume one of Fernand Braudel's Civilization and Capitalism trilogy. I reminded myself in another thread that I had pledged to read it, and I'm about 140 pages in. Very well written and very informative, though my reading suffers from my lack of detailed knowledge of French geography and my very American unfamiliarity with some units of measurement (in this country we measure crop yields in bushels per acre, not in quintals per hectare). That said, this book proves beyond a doubt that, when it comes to the comforts of life, we do indeed live in the best of times. Now I'd like to see that we're not going to screw it up, but that's a political discussion.

Winners Take All: The Elite Charade of Changing the World, Anand Giridharadas. Oops, getting political again.

A book of fiction that I haven't chosen yet. Maybe even a Folio Society publication!

253L.Bloom
Jan 31, 2023, 9:53 am

Great Expectations in the Dickens III printing on the recommendations of this forum. I must say the binding is excellent and I'm glad I followed the advice. Enjoying the work immensely and I find the book is difficult to put down!

254Son.of.York
Jan 31, 2023, 2:03 pm

Robinson Crusoe, first published by the FS in 1972; sixth printing, 2008

Terrific!

255assemblyman
Jan 31, 2023, 2:27 pm

On the home straight reading the FS Iliad. I enjoyed it so much that I have the FS Odyssey and FS Aeneid (SE) heading my way :)

256CarltonC
Jan 31, 2023, 4:07 pm

Recently read The King must Die, which I had picked up in the FS sale four years ago. Excellent retelling of the first part of the Theseus legend, up to the standard the recent Circe by Madeline Miller, and the Geoff Grandfield illustrations really complement the story (although I was originally ambivalent about them).
Currently reading Huckleberry Finn with the wonderful and numerous Harry Brockway wood engravings.

Also currently reading Hollywood: The Oral History, which is very readable and interesting, especially as told using the American Film Institute series of conversations between Hollywood professionals and AFI conservatory students. Recommended if you’re interested in popular culture.

257Joshbooks1
Jan 31, 2023, 5:23 pm

>255 assemblyman: Personally, although I loved the Iliad, it is my least favorite of the three with The Aeneid being my favorite; if you haven't read either you are in for a treat. If you liked The Aeneid and/or The Odyssey I strongly recommend The Death of Virgil by Hermann Broch and The Odyssey by Nikos Kazantzakis. Both are masterpieces, although very difficult at times, and some of the finest literature of the 20th century.

258assemblyman
Jan 31, 2023, 6:05 pm

>257 Joshbooks1: Thank you for the recommendations, I will add them to my TBR list as both sound very interesting after I googled them. I have read both the Iliad and the Odyssey but i was a teenager at the time so it’s been over twenty years. I have never read The Aeneid so I am looking forward to that in particular.

259CarltonC
Edited: Feb 1, 2023, 3:01 am

>250 coynedj: I meant to respond to your earlier post, as I also read Indigenous Continent this month. I thought this good and I found myself in a real dialogue with the book, but considered it marred overall as I felt that Hämäläine undermined his argument by overstating his case. Some very thought provoking reframing of history nevertheless.
I read The Once and Future King a couple of years ago, and after the brilliant fantasy of The Sword in the Stone found the middle two books readable, but workmanlike; however, they are necessary for the overall tragic arc of the stories, which I thought was brilliantly achieved in The Candle in the Wind (I was crying at the end), even if diminished by the political leanings.

Edited for clarity

260PartTimeBookAddict
Jan 31, 2023, 7:20 pm

Just finished:
The Complete Maus - Art Spiegelman
The Glass Key - Hammett
FS of Kidnapped - Stevenson.

Still reading:
11/22/63 - Stephen King

Next:
FS of Catriona

261amp123
Feb 1, 2023, 4:57 pm

The Matter With Things: Our Brains, Our Delusions and the Unmaking of the World, by Iain McGilchrist, a long and complex, but highly readable, excursion through fields of neurology, physics, art, philosophy and religion that attempts to come to grips with the matter of consciousness and other "things." He takes aim at Dawkins and a materialistic view of the world that excludes and derides the sacred and the divine. You might not like the destination but I think you might enjoy the ride, even if it is a long one.

262Macumbeira
Edited: Feb 3, 2023, 2:52 pm

I am about to read Salman Rushdie's Victory city. It is my way to show my sympathy towards this writer who wrote and lived under continuous threat since 1989. I hope he recovers well from the attack of 12 august 2022.

Delivery expected February 18.

263adriano77
Feb 3, 2023, 11:13 pm

Just finished re-reading Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash and currently a quarter of the way through Ray Dalio's Principles for Dealing with the Changing World Order.

264L.Bloom
Feb 4, 2023, 9:12 am

>263 adriano77: How's the Dalio book? I read his first one and found it quite good.

265adriano77
Feb 4, 2023, 6:27 pm

>264 L.Bloom:

I've not read anything of his before. Liking it quite a bit. Casual, almost conversational style of writing. The format is interesting as he clearly wrote it hoping to appeal to people that may not have a lot of time (says as much early on; highlights key principles, says skip the rest). As for the content itself, it's nothing groundbreaking - mostly his way of looking at the financial world, with cycles inside of cycles inside of cycles - but it's enjoyable. I guess the genre would be pop economics?

266ntenBroek
Feb 6, 2023, 10:27 am

Working my way through a lot of Dumas right now. Hunting down the entire Bragelonne cycle in Hard Cover has been challenging. Speaking of which would really love to see an updated translation of the complete D'Artagnan romances put out by FS. Have quite enjoyed the Ellsworth translations, but Pegasus seems to have cut his book deal right in the middle of the series!

Would be a great place for FS to swoop in and fix the situation. Would love to read some up to date introductions and new illustrations.

267GusLogan
Feb 6, 2023, 11:09 am

>266 ntenBroek:
That’s disappointing to learn to say the least, having bought all the books so far.

268ntenBroek
Feb 6, 2023, 11:36 am

269PartTimeBookAddict
Feb 15, 2023, 1:17 pm

Just finished Lermontov's "A Hero of Our Time." A short and interesting, if slightly disjointed, novel. The setting is of Russian soldiers stationed in the Caucasus in the early 1800s. A good finale with a triple-bluff duel scene. Nice illustrations.

Up next: The Easton Press version of Hal Clement's " Mission of Gravity."

270CobbsGhost
Edited: Feb 15, 2023, 3:23 pm

I noticed a bunch of you were reading T.H. White not long ago, I recently started one of his works as well, the FS version of Once and Future King with my 6 year old. I fear it's over his head and it will take a while, but it's my first time with this as well. I love it!

FS, The Princess Bride with my 10 year old, she chuckles a lot. On a side note, Buttercup really ticks my wife off.

LEC, Livy The Early History of Rome, love this book in this edition. The Limited Editions Club generally put out books that rival fine editions of Folio, except with better paper.

271Eumnestes
Feb 15, 2023, 4:31 pm

On the FS side of things, this week I started Robert Burton's Anatomy of Melancholy. It's a rather frenetic read, but great fun, testing one's knowledge of ancient philosophy since Burton goes to such lengths to satirize it in his 110-page preface. Since the book comes in a little shy of half a million words, it is a commitment. Thank goodness that FS published it in three volumes for easy handling, while the buckram bindings and marbled paper sides are a pleasure to look at, as well. Since my Latin is so rusty, I am secretly relieved that the 1932 editor, Holbrook Jackson, places English translations in brackets after all the Latin passages. But my official position is that I do not need any translations.

272GusLogan
Edited: Feb 15, 2023, 4:34 pm

>270 CobbsGhost:
I’ve read Bilbo (FS edition) to my six-year old - it’s not his first language so you can guess how much went over his head but he was very excited! - and we’re now working on The Fellowship of the Ring (also FS, 1990s elephant hide), which is a bit heavy on scenery for him but nevertheless gets to stay on top of the book pile. I look forward to reading both The Once and Future King and The Princess Bride (I have both from the FS) with him later on!

I also have the LEC Livy and would go one further - being letterpress throughout I feel many LECs beat Folio Limited Editions, though Folio certainly also often come up trumps with newer - and better - translations and vivid art! I’m no great fan of the recent tipped-in letterpress limitation pages in offset-printed books - why bother?

273coynedj
Feb 15, 2023, 6:46 pm

Recently finished:

The Structures of Everyday Life, volume one of Fernand Braudel's Civilization and Capitalism trilogy. My conclusion hasn't changed from what I said when I was just a bit into it - it's an exhaustive compendium of how life was lived centuries ago, and why we should be glad to live in the present time.

Winners Take All: The Elite Charade of Changing the World, Anand Giridharadas. I struggled with this one. He has a point, that the rich have taken over much of the charitable work in this world and decided not only what problems should be addressed, but also how they should be addressed (hint: in ways that don't bring attention to how they made their money, often by causing the problems they're now out to alleviate, or endanger their continuing to make said money). But he overstates his case - there's a lot of "if the rich are funding X, Y, and Z, then the agencies working on these issues will reflect their desires alone", though of course not in those words. And he offers no alternatives. Sure, it would be nice if, say, Pepsi would dedicate themselves to healthy dietary habits instead of selling very unhealthy products, but that's veering off into utopian realms. Maybe I'm just too much a prisoner of the MarketWorld mindset he rails against, but that's a real criticism that he doesn't seem to want to address.

Just begun:

Cloud Cuckoo Land, Anthony Doerr.
How the World Really Works: the Science Behind How We Got Here and Where We're Going, Vaclav Smil

274CobbsGhost
Feb 19, 2023, 8:16 am

>272 GusLogan:

That's awesome, my little guy seems to be interested in the Hobbit but chose to read about the Wart first. I've been sure to purchase many o' children's books from Folio and stacked a fair amount in each of the little one's top shelf, and it has paid off. Aside of one cabinet of imited edition Folios and a few favorites, those kids books would be the last to leave the collection.

Regarding the LEC, I agree completely.

275ubiquitousuk
Edited: Feb 19, 2023, 1:18 pm

I am reading Schindler's Ark in it's Folio edition. I sort of knew what to expect going in, being familiar with the famous movie and reasonably well-informed about the Holocaust. But I hadn't prepared myself for just how tragically powerful Keneally's version of events would be. I struggle to put the book down, but whenever I do a cloud of melancholy follows me around for some time.

It's also quite a nice edition in general.

276Lady19thC
Feb 20, 2023, 1:13 pm

Crime and Punishment, my FS edition.

First time reading this novel and while only about 80 pages in, I am enjoying it very much. He definitely was the Russian Dickens!

277StephenHorsfall
Feb 28, 2023, 7:12 pm

>1 NLNils: Vol. 2 of 'India: a History' by John Keay
'Legends of King Arthur' vol. 1, 'Arthur'
'The Book of Margery Kempe''
'The Code of the Woosters' by PG Wodehouse (Everyman)
'A Short History of Slavery' by James Walvin (Penguin)

278PartTimeBookAddict
Mar 3, 2023, 3:21 pm

Reading and really enjoying "Moonfleet". A great young adventure book in the vein of "Kidnapped" or "Treasure Island."

It's the kind of production I really like from FS. Cloth-bound, great cover, original introduction, and lots of illustrations: 10 in a 214 page book. I'm glad they did this one, I would never have known about this author otherwise.

279PartTimeBookAddict
Mar 12, 2023, 1:35 pm

Just finished “The Silver Sword.” A charming young adventure novel. Well bound by the FS, but I think the illustrations left a little to be desired.

On to “The Silmarillion” next.

280jsg1976
Edited: Mar 12, 2023, 2:25 pm

I’m traveling to Scotland later this year, so I’ve decided to work my way through some of the Scotland-related (either by subject or author) books in my library. Here’s my reading list (which I am certain not to get through in its entirety):

The main list:
Kidnapped (FS) - just finished
Catriona (FS)
A Memoir of the Forty-Five (FS)
Glencoe (FS)
Culloden (FS)
The Highland Clearances (FS)
The Master of Ballantrae (LEC)
Rob Roy (FS)
Waverley (LEC)

Lower priority:
The Memoirs of Sir James Melville of Halhill (FS)
The Amateur Emigrant (FS)
Across the Plains (Allen Press)
The Silverado Squatters (Grabhorn Press)
Ivanhoe (LEC)
New Arabian Nights (LEC)

Read before this project started:
Treasure Island (FS)
Jekyll & Hyde (Amaranthine)
Two Medieval Tales (LEC)

I know there are many, many more Stevenson and Scott books out there, but these were the ones I had on hand (other than the Glencoe/Culloden/Highland Clearances ones which I just picked up pretty cheaply for some background reading). Any must-reads I’m missing?

281PartTimeBookAddict
Mar 12, 2023, 2:50 pm

>280 jsg1976: Check out "The Scottish Chiefs" by Jane Porter. Especially if you can get a copy with the N. C. Wyeth illustrations. She is often overlooked, but easily as entertaining as Walter Scott.

282jillmwo
Mar 12, 2023, 4:55 pm

My next read will be Barchester Towers as I have just finished re-visiting The Warden. I was reading the FS edition from the mid-80's (or perhaps mid-90's) with a most informative introduction written by Owen (--momentary brain-freeze-- Chadwick). I believe Ruth Rendell wrote the introduction for the follow-up volume, Barchester Towers. Last night, I discovered the existence of the essay series entitled Clergymen of the Church of England that Trollope did; really an interesting side-road to go down...

283affle
Mar 12, 2023, 4:59 pm

284ubiquitousuk
Mar 12, 2023, 6:14 pm

>283 affle: I second these suggestions. Especially the Boswell/Johnson volume, which gives a great insight into the lives of Scottish people a couple of centuries ago. If it's preferred, the LEC also published an edition of Boswell's text, although not Johnson's version (the Folio edition includes both).

285jsg1976
Mar 13, 2023, 1:06 am

>281 PartTimeBookAddict: >283 affle: >284 ubiquitousuk: Thanks! I ordered a copy of the Scottish Chiefs with the Wyeth illustrations and the FS Boswell/Johnson volume (being more interested for my purposes in the Johnson rather than the Boswell).

286N11284
Mar 13, 2023, 8:16 am

>280 jsg1976: If you are a golfer (and it's not a necessity) a must read before going to Scotland is Preferred Lies by Andrew Greig.

287PartTimeBookAddict
Mar 13, 2023, 1:28 pm

>285 jsg1976: You're welcome. There is also "The History of Scotland" by Houston and Knox that FS did as a handsome two volume set. I've yet to read it however.

While reading Catriona I was very happy that FS included a glossary. I had to refer to at least once per page, if not more often.

Hope you have a great trip!

288coynedj
Mar 15, 2023, 11:00 am

Recently finished:

How the World Really Works: the Science Behind How We Got Here and Where We're Going, Vaclav Smil - I expected more than what I got. He spends much more time on history (the How We Got Here part) than on science, and the science was focused mostly on the near-impossibility of accurate prediction on the topics covered (so there wasn’t much to the Where We’re Going part, though a good amount on where we’re not going despite the popularity of some scenarios).

Cloud Cuckoo Land, Anthony Doerr - I liked his previous book, All the Light We Cannot See, but this one left me cold, and I gave up on it. The story lines were too far apart, with too slim a thread connecting them.

Blindsight, Peter Watts - ah, finally a winner. A science fiction first contact book, but brimming with ideas and wonderfully different from other first contact books and movies I’m familiar with.

Mythos, Stephen Fry - a fun retelling of the Greek myths, ranging from the very start, through to the familiar gods of Zeus, Hera, Hermes, etc. I will be reading his other retellings, Heroes and Troy.

The Singing Sands, Josephine Tey - Just delightful, even with the ending being too pat and quick. This was my first Tey book, and it won’t be my last. The introduction lists The Daughter of Time, Brat Farrar, and The Franchise Affair as her best, and if The Singing Sands is in her second tier, then the first tier must be tremendous.

Up next:
The Luminaries, Eleanor Catton

Alpha: Eddie Gallagher and the War for the Soul of the Navy Seals, David Philipps (not my usual type of reading, but it comes highly recommended)

289EdmundRodriguez
Mar 15, 2023, 11:06 am

>288 coynedj: Regarding Tey, I recently finished The Franchise Affair and really enjoyed it (also read Daughter of Time which was very good, and Miss Pym Disposes, which I enjoyed, but didn't like it as much as the others). The Singing Sands is on my TBR pile, along with Brat Farrar!

290CarltonC
Mar 16, 2023, 1:36 pm

>288 coynedj: thanks for these short reviews. May get Blindsight for my son, as sounds suitably ideas driven.
I was underwhelmed by Fry’s Mythos, as too “easy”, although I will probably read subsequent books. I think that I have been spoilt by Miller’s Circe and Barker’s The Silence of the Girls.

For me, recent fiction highlights have been the much praised Small Things like These and Atkinson’s historical novel Shrines of Gaiety, which was something like a cross between Wodehouse and Gold’s Carter Beats the Devil, set in 1920’s London underworld - just fun!
Non-fiction highlight was The Restless Republic, which was shortlisted for the Baillie Gifford Award last year. I am on an English Civil War binge, and this looks at the “interregnum” of 1648 to 1660 by telling the stories of nine very different individuals during this period. I found it wide ranging, thoughtful, thought provoking and again, a fun read.

I would also mention Sebastian Barry’s latest Old God’s Time, which was beautifully written (as ever), but I found the use of an unreliable narrator just a little bit too much. However it is staying with me, so I may have to reread and perhaps amend my judgment.

291SimB
Mar 18, 2023, 7:30 am

>288 coynedj: Brat Farrar is very good. My first Tey novel. Great twists and turns.

292PartTimeBookAddict
Mar 27, 2023, 11:10 pm

Halfway through "My Brilliant Career" by Miles Franklin. A FS printing from the 80s with a fairly bland cover design. The cloth feels nice though and I'm a fan of all the integrated illustrations throughout.

The book is very engrossing. This is my first time reading Franklin (it was recommended by the 1000 Books to Read Before you Die) and so far I can see why it is on the list.

293dyhtstriyk
Mar 28, 2023, 9:12 am

I've been reading 'All hell let loose' for the past week.Trying to decide if I'll like it enought to invest in the Folio edition, which has a hefty price.

294PartTimeBookAddict
Apr 6, 2023, 7:20 pm

Finished "My Brilliant Career". Very charming story with an unexpected ending. Similar in style to "Little Women" and the works of Ingalls Wilder.

Also finished Frank's "Diary of a Young Girl." Excellent FS production in a great format and with many photos. Such an engrossing book.

Next up, keeping on the "books by young women" theme, is "Persepolis" by Marjane Satrapi.

296Fortinbras1601
Apr 6, 2023, 9:29 pm

>293 dyhtstriyk: It’s fantastic. Best single volume (well, in the FS case, two-volume) history of the Second World War that I have ever read. I read several years ago when it was first published and was delighted to see the Folio edition. It’s worth the hefty price - very well done.

297PartTimeBookAddict
Apr 6, 2023, 11:59 pm

>295 wcarter: Great review. Mine has that same greenish tinge to the spine.

298wcarter
Apr 7, 2023, 1:21 am

>297 PartTimeBookAddict:
I think that is caused by mild sunning. Very appropriate for an Australian novel ;-)

299L.Bloom
Apr 7, 2023, 8:08 am

Bleak House, Dickens III.
Pace: glacial.

300PartTimeBookAddict
Apr 7, 2023, 2:21 pm

>298 wcarter: I was looking into the poet Adam Gordon she mentions a few times in the book. Is he still read in Australia?

301wcarter
Apr 7, 2023, 5:29 pm

>300 PartTimeBookAddict:
No, he is a forgotten poet now, but he was very popular a century ago, and my father used to quote him.

302jillmwo
Apr 7, 2023, 6:39 pm

Working my way through Trollope's Chronicles of Barchester. Am about to begin Framley Parsonage as my evening read. The edition is from the Folio set of the late '90's. (Really handsome sitting on my bookshelf.)

303ubiquitousuk
Apr 8, 2023, 1:30 pm

I have begin the Folio edition of Lark Rise to Candleford. So far it lives up to its reputation as idyllic bucolic escapism.

304PartTimeBookAddict
Apr 8, 2023, 1:34 pm

>301 wcarter: A lot of poetry is unfortunately ignored. I'll be giving him a read. A lot of his work is online.

305coynedj
Apr 8, 2023, 3:36 pm

>303 ubiquitousuk: That one has been in my TBR pile for a long time. I do need to get to it at some point.

306gmacaree
Apr 8, 2023, 6:34 pm

>303 ubiquitousuk: I was reading Lark Rise to Candleford when my first child was born, so it feels extra special to me. A lovely book.

307Jeremy53
Apr 10, 2023, 7:53 am

>299 L.Bloom: yep. I really liked it…but around half way, I wondered whether I actually needed to personally experience and *feel* the court case dragging on and on. I may get back to it some day…

I just finished the Hitchhikers fifth and final book. I enjoyed it a lot and thought the ending fitting, if morbid. But, it kinda worked for me. The Folio editions are a joy.

Now reading a biography on Patrick White - very detailed but starting to become very engrossing.

And flicking over to the second book in His Dark Materials from time to time.

308AlexBookshelfFrog
Apr 12, 2023, 10:56 am

This message has been deleted by its author.

309ubiquitousuk
Apr 12, 2023, 11:31 am

>306 gmacaree: I recently started parental leave with my first, so it may yet have the same association. Either that, or it will forever remind me of poo-filled nappies ...

310cronshaw
Apr 12, 2023, 1:13 pm

Currently re-reading Guns Germs & Steel by Jared Diamond. An amazing, enlightening read and a beautiful Folio edition.

311assemblyman
Apr 12, 2023, 1:28 pm

I am in the middle of reading Gogol Collected Stories which as a first read I am greatly enjoying. I must pick up his Dead Souls. I am also re-reading At Swim-Two-Birds by Flann O'Brien in the Everyman's collected edition. I usually prefer to read one book at a time but it's going well so far. I really wish FS would do At Swim-Two- Birds to go with the Third Policemen which is one of my favorite SEs.

312PartTimeBookAddict
Apr 14, 2023, 2:28 pm

Just finished Ian McEwan's "Lessons" - his longest and least interesting book.

Working on the "Wrinkle In Time" series. On to the last book. It's a unique series structure, but I can see why the FS only published the first one. Each pretty much stands alone as its own story. They feel like Dr. Who episodes.

313coynedj
Apr 15, 2023, 10:54 am

The Luminaries, Eleanor Catton - I gave up on it after 300 pages. I'm sure the author had some very detailed flowcharts tracking just when she would hint at plot points, and then later on would reveal them, and then later on would develop them, and then later on would connect them to other plot points. It was all very clever, but far too calculated for me.

Alpha: Eddie Gallagher and the War for the Soul of the Navy Seals, David Philipps - top quality reportage, showing just how someone can game the military's clannishness and legal system, and the public's adoration of the Navy Seals, to get away with serious criminality.

Currently reading:

The Black Lizard Big Book of Pulps - I've been slowly working my way through this, and am almost done with it. This was a lot of fun, though I have to say that a number of the stories at the end of this long book are pretty weak.

A Manual For Cleaning Women: Selected Stories, Lucia Berlin. I've only read about ten stories so far (they're quite short), but it's clear that Berlin was an excellent writer.

Origins: How Earth's History Has Shaped Human History, Lewis Dartnell. I've only started it, but this is right up my alley, or what my son calls "Dad's weird nonfiction books".

314NLNils
Edited: Apr 16, 2023, 1:15 pm

>313 coynedj: I bought Alpha on your previous recommendation, it will be my next read after The Road. I immediately bought a second book on the topic, called Code Over Country by Matthew Cole, detailing the derailment of Seal Team Six (as they are known in public).

315cronshaw
Apr 22, 2023, 7:34 am

Have just begun '1000 Years of Joys and Sorrows' by Ai Weiwei.

316podaniel
Apr 24, 2023, 11:20 am

I just started the second volume of the FS version of Churchill's The World Crisis--this is the volume where he tries to dig himself out of the Gallipoli debacle.

317CobbsGhost
Apr 24, 2023, 11:52 am

Just finished The Tomb of Tutankhamun, FS a week ago and LIVY, LEC edition three weeks before that, both are beautiful and interesting books to have on the shelf.

Last night I started 'The Anatomy of Melancholy' by Burton. The introduction is the greatest CYA note in history and nearly nullifies the basis for writing the book, but it's quite wonderful.

318Cat_of_Ulthar
Apr 28, 2023, 12:33 pm

Molesworth. Hilarious and I seem to recall that there was a topp Folio edition of it which I should track down. (My current copy is a wet and weedy Penguin, chiz.)

319Amarisy
Apr 29, 2023, 5:12 pm

Selected 'The Periodic Table' by Primo Levi from my shelves today.

320stopsurfing
Apr 30, 2023, 5:51 pm

Halfway through ‘Victory’ by Joseph Conrad. Like all Conrad books in my experience: starts off slow and you wonder why he’s considered a great writer and then you get caught by the psychology of the characters and the drama between them. I’m riveted!

321coynedj
May 3, 2023, 9:33 pm

Recently finished:

A Manual for Cleaning Women: Selected Stories, Lucia Berlin. I confess, I didn't finish it. Not because it was badly written - it was quite well written. But I grew anxious for a sustained narrative. I may come back to it at some point.

Origins: How earth's History has Shaped Human History, Lewis Dartnell. I enjoyed this - it did a very good job of explaining the strong impact of plate tectonics on human development and history.

Next up:

Slouching Towards Utopia: An Economic History of the Twentieth Century, Brad DeLong. Hey, I have a degree in economics.

The Anomaly, Herve Le Tellier. I don't recall where I got the recommendation for this one.

And, spurred on by the discussion in another thread, I pulled out the old family copy of Bunnicula: A Rabbit-Tale of Mystery, Deborah and James Howe. Not deep stuff, but it should be fun.

322PartTimeBookAddict
May 4, 2023, 12:37 am

>321 coynedj: Beware! The celery stalks at midnight!

323CarltonC
May 4, 2023, 11:30 am

>321 coynedj: I have A Manual for Cleaning Women, but have yet to find myself in the mood to read it. Recently read Louise Kennedy’s collection of short stories, The End of the World is a Cul de Sac, which is uneven so I am hoping for more from her Trespasses.
Recently read Time Shelter from the International Booker shortlist, which was full of ideas, but didn’t work for me as a novel. However I would recommend Guadalupe Nettel’s Still Born which is also listed and which I read last year.

Have just started the latest Kapka Kassabova travel book, Elixir: In the Valley at the End of Time, having really enjoyed her previous two books.

324coynedj
May 4, 2023, 2:21 pm

I forgot to mention that I also recently finished The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman. An utterly charming book. If the folks in Hollywood have any sense in them at all, it will soon be adapted for film. And if the Folio Society has any sense, they'll have a new edition ready for release shortly before the film's debut.

325PartTimeBookAddict
May 9, 2023, 2:26 pm

Just finished FS's "A High Wind in Jamaica". I thought it was just going to be a children's adventure story. Wow! I was not expecting such a grim, strange tale. Very interesting read, with the most unexpected twists and character reveals. It kept me rivited. And good illustrations. Happy for the FS having brought this to my attention.

Up next: "The Girls of Slender Means" by Muriel Spark.

326L.Bloom
Edited: May 9, 2023, 3:29 pm

Antony and Cleopatra in the Nonesuch Shakespeare. I know it's not FS BUT it is FS inspired. Once I learned about the upcoming Shakespeare LE I decided that if I'm going to splurge on a collected Shakespeare, I might as well go big. I suspect the price variance won't be too large between them in any case.

327LBShoreBook
May 9, 2023, 4:37 pm

>316 podaniel: How is this one so far? I have the set waiting for me to clear space in my calendar to tackle it. I really enjoyed his writing in The River War 2v and the FS war speeches.

328podaniel
May 9, 2023, 5:06 pm

>327 LBShoreBook:

It's Churchill so it's a good read--but you have to understand that it is the First World War as seen by Churchill as civilian head of the navy. Which is an odd way to look at a war that was mostly land based. So the first volume is about events leading up to the war through the end of 1914 from a naval perspective. The second volume is just about 1915, i.e., Gallipoli, and is mostly an apologia for Churchill's role with respect to that debacle. The third volume is the rest of the war. The fourth is the aftermath. And the fifth is a tacked-on volume about the Eastern Front. Just from this overview, you can see how out of proportion the work is, but, again, that's Churchill for you.

329LBShoreBook
May 9, 2023, 5:37 pm

>328 podaniel: Sounds fantastic in a Churchillian way. I've read other WW1 narratives for the bigger-picture view (The Guns of August being one of the better ones) so a myopic ego-centered one should be entertaining. Thanks for the input.

330podaniel
May 9, 2023, 5:45 pm

>329 LBShoreBook:

Yep--can't go wrong with Churchill. By the bye, if you haven't picked it up yet, I'd highly recommend FS's Great Contemporaries by Churchill. That may be his best single-volume book.

331LBShoreBook
May 9, 2023, 6:19 pm

>330 podaniel: will check it out, thanks

332PartTimeBookAddict
May 18, 2023, 2:40 pm

Finished "The Girls of Slender Means" by Muriel Spark. I love her writing. Clever, darkly funny. She makes you keep pace. An excellent set piece near the end. I would love FS to do a box set of her novellas like the Waugh Comedies collection.

Also finished "Cider With Rosie". Very charming prose. A song on the secondary market for a pretty good production. Like those tall, slender books the FS does.

Listened to "Faceless Killers" - snooze. Better than Nesbo, but not as good as P. D. James or Ruth Rendell. And certainly not better than the masterful Martin Beck series, which the FS should have done instead.

Also listened to "The Order of Time" - (narrated by Cumberbatch) very interesting, smart, but comprehensible for the layman like me. A good choice for FS. I have to visit their "Relativity" for more background knowledge.

Up Next: Time to pick up my copy of "A is for Ox" and find out what all the hubbub was about!

333PartTimeBookAddict
May 20, 2023, 1:22 pm

Finished "A is for Ox" - a great short read. Well presented, with illustrations lined up perfectly. Now I know where serifs come from. Glad I got it before the secondary market blew up.

Also re-read "The Red House Mystery" which has put me in the mood for more of that kind of thing. Next, I will be going through the Locked-Room Mysteries box set that has been sitting on my shelf for the last three years.

334coynedj
May 25, 2023, 5:08 pm

I'm on a winning streak!

Recently finished:

Slouching Towards Utopia: An Economic History of the Twentieth Century, Brad DeLong. Superb, for those who have an inkling to read such a thing. More wisdom and levelheadedness than is normally found, though he did less well with the most recent parts of his story. It's just too recent, and he did play a part in American economic policy making, so he (admittedly) isn't completely unbiased.

The Anomaly, Herve Le Tellier. Entertaining, a quick read, and it sticks with you (or, at least, it stuck with me). That said, it's not going to become part of the literary canon.

Bunnicula: A Rabbit-Tale of Mystery, Deborah and James Howe. A flash back to when my kids were young. Maybe I should read some Hank the Cowdog next.

Little Things Like These, Claire Keegan. Very short, and very powerful. Sure to be shortlisted for my Best Books I Read This Year list.

Up next:

The Complete Calvin and Hobbes. No need to wait for my capsule review - it's a work of genius.

The Daughter of Time, Josephine Tey. I said I would read more Tey, after I enjoyed The Singing Sands so much.

Civilization: A New History of the Western World, Roger Osborne.

The Disappearing Spoon, and Other True Tales of Madness, Love, and the History of the World from the Periodic Table of Elements, Sam Keane.

335L.Bloom
May 30, 2023, 3:53 pm

Moby-Dick LE. Maybe my favorite LE and one of my all time favorite books.

336dyhtstriyk
Edited: May 31, 2023, 3:14 pm

>333 PartTimeBookAddict: Delightful little mystery. I liked it very much. A very nice Folio production just marred by the incomprehensible decision of repeating the cover on a thin cardboard slipcase. It would have been much better with a plain red slipcase.

You'll find that the latter two of the locked room mysteries (the Leroux and the Dickson-Carr) very similar, but with far more outlandish solutions. I didn't care much for The Four Just Men.

337ubiquitousuk
May 31, 2023, 2:02 pm

I am reading A Month in the Country on the recommendation of >295 wcarter: (https://www.librarything.com/topic/349775). Today I read the first half, which was a pleasant way to spend a couple of hours. Tomorrow I plan to finish it off.

338cronshaw
Edited: May 31, 2023, 6:32 pm

I'm reading Martin Gilbert's quite brilliant history of the Second World War. It's gripping, once I pick the book up I can't bring myself to put it down. I'm not usually much taken with military histories, but Gilbert's comprehensive bird's eye view of the theatre of war and his engaging, accessible prose style that includes fascinating (and horrific) anecdotal detail and regularly focuses on the war as experienced by ordinary soldiers and civilians, rather than merely as directed by political leaders and generals, has me hooked. The Folio edition is excellent, a beautiful binding design and well illustrated.

The parallel between the behaviour of Hitler's SS and Putin's troops in Ukraine is unnerving.

339LBShoreBook
May 31, 2023, 6:54 pm

To the Lighthouse; perhaps FS will publish something by Clarice Lispector, such as The Chandelier, to augment its collection of Woolf novels. I find Woolf easier to read, Lispector is harder to forget.

340PartTimeBookAddict
May 31, 2023, 10:53 pm

>336 dyhtstriyk: Yeah. The Red House "slipcase" is bad design.

I finished "The Four Just Men". I found it entertaining enough with a few twists. In its way it is a precursor to thrillers like "Day of the Jackal", Harris' "Hannibal" and Nolan's "The Dark Knight." Looking up the publishing history on wikipedia is hilarious (and spoiler free).

I finished a few FS Simenon books as well. "Maigret's Mistake" and "Maigret Sets a Trap". Both very good. I haven't read enough of the 75-odd novels to state which are the "best". I would have put in "The Man on the Bench". But, I also would have made them collections of at least 6 novels - like the Waugh set or the Dahl set.

On to Leroux's "The Mystery of the Yellow Room" next.

341ArchonGed
Jun 1, 2023, 9:37 am

Something Wicked This Way Comes. I read half of it yesterday and will probably finish today. Awesome book so far.

342amp123
Jun 16, 2023, 9:20 pm

The Fantastic Gustave Doré. A selected collection of his illustrations from the beginning of his career to the end. The reproductions are excellent, the paper and sewn binding have a high quality and the way the cover illustration is done (embossed, with gold and silver highlights) is striking.

In response to a publisher's rejection of Gustave Doré's proposed folio edition of Dante on the ground that the public only wanted cheaply made editions, he responded:

"In every age when art or industry has exhibited a tendency to languish, there have always remained a few hundred individuals who have protested against so pernicious a state of affairs, and have been ready and willing to pay a handsome price for any careful and well-published work which should be brought out."

168 years later, this statement remains relevant.

343jillmwo
Jun 17, 2023, 10:27 am

Still have two volumes of the Barchester novels to get through, but paused to read as a change of pace Alberto Manguel's A History of Reading. A chapter or two at a time allows me to absorb it.

Also taking a look at a (very) recent publication from the British Library, The Gothic Tales of Sheridan Le Fanu Note: For some reason that touchstone is wonky. My version was edited by Xavier Aldana Reyes.

And a couple of light mysteries.

344BionicJim
Jun 18, 2023, 12:45 am

I just finished reading Great Expectations (the 1994 Folio edition). As expected, I enjoyed it much more as an adult after having been forced to read it in Jr High. I was actually surprised how many bits and pieces were familiar after all these 40 years.

One of the inspirations to read it again this year was the new BBC mini-series. While the book is great and is certainly a deserved classic, the new mini-series is awful. Outside of the setting and character names, the story has been changed so much it's difficult to recognize the original and the themes and ideas that resonated so much with me (and I'm certain were a strong reason this book is still read 150 years after its publication) were lost upon those responsible for the cinematic work. I'm a proponent for updating classics and expect transference to a new medium to include changes, hopefully the better to enhance the original, but this was a major miss.

Dickens famously changed the ending of his book to make it a "happy ending" after input from his friend and novelist Bulwer-Lytton (An outline of the original ending is included in the Folio edition). Though there is some controversy, the published ending works on many levels in addition to giving the hint of an optimistic future for the main characthers. The cinematic ending is awful and completely wrong.

Sorry for the OT movie review, but the book is great! Like the rest of the FS editions in this series, the illustrations are fantastic and made it a pleasure to read.

345Amarisy
Jun 18, 2023, 1:40 pm

No FS volumes in the pile ATM. I am reading Miss Willmott's Ghosts (Sandra Lawrence). Next up I have Islands of Abandonment; The Book of Trespass; Small Pleasures; Three Things You Need to Know About Rockets.

346Eumnestes
Jun 19, 2023, 7:42 am

We’re reading Austin’s Northanger Abby to our son, from the 1975 FS set with the red buckram. Not fancy, but a charming, convenient edition.

347Lady19thC
Jun 19, 2023, 4:02 pm

>344 BionicJim:
I love Great Expectations and am due for another reread of it. I'm so glad you enjoyed it! I find many people return to the classics long after their schooling days, only to realize they are fantastic and so much more enjoyable and relatable when you are a bit older and wiser! If you are looking for a worthy film to watch, the BBC TV miniseries starring Ioan Gruffudd, Justine Waddell and Charlotte Rumpling is fantastic. While none are perfect, it was the closest one to the book that I have come across and a delight to watch. I also really appreciate the ending, which I will not spoil for you!

348RRCBS
Jun 20, 2023, 12:07 pm

Currently reading American Pastoral by Philip Roth in my LOA edition. It’s been on my TBR pile for a while. Having a young daughter myself, finding the book tough to read, but definitely engaging and thought provoking.

349kcshankd
Jun 20, 2023, 1:07 pm

Recently finished Colson Whitehead's debut The Intuitionist, still thinking about it a few days later. On the one hand read straight it is a noir-ish tale from not quite historical 1950s NYC, on the other hand it is clearly an allegory on race in the USA

Currently reading Nothing Ever Dies on the generational trauma rippling from those decades of conflict.

350dyhtstriyk
Jun 21, 2023, 10:41 am

Currently @ 74% of The War of the End of The World. I have the Folio Edition (a heavy thing of beauty), but given that the book was written in my native language I'm reading it on Kindle. So far it's been a spectacularly brutal and muscular novel.

351LesMiserables
Jun 23, 2023, 12:55 am

Reading The Institutes by John Cassian.

352cronshaw
Jun 23, 2023, 6:33 am

Am presently engrossed in Bill Bryson's 'At Home', an absolutely riveting history of mankind's domestication.

353ubiquitousuk
Edited: Jun 23, 2023, 4:31 pm

I just finished Roadside Picnic (SE), which is a very nice edition in my view and represents great value for money.

I am now reading Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. Also a nice edition (I prefer Roadside Picnic), and quite funny if you have an irreverent streak. But I am glad the book is short because I can see it outstaying its welcome.

354dlphcoracl
Edited: Jun 23, 2023, 3:24 pm

>353 ubiquitousuk:

"I can see it outstaying its welcome".

Spot on. This is one of the most overrated books of all time and it has aged poorly. Might have been an interesting or fun read in 1971 but today?? Not so much.

And here is a two-fer for you. This will probably be an unpopular opinion but Charles Bukowski is another author who quickly overstays his welcome, where a little (VERY little, I might add) goes a long way.

355PartTimeBookAddict
Jun 23, 2023, 3:21 pm

>354 dlphcoracl: Why in 1998?

356dlphcoracl
Jun 23, 2023, 3:27 pm

>355 PartTimeBookAddict:

My mistake. I meant to refer to its publication date, which was 1971 and not 1998. The book was very much ‘of the time’ in 1971 but is decidedly out of date today.

Now corrected above. Thanks!

357L.Bloom
Jun 23, 2023, 3:43 pm

>353 ubiquitousuk: I have something crazy to say...

I recently read fear and loathing and HST's published letters. I am currently reading Moby-Dick and maybe this is some kind of weird bias but HST's writing is a lot like Melville's to me.

358PartTimeBookAddict
Jun 23, 2023, 4:03 pm

>356 dlphcoracl: Oh, just a typo. I thought something might have happened in 1999.

Thompson's writing is decidedly evergreen. Aside from some of the political characters current readers may not be familiar with, his writing has some of the strongest and most passionate editorial prose in history. And as a stylist he is often imitated but never duplicated. I put him right up next to another great, Jimmy Breslin.

If you can find hard-charging, two-fisted writing today that outclasses him I'd like to see it.

As for Bukowski, we live in an era of ONLY Bukowski. Most new fiction is Auto-fiction of the type that made Bukowski popular. His legacy lives large: Knausgård, Rooney, etc... But, you are right. Just like all his acolytes he's a complete snoozer.

359coynedj
Jun 23, 2023, 4:21 pm

I've never read any Bukowski, but I have to agree that Fear and Loathing did overstay its welcome. The further I got into it, the more times I said to myself "not this again!". At least I didn't buy the FS edition - I read it before FS got around to it, through the library.

360PartTimeBookAddict
Jun 23, 2023, 10:54 pm

I'm reading a few Non Folios at the moment:

Vikram Seth's "The Golden Gate: a novel in verse." Once you get into the rhythm it becomes really hypnotic.

"Rumpole and the Penge Bungalow Murders". Light summer entertainment. Mortimer is always enjoyable.

For FS: I'm deciding if I want to start Ballard's "The Drowned World" or Milton's "Big Chief Elizabeth" next.

361coynedj
Jul 6, 2023, 8:42 am

Recently finished:

The Complete Calvin and Hobbes. A transcendent work of genius. This was very enjoyable, and I must do it again.

The Daughter of Time, Josephine Tey. Somehow, I liked The Singing Sands more. This had less of the dialogue I so enjoyed, and not being English, I had trouble following all of the names and titles. I have no idea if the history is creditworthy. I didn't dislike it, but it wasn't quite as good as I had hoped.

Civilization: A New History of the Western World, Roger Osborne. Very good, especially at putting historical trends and events into context. Weakest when discussing post WWII history, where his political leanings came to the fore.

Still working on:

The Disappearing Spoon, and Other True Tales of Madness, Love, and the History of the World from the Periodic Table of Elements, Sam Keane. While it's informative and well-written, I find myself reaching for other books first.

Started:

The Space Merchants, Frederik Pohl and C.M. Korbluth. Kornbluth's work was recommended to me, and this was all the local library had. Quite good so far. Part of the LOA's American Science Fiction collection.

Priestdaddy, Patricia Lockwood. The author is quite skilled at simile (and telling a story, of course). Not many people can legitimately say they have a Roman Catholic priest as a father.

362kcshankd
Jul 6, 2023, 8:04 pm

Finished Nothing Ever Dies, an exploration of the multi-generational reverberation of violence rippling from Vietnam. That led me to revisit my FS Quiet American, that I had last read in the runup to the second gulf war. Such lunacy to repeat such lunacy.

>361 coynedj: Priestdaddy might be an all-time favorite, I remember drawing several glances from my wife due to laughing out loud while reading it.

363ubiquitousuk
Jul 9, 2023, 3:54 am

I just finished The Door in the Wall, which lives up the hype that surrounded the edition on this forum. Thanks to those who sang it's praises for inducing me to buy this book.

Now on to Shackleton's Boat Journey. First impressions are very positive: the textured paper binding feels like cloth and the addition of spot UK and silver foil makes for a very tasteful design on my view. From a quick flick through, the interior looks quite neatly put together too.

364L.Bloom
Jul 9, 2023, 8:25 am

FS latest printing of Wuthering Heights. This is FS at it's best imo. Classic book, buckram bound, great original art (not much of it but it's well done), and great paper. At the original price ($60 US I think I paid) it was certainly worth it. Now at 75$, I would not be so happy to buy it.

365PartTimeBookAddict
Jul 9, 2023, 11:29 am

>363 ubiquitousuk: "Shackleton's Boat Journey" is a perfect adventure read. I loved it.

I'm reading a non Folio version of "The Origins of Totalitarianism" on and off. Took a break to read the delightful "Dream Days" by Kenneth Grahame. A small and lovely designed book. Very wistful with his romantic nostalgia for innocence. Perfect summer reading that will make me go back to "The Wind in the Willows" very soon.

Also read "Silas Marner" recently to prepare myself for the big one in the fall: "Middlemarch."

367PartTimeBookAddict
Jul 21, 2023, 7:19 pm

Some forum enablement to my reading this week:

Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan
A Month in the County by J. L. Carr
And starting off on A Shameful Revenge by María de Zayas y Sotomayor.

368Cat_of_Ulthar
Jul 22, 2023, 12:44 pm

Foliowise, I've been enjoying Hitchhiker; non-Foliowise, I've been engrossed in The House of the Spirits. I might have said this before but I would love some Allende from Folio.

369HonorWulf
Jul 28, 2023, 11:33 am

Finished Roadside Picnic. Fun mix of PKD and Lem with a noirish flare to it. A lot more world building than the Tarkovsky film as it takes place over many years and narrates multiple trips to the "zone". Was interesting to see the film pick out the best bits and pieces from the book's various missions and fuse them into a single trip. The film also focuses on the more moralistic themes, and is less interested in some of the more alien (and supernatural) ones.

Le Guin mentions this in the intro, but it's also amusing how Soviet writers resign themselves to the possibility that we probably won't be able to understand and/or communicate with an advanced alien species, unlike more optimistic Western fiction that typically culminates in a communications "breakthrough". A big McKean fan from his Sandman and Cages days, so was pleased with the abstract illustrations that help underscore the more nebulous aspects of the work.

Probably not for everyone, but vintage sci-fi (or Tarkovsky) enthusiasts should be pleased.

370L.Bloom
Jul 28, 2023, 11:51 am

LE Madame Bovary, enjoying it very much so far.

371coynedj
Jul 28, 2023, 1:29 pm

Recently finished:

The Space Merchants - Frederik Pohl and C.M. Kornbluth. Classic science fiction from the 1950's, very enjoyable.

Priestdaddy - Patricia Lockwood. Funny, touching, and (having been raised Catholic) filled with many familiar notions. I see that she has a novel out. I think I'll have to give it a try.

Currently reading:

Spinning Silver - Naomi Novik. This was recommended to me, and while I am enjoying it, I notice that all of the women are excellent people but any evil person is invariably male. Not that there aren't good men as well, but this is a story clearly pitched to women.

Existential Physics: A Scientist's Guide to Life's Biggest Questions - Sabine Hossenfelder. Very good so far. I'm no physicist, but I've been able for the most part to follow her arguments, though I'll never understand quantum mechanics. She doesn't shy from a debate, takes people to task when she feels it necessary, and isn't afraid to say "we just don't know".

372ubiquitousuk
Jul 28, 2023, 3:01 pm

I just finished Foundation, which has an interesting narrative structure. I enjoyed the book's fairly rich model of the forces that shape society.

Prior to that I read Shackleton's Boat Journey, which was excellent. The recent Folio edition is nicely put together and the story of Shackleton's adventures is quite incredible and most thrilling.

Before proceeding with the next part of the Foundation Trilogy I am reading Five Days in London, May 1940. This is a much more academic book and perhaps a little bit disjointed in places. But it's a fascinating period and very interesting to get a bit of insight into the characters involved.

All three are in their Folio editions.

373PartTimeBookAddict
Jul 28, 2023, 3:59 pm

>372 ubiquitousuk: Loved Shackleton's Boat Journey. I still have no idea how they survived that ordeal.

If you like "Five Days in London" check out Erik Larson's "The Splendid and the Vile". It has more scope for that time period and is very well written.

374ubiquitousuk
Jul 28, 2023, 4:25 pm

>373 PartTimeBookAddict: thanks for the tip, I'll take a look!

375jsg1976
Jul 28, 2023, 5:27 pm

>374 ubiquitousuk: I’ll second the recommendation for The Splendid and the Vile. Great book.

376PartTimeBookAddict
Jul 28, 2023, 6:51 pm

I just read Nancy Mitford’s “The Pursuit of Love” and “Love in a Cold Climate”.

Both had me laughing on almost every page. And such a lot of illustrations in the FS editions. Very enjoyable.

Next: Dipping into some vintage sci-fi with “Babel-17” by Samuel R Delany.

377cronshaw
Edited: Jul 29, 2023, 6:45 am

'China's Hidden Century: 1796-1912' published by the British Museum. A quite extraordinary read and a magnificent, profusely illustrated edition that provides a comprehensive history of the complicated, cosmopolitan and fragile empire that was late Qing China. The eponymous exhibition at the British Museum is wonderful, but there's so much more history and exhibit information in the book than is available to read in the exhibition itself.

Furthermore it's remarkable how affordable this large hardback edition is, with a sewn binding and printed in Poland, costing only £40 in the museum shop or on-line (cheaper than on Amazon). An equivalent Folio edition would be well over £100.

378gmacaree
Jul 30, 2023, 2:09 am

>377 cronshaw: I thought the exhibit was glorious. Already been three times!

379BooksFriendsNotFood
Aug 3, 2023, 6:12 pm

I just finished reading The Book of Crawling Creatures from the Studies from Nature set and what a lovely experience overall! I can't wait to make my way through the other three poetry volumes (I'm trying to go slowly to make it last).

380PartTimeBookAddict
Aug 4, 2023, 2:37 pm

>183 red_guy: Just got around to my FS copy of "The Blue Flower" by Penelope Fitzgerald this week.

I don't know if it was the prose style, my unfamiliarity with Novalis and the era, or the crazy German names, but it was hard for me to connect with the book. It was fine and there are interesting elements (especially about late 1700s life), but I felt I really had to work at finishing it. It seemed to jump around too much. At least it's only 200 pages. The illustrations are fantastic, though.

This was the first P. Fitzgerald book I read, aside from "The Axe" short story. Anyone have recommendations of another of her works to try next?

381CarltonC
Aug 4, 2023, 8:17 pm

>380 PartTimeBookAddict: I would suggest Offshore or The Bookshop. I really enjoyed reading Penelope Fitzgerald’s books, and I consider The Blue Flower her best, but I had just discovered German Romantic Art (mid-1990’s), so it was an ideal read.

Have recently most enjoyed reading Fight Night by Miriam Toews, which is not my usual style of book , but which I found very funny.
Have also read The Romance of Ruins: The Search for Ancient Ionia - 1764 which I found a delight and, for my personal understanding, revelatory in providing sufficient detail of the experiences and difficulties overcome by eighteenth century travellers. It is a catalogue where I had been unable to attend the exhibition, but where the essays added significantly to the enjoyment of the art.

382gmacaree
Aug 5, 2023, 2:37 am

>380 PartTimeBookAddict: I've gone through The Blue Flower twice and didn't really care for it either time.

383PartTimeBookAddict
Aug 5, 2023, 3:12 am

>381 CarltonC: >382 gmacaree: I don't think it's without qualities. She definitely had passion and was well versed in the subject matter. It just didn't jibe with me. I will check out some of her other works. Thanks for the recommendations.

384red_guy
Aug 5, 2023, 5:19 pm

>380 PartTimeBookAddict: Oh, that's a shame it didn't appeal. I remember the thing I liked was that it didn't read like a historical novel at all, and was very immediate. If you should feel up to trying another one, I recommend 'At Freddies', which is about a stage school in London in the 1960s, and very funny.

385LesMiserables
Aug 7, 2023, 11:23 pm

Just finished The Big Short by Michael Lewis.

386PartTimeBookAddict
Aug 7, 2023, 11:28 pm

>384 red_guy: Thank you. Sounds interesting.

387Jeremy53
Aug 8, 2023, 2:14 am

I've decided to read a bunch of India-based stories for the rest of the year. Primarily because I have them, but also because there's some India-related stuff happening at work (in a good way).

Just started the Paul Scott series (in Folio) - great so far.

Then, Vikram Seth's A Suitable Boy.

A fair few words in all that, but looking forward to finally getting around to them.

Any other recommendations for India-related fiction/non-fiction? I've read The God of Small Things (wow).

388BooksFriendsNotFood
Edited: Aug 8, 2023, 3:08 am

>387 Jeremy53: I haven't read them myself but I've heard great things about the Ponniyin Selvan volumes by Kalki (it's fiction based on real historical people and events). I did watch the movies recently - they're available through Amazon Prime Video in the US - and they were stunning! Another fictional book series I enjoyed was The Immortals of Meluha by Amish Tripathi — I read it quite a while ago and don't remember much, but it's pretty popular so you may have already heard of it.

I visited Mysore Palace this summer and was really awed by the beauty and history of the place. If anyone has any book recommendations specifically regarding the Kingdom of Mysore, I am all ears.

389N11284
Aug 8, 2023, 5:16 am

Just finished the FS Parades End by Ford Madox Ford. A hard slog at times and not sure where it was going but well worth the effort.

390N11284
Aug 8, 2023, 5:20 am

>387 Jeremy53:

How about A Passage to India. Westvaco produced a lovely boxed version complete with 2cd's of Indian music. Lots of copies available on eBay. Its called A Silk Road Journey 2

391Lady19thC
Edited: Aug 8, 2023, 2:59 pm

I just finished a reread of My Cousin Rachel, by Rebecca du Maurier, FS edition.

Also just starting The Living Mountain, by Nan Shepherd, FS edition and first time read!

Studying through Travels Through Middle Earth; The Path of A Saxon Pagan, by Alaric Albertsson.

392abysswalker
Aug 8, 2023, 3:27 pm

>381 CarltonC: re: The Romance of Ruins, how is book construction? Stitched binding? Looks fascinating.

393CarltonC
Aug 8, 2023, 5:16 pm

>392 abysswalker: The book construction is good, stitched binding as far as I can tell and I can lay the book flat without issue. When checking I noted that it was printed in Turkey, which was rather appropriate.
A Sir John Soane's Museum publication in association with the British Museum.

394Jeremy53
Aug 8, 2023, 11:36 pm

>388 BooksFriendsNotFood: Awesome, thanks. Will add to TBR list.

>390 N11284: I've read A Passage to India a couple of times actually - which is unusual for me to re-read! I believe the initial set-up is very similar to the Paul Scott series, which is maybe based on an actual happening of the time? Cool re: the music set, will check out...

395Joshbooks1
Aug 9, 2023, 7:35 am

>387 Jeremy53: L.H. Meyer's The Root and the Flower is superb. Rushdie's Midnight Children was enjoyable but I'd advise lower expectations since I was expecting something magnificent after it won the Booker of all Bookers. Gandhi's autobiography is great. Also The Autobiography of an Unknown Indian is also well worth reading.

Hope this helps and enjoy!

396Cat_of_Ulthar
Aug 9, 2023, 12:20 pm

Folio: Trainspotting. Pure brilliant, so it is.

Could do with a glossary, though, I suspect. I'm a highlander rather than from Leith so I could follow most of this although there was the odd word I had to check out. But what would our American cousins, among others, make of it?

Anyway, it's a way of life that is alien to me in many, but not all, aspects (the overnight bus journey brought back a big whiff/pong of nostalgia).

Non-Folio: Breakfast at Tiffanys.

I sort of enjoyed this without understanding a lot of it. But it's short so I'm going to read it again to try and get my head around it. Two nations divided?

397Carl64
Aug 10, 2023, 9:21 pm

Currently reading The Restaurant At The End Of The Universe. Douglas Adams. The Limited Folio Edition

398BooksFriendsNotFood
Aug 10, 2023, 9:42 pm

>397 Carl64: Whoo! Enjoy!

399Carl64
Aug 10, 2023, 9:53 pm

>398 BooksFriendsNotFood: Thanks! Great read and the books are top notch!

400L.Bloom
Aug 15, 2023, 11:30 am

Les Miserables LE. I actually like the design of this one and this era of LEs in general. A Big, chunky, monument to a great work of literature.

401Lady19thC
Aug 15, 2023, 6:33 pm

I finished The Living Mountain this morning and it was wonderful! Originally I was not going to pick it up, but so many of you raved about it! I'm glad I invested. Quite a treasure!

I am now rereading Piranesi, by Susanna Clarke.

402ian_curtin
Aug 16, 2023, 4:23 am

I just read Evelyn Waugh's peculiar little novel, Helena - a title of his that is mostly overlooked these days, it seems to me. Very interesting and typically, drily funny throughout, but as I said - peculiar. Anyway, being about Constantine and that era, I thought I would bookend it with the FS Fall of Constantinople by Steven Runciman - just started today.

403assemblyman
Aug 16, 2023, 5:08 am

I am currently reading Middlemarch. Its a first read for me and I am halfway though it. It took me a bit to get into it but I am enjoying it now. I don't think I like it as much as The Mill on the Floss which I loved but I will wait to finish it and see how I feel.

404Tamachan00
Aug 16, 2023, 7:06 am

Beowulf - 1973 Folio Edition, picked up from Abe Books after the recent special edition release. 1st time reading it, didn't think I'd ever read something like this but I'm enjoying it and glad I took the chance with it.

405BooksFriendsNotFood
Aug 19, 2023, 3:08 am

I started reading the latest FS edition of Monkey by Wu Ch’eng-en and I'm really enjoying it! One thing I'm appreciating so far is how it skips the long, detailed fight sequences and just says something like "It was a good fight that followed." or "Truly a good fight!" and then just gives us the ending. This is perfect for my current attention span.

406Ragnaroek
Aug 21, 2023, 7:52 pm

>404 Tamachan00:
Thats so expensive on ebay. 😳😓

407Nerevarine
Edited: Aug 22, 2023, 7:04 am

>406 Ragnaroek: The 1973 FS edition of Beowulf can be found very, very cheap on eBay.

It’s the 2010 Seamus Heany’s translation edition that is on the pricier side.

408Ragnaroek
Aug 22, 2023, 9:03 am

>407 Nerevarine:
Ohhhh yes. My fault. Its a shame so. I wish the new version would be 100£ cheaper 😕

409Tamachan00
Aug 22, 2023, 10:21 am

>407 Nerevarine: Yes, this is correct.
I picked up my copy for 12.99! It's a lovely edition though - a bit of a bargain at that price.

410ubiquitousuk
Aug 22, 2023, 5:22 pm

I am nearing the end of the second volume of The Foundation Trilogy. The first volume ("Foundation") was clever and reasonably fast paced. The second ("Foundation and Empire") feels a bit more like cheap, derivative science fiction and is dragging a bit. We'll see what the third volume brings...

411Lady19thC
Aug 22, 2023, 7:53 pm

I am almost halfway through Arabella, by Georgette Heyer, FS edition. I enjoyed the first one, so my husband gave me this for Christmas and I am finally getting around to it, before I sink into my "spooky" reads for September and October. A very pleasant way to end my summer reading!

412BooksFriendsNotFood
Aug 22, 2023, 8:14 pm

>411 Lady19thC: I hope you're enjoying it! I read Arabella in the Georgette Heyer Signature Collection edition back in 2021 - I recall it being very fun! - and when the Folio Society did an edition I snapped it up real quick haha. I really hope we get a new Heyer book from FS this year — I'd love for them to publish at least one of her mysteries as well as they're reminiscent of Agatha Christie's works.

413DramPan
Aug 23, 2023, 7:13 am

>412 BooksFriendsNotFood: i truly hope they do!

414N11284
Aug 23, 2023, 11:20 am

Picked up a FS edition of The Magic Mountain by Thomas Mann for €12 recently. A book I had not heard of before. I'm finding it an interesting treatise on time. Enjoying it so far.

415BooksFriendsNotFood
Aug 23, 2023, 8:19 pm

>413 DramPan: Fingers crossed!

I'm so glad she was a prolific writer because I've read 31 of her books so far and it's not nearly enough.

416Forthwith
Aug 24, 2023, 4:49 pm

I just completed The Eight Mountains: A Novel by Paolo Cognetti. This might be read in your comfortable armchair in the quiet of an evening. It is a contemporary work about the life friendship between two men and their fathers. One lived and remained in the Italian Alps and the other ventured to Nepal. The writer is living some of both lives.

417HonorWulf
Edited: Aug 25, 2023, 9:34 am

Finished Childhood's End, one of Arthur C. Clarke's early successes that has continued to improve upon its reputation over time (it was also Kubrick's first choice for film adaptation before settling on The Sentinel (2001) over rights issues). It presents a different take on the alien invasion yarn by featuring a benevolent race of aliens instead of the typical hostile invaders, with a number of interesting and unexpected twists along the way. The Folio edition features illustrations by Grace Aldrich -- whom I really like as an artist -- however, some of her choice of subjects were somewhat underwhelming given the imaginative source material. Overall, though, the vintage sci-fi enthusiast should be quite happy with this package.

418Eumnestes
Aug 29, 2023, 10:53 am

>411 Lady19thC: My wife and I read Arabella in the FS edition a few months ago. Charming story in pretty presentation.

419Forthwith
Aug 29, 2023, 1:05 pm

I am nearing the half-way point in the FS version of Blood Meridian. I anticipate that it will take more time for a slow read. Chapters 11 and 12 have some brilliant writing to savor. I am reading a Chapter or so at a sitting to let the phrasing internalize. This is a book with the parts exceeding the whole.
I am sad to learn that there is another serious effort this time to make this a movie.

420assemblyman
Aug 29, 2023, 1:54 pm

I am currently reading a trio of Franz Kafka short story books from Twisted Spoon Press. Contemplation, A Hunger Artist and A Country Doctor. I was away on a short visit to Prague recently (first time) with my wife and couldn't resist picking them up after visiting his museum. I really like some of the stories so far. I foresee picking up his main novels down the line at some point.

I also highly recommend visiting the Franz Kafka Museum in Prague, I found it very interesting and a wealth of information on his life.

421Betelgeuse
Aug 29, 2023, 4:13 pm

I'm nearly finished with the Heritage Press edition of Bulwer-Lytton's The Last Days of Pompeii. It's just slightly better than dreadful.

422coynedj
Aug 29, 2023, 5:42 pm

>421 Betelgeuse: High praise indeed! It'll be a dark and stormy night before I read any of his work. And one without access to anything better.

423Betelgeuse
Aug 29, 2023, 6:15 pm

>422 coynedj: I felt compelled to give it a try because I just saw a Pompeii exhibit at one of the Chicago museums. A few years ago I read one of his short stories and it was pretty good. It was a horror story and the florid prose worked in that case. But this is something else. I’m more than ready for the volcano.

424jsg1976
Aug 29, 2023, 6:32 pm

>423 Betelgeuse: was it a good exhibit? I’ve been thinking of going.

425Betelgeuse
Aug 29, 2023, 6:43 pm

>424 jsg1976: Yes, it was well worth the visit. Tragic, grim, interesting, and beautiful all at once.

427coynedj
Aug 30, 2023, 10:32 am

Recently finished:

The Adventures of Sinbad, by Gyula Krudy
Season of Migration to the North, by Tayeb Salih
Both of these are NYRB editions, and provide further proof that they have a superb selection of translated works the we insular Americans would otherwise know nothing about.

Cheri, by Colette - another NYRB book, but proof that they don't always suit my taste. I got 80 pages in and gave up on it. It seemed like a pointless story about pointless people.

The Ascent of Money, by Niall Ferguson - began as a history of money, then veered into a history of finance, which I wasn't looking for. This book pre-dates cryptocurrency, so I hope someone does a book covering them and how our definition of money is changing.

Next up:

Musashi, by Eiji Yoshikawa - as mentioned in a previous post

The Big Myth: How American Business Taught Us to Loathe Government and Love the Free Market, by Naomi Oreskes and Erik Conway - if the title doesn't tell you their opinion, then the introduction (which is as far as I've gotten) certainly will. I'm in the mood for a good polemic.

428LesMiserables
Aug 30, 2023, 8:02 pm

429BooksFriendsNotFood
Aug 30, 2023, 8:18 pm

>428 LesMiserables: The titles you've been reading are real eye catchers. 😆

430LesMiserables
Aug 31, 2023, 2:34 am

>429 BooksFriendsNotFood: Yeah, real classics. :-)

431Eumnestes
Aug 31, 2023, 7:18 pm

About 200 pages into the FS edition of Tocqueville's Democracy in America. A really fascinating view of the early 19-c US, even if the author never saw a detail he failed to remember. An engaging mix of political theory and history.

Although the leather of the cover seems less luxurious than one might expect, and there are no illustrations, this is an excellent reading edition. It reproduces the U of Chicago edition of 2000, which is a good mix of scholarly notes and accessible text, perfect for the interested non-expert. I'm almost always impressed with the decisions FS makes in presenting classic works.

432Lady19thC
Aug 31, 2023, 8:18 pm

Finished Matilda (FS) and Coraline, by Neil Gaiman (another Gaiman I would like them to publish)

Now rereading Phantom of the Opera (FS) and loving it more each time I read it. Very hard to put down!

433ubiquitousuk
Sep 1, 2023, 1:33 pm

I am reading a rare trade edition: "The Perks of Being a Wallflower". I am pleasantly surprised: there's more to this than I expected. The blurb on the cover compared it to Catcher in the Rye, but it's a bit of a mix of that and of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime.

434L.Bloom
Sep 1, 2023, 2:00 pm

>431 Eumnestes: Totally agree, they excel at presenting classic works (with the exception of few questionable translation choices).

435texntim
Sep 2, 2023, 1:31 pm

I am reading Les Miserables (Folio LE) for the first time.

436Chemren
Sep 2, 2023, 1:46 pm

On the second book of the Farseer trilogy. I read these in the trade editions when they were originally issued, but remember very little about them. I am enjoying the re-read.

437L.Bloom
Sep 6, 2023, 8:37 am

>435 texntim: Same! Really enjoying it as well.

438assemblyman
Sep 6, 2023, 10:14 am

>435 texntim: >437 L.Bloom: This coincidently just arrived for me this morning.

439Redshirt
Sep 9, 2023, 2:12 pm

I recently finished The Book of Ebenezer Le Page by Gerald Basil Edwards and thoroughly enjoyed it. The book is written in the cranky but also endearing voice of the title character and unfolds in a series of anecdotes and memories spanning the course of his life on the isle of Guernsey. It is not, for the most part, a plot driven book but is instead very much a study of the title character, his friends and family, and Guernsey itself. The degree to which any potential readers will enjoy the book will no doubt hinge on the degree to which they are drawn to the title character. The book unfolds slowly but rewards patience and even develops a bit of momentum at the end. And if you are at all interested in the Isle of Guernsey you will almost certainly enjoy this book.

If you are interested in picking up a copy, I’d strongly suggest checking out the illustrated editions put out by Extraordinary Editions: http://extraordinaryeditions.com/books/the-book-of-ebenezer-le-page/. The Island Edition is a particularly good value, IMHO, as it doesn’t cost that much more than a trade edition. And Martin Morgan, the publisher, is a pleasure and worthy of the support of this community.

Forgive me for the longer than normal post to this thread but I’m on lockdown with Covid and a bit bored so I thought I’d say a little bit about my impressions of the book rather than just state the title.

440RRCBS
Sep 9, 2023, 4:45 pm

A lot of Kindle reads lately: Curse of the Chalion, Paladin of Souls, Berta Isla, Tomas Nevinson (prob fav recent read, ending was really good), A Heart so White, Learned by Heart.

Three favs are Tomas Nevinson, The Curse of the Chalion and Learned by Heart. All very different by really good.

Really miss physical books and will be happy to get back to them. Kindle was just easier for things like going on day trips. Finishing a reread of The Quincunx then prob start on some non fiction.

441red_guy
Sep 9, 2023, 5:08 pm

>440 RRCBS: Great to find another fan of The Quincunx!

I recently bought a U.S. trade edition, which amazingly is sewn and has good paper and is nestling in my TBR pile. I've just finished Shadow of the Wind and found echoes of The Quincunx there. It has been a long time since I read the paperback (1990-ish), but remember enjoying it hugely. Did you find it has stood the test of time?

442RRCBS
Sep 9, 2023, 6:24 pm

>441 red_guy: Neat find! I’m really enjoying it the second time around, and can see what you mean about echoes in The Shadow of the Wind. I actually think I haven’t read any of Palliser’s other novels, so will be looking into that at some point!

443Ragnaroek
Sep 10, 2023, 2:56 pm

I tried to read Howls moving castle, but this book is so boring and every character is absolutely annyoing I can't identify with one of those.

I gave it up and read GoT instead 😍😊

444BooksFriendsNotFood
Sep 11, 2023, 3:03 am

I finished True Grit and I'm still making my way through Gulliver's Travels and Titus Groan — I'm reading them in ebook form but I chose them based on the existence of the FS SE and LEs. I don't find them horrid or anything but all three excel at putting me to sleep so I've put them to effective use by reading them before bedtime.

445dlphcoracl
Sep 11, 2023, 3:29 pm

>443 Ragnaroek:

You are being overly kind. It’s worse than that.

446BooksFriendsNotFood
Sep 11, 2023, 7:13 pm

I read Howl as a kid and enjoyed it very much. Didn't feel the same way about the movie though.

447HonorWulf
Edited: Sep 12, 2023, 12:47 pm

Finished Restaurant at the End of the Universe. Second go around for me, but first in 30 plus years (and first in Folio!). A worthy sequel in which Adams' imagination is still outpacing his pessimism and he swings for the fences here to valiantly top the original, even if he ends up just a bit short. Jonathan Burton's a great choice on art, channeling Adams' humor and whimsy quite well. I would avoid the Adam Roberts introduction until after reading all of the books, as it contains spoilers not only for this one, but subsequent volumes as well...

449Jeremy53
Sep 13, 2023, 7:20 pm

Half-way through Paul Scott's 'The Jewel in the Crown' (FS edition - which I really, really like).

It started well - very interesting character development and context. Then, it inexplicably got bogged down in some interminable monologues, narrated by characters of questionable interest and value to the overall story. I really wrestled with why Scott chose to do it this way...to just cripple the momentum of his story like that...I mean, I know why he did it as a story-telling device (allows him to paint a very broad picture of the circumstances of the story and of Indian context), but boy, was it long-winded and lacking interest!

Anyway, I seem to have come out the other side of that and he's increasingly narrowing the lens again onto things that matter more. And more interesting characters. I nearly gave up!

I feel like it's the kind of book that really tests our modern attention spans and the time we have available. There are 4 books in the original series...+1 another sequel...so that's quite a commitment. When you're going through such reading tests, it's hard not to think about all the other (shorter) books you could be reading that you've never got around to.

(Rant over)

450PartTimeBookAddict
Sep 17, 2023, 1:34 pm

September has been a mixed bag so far:

The Good:
'Salem's Lot - Stephen King (Not a fan usually, but this one didn't stall out like most of his books do.)
City of Thieves - David Benioff (A tight WW2 story of two Russian soldiers trying to find some eggs during the German invasion.)
The Sea Around Us - Rachel Carson (I don't know if research has updated this book any, but it was extremely interesting, full of facts I hadn't even wondered about before. Highly recommended.)
Big Tree - Brian Selznick (If you like Selznick's style, this is a great short read about 2 seeds trying to make it big!)

The Bad:
Stella Maris - Cormac McCarthy (Incomprehensible and boring. Maybe if I was a quantum physicist I could glean something out of it, but I doubt it.)
Boldly Go - William Shatner (One or two good stories inflated to book length with a whole bunch of filler.)
The Shadow of the Wind - Carlos Ruiz Zafon (The worst book FS has ever recommended. Thankfully, I read a library copy. Poorly written, boring story, very long, the worst kind of exposition dumps, dull characters, and similes that just don't work at all. It's juvenile in the same way as "The DaVinci Code" or "The Night Circus")

Upcoming:
Origins of Totalitarianism - Arendt (Almost finished... finally)
The Bloody Chamber - Angela Carter (Found a bargain FS copy. Looking forward to it. Haven't read her before. The cover and illustrations pop.)

451BooksFriendsNotFood
Sep 17, 2023, 3:14 pm

>450 PartTimeBookAddict: Ouch at The Shadow of the Wind lol (it ended up being a surprise favorite for me). I'm sorry it didn't work for you!

452Xandian97
Sep 19, 2023, 3:40 pm

Currently on holiday in the Brecon Beacons, having spent a long day in Hay-on-Wye (somehow it's become an annual pilgramage!), where I picked up more than a few FS goodies. Made a start on Gilgamesh by reading the preface and first section, and honestly the book was worth buying just for the preface - to me the history of the story and it's redicovery is more epic than the story itself!

453HonorWulf
Sep 19, 2023, 4:32 pm

>450 PartTimeBookAddict: If I had to take one Stephen King book to the desert island, than it would definitely be 'Salem's Lot.

454PartTimeBookAddict
Sep 19, 2023, 6:17 pm

>453 HonorWulf: I like "Skeleton Crew" and "Four Seasons" but the rest all feel bloated. 'Salem's was good, though.

>451 BooksFriendsNotFood: Each to their own taste. I have a hard time even thinking of what other better books to recommend if someone liked it. I think of the works by Ondaatje: "Cat's Table" or "The English Patient." Tartt's "The Secret History" or Chabon's "Wonder Boys". But, I don't even know what people who like "Shadow of the Wind" get out of it. It's insanely popular, so there must be something. What made it work for you?

455BooksFriendsNotFood
Sep 19, 2023, 9:20 pm

(I would suggest not reading the below if you have not yet read The Shadow of the Wind, because while I don't think I've spoiled anything - although I could be wrong - I've definitely listed a bunch of memorable scenes and themes.)

>454 PartTimeBookAddict: I honestly don't know how to explain why I loved it, but I think it's some combination of the grandness of the story along with the little details that just worked for me. I enjoyed reading about the characters, especially Fermin. I was absolutely hooked when the evil detective came into it. The mystery and "haunted house" aspect also had my eyes glued to the page. The absolutely dramatic climax. And just so many elements / scenes of the story that I can still recall, like the workplace harassment, the time in Paris meeting the mysterious author, the burning, the little community around the bookstore, Fermin's Godfather-esque antics, Fermin and Daniel in disguise and tricking that school priest guy 😭, etc. (And I mean, I recall that it felt sexist at times, but my brain is good at compartmentalizing.) And I suppose it was cool how this magnificent story was uncovered through so many smaller, individual narratives. I also just really enjoyed reading the sentences, but that could also be attributed to the beautiful LE which without a doubt enhanced the reading experience.

I'd personally compare this book with:
- The Starless Sea
- The Book Thief
- Les Mis (the movie)
- Murakami

Thanks for your recommendations, by the way! If I ever check any of them out, I will definitely be comparing them to The Shadow of the Wind haha.

456LesMiserables
Edited: Sep 26, 2023, 4:24 pm

Just finished Mani by Patrick Leigh Fermor. It has taken me a while, having set it aside due to other commitments, but as I'm recuperating from some surgery, I dusted it off and thoroughly enjoyed it.

Moving quickly on to Roumeli; its Folio companion.

457coynedj
Sep 26, 2023, 9:49 am

>456 LesMiserables: Wishing you a speedy recovery.

458BooksFriendsNotFood
Sep 26, 2023, 11:09 am

>456 LesMiserables: Hope your recovery is quick and easy!


Last night I finished reading my recently acquired Madame Bovary LE (I now officially own all LEs ever published that I wanted to own! Hurrah! I won't be able to say this for long though because FS simply does not know how to chill & I'll most likely hunker down into savings mode soon.) and I loved it! I definitely had the thought that it must be illegal for art to be so gorgeous — the paintings were stunning.

I love this article by the artist explaining her process: https://www.foliosociety.com/ca/blog/this-folio-life-bringing-madame-bovary-to-l...

459LesMiserables
Sep 26, 2023, 4:42 pm

>457 coynedj:
>458 BooksFriendsNotFood:

Thank you. One upside from being inconvenienced is the uptick in reading time. I expect that these hours in a library may not be experienced again until I retire.
I'm rather looking forward to a few hours of reading every day.

460LesMiserables
Oct 3, 2023, 5:52 am

Roumeli like Mani is another great example of PMLF's skill in prose.

If you have this set and have yet to read, prepare for a spectacular tour of Greece. The illustrations are excellent and accompanied by a generous amount of photographs.

461LesMiserables
Oct 4, 2023, 2:21 am

Reading The Lord of the Rings again.

This outing belongs to the Harper Collins Illustrated Hardback 2021 edition.

462ubiquitousuk
Oct 4, 2023, 2:46 am

>458 BooksFriendsNotFood: I very rarely buy LEs from Folio Society because I always feel like I get a better made book from a private press for the same money. But Madame Bovary brought me really close. I still live in hope that there might be a standard edition one day, so I too may enjoy those gorgeous paintings.

463BooksFriendsNotFood
Oct 4, 2023, 8:00 am

>462 ubiquitousuk: That would be great — the paintings are truly breathtaking in-person and I hope someday you'll have the chance to enjoy them!

464dlphcoracl
Edited: Oct 4, 2023, 1:06 pm

>462 ubiquitousuk:

In waiting for a standard edition of the Folio Society LE edition of Madame Bovary, I fear you are being penny wise and pound foolish - no slight intended. I have a good feel for your collecting interests and tastes and an FS standard edition will be the worst of all worlds. Here's why:

The FS Limited Edition is gorgeous and it hit all the right notes. It's full quarto size (28 x 18.5 cm) shows the luminous full page colour illustrations to wonderful effect, something a smaller FS edition page will not do. Additionally, an FS standard will almost certainly not have the beautiful cloth binding with wrap-around illustration seen on the FS LE. Unfortunately, the price has nearly doubled since it was originally issued in 2020 for about $325 and it now sells for $500 - $550. If you can find this for $400-$450 it will still be worth the asking price.

A viable alternative is the 1950 (not 1938!) Limited Editions Club edition. It features a beautiful textured French golden damask cloth binding and it was designed by Francis Meynell, of Nonesuch Press fame. It is identical in size to the FS LE and it also has colour illustrations. However, they have flat colouration and only occupy about 1/2 of each page. It is still a quite attractive edition and very affordable in the $120 - $150 range for a NF or fine condition copy.

Bottom line: you will be quite pleased with either the FS LE, despite the somewhat inflated current price, or the 1950 LEC edition, but a standard FS reissue of the LE will probably not work for you.

465PartTimeBookAddict
Oct 6, 2023, 2:44 pm

Finally finished "Origins of Totalitarianism". It was too long and I didn't get along with the writing style, but I don't regret having read it. It's interesting seeing parallels in our modern crop of fascist politicians.

Also finished the wonderful "The Bloody Chamber" FS edition. Makes me want to revisit some Perrault now for the original versions of these tales.

Read the "Patrick Melrose" quintet. The first two were interesting, but I felt the last three retread the same ground. Possibly not meant to all be read in one week.

Listened to the audiobook of "The Making of Another Motion Picture Masterpiece" by Tom Hanks (who narrates). An apt look into the realities of film production, but sadly it is lacking a plot. It's also very long. Hanks' short stories "Uncommon Type" are recommended, though.

Halfway through "The Assassins" by Bernard Lewis. Excellent classic FS production. Colour plates throughout and map endpapers. Cheap on the secondary market.

466ambyrglow
Oct 6, 2023, 3:11 pm

>465 PartTimeBookAddict: I really loved The Bloody Chamber too, and I find the cover one of Folio's more striking standard designs. Perhaps one day I'll try the author's Nights at the Circus.

467PartTimeBookAddict
Oct 6, 2023, 3:18 pm

I have the Penguin paperback of "Nights at the Circus" and will be reading it this fall. Looking forward to it!

468assemblyman
Oct 9, 2023, 8:56 am

I just finished Resurrection by Tolstoy as recommended by Joshbooks1 many moons ago. I did enjoy it although I would not say at this stage if it was better than War and Peace or Anna Karenina. I have read the other two more than once which may give them some preference and I found this a much different work in many ways. The LEC edition I have definitely helped in it's reading with Fritz Eichenberg's suitably dark wood engravings.

469PartTimeBookAddict
Oct 9, 2023, 3:27 pm

Finished "The Assassins" by Bernard Lewis. A very interesting read.

Re-read "Ordeal by Innocence". Not my favourite Christie by a long shot. A thin plot that is very drawn out and soap opera characters. It felt she was forcing a story out of the idea that "the innocent must not suffer!".

Read "Trigger Warning" by Neil Gaiman. It was mostly forgettable. The standouts were his Dr. Who story and "The man who forgot Ray Bradbury".

Read and loved Wynne Jones' "A Charmed Life". Fans of Harry Potter should snatch this one up. It also has her zig-zagging weirdness found in the Howl's series. It kept me on my toes.

Next up: The FS version of "The Golem" by Meyrink just in advance of spooky season!

470BooksFriendsNotFood
Edited: Oct 9, 2023, 3:41 pm

>469 PartTimeBookAddict: I read Ordeal by Innocence for the first time and really enjoyed it! It also put me in a mystery mood so I'm currently enjoying A Christmas Party by Georgette Heyer, which is 1) the only mystery I haven't read yet by the author and 2) reminding me that we're close to Christmas! I can't believe I haven't been feeling festive yet; in other years, I would've had a mini Christmas tree up by now (yes, I know it's not even Halloween yet hehe).

I also recently read Charmed Life — I had to force myself to stick with it but I found the climax/ending worthwhile.

471PartTimeBookAddict
Oct 9, 2023, 3:41 pm

>470 BooksFriendsNotFood: have you read “And Then There We’re None” or the Tommy and Tuppence series? Those are my favourites.

“Ordeal” kept retreading the same scenes over and over. It could have made a good short story.

472BooksFriendsNotFood
Oct 9, 2023, 3:55 pm

>471 PartTimeBookAddict: Believe it or not, I enjoyed Ordeal more than And Then There Were None! I think part of it is that I really liked the character studies. I've also read just the first of Tommy and Tuppence and was very entertained by all the drama ;)

I read all of the Marple books last year and really enjoyed them. Some other recent favorites of mine are Dead Man's Folly, Five Little Pigs, and Why Didn't They Ask Evans?

Has anyone watched the French show Agatha Christie's Criminal Games? I have yet to see better adaptations!

473BooksFriendsNotFood
Edited: Oct 10, 2023, 9:19 pm

I had my heart set on reading All's Well That Ends Well - I have no idea what it's about; I think I just like the title - but for some reason, I'd assumed it was one of the Tragedies or Romances. I took out the largest tome only to realize that ah, it must be a Comedy. I already have this big thing out though so I'm reading Titus Andronicus and I'm enjoying it! I've not even completed the first scene and everything is already a disaster XD

474HonorWulf
Edited: Oct 12, 2023, 12:41 pm

Finished A Wizard of Earthsea. Full confession, wasn't a Le Guin fan in my wayward youth (nor fantasy of most stripes beyond some surface Tolkien and the more nihilistic Moorcock), but was able to appreciate the humanistic and meditative themes better in my (slightly) more mature age and now look forward to the remaining novels. The illustrations from David Lupton mirror these themes nicely, even if they feel a bit crude for the fantasy genre. David Mitchell's introduction is vaguely interesting, but, once again, should be read after finishing the novel, since it basically runs through all of the major plot points. The afterward from Le Guin is more neutral and provides some insight into her formative thinking for the novel.

476cronshaw
Edited: Oct 16, 2023, 10:10 am

I'm reading Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, the original 1818 edition published by Norton Critical Editions, an excellent annotated series with a fully array of contextual notes and essays. I prefer the 1818 to the amended 1831 version that Folio have used for both of their Frankenstein editions, it feels fresher. I'm surprised that Folio persisted with the 1831 version for their second Frankenstein edition when they surely could have tempted more Devotees who already owned their first 2004 edition by publishing Shelley's original edition as their second.

477ubiquitousuk
Oct 15, 2023, 9:38 am

I am reading The Secret Life of Trees in its Folio Society edition. This is a fascinating and prodigiously illustrated book. But the middle third, which is essentially a catalogue of tree genera, was a bit of a slog.

478Pellias
Oct 17, 2023, 4:49 pm

Playboy

479PartTimeBookAddict
Oct 17, 2023, 5:41 pm

Finished the masterful "Silent Spring" in FS edition. The 1st version from 2000. Excellent science reporting, well explained.

Read the first two Amelia Peabody mysteries by Elizabeth Peters. Fun, Egyptology-based reads.

On to the next Chrestomanci book, "The Magicians of Caprona".

480LesMiserables
Oct 19, 2023, 2:05 am

Just finished another outing of The Lord of the Rings. Can't be sure, but this might possibly be my 11th or 12th reading. Never gets dull, always something unexpected that I had missed or had forgotten, or had become befuddled about given the muddled cinematic rendering.

481Ragnaroek
Oct 19, 2023, 2:18 am

>476 cronshaw:
I like Frankenstein, but the fun starts first, when the Monster starts talking.
I wanted to through the book away, until this point. Then I enjoyed it 😄

482Ragnaroek
Edited: Oct 19, 2023, 2:21 am

>480 LesMiserables:
Iam always confused that there isn't any Elrond arround in Helms Deep helping out the humans with an brigade of trained fighters.

The movie is a little different, but I like both.

Isnt the movie in the list of the best films ever created ?

483LesMiserables
Oct 19, 2023, 3:00 am

I do enjoy the films but they do confuse one's recollection of the books.

484LesMiserables
Oct 19, 2023, 5:04 am

Just starting on another outing of The Silmarillion

485LesMiserables
Oct 29, 2023, 3:55 am

Just finished The Silmarillion.

I had forgotten until this rereading how magnificent this work is.

486LesMiserables
Edited: Oct 29, 2023, 4:28 am

Just started reading Haydock Douay Rheims Bible with notes by the Rev. G.L. Haydock.

487PartTimeBookAddict
Oct 29, 2023, 2:39 pm

Finished "The Magicians of Caprona." An excellent follow up in the Chrestomanci series.

Read Michael Palin's toothless "North Korea Journal."

Re-read Christie's "Mystery of the Blue Train" and Saint-Exupery's "Night Flight."

Listened to the Audiobook of Werner Herzog's "Every Man for Himself and God Against All". Probably the best way to enjoy this book is with his articulation and cadence.

TIME magazine just released a lazy top 100 mystery/thriller list. I had already read about 60 of them. I went for two new-to-me titles: "Fade Away" by Harlan Coben and "When No One is Watching" by Alyssa Cole. Both were hot garbage.

UP NEXT: "Fevre Dream" by George R. R. Martin. Inspired by the FS "Pease tell us what you'll buy" poll.

488RRCBS
Oct 29, 2023, 3:26 pm

Just finished Frederica…a light read for sure but a nice, warm book and exactly what I needed. The FS version is very beautiful.

489cronshaw
Oct 29, 2023, 5:15 pm

Am halfway through Kafka on the Shore, fascinated and completely hooked. I'm in awe of Murakami's imagination. The Folio edition is magnificent.

490ubiquitousuk
Edited: Oct 30, 2023, 8:45 am

>489 cronshaw: isn't it just wonderful (the novel and the edition).

I am reading Disgrace by J. M. Coetzee. The edition isn't up to the lofty standards of Kafka on the Shore, but is nice enough (I like the illustrations). The book is beautifully written and very engaging; one can easily see why Coetzee got the Nobel Prize. Also, this is one of those relatively modern editions that one can buy for about £10 on the secondary market.

Folio should publish more Coetzee!

491podaniel
Oct 30, 2023, 9:33 am

>486 LesMiserables:

How is it? I have a reproduction of Haydock's New Testament and have been intimidated by the fine print.

492LesMiserables
Oct 30, 2023, 3:48 pm

>491 podaniel: Yes, nothing but positives to report. Fluent text, copious notes, but retains the feel of an ancient tome.

493coynedj
Edited: Oct 30, 2023, 8:43 pm

Recently finished -

Musashi, by Eiji Yoshikawa - Absolutely superb. This would make for a wonderful Folio edition (assuming they do it right, of course). The scope for illustration is enormous. I think I will recommend it in the shortlist survey. I did think on more than one occasion that its celebration of the warrior spirit may have played a part in its success when published serially in late-1930's Japan, but it's timing does not detract from the great story it tells. After finishing it, I decided to re-watch the celebrated film trilogy based on it, from the 1950's. There were many changes and omissions (the fate of Akemi comes most easily to mind), but the films were excellent as well, and while the book, as is usually the case, is better than the films, there were a number of things such as the music and dancing that can be portrayed much better on film. Highly recommended.

The Big Myth: How American Business Taught Us to Loathe Government and Love the Free Market, by Naomi Oreskes and Erik Conway - I only got halfway through this before having to return it to the library. A thorough historical analysis, though the point of view of the authors was clearly on display. I won't think of The Little House on the Prairie in the same way again. I'll have to get it back and finish it.

Beware the Cat, by William Baldwin - allegedly the first novel written in English, in 1553. Short, and little more than a curiosity. The regular published version is out of print and very expensive, but it's available in a print-on-demand edition, which I bought. I must say that, while the line spacing was pretty unpredictable, the copy I received was of better quality that I ever expected.

Currently reading:

Top Ten - Alan Moore, graphic novel. After the 970 pages of Musashi, I decided to go in a different direction for my next reads. Very good so far.

The Goblln Emperor, by Katherine Addison - also in a different direction. It's a quick read, and while I'm not too far into it, I think I'm going to like this one.

494HonorWulf
Oct 31, 2023, 9:32 am

>493 coynedj: Musashi's great. Would definitely re-read in Folio. Top Ten is fantastic as well -- my favorite of Alan Moore's ABC books (although Promethea was quite good as well). Moore did write a companion book to Top Ten featuring Smax that's not at the same level, but amusing if you enjoy the characters.

495cronshaw
Nov 8, 2023, 5:30 pm

The Thames & Hudson hardback edition of Troy: Myth & Reality, by Villing et al. and published on behalf of the British Museum to accompany the eponymous exhibition held just before the first Covid lockdown in 2020. I wasn't able to attend the exhibition so am very much enjoying this well-edited, richly illustrated edition which provides an engaging, comprehensive history of Troy, both the mythical aspect and the archeological, with good descriptions of Schliemann's work and the numerous other archeologists who preceded and succeeded him. There's thorough coverage of the various cultural expressions of the Troy myth throughout history up to the current day. It's a glorious read for anyone who loves the Iliad and/or is interested in the history and myth that Troy represents. The hardback RRP is £40 but it's available new through a few booksellers for under £30 (including UK P&P). A bargain for such an informative, profusely illustrated Smyth-sewn hardback if you ask me. There's a paperback edition available too for around £15.

496CarltonC
Nov 8, 2023, 7:35 pm

>495 cronshaw: Agree that this is another wonderful British Museum catalogue, both content and presentation. The last exhibition I attended before Covid.
Totally different topics, but also excellent books related to BM exhibitions Thomas Becket: murder and the making of a saint (read in 2021) and Germany: Memories of a Nation (read in 2020).

Currently about to start the BM catalogue for The World of Stonehenge, having visited the monument yesterday.

497Jeremy53
Nov 8, 2023, 7:42 pm

>490 ubiquitousuk: Totally agree on Coetzee - love a lot of his work. Disgrace is a masterpiece. Waiting for the Barbarians, Youth, Life & Times of Michael K. His literary criticism is incredible too.

498PartTimeBookAddict
Nov 8, 2023, 8:28 pm

>497 Jeremy53: What do you like most about his writing? I read four of his novels last year (Barbarians, Foe, Disgrace, Michael K), and always feel held at arms length, as if he's only going to describe so much of the story and no more.

They're short and easy to get through, but I never connect. I have the same experience with Kundera.

Is there something in particular that attracts you to his writing?

I'd love to get a better handle on it before reading some more next year: Youth, Slow Man, Master of Petersberg.

Thanks.

499cronshaw
Nov 9, 2023, 3:03 am

>496 CarltonC: Germany: Memories of a Nation was a fascinating exhibition. I bought the accompanying book too but haven’t read it yet (too many intruding Folios). I was disappointed that the book format doesn’t follow that of most BM books, it’s smaller and the paper quality and the resolution of the images don’t seem up to the usual high standard.

>498 PartTimeBookAddict: I’m intrigued that you find you don’t connect with Coetzee’s writing yet persist in reading so many of his works!

500PartTimeBookAddict
Nov 9, 2023, 3:19 am

>499 cronshaw: Sometimes I'll take a scattershot approach to an author, especially if their works are so short, looking for a novel that works for me. I did the same to Joyce Carol Oates and Max Brand in 2021.

I don't think he's a bad writer. It's just that I haven't connected and am still looking for a way in. Sometimes it takes a new perspective and re-reading to appreciate what I missed.

501ubiquitousuk
Nov 9, 2023, 8:10 am

>498 PartTimeBookAddict: I only read two Coetzee novels (Disgrace and Slow Man). I like the former much more, but in both I enjoyed the rendition of characters.

If you watch a talented painter at work you will be amazed at how they can sometimes conjure a lifelike figure in the landscape from a single well-formed brush stroke, while lesser amateurs fuss over the details of a person who ends up looking stilted and disconnected from their environment. So it is with Coetzee: his description of character and plot is indeed economical, but I found it full of personality and with a wide emotional spectrum for so few words.

It helps that the prose was, in my view, also nicely crafted.

502Joshbooks1
Nov 9, 2023, 9:16 am

>498 PartTimeBookAddict: I've read most of Coetzee and I suppose he's not for everyone, but, I've always found his prose and most of his books to be exceptional. It's been over a decade since I've read either Waiting for the Barbarians or Disgrace but I think these two are probably his most well known and for a reason. It is too easy to say both books are mere allegories of pre and post Apartheid since they are so much more - there are times when the reader can make certain connections but Coetzee somehow creates a nebulous time period as if his stories are taking place in one's backyard. The reader feels present within the novel and can also find examples in his or her own life about events they have experienced. There is a mixture of love and compassion along with hate and brutality. And maybe I am misremembering but there are times too when there is a little Sarte or Camus thrown in there about the absurdity of humanity and existence. (Life and Times of Michael K was also great.)

I love Dostoevsky and was so excited when I first picked up Master of Petersburg, but I thought it was the worst novel I read by Coetzee. I think Youth is the second book of his autobiography and you may want to start with Boyhood. After reading this page I hadn't realized he finished his Jesus Trilogy(?) so I guess I will be purchasing that book today - the first two were fabulous. I don't remember the title but he also has a short book of biographies of a selection of authors which I found very amusing.

There are some Nobel winners that are head-scratchers but Coetzee is not one of them. Also for those who like Coetzee, Nadine Gordimer, also a Nobel Laureate from South Africa, is equally as impressive.

503PartTimeBookAddict
Nov 9, 2023, 1:03 pm

>502 Joshbooks1: Well explained. I'm glad he works for you. I understand the nebulousness feeling. I feel his narrators have a fog around them and are slightly stupid, so the reader doesn't get the full picture of what's going on.

It's much like Ishiguro's work (Buried Giant and Remains of the Day, Klara and the Sun) but I feel that with Ishiguro the reader is able to parse out the context the main character can't express. With Coetzee I'm always waiting for a final act. I don't think he sticks the landing in anything I've read so far.

Camus, Ishiguro, Highsmith and Kafka especially can satisfyingly finish a tale. I don't think I can remember any of the endings to the Coetzee books.

I'll keep trying.

504Jeremy53
Nov 9, 2023, 5:31 pm

>503 PartTimeBookAddict: I think you've already read his best three - Disgrace, Michael K and Barbarians. They are the three towers.

So, not sure you'll connect with his others if you haven't already. Authors, artists, musicians speak to some, not to others, that's the way it is. There are plenty of authors I don't connect with - it's a personal thing, maybe it evokes past experience, attitudes, outlook etc.

Disgrace blew my mind - the first of his I read. I hear you re: being kept at arm's distance, and I think part of it is being ok feeling slightly uncomfortable or ill at ease in the presence of his characters. They are flawed in a flawed and scary world - and trying to wrestle their own demons first, but in the context of what surrounds them, it seems almost an absurd situation. He can be very meta. I had a bad reaction to Foe, actually.

505PartTimeBookAddict
Nov 10, 2023, 6:27 pm

>504 Jeremy53: I think we both have a similar reactions, if not the same levels of appreciation. I'm glad he works for you!

Meanwhile, I am currently on "The Farthest Shore" by Le Guin. I read the first one by itself a few years ago, but this time I am doing the series all in one go.

I read "Fevre Dream" by George Martin. A really cool setting for a Vampire novel (how much was inspired by Anne Rice?). The Vampire to slave master allegory worked well and the characters were good enough. I wish there was more detailed knowledge of paddle steamer life. Would be a good choice for FS to print.

Also read "Lullaby" by Chuck Palahniuk. Great idea muddied by his usual haphazard spray-n-pray approach.

And "The Secret" by the Child Bros. Even after a 6-book decline in quality this is an appreciable new low in the Jack Reacher series. This and "Better off Dead" are as bad as this series gets. Most likely the last one I'll read.

Up next: The rest of Earthsea saga and the FS version of "The Surgeon of Crowthorne."

506LesMiserables
Nov 15, 2023, 7:38 am

Just finished the Hobbit and started A Christmas Carol.

507assemblyman
Nov 15, 2023, 8:34 am

I have recently finished the first book in the the FS Chekhov collected stories set. I enjoyed it but Ronald Hingles translation took some getting used to. I am currently finishing the FS Sherlock Holmes selected stories. It's the latest edition and its a fun read. Next up Melmoth the Wanderer.

508cronshaw
Nov 15, 2023, 10:44 am

>507 assemblyman: I'd be intrigued to know what you make of 'Melmoth the Wanderer'. It's been sitting on a remote shelf on one of my TBR mountains for years. I love the title and the Folio Society binding but am unsure what to expect once I get my crampons on and reach it.

509BooksFriendsNotFood
Nov 15, 2023, 10:47 am

I'm really enjoying everything I'm currently reading!

• The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins
• Thunderball by Ian Fleming
This lovely edition of David Copperfield by Charles Dickens
The Fantastic Four from the Penguin Classics Marvel Collection — I only rarely read introductions / supplementary material but I really love how the intros to the Marvel collections in this series place the content in its historical context for added interest and I appreciate the forwards providing a glimpse into how different comics made an impact on different young readers!

510LesMiserables
Nov 15, 2023, 5:29 pm

511Jeremy53
Nov 15, 2023, 9:09 pm

Halfway through Rubik by Elizabeth Tan (non-Folio) - amazing creativity, wow.

And in Folio, dipping into Meditations by Marcus Aurelius. And what a great introduction.

512GusLogan
Nov 16, 2023, 7:56 am

Reading the FS Campaigns of Napoleon (Chandler), partly in anticipation of the Ridley Scott movie. It’s good stuff, but the occasional question arises regarding Chandler’s motivation (as a minor example he calls Napoleon ”our hero” at one point, a nice literary flourish for sure, but…).

513HonorWulf
Nov 28, 2023, 9:19 am

Finished Consider Phlebas by Iain M. Banks. Has been on my rainy day list for a couple of decades (!), so the Folio edition was a good impetus to pop it to the top of the queue... Grand space opera that's kind of a quirky mix of Stephenson (without the hard science) and the page-turner of a Crichton or McDevitt. The most interesting thing to me is that it doesn't feel like a sci-fi novel written in the 80's and has somewhat of a timeless quality to it. It's apparently a different animal than the rest of the Culture books, but I enjoyed it on its own merits and hope Folio continues the series. No intro or afterward, but the illustrations by Dániel Taylor were clean and representative of the material, imo.

514boldface
Nov 28, 2023, 1:44 pm

I'm currently reading (among other things!) Hilary Spurling's Paul Scott: A Life. I'm a third of the way in and already it's offering many insights into the Raj Quartet (as well as a lot else, of course), which I shall then re-read in the FS edition.

515jillmwo
Nov 28, 2023, 1:52 pm

Picked up a Folio edition of A Little Princess a week ago and dipped into it for an hour or two. Burnett was an unusual woman.

516coynedj
Nov 30, 2023, 8:23 pm

Finished:

Top Ten - Alan Moore, graphic novel. Good fun. I would read further into the series, but my local library doesn't have any more and I'm not willing to buy them.

The Goblin Emperor - Katherine Addison. Also good fun. Nothing earthshaking, but I don't need that with every book I read.

The Fourth Turning is Here: What the Seasons of History Tell Us About How and When this Crisis Will End - Neil Howe. Jam packed with cherry picking and curve fitting. I gave up on it - it seemed pointless to waste any more time on it.

The Passenger, and Stella Maris - Cormac McCarthy. His unfortunately last two books. Fascinating, and very frustrating in a major way. I won't go into details in fear of spoiling the experience for anyone else. Despite the frustrations, I still found them very worthwhile reads.

Crack-Up Capitalism: Market Radicals and the Dream of a World Without Democracy - Quinn Slobodian. A very good telling of a story not well known - how rich super-libertarians want (and have tried) to build a place full of no-holds-barred capitalism without the annoying democracy and human rights that so many people think necessary. It tells what they've tried, and why they always fail.

Up next:

The Greatest Benefit to Mankind: A Medical History of Humanity - Roy Porter. Not the FS edition - often when I am intrigued by an FS edition but not enough to buy it, I'll get a cheaper copy or borrow it from the library. I found a hardcover edition for $1.50 at a thrift store.

The Illuminatus! Trilogy - Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson. Recommended by our esteemed Cat of Ulthar. I could use some snarky silliness, and this seems to be aimed at just the right targets.

Since I mentioned above that I buy books at the thrift store, I'll mention that my reading might slant toward science fiction in the near future. Someone dropped off a big collection of quality science fiction books, and I picked up 27 volumes. Included are some Asimov, Philip K. Dick, Bradbury, Robin Hobb (yes, the Farseer Trilogy and the follow-up trilogy), Vernor Vinge, Ian Banks (including Consider Phlebas), and others.

517PartTimeBookAddict
Dec 2, 2023, 3:31 pm

Finished the Earthsea cycle. The first two are really great, then it seems to spin it's wheels, or tread water as the case may be.

Finished "The Surgeon of Crowthorne" It was excellent with great photos in the FS edition.

Also "Mr. Norris Changes Trains" A very good read. I do like the large format FS editions, especially for shorter works. The attention to detail of the Cooke illustrations are maybe the most accurate of any FS book I have read.

>381 CarltonC: On the recommendation CarltonC of I also read Fitzgerald's "The Bookshop" It was sad and wonderful.

Up next: Might jump into some Le Carre for the winter with the Karla trilogy. Or some Sci-Fi. I've been meaning to get to "The Anubis Gates" for some time now.

518RRCBS
Dec 2, 2023, 4:15 pm

>517 PartTimeBookAddict: I think I’ve definitely got different tastes than most…I enjoyed all four Earthsea books, especially Tehanu and The Tombs of Atuan. I didn’t reread them back to back though.

519PartTimeBookAddict
Dec 2, 2023, 4:31 pm

>518 RRCBS: They're all good, but the two that gripped me were "A Wizard" and "Tombs of Atuan." The rest were more character studies than world-building adventures and at times felt makeweight. Her characters aren't nearly as interesting as the setting of this archipelago she created is.

But, you've only read four? By my count there are six. Have you not read "Tales from Earthsea" and "The Other Wind" yet? In the Tales "On the High Marsh" was the standout for me.

520RRCBS
Dec 2, 2023, 4:46 pm

>519 PartTimeBookAddict: I read all six a while back. Have been doing a reread in the FS editions.

521Lady19thC
Dec 5, 2023, 6:22 pm

I just finished The Enchanted Wood, by Enid Blyton. (FS)

This is my first Blyton and it was cute, loved the idea, rather childish, obviously, but fell in love with Saucepan, Moon-Face and the Clock! Endearing enough for me to want to read more. My understanding is that there are quite a few of the Faraway Tree books? I wonder if FS will print more. Hopefully, at least, the next two. For those who grew up on these, are they worth it? Any others by her that are even more charming for an adult looking for the occasional light read?

522LesMiserables
Dec 6, 2023, 10:50 pm

Reading the Bible using this annual reading plan which follows the liturgical year. Also reading Meditations for Advent by Bishop Bossuet.

523Geburah
Dec 6, 2023, 11:01 pm

Reading Nouvelle Lumiere chymique , Bibliotheca Hermetica 1976.

524CarltonC
Edited: Dec 7, 2023, 10:55 am

>499 cronshaw: Agree that the production of Germany: Memories of a Nation isn’t up to usual BM standard, but this is compensated by MacGregor’s writing. I was underwhelmed by The World of Stonehenge, as I felt it strayed too far temporally, although the first couple of chapters were good.

>517 PartTimeBookAddict: Glad that you appreciated Fitzgerald’s The Bookshop.

Enjoyed both LaRose and Demon Copperhead recently, stories of contemporary non-urban America, but neither was outstanding.
Completely different and perhaps a cross between coffee table and accessible academic book, I have also just finished the well illustrated Georgian Arcadia: Architecture for the Park and Garden. Published by Yale, so good production values and illustrations, but admittedly of rather specialist interest.

525LesMiserables
Dec 8, 2023, 7:00 pm

Just finished reading The Institutes by John Cassian.

526stopsurfing
Dec 9, 2023, 4:35 pm

Have just finished The Identity Trap by Yascha Mounk (not FS). A great book actually, and a timely addition to the debate about ‘wokeness’. He presents the philosophical underpinnings and the current out-workings of what he terms ‘The Identity Synthesis’ (though I’m still unclear why he calls it that), and argues for an alternative.
I always thought that ‘wokeness’ was simply acknowledging injustice and trying to right wrongs. I was shocked at some the manifestations of it in the US: e.g. segregating classrooms (ie grouping classes according to race/identity group - obviously only in some schools), distributing Covid vaccines in a way that ‘addresses historical injustice structures’ but results in a higher number of deaths (even in the groups the policy was trying to help), the actual ‘danger’ of voicing an unpopular opinion, and of micro-aggressions being seen as actual violence. The author presents the ‘woke’ positions in a way that I think they would agree with (ie fairly), analyses their shortcomings, and presents his alternative: philosophical liberalism (individual freedom, political equality, and collective self-determination). He argues well.
This book is not difficult and anyone with a university education of some sort (or a good high school education) should be able to follow it. Perhaps a Christmas present for anyone who would be interested in non-right-wing critique of the dominant narrative in the US at the moment (and to a lesser extent other Western countries). It’s always good to question things, it certainly helped clarify my thinking on the matter.

527LesMiserables
Dec 10, 2023, 12:45 am

>526 stopsurfing:

Try this one, a good read. Awake, not Woke by Noelle Mering.

528LesMiserables
Dec 10, 2023, 12:46 am

Just started reading Adam's Deep Sleep by Fr James Mawdsley.

529Alan_Wake
Edited: Dec 10, 2023, 3:27 am

I just finished Haruki Murakamis 'Kafka on the shore' and been halfway through 'Norwegian Woods" now.

Is the 'Wind-Up Bird" as good as those two above ?

The style of writing and all the hidden little wisdom is absolutely fantastic. I wish I could read and understand Japanese.

530PartTimeBookAddict
Dec 12, 2023, 2:55 pm

Just read the FS edition of "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie" by Muriel Spark. I love her wry humour and lightning quick style. A wonderful edition you can pick up for $15 or so on ebay. Highly recommended.

Also read Woolrich's noir nightmare "The Black Angel". So good if you love the high pulp style.

I've also started a massive Hellboy Saga binge. I'm on to the 8th omnibus.

UP next: More Hellboy and "The Color Purple".

531DZWB
Dec 13, 2023, 6:56 am

Shackleton's Boat Journey (FS's new version) - what an extraordinary story, and a beautiful edition.

532BooksFriendsNotFood
Edited: Dec 13, 2023, 1:38 pm

>531 DZWB: I read this earlier in the year in ebook form and I loved it a lot, much to my surprise considering I don't usually read non-fiction. It was also great because The Waste Land makes a reference to one moment from Boat Journey and I was pleased to be able to comprehend that when I re-read the former a few months later.

533DZWB
Dec 13, 2023, 7:57 pm

>532 BooksFriendsNotFood: I generally don't read much non-fiction either, but I'm glad I read this and would recommend it to anyone - the FS version in particular is a beautiful thing. I didn't know that about The Waste Land - thank you!

534BooksFriendsNotFood
Dec 13, 2023, 9:01 pm

>533 DZWB: "I'm glad I read this and would recommend it to anyone..."

Agreed! And the FS version is definitely what turned me on to the title as I hadn't been aware of it previously.

I'm glad to have had the chance to share a fact I found extremely interesting ◡̈

535PartTimeBookAddict
Dec 18, 2023, 7:37 pm

Finished "The Color Purple." It was fine, but not as interesting as Hurston's "Their Eyes Were Watching God." The film version added a lot of atmosphere and character traits that were missing in the book.

Now dipping into South Polar Times LE (an early Christmas gift).

Halfway through Thomas Pynchon's "Bleeding Edge". Very funny and nostalgic for the early 2000s. I think any Pynchon would be a hit for FS.

536amp123
Dec 22, 2023, 10:53 pm

"The Waste Land" Centenary Edition published by Liveright. This edition is described by the publisher as follows:

"In celebration of the centenary of the poem, published in the United States by Boni & Liveright in 1922, Eliot’s manuscript pages are presented in vivid color for the first time. The updated facsimile edition also offers a new appendix―including a sheet of Valerie Eliot’s corrections discovered in the Faber archive in 2021―and an insightful afterword from Faber poetry editor Matthew Hollis. Complete with the text of the first published version of The Waste Land, this definitive volume reveals the evolution of a landmark work of the twentieth century and its enduring legacy."

At $22.99 on Amazon, it's an attractive alternative for those, like me, who found the price tag for the FS LE "centenary" edition too hefty and did not succumb to temptation (at least not yet), or those in the UK subject to the embargo on domestic sales of that LE.

537LeBacon
Jan 3, 1:30 pm

I'm currently reading "Please Kill Me: the Uncensored Oral History of Punk" by Legs McNeil and it's really great so far. It covers alternative music from The Velvet Underground, through glam rock, to punk and the breakthrough of later alternative in the 80s and early 90s.

I would love if Folio would consider an edgier type title like "Please Kill Me" (they did "Mystery Train" and this is basically the next generation) but I suspect Folio is too conservative these days to even try it, despite the success of Fear and Loathing suggesting a 60s/70s counterculture title might be a success.

Folio seems to want to cater to an older crowd but think grandpas endlessly want WWII for their non-fiction. I was thinking of how old everyone in Please Kill Me is now. For example Iggy Pop is now 76 years old and all the kids who originally went to his shows are in their late 60s early 70s too. Those are the grandpas with disposable income now, not just the baby boomers reading endless war histories.

538coynedj
Jan 3, 1:49 pm

>537 LeBacon: I've seen that title, and wondered if it was any good (I love punk rock, and yes, I'm of an age that saw it in its original days). I just might have to pick it up. And, just as an aside, my sister once arrested Iggy Pop.

539LeBacon
Jan 3, 2:06 pm

>538 coynedj: Ha! Yeah, apparently a LOT of people arrested Iggy Pop.

Being an oral history everyone is talking trash about everyone else and it's all pretty outrageous - no one is holding back. It was made at the right time too (published 1996) so they got the participation of a lot of people who aren't around anymore.

540N11284
Jan 3, 3:07 pm

Reading this years Booker prize winner Prophet Song and enjoying it so far. At one stage FS were publishing Booker winners but that didn't last too long.

541HonorWulf
Jan 4, 7:03 am

Finished The Passenger by Cormac McCarthy (no doubt, a future Folio!). Will reserve judgment until I finish the companion, Stella Maris, but I enjoyed it quite a lot. Apparently, McCarthy had been working on this one off-and-on for almost 40 years (!) and it feels very much like his closing thoughts on a wide range of topics -- especially poignant given his recent death. While plot has always been secondary in his novels, I found it particularly bold to see him all but abandon it here, leaving behind a heady concoction of rich language, characters and themes for us to unravel.

542BooksFriendsNotFood
Edited: Jan 4, 2:04 pm

I know I said I wouldn't buy FS non-fiction no matter how pretty they were but I just finished reading the very beautiful The Six Wives of Henry VIII and it was a great experience. I regret nothing :)

I'm now on to Childhood's End: it's already pulled me in story-wise and from a physical standpoint, I absolutely adore the shiny lavender endpapers!

543assemblyman
Jan 5, 7:38 pm

>508 cronshaw: I took my time with it but I have just finished Melmoth the Wanderer and would definitely recommend it. A quite chilling tale which has a stories within stories structure. The stories are dark and foreboding with Melmoth the link. Well worth a read.

544RRCBS
Jan 5, 9:43 pm

The discussion about Melmoth inspired me to start the book tonight. I only had time for the first chapter, but enjoying it. It’s been on my TBR piles for years! I like the FS edition, though the font size could be bigger!

545ubiquitousuk
Jan 6, 3:33 am

I finished To The Lighthouse. It's merits were lost on me and it was a quite dreadful experience that took me about a month to slog through, even though the book was short. Online reviews said it improved in the second half so I soldiered on. But I saw no improvement at all

Now I am reading The Buried Giant. This I am enjoying much more and the Folio edition is quite nice (although perhaps slightly overpriced)

546coynedj
Jan 6, 12:48 pm

Recently finished:

The Illuminatus Trilogy, book 1 - Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson. Wow, the conspiracy theory mumbo jumbo is quite something here - I could only handle the first part of the trilogy, and had to take a break. It was published in 1975 and thus had all of the theories of the day, which I was quite familiar with but might not resonate with younger readers. Lots of crazy fun, and I would say that there is absolutely no chance at all the Folio Society will publish it. Pity, because I quite enjoyed Howard's satirical song about sharks.

Leave the World Behind -Rumaan Alam. It set up an interesting premise and had some excellent observations about human nature, but it really didn't go anywhere. Which makes me wonder what the upcoming TV miniseries will be like; I assume that liberties will be taken with the story, and a promo photograph of the two lead couples already tells me that they'll be doing exactly that.

All Systems Red - Martha Wells. Book 1 of the Murderbot Diaries. Good fun, and quite short - most of the books in the series are comfortably below 200 pages, and it read very quickly. I'll be moving on to book 2 as soon as the library gets their copy back.

Still working on The Greatest Benefit to Mankind: A Medical History of Humanity - Roy Porter. It's very long, very detailed, and has concentrated so far on theories more than practices. But I am learning a lot. I've also read a number of short stories and long-form magazine articles.

Coming soon:

How to Know a Person: the Art of Seeing Others and Being Deeply Seen - David Brooks. This will arrive at the library before I finish The Greatest Benefit to Mankind, so I will take a break from that book to read this one. I also have the BBC miniseries of War & Peace coming. I read the book last winter, and the series allegedly sticks very closely to the book.

547cronshaw
Jan 7, 5:09 am

Just finished 'Touching the Void' by Joe Simpson, in FS. An extraordinary story, very recommended.

548BooksFriendsNotFood
Jan 7, 1:25 pm

New Folio Society unboxing by that guy several of you don't love just dropped XD https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EuFONsFDkpU

I actually generally enjoy his videos: I believe I was first introduced to him through his entertaining bookshelf roast videos lol. I appreciate his energy and the way he makes things fun even though I don't agree with all of his book tastes, which is expected. In this instance, I absolutely agree that the art in Dune: Messiah looks much better than the art in Dune, but I simply reject his distaste for Childhood's End which is beautiful!!* And although there were (only?) 6 illustrations including the title spread, there were no long periods without art because the book itself is so short. Also, I myself do not hate on flat spines.



*I found it simple but nice before reading the book, and now that I've read it, my opinion is that the edition can't be improved because the reading experience is perfection.

549PartTimeBookAddict
Jan 7, 3:07 pm

Started Wodehouse's "Leave it to Psmith". The perfect distraction for a winter's flu.

A bland cover, but I love the way the illustrations are integrated. A really great introduction and interesting paper texture: Monument Wove.

Can someone explain what it means to be "Filmset in Galliard." I understand Galliard is the font. Does Filmset just mean offset printed?

550Jayked
Jan 7, 5:11 pm

In offset printing the inked image is transferred via a rubber blanket or roller to the paper.
In filmsetting characters are exposed on film which is then used to produce printing plates.

551PartTimeBookAddict
Jan 7, 5:39 pm

>550 Jayked: Thank you.

552LesMiserables
Jan 8, 4:22 am

>547 cronshaw:

Yes, I thoroughly enjoyed this. I too highly recommend.

553LesMiserables
Jan 8, 4:23 am

Currently reading The Violins of Saint Jacques by Patrick Leigh Fermor.

554LesMiserables
Jan 12, 1:49 am

And have just finished The Violins of Saint Jacques by Patrick Leigh Fermor.

Many of you will know of PLF from his perambulations or perhaps his Cretan operations.

This novel is the first fictional work I have read, and does not disappoint. His skill at vividly describing his scenes without disruption of narrative are a match for Stevenson.

555coynedj
Jan 12, 1:39 pm

>554 LesMiserables: His skill at vividly describing his scenes without disruption of narrative are a match for Stevenson.

High praise.

556LesMiserables
Jan 12, 10:17 pm

557coynedj
Jan 13, 10:58 pm

In keeping with my pledge to read more of my Folio books this year, I have today begun The Travels of Marco Polo, in the superb 2019 FS edition.

558cronshaw
Jan 14, 4:36 am

Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys, in FS. Impressive cloth binding, bland illustrations. Very well written, an enjoyable read.

559LesMiserables
Jan 14, 5:58 am

>558 cronshaw: I had to read this as part of a Uni degree I was doing around 25 years ago, and at the time, every word was a trudge. Not sure how I'd appreciate it now.

560Jeremy53
Jan 14, 3:14 pm

I’ve actually just finished Wide Sargasso Sea (not FS), and really wanted to like it, but found it lacking heart. (Compared to Jane Eyre, which I’d read again just prior, which is all heart.)

I could certainly imagine people really liking it though. I appreciated some aspects of it…but it didn’t endear me to the characters at all…

561LesMiserables
Jan 14, 4:14 pm

>560 Jeremy53:

Since cronshaw mentioned WSS above I have been trying to recall my aversion to it. Vague though it is, I'd probably say my resistance was a combination of it being a prescribed read and what I felt was an ideologically driven narrative. I also do not take to works which are obvious attempts to capitalise on someone's else's creative masterpiece.

562PartTimeBookAddict
Jan 14, 5:47 pm

I just finished the Psmith series by Wodehouse. "Mike and Psmith" "Psmith in the City" and "Psmith, Journalist". All good, but "Leave it to Psmith" is the one that really sings. I see why FS only published that one. All four books stand alone.

I also read a couple of stories about early 20th century Russians. "After the Romanovs" by Helen Rappaport. Non-fiction about the lives of White Russian emigres in Paris. Also "The Beginning of Spring" by Penelope Fitzgerald. I'm beginning to really enjoy her abrupt, snarky style. I had to give her a few chances after a bumpy start with "The Blue Flower" last year.

For Jean Rhys, I recommend her short stories "Tigers are Better-Looking" often combined with "Left Bank Stories". I enjoyed them more than "Wide Sargasso Sea."

563Jeremy53
Jan 14, 9:11 pm

>562 PartTimeBookAddict: I've heard that with Jean Rhys - thanks, PaTiBoAd. Maybe another point that emphasizes the arguments made in another thread 'An author's best work' re: WSS hit the mainstream and isn't necessarily her best work - or one of.

564Pax_Romana
Jan 21, 3:48 am

This message has been deleted by its author.

565HonorWulf
Jan 22, 10:49 am

Finished Stella Maris by Cormac McCarthy. Quite literally a 190 page conversation between one of the characters of The Passenger and their therapist, McCarthy leaves us with one last meditation on grief, guilt, existence and everything in-between (including mathematics!). It sheds some token light on a couple of the unresolved personal mysteries in The Passenger, but, once again, McCarthy eschews plot in favor of a multi-layered canvas of metaphor, dream and illusion whose interpretation is very much left to its reader to decipher.

566PartTimeBookAddict
Jan 24, 4:21 pm

I just read a non-FS copy of "The Princess Bride". As much as I like Goldman's kibbitzing, it overstays it's welcome in the same way as Westlake does in his later Dortmunder novels.

It's different enough from the film, especially with the 25th and 30th anniversary intros, to be worth a read, but the film really has a charm all it's own.

Making my way through "Black Holes" by Brian Cox as best as I can.

Up next: Going to dive into a re-read of the FS's "Planet of the Apes".

567Jeremy53
Edited: Jan 25, 12:05 am

>566 PartTimeBookAddict: Agree on TPB! Loved the first half, but then the suction cups thing happened, which I found a little upsetting tbh, which is ok, but the magic seemed to dissipate for me and I lost interest. Which was at odds with my feelings for the first half, which I absolutely adored.

568SimonRomero
Jan 25, 12:14 am

I'm reading the book "Lost Paths", the content is about survival in the wilderness. Author Claude Davis provides a lot of good and useful information. I'm reading it a second time.

569assemblyman
Jan 30, 12:57 pm

I recently finished Shackleton's Boat Journey which I picked up in the sale. I can see why there was so many positive reviews here regarding it. A real page turner in a lovely binding.

570ubiquitousuk
Jan 30, 2:02 pm

I am on Silent Spring in its most recent FS edition. Some interesting production decisions--I think in a good way--and a nice coherent overall design. The book makes a very powerful case for environmentalism, but is starting to get a bit repetitive at around the 100 page mark. It's also quite US-centric. We'll see how things go from here.

571PartTimeBookAddict
Jan 30, 2:14 pm

>570 ubiquitousuk: It's almost all US-based. Very good book, but it is thesis driven, so a lot of it is examples to prove it's point. Many interesting facts and well worth finishing. One of my top ten books from last year.

I just read "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich." It's a quick re-read for me and something the FS should do. It ticks a few boxes: Nobel Prize Winner, Russian History, Dude-Bro Lit (any McCarthy fans will see where he got his style from). Also Solzhenitsyn's "Gulag Archipelago" is highly sought on the secondary market.

Now I'm halfway through Antonia Fraser's "Marie Antoinette". Very well written and researched. Surprised that FS hasn't done this one either. Maybe they will if "Six Wives of Henry VIII" sells well.

572cronshaw
Jan 30, 2:33 pm

>571 PartTimeBookAddict: yes I'm surprised Folio have never published One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich. I'd have thought it an obvious choice for FS's editors: a well-known and popular classic, as relevant today as it was when written.

573cronshaw
Jan 30, 2:36 pm

Currently reading 'Before the Coffee gets Cold' by Toshikazu Kawaguchi, about two-thirds of the way through, and absolutely loving it. Highly original and imaginative.

574PartTimeBookAddict
Jan 30, 2:39 pm

>573 cronshaw: I read the first three last year. Really sweet "cozy" novels.

575Joshbooks1
Jan 30, 3:17 pm

>571 PartTimeBookAddict: It's a shame Folio did the abridged version of Gulag and still makes no sense to me why they didn't do the entire work since it is amazing from start to finish. Cancer Ward and First Circle are also must reads but maybe too literary for Folio these days. Not sure I get the connection between McCarthy and Solzhenitsyn.

576DanielOC
Edited: Jan 30, 7:00 pm

>575 Joshbooks1: “too literary for Folio”, that about sums it up

577PartTimeBookAddict
Jan 30, 4:46 pm

>575 Joshbooks1: Just talking about "One Day" as I haven't read all his books. It's the rhythm. The style. It has the trappings of dude-bro: survival, men doing things, lists of things. Trace it back to Jack London then Hemingway, and, like them, Solzhenitsyn had lived experience.

McCarthy aped the style, added oblique and inscrutable words and took away punctuation.

578podaniel
Jan 31, 10:04 am

I'm currently reading the FS LE of Don Quixote (with illustrations by Quentin Blake) paired with Vladimir Nabokov's Lectures on Don Quixote.

579naman0
Jan 31, 10:23 am

I'm currently reading " And Then There Were None" by Agatha Christie's
Agatha Christie's "And Then There Were None" isn't just a murder mystery; it's a masterfully crafted puzzle that keeps you guessing until the very end. Ten strangers, each harboring a dark secret, are lured to a secluded island by an unseen host. As they're picked off one by one according to a chilling rhyme, paranoia and suspicion grip the survivors.

580Joshbooks1
Jan 31, 11:28 am

>576 DanielOC: I didn't mean it as a slight, just the way it seems to be these days. Would love to be wrong.

>577 PartTimeBookAddict: Interesting. I think Solzhenitsyn is much more philosophical and political than McCarthy and not a 'dude-bro'. Most of his writings are based on either historical events and/or personal experiences regarding Russian concentration camps and Russian history.

581PartTimeBookAddict
Jan 31, 2:49 pm

>580 Joshbooks1: Well, give "One Day" another read and you can find many of those trappings. I'll add: knives (the making of and using of), tobacco (especially rolling one's own), Stoicism and God (and man's place with Him).

I'm only talking about this one book and in a context that I think FS would be able to sell it to fans of "The Road".

I like it a lot. Also Hemingway and London are two of my favourite writers, so I'm not using the term disparagingly.

582DZWB
Jan 31, 8:49 pm

I just finished "Prophet Song", last year's Booker winner. I found it very impactful: timely, lyrical, and unsparing. I often think reading widely helps you empathise and identify with people whose experience of life is wholly different from your own. "Prophet Song" does this very powerfully, or at least it did for me. (In another post, there is a discussion of Conundrum, which I think is another good example.) I will need something light to follow it though!

583antinous_in_london
Edited: Jan 31, 11:01 pm

>582 DZWB: You should try ‘Close to Home’ by Michael Magee, another award winner, it’s a light fluffy tale about unicorns, fluffy bunny’s & people being nice to each other (er….not !)

584DZWB
Jan 31, 11:10 pm

>583 antinous_in_london: Thank you - I will put it on my list - but perhaps not next up...!

585cronshaw
Feb 1, 7:03 am

Inspired by the Posy Simmonds exhibition currently displayed at the Bibliothèque Publique d'Information in Paris (in the Georges Pompidou centre), I ordered my first ever graphic novel by her, Gemma Bovary. It's brilliant. Not only is Posy Simmonds a superb illustrator, she's a first class writer, perceptive and very witty. Definitely worthy of Folio-isation if Marvel and DC Comics make the grade.

586N11284
Edited: Feb 1, 2:37 pm

>585 cronshaw:
I agree wholeheartedly with you on this. I bought this (published by Jonathan Cape) last year on e-bay and just love it. It has joined my small but growing collection of Graphic novels. You should check out Logicomix or some of Proust illustrated by Stephane Heuet and published by Gallic Books of London

587Pendrainllwyn
Feb 13, 10:59 pm

Just finished The Color Purple by Alice Walker. A very well written book and beautifully illustrated too.

588HonorWulf
Feb 14, 9:28 am

Finished Something Wicked This Way Comes by Ray Bradbury (Folio 2019). Very glad I chose to revisit this as Bradbury's wonderful metaphors and word play were completely lost on my once youthful self. Also of interest, I found myself identifying more with the father than the boys this time around, almost as if Bradbury intended this book to be read twice by-design at different stages of one's life. Folio also did a great job with this one -- excellent intentionally garish design, informative intro by Frank Skinner, and moody, carnivalesque illustrations from Tim McDonagh.

589islandbooks
Feb 14, 11:08 am

Received Antonia Fraser's 'The Six Wives of Henry VIII' yesterday and started reading today.
She finished this book in August 1992 at the age of 60 but she wrote a new introduction for the Folio Edition (2023) which means that she must be 93 years old now. Wow!

As for the book itself, the price is £85 but I had to pay €141 after tax and postage (I'm in The Netherlands). That's a hefty price! Still hate the Brexit.

590BooksFriendsNotFood
Feb 15, 8:21 pm

I'm a bit less than 200 pages into The Long Way To A Small, Angry Planet and it's really good!! The first 80 pages were mostly world and character exposition and had me concerned because it wasn't exactly gripping, but no, the book is awesome! I doubted the whole "cozy sci-fi" claim, especially after Legends & Lattes did cozy fantasy SO well, but I definitely think that if you liked Legends & Lattes, then you'll enjoy this as well! I'm so invested in the well-being of each of these characters, and at the same time I love that we're doing things like violently punching tunnels through space and dealing with very interesting space pirates.

Also, does anyone else think of Hitchhiker's Guide as cozy?

591BooksFriendsNotFood
Feb 16, 10:10 pm

I just finished reading Long Way and I loved it so much!! I'm so happy right now.

At the same time though, this was way too stressful & intense for me to call it "cozy". Whatever genre In the Lives of Puppets by T.J. Klune is, that's what this is too. I think I like Long Way even more than that awesome book though. Also shoutout to the artist for drawing the perfect art, as the author already mentioned.

592GardenOfForkingPaths
Edited: Feb 18, 10:21 am

I recently finished the 2-volume edition of Dr Zhivago. Overall, I think it's a successful edition and a bargain at the sale price. The use of Leonid Pasternak's paintings and drawings works very well, and even when the details do not quite correspond to the text, the feel and atmosphere of the pictures still contribute to the experience.

One criticism I have is that the notes are all at the back of volume II. For me, it slightly negates the benefit of having two volumes if I have to keep the second volume with me the whole time. It seems like it would have been easy to split the notes which pertain to each volume. Also, I didn't always know when there was a note to refer to because they aren't indicated in the text itself. I noticed from pictures online that the older FS edition (1997, translated by Hayward and Harari) has the notes at the bottom of each page. I prefer this approach.

This was my first time reading Dr Zhivago. I found it quite enjoyable and I'm pleased to have filled this notable gap in my reading, but for now it's probably going to go down as one of my least favourite Russian novels. I felt like there was often a veil between me and the work, which made it difficult for me to fully connect with it. Hard to say why that was at the moment; perhaps just the wrong book at the wrong time. I didn't have that same wonder that I felt when reading Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky, Turgenev or others.

The quantity of coincidences within the plot did strike me as a bit fanciful and sometimes unnecessary. The introduction (Ann Pasternak Slater) makes the point that this oft-criticised aspect of the work actually reflects, if not in fact then in feel, the sheer number of separations and reunions that must have occurred during a period of such turmoil. Fair enough, and I think to get too hung up on the plot might be to miss the wood for the trees anyway. Somehow I think I didn't get to the heart of this book during my first reading and need to revisit it in a few years.

Right after finishing the novel, I started watching the film (1965), also for the first time. As expected, the film feels like a gross simplification in every way compared to the novel, but there's still something quite magical about seeing the pivotal scenes brought to life on screen and so powerfully acted. I can already feel that the novel and the film are going to become intertwined in my imagination and probably result in a memory of Dr Zhivago that might be greater than the sum of its parts.

593SimonRomero
Feb 18, 11:51 pm

I'm reading the book "The Lost Ways" for the second time and I've learned a lot of good things in this book. You can find it.

594LesMiserables
Feb 21, 6:35 am

Reading Le Carré's A Most Wanted Man.

595Joshbooks1
Feb 21, 10:35 am

>592 GardenOfForkingPaths: Totally agree on the Doctor Zhivago review. I have never read his poetry which is highly regarded but Doctor Zhivago is such an overrated book especially compared to the numerous Russian giants of the 20th century. It reads like an above average cheesy soap opera. I've read it once and never plan to read it again.

You have Solzhenitsyn, Bulgakov, Grossman, Paustovsky, Sholokhov, Shalamov, Nabokov... and then there is Pasternak. I still don't know how he won the Nobel for such a mediocre novel and I would probably appreciate it much more if expectations weren't so high and he hadn't won the Nobel.

As for recent books, I must say Archipelago is as good of a publisher as NYRB and is one of my favorites. I subscribed last year and, boy, do they publish some gems. I've recently read:
The Last Pomegranate Tree - a touching philosophical novel about Iraq's Kurdish conflict after Saddam's rule.
Tali Girls - The tale of 3 women and the brutality all women face in 21st century Afghanistan
Whale - a South Korean version of One Hundred Years of Solitude. Not as good but a wonderful book.

A subscription ranges from 125-250 depending on what type you want. They do ship irregularly where you won't receive anything for months and get a stack all at once but for anyone who likes foreign literature consider subscribing.

596GardenOfForkingPaths
Feb 21, 2:32 pm

>595 Joshbooks1:

Some of Yuri's poems at the end of the book did strike me as being good, but by that point I had unfortunately run out of enough steam to fully appreciate them. I'd certainly be happy to explore more of Pasternak's poetry in the future. It sounds like his poetry was a significant factor for the Nobel Prize.

Thanks for mentioning those titles from Archipelago. I keep meaning to try something from them but haven't really known where to begin. I would welcome suggestions for any past favourites too!

I've just started the FS Radetzky March (2015). I'm only 100 pages in, but the writing is very fine indeed.

597PartTimeBookAddict
Feb 22, 2:30 pm

It's been a rough reading week.

I finally finished the lamentable "The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet". It was one of the dullest books I've ever read. Paper thin characters in a worthless, tensionless plot. Chambers has an extremely limited vocabulary and all the characters sound the same. A great idea to have all sorts of aliens working together on a starship (has this ever been done before?), except here they are all prissy and smug.

One of the members here said to try Kelly Link. I read both "Get in Trouble" and "Magic for Beginners". These stories are much too long and unfocused. They are all repetitive and forgettable. Obviously, no editor was hired. For much sharper, smarter and edgier grim fantasy short fiction try Angela Carter's "The Bloody Chamber" or Patricia Highsmith's "The Animal-Lover's Book of Beastly Murder".

I read "Poor Things" by Alasdair Gray. It was okay. An interesting take on Frankenstein, but kind of dull. I can see why it was made into a movie. It has a fun part for a female lead. I haven't seen the film yet, but I look forward to what Emma Stone does with the part. She can't help but elevate the material.

Finished the week with "Some Buried Caesar" by Rex Stout. A much-needed, unpretentious palate cleanser mystery.

Let's hope next week fares better.

598wcarter
Feb 22, 4:34 pm

I am reading The Long Way to a Small Lonely Planet and enjoying it.

599Betelgeuse
Feb 22, 4:43 pm

I am enjoying Patrick O'Brian's "The Fortune of War," sixth in the Aubrey-Maturin series.

600Jayked
Feb 22, 6:19 pm

>597 PartTimeBookAddict:
I found Poor Things one of Gray's most approachable efforts, c.f. the long passages of gobbledygook in Lanark. He's taking a chance using James Hogg's narrative technique of having the same events repeated in the second half from an entirely opposing viewpoint, a turn-off for those who read mainly for the plot. It's a technique unsuitable for cinema, so I think I'll give the movie version a miss. Previous tries at parallel plots in movies have usually ended in confusion. Meryl Streep described The French Lieutenant's Woman as her worst role, because she had no idea before during or after the performance what it was about. Whatever the merits of the new movie, it's unlikely to be a tribute to Gray.

601PartTimeBookAddict
Feb 22, 7:29 pm

>600 Jayked: Two good films that have that technique are Rashomon and Snake Eyes. They both work.

Any other Alasdair Gray books worth trying?

602BooksFriendsNotFood
Feb 23, 7:46 pm

>598 wcarter: Yay, that’s awesome to hear!

603booksaplenty1949
Feb 25, 7:20 am

>595 Joshbooks1: Dr Zhivago over-written and disappointing. His Nobel Prize a Cold War gesture, IMHO. And frankly, I don’t regard the Nobel Prize in Literature as any kind of guide to a writer’s quality in the first place. Saint-John Perse? Pearl Buck? John Galsworthy? And those are writers I’ve actually ever heard of, at least.

604BooksFriendsNotFood
Feb 27, 6:20 pm

I'm reading Noughts and Crosses and, ignoring the unexpectedly lovely production, I'm enjoying the read! FS should really publish more (non-classical? lesser known?) YA.

605cronshaw
Mar 3, 12:36 pm

'Breaking Through' by Katalin Karikó, winner of the Nobel Prize in Medicine 2023. One of the most absorbing and inspiring books I've read in ages.

606LG2
Mar 6, 10:02 am

>596 GardenOfForkingPaths: I loved "Radetzky March" which in turn led me to "Buddenbrooks" by Thomas Mann.

607LG2
Mar 6, 10:04 am

"Remains of the Day" almost done.have not seen the film, but ran across a reference in the Backlisted podcast. Boy, can Ishiguro write.

608Pendrainllwyn
Mar 6, 10:30 am

>607 LG2: Love the film. Read my first Ishiguro book recently - A Pale View of Hills. It didn't bowl me over but I am still very keen to read Remains of the Day

609Chemren
Mar 6, 10:39 am

I am reading Stalingrad by Vasily Grossman in the NYRB paper bound edition. Quite a tome, but engrossing. It would make a fine addition to the Folio catalogue some day (probably split into two volumes).

610coynedj
Mar 6, 12:55 pm

>609 Chemren: If you think Stalingrad is engrossing, wait until you get to Life and Fate!

611red_guy
Mar 6, 1:40 pm

>607 LG2: Backlisted is wonderful. I have lost count of the number of astonishing books I have found through it. Andy Miller's vast ego wears thin quite quickly, though ...

https://www.backlisted.fm/

612Chemren
Mar 6, 2:52 pm

>610 coynedj: I ordered Life and Fate first and found out about Stalingrad while reading its introduction. Then paused while ordering Stalingrad.

My wife has been studying Russian and is currently plowing through the original language Stalingrad. She is about half way through after many weeks. I figure I'll catch up to her soon and we can compare notes.

613Joshbooks1
Mar 6, 4:14 pm

>612 Chemren: as >610 coynedj: states, Life and Fate is much better and you're in for a treat. I liked Stalingrad but after 300 pages or so I couldn't keep reading. There was too much Soviet propaganda and nationalism that I had to put it down. If I hadn't read Life and Fate years before it wouldn't have bothered me as much - you can tell Grossman had more literary freedom in Life and Fate and it is a fantastic novel. His writing is superb in both volumes.

614PartTimeBookAddict
Mar 6, 4:35 pm

>605 cronshaw: "Breaking Through" sounds interesting. I've added it to my library holds list.

This week I read:
"Life of Pi." It was fine, but overlong. The movie covers all the book has to offer, trims the fat, and adds the needed spectacle!

"The Children of Men." More introspective than the film, but without those amazing one-shot sequences. Worth reading and seeing the film.

"The Sinking Admiral" by the Detection Club. A spiritual sequel to "The Floating Admiral" but the bungled it. Apparently it was written by committee, rather than in relay. It's plodding and not nearly as fun. The FS has done "The Floating Admiral". It's worth checking out.

"Mr. Rabbit's Symphony of Nature". Such a charmer. A great read to usher in spring and some touching depictions of the Canadian wilderness.

615BooksFriendsNotFood
Mar 9, 11:38 am

I'm quite sad that Noughts and Crosses didn't sell too well for the Folio Society (or at least, I'm assuming it didn't since it's still in its first printing) because I would've LOVED for them to do book two.

I'm currently reading The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle and...it's pretty boring so far. I loved Norwegian Wood and really enjoyed Kafka on the Shore so this is not a fun discovery or a fun time.

616red_guy
Mar 9, 12:59 pm

>615 BooksFriendsNotFood: Stick with the Murakami - you will love it by the end and be waiting for the one Folio gives us next. Have you read any Paul Auster? Folio did a beautiful edition of The New York Trilogy with stylish illustrations. Auster is similar in a lot of respects to Murakami, and is often reasonably priced on Ebay, I think you would enjoy it.

617ubiquitousuk
Mar 9, 1:15 pm

>615 BooksFriendsNotFood: thanks for the tip. I was aware of the Auster edition but knew nothing about the book. The idea that it might be somehow similar to Murakami was enough to tip me into a purchase.

618red_guy
Edited: Mar 9, 1:38 pm

>617 ubiquitousuk: You're welcome. If you like Murakami, I can't imagine you not enjoying it. Also an unusually shaped book for Folio (tall and thin) and beautifully illustrated.

619santiamen
Mar 9, 1:36 pm

I've just finished The Haunting of Hill House in an attempt to decide whether I'd like the FS edition. Unsurprisingly, it terrified me to the point of having trouble sleeping and not daring to extend a limb near the edge of the bed because I'm that much of a coward. So I'll continue to read horror stories only once every blue moon when I successfully forget how much the last one scared me.

On that note, does anyone know whether We Have Always Lived in the Castle is scary like that too?

And not to come off negative, I liked the author's style a lot. She's definitely great at building the atmosphere and letting the imagination run wild even when seemingly nothing happens. The novel basically reads itself.

620PartTimeBookAddict
Mar 9, 1:53 pm

>619 santiamen: Well, no book has ever scared me like that, but I wouldn't say "We Have Always Lived in the Castle" is a ghost story. More of a gothic character study. It's really good.

Currently reading: "Children of Dune" which I am enjoying even more the "Dune Messiah". This one has thriller elements that remind me of Ludlum, mixed in with the great Herbert world building. Very fun.

621BooksFriendsNotFood
Edited: Mar 9, 4:00 pm

>616 red_guy: I'm really hoping that'll be the case re: The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle! And thank you for the Auster recommendation!


>619 santiamen: I agree that The Haunting of Hill House is very scary. I love it as a book and as a truly haunting story but dang — sometimes I'll walk into a room and try to forget that part in the book about the cold air & chill in that one doorway...

I'm happy to report that We Have Always Lived in the Castle is not really scary while still being a very good read. The atmosphere & plot is more quietly unsettling than fear-inducing, I think I would say.

622Chemren
Mar 9, 3:59 pm

>620 PartTimeBookAddict: I liked Children of Dune and God Emperor of Dune more than Dune Messiah, but I haven’t read Dune Messiah since I was a teenager. I’ll revisit in the FS version once it migrates to the top of my TBR pile. The series jumped the shark for me in the fifth one.

623santiamen
Mar 9, 5:15 pm

>620 PartTimeBookAddict: >621 BooksFriendsNotFood: Thanks for letting me know. I'll give it a chance then. :)

I certainly didn't appreciate the descriptions of the cold doorway. It won't be fun visiting my parents who have a room in their house cold like a fridge because a pine marten moved in and ripped through the insulation. :)

624BooksFriendsNotFood
Mar 9, 5:57 pm

>623 santiamen: Oh no 🙈

625PartTimeBookAddict
Mar 9, 6:09 pm

>622 Chemren: My library has "God Emperor" "Heretics" and "Chapterhouse" so I think I'll finish the Frank Herbert Cycle and call it good. I like them, but not enough to be a completionist.

626BooksFriendsNotFood
Edited: Mar 10, 5:45 pm

>616 red_guy: "Stick with the Murakami - you will love it by the end and be waiting for the one Folio gives us next."

I just finished the book, and yep, you've called it exactly. Also, I don't know if this is specific to the Folio edition, but I loved the way they formatted the articles and the computer text — it was delightfully immersive.

627coynedj
Mar 11, 10:20 pm

>626 BooksFriendsNotFood: - I was too late to give my opinion, but The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle was my first Murakami, and after that I was hooked - it was superb. I have Kafka on the Shore, and need to get to it soon.

>619 santiamen: - As for The Haunting of Hill House, it's masterfully done. Chilling is an apt description. If you're up for a laugh, watch the fairly recent film version with Liam Neeson, simply called The Haunting. It's so bad that it has become a family meme.

628Chemren
Mar 12, 9:43 am

>627 coynedj: Or opt for the '60's version. It is superb. There was a movie that did not need a remake.

629BooksFriendsNotFood
Edited: Mar 12, 4:16 pm

>627 coynedj: Once you read Kafka on the Shore, I'd be interested in hearing whether you end up enjoying it even more than The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle!

630Charon49
Edited: Mar 13, 9:27 am

Just finished Kafka on the shore, the first Murakami I have read and I enjoyed it and was impressed by his creativity to craft a story mixing in so many influences but found maybe it was a bit needlessly over sexualised at times.

631Cat_of_Ulthar
Mar 13, 2:12 pm

>544 RRCBS: 'It’s been on my TBR piles for years!'

Mine too, ever since I read Cerebus: Melmoth.

Must get hold of Folio's edition :-)

632Cat_of_Ulthar
Mar 13, 2:19 pm

>546 coynedj: 'Lots of crazy fun, and I would say that there is absolutely no chance at all the Folio Society will publish it.'

Right and (probably) right again although, as you say, published in 1975 so a lavish 50th anniversary Folio LE is not totally impossible: they have been getting into the counter culture stuff lately, after all.

And those golden apples I chucked into the editorial office must have had some effect ;)

633coynedj
Mar 15, 3:02 pm

Recently finished:

The Greatest Benefit to Mankind: A Medical History of Humanity - Roy Porter. Not the FS edition. It was detailed and took me quite some time to get through, and I have learned a lot. But, with the advances in medicine since it's publication, it is a bit out of date in later sections, which also were quite full of medical and chemical terms that a dunce such as I did not know. Overall, I think it was an odd choice for the FS treatment, and I'm very happy with my cheap mass market copy.

The Travels of Marco Polo - the FS edition, and a tremendous production it is. That said, while it's historical importance can't be denied, I didn't find it to be an engrossing read. There was a lot of repetition (it seems like every city was populated by idolators, used paper money, had their own language, and abounded in game, both beasts and birds, etc), along with some very interesting cultural commentary. I don't expect to ever read it again.

The Murderbot Diaries, books 1-7 - Martha Wells. These were a blast, in more ways than one. Most were quite short and all were fast reads, and featured a fascinating main character and action-filled plots. I seem to have a habit of starting books or series just before a film or TV adaptation is announced, and this is another - I wonder just how it will come off, given how much depended on things that can't be well portrayed visually. Lots of fun - I have recommended them to a few people already.

Evolution and the Myth of Creationism: A Basic Guide to the Facts in the Evolution Debate - Tim Berra. Another book that was published a ways back and thus doesn't deal with more recent events and discoveries. But, it did cover the topic pretty well. The fact that there is a "debate" in this country about evolution distresses me.

How to Know a Person - David Brooks. This has been highly praised, but I didn't find anything that couldn't be found in a hundred other books or articles on the same topic. I started reading it, then started skipping parts, and then gave up entirely.

Up next - Kafka On the Shore, by Haruki Murakami, in the FS edition, as hinted above. I usually am reading two to four books at any time, but I think I'm going to focus on just this one right now. I'm very much looking forward to it.

634ubiquitousuk
Edited: Mar 15, 4:32 pm

I am just about finished with the first volume of the three-volume Folio edition of James Cook's Journals, covering his first voyage.

Reading nautical journals always involves a bit of dryness. But there are plenty of interesting insights into 18th century seafaring life, native culture, and the tribulations of a historically important expedition.

Looking forward to volume 2, not least of all because I already read Sparrman's journal of the same voyage and it will be interesting to compare the two accounts. But first I will read something else because two volumes of ships' journals back-to-back would be too much.

635HonorWulf
Mar 25, 1:33 pm

Finished Killing Floor by Lee Child (Folio, 2020). This was my guilty pleasure book from the recent Winter sale and it certainly lives up to its name as a breezy adrenaline-filled revenge thriller -- basically a beach read for men. Not sure I'll ever continue with the series, but at least I now know what the Reacher multi-media phenomenon is all about... The Folio edition sports an intro by Malcolm Gladwell (Outliers) and moody illustrations from Oliver Barrett.

636Pendrainllwyn
Mar 25, 8:53 pm

>635 HonorWulf: Good description of it. Like you I enjoyed reading it but it didn't inspire me to read any more of Lee Child's books.

637PartTimeBookAddict
Mar 25, 9:00 pm

>636 Pendrainllwyn: They're all well written (until the recent ghost-written ones), but fairly formulaic. My two favourites are "Personal" and "Make Me" numbers 19 and 20. "Personal" has the best action and "Make Me" has some good twists and atmosphere. Otherwise, you're not missing much with the series.

638PartTimeBookAddict
Mar 26, 4:48 pm

Finished "Children of Dune." It has a similar tone to the first one and I preferred it to "Messiah."

Also read:
Monstrilio by Cordova. It was poorly written, terribly long and boring.

The House of Silk by Horowitz. A good enough Holmes pastiche, though tries to be a bit meta at times. A great scene between Sherlock and Mycroft.

The Last Unicorn by Beagle. Borrows a lot from Bradbury and not quite as funny as "The Princess Bride". The last two chapters are a slog. Fun, but doesn't stick the landing.

Faun - Joe Hill. He has the same talent his dad has. I'll leave it at that.

Up next:
Cover Her Face - A reread inspired by wcarter's latest review.
and
What is life? by Schrodinger. This little volume has been sitting on my shelf for too long.

639coynedj
Mar 27, 8:07 pm

>629 BooksFriendsNotFood: I've finished Kafka on the Shore. It was superb. For a while I was thinking that The Wind-Up Bird Chronicles was better, but as I went on my opinion changed. Nearing the end I wondered just how it would finish, and the answer was "magnificently". Both books are excellent and well worth reading, though, and I can see how some would put them in the reverse order.

640BooksFriendsNotFood
Mar 28, 9:02 am

>639 coynedj: Thank you for sharing! I also love both but I too favor Kafka out of the two.

641drizzled
Mar 29, 5:00 am

>464 dlphcoracl: "A viable alternative is the 1950 (not 1938!) Limited Editions Club edition."
May I ask why not the 1938?

642Cat_of_Ulthar
Apr 1, 9:07 am

641 posts. Longest FSD thread ever? Seems to work okay, though. Can we make 1,000?

I've been reading some Baum recently, an Oz omnibus. Yes, it's aimed at kids and it's unashamedly unrealistic and utopian (and Dorothy's speech patterns seem somewhat variable). But I really enjoyed it. It had me wondering why Folio stopped at the first book. Did it not sell well enough? Or are the rights tied up elsewhere?

In a more adult vein, I read The Dictionary People, concerning the volunteers who helped build the OED. Fascinating stuff. I wouldn't have minded being part of that myself, actually.

And I've been reading more Wodehouse: The Little Nugget. An odd one, to my mind. It's got typical Wodehouse themes: two people in love only there are complications in the way; and the abduction of key plot-related items (in this case, The Little Nugget himself). The tone, however, is very different, more serious at times, even involving some actual violence. There is humour, but it's a bit more thinly-spread or darker-toned. I (sort-of) enjoyed it but I didn't feel the satisfaction I get from other books of his. Whether that's his fault or mine, I'm not sure. (I note that it hasn't been reprinted very often so maybe I'm not alone in my reactions.)

643CabbageMoth
Apr 2, 4:13 pm

>642 Cat_of_Ulthar: I would buy a lot of Baum and not just the Oz books. But I suspect the market would be quite small. Although I love them, I recognize that many of them are not good by any objective standard.

644RRCBS
Edited: Apr 2, 5:06 pm

This message has been deleted by its author.

645PartTimeBookAddict
Apr 4, 7:06 pm

Did a re-read of "Cover Her Face" inspired by wcarter's post. I had forgotten most of it. There is a fête, but that's not where the body is found. Of the Dalgliesh mysteries I've read, this is closest to a Christie novel and a good place to start (also the 1st in series).

Read "The Bayeux Tapestry". It's short, comprehensive, and well put together, but not the prettiest book on the shelf.

Followed that with "1066 and All That". Charming little book and well-designed by the FS, but didn't make me chuckle as much as The Compleet Molesworth.

Also, "Until August": necro-fiction from Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Novella length and just okay. I understand why the publishers needed the "he asked us to burn it" hype to get people interested.

Also read "The Swerve" by Stephen Greenblatt. I recommend it. It is a good overview of how books have survived over the centuries, what ideas were buried and on the philosophy of Lucretius. Now I have to dive into my FS Great Philosophers copy of On the Nature of Things.

Up next: Schrodinger's "What is Life?" - finally! And "The Tenant of Wildfell Hall."

646BooksFriendsNotFood
Apr 4, 9:04 pm

>645 PartTimeBookAddict: I just recently read The Tenant of Wildfell Hall and really enjoyed it! I hope it's a great read for you.

647PartTimeBookAddict
Apr 4, 9:13 pm

>646 BooksFriendsNotFood: Great. Thank you. Looking forward to it.

648HonorWulf
Apr 8, 3:42 pm

Finished The Tombs of Atuan by Ursula K. Le Guin (Folio, 2022). Despite being narrower in scope (and length!), this is a highly entertaining entry in the Earthsea saga that explores religious conviction, identity and independence in a way that manages to be both dark and playful at the same time. Le Guin's writing is also more confidant here, manifesting in a tighter plot and stronger command over her characters, who feel far more human than in its predecessor. David Lupton continues to provide expressive illustrations lush in earth-tones, and Le Guin pens the afterward that explains the genesis of the book and her view on some of its perceived themes.

649PartTimeBookAddict
Apr 21, 2:36 pm

This week I read:

Poems - G. K. Chesterton. FS copy. Funny poems with appropriate amount of footnotes to situate the reader. Good spot illustrations. My favourite poem from the collection can be read here:

https://www.poetrynook.com/poem/commercial-candour

Gitanjali - Rabindranath Tagore. Read on Project Gutenberg. An unrhymed litany. It's not really my thing, so I'm safe to skip the FS production. Fans of Kahlil Gibran and Rumi might like it.

Cod - Mark Kurlansky. An interesting look at fisheries over the centuries. Kurlansky is a great writer. I recommend this, but more so his magnum opus "Salt". It deserves the FS treatment.

Knife - Salman Rushdie. Unfortunately, a fairly boring book about an interesting event. It could have been a quarter the length.

Owls in the Family - Farley Mowat. Short, classic children's animal rescue story from what feels like a very different time. If FS did more Canadiana, it would be a good fit.

Up next: "What is life?" Haven't forgot about you! And the FS version of "Notes From a Small Island" by Bryson.

650BooksFriendsNotFood
Edited: Apr 21, 3:52 pm

I finished my last of Shakespeare's Tragedies last night (Timon of Athens: it was a fun time) so I'm down to just 5 Histories, 4 Romances, and 2 Comedies remaining!

I started reading The Dogs of Riga this morning and it is both physically gorgeous and a wonderful read so far — it was absolutely worth waiting 1 year to read the FS edition. It's so nice to be back in this melancholy detective world, and it's actually perfect since I have no more James Bond to read until Folio releases the final book and I am getting just the teeniest bit of similar vibes. I also just noticed that the title on the spine of the book is missing the 'The', but I'll accept it for the sake of the aesthetic.

651HonorWulf
Edited: Apr 25, 1:57 pm

Finished Life, The Universe and Everything by Douglas Adams (Folio, 2014). The original Hitchhiker's Guide trilogy comes to a close as the loose ends from the previous books are tied up in a neat bow and Adams proves that, yes, you can, indeed, stretch a cricket joke for an entire novel. Includes an entertaining intro from writer Jon Canter (who lived with Adams for a spell) and inspired illustrations, once again, from the incomparable Jonathan Burton.

652coynedj
Edited: Apr 28, 8:28 pm

Recently finished:

Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, Gabrielle Zevin - very good. I thought it might benefit from being shorter but I failed to come up with anything that should have been cut out. It's about people in the gaming business, but it isn't jargon-laden, and someone who isn't into gaming should have no trouble following it.

The Way of the World: From the Dawn of Civilizations to the Eve of the Twenty First Century, David Fromkin - I'm a sucker for "big history", and this was quite good. Sure, it doesn't cover a lot of things that happened after it was written in the 1990's, but the stretch of time before then is well covered, and a lot of his "I see this happening in the near future" stuff was spot on. I can't blame someone for not perfectly knowing what would come in the future.

The Course of Love, Alain de Botton - OK, this one isn't "recently finished" because I gave up before finishing it. The book intersperses two things - a love story, and observations on "this is what true love really is". It felt like he wrote all of his little aphorisms first, then devised a story to illustrate them, in proper order. I found it tedious.

Kafka on the Shore, Haruki Murakami - I mentioned up above that I finished it, and found it to be excellent. I read the superb FS edition, and found that I liked the simple little illustrations at the end of each chapter better than the full-page illustrations. Murakami obviously has a thing about lost cats (having previously read The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle). Maybe something from his childhood?

Quarantine, Jim Crace - the book cover says that it was a Booker Prize finalist - it must have been a down year. The writing itself is very good, but I dislike books that have me yell "what the hell?!" and don't properly deal with the WTH moment later on.

Up next: nonfiction - 1177 B.C.: The Year Civilization Collapsed, by Eric Cline, and Not the End of the World: How We Can Become the First Generation to Build a Sustainable Planet, by Hannah Ritchie (I fervently hope this points the way to such a result). Fiction - The Iliad, in the new Emily Wilson translation, and Wyrd sisters, by Terry Pratchett. I'm not sure what order I'll read them in, but I suspect that Wyrd Sisters will come first.

653tkellici
Apr 28, 9:11 pm

>652 coynedj: "Murakami obviously has a thing about lost cats (having previously read The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle). Maybe something from his childhood?"

A nice article that might be of help:
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2019/10/07/abandoning-a-cat

654PartTimeBookAddict
May 17, 3:10 pm

Finally finished Schrodinger's "What is Life?". It was easier to understand than I had feared, especially thanks to the introduction. I must make an effort to read more science texts.

I read "The Tenant of Wildfell Hall". Very good, and I liked the weird collage-like illustrations by Catto as well.

I also read "Song of Achilles." A complete slog and a bore. Very glad I didn't splurge for the FS edition. I can't understand why Dillon didn't do any illustrations of the famous battle. Over half of the illustrations are of Achilles and Patroclus looking like they just popped some Ambien. A dud.

Up next: "Diary of a Provincial Lady" and "Treasure Island". Perfect spring reads.

655HonorWulf
May 29, 10:17 am

Finished Oryx and Crake by Margaret Atwood (Folio, 2019). This one sat on the proverbial fence for awhile based on some of the descriptions I've read over the years, but it turned out to be a wonderfully entertaining post-apocalyptic parable that's equally poignant, satirical and traumatizing -- often at the same time. Given the cliffhanger nature of the ending, I'm also now keen on Folio publishing the rest of the trilogy (although that boat may have sailed). Atwood provides the foreword into the genesis of the novel, and Harriet Lee-Merrion the oddly clean illustrations that put an exclamation point on the surreal events contained within it.

656PartTimeBookAddict
Jun 1, 4:21 pm

Finished my re-read of "Treasure Island" a perennial favourite that never fails to entertain.

Also read Delafield's "Diary of a Provincial Lady". Very funny in the same vein as "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" and "Diary of a Nobody." I would reccomend it and it is very cheap on the secondary market.

Also, on cronshaw's recommendation, I read 'Breaking Through' by Katalin Karikó. A little light on the science and a little heavy on her personal life, but a pretty interesting book. Found it funny how much Hungarians love Columbo:
https://columbophile.com/2016/07/10/why-is-there-a-columbo-statue-in-budapest/

Up next: Manhattan '45.

657ubiquitousuk
Jun 3, 10:25 am

I have read two out of three volumes of Cook's Journals. Reading nautical logs is pretty dry (to say the least...) so I have been interspersing them with other books for a bit of relief.

Right now I am about 60% through Wind-Up Bird Chronicle. It doesn't disappoint! This is my fourth Murakami book (third from FS) and he's quickly becoming a favourite author. I'm hoping we see another Murakami edition this Autumn.

658assemblyman
Jun 3, 12:44 pm

I recently picked up Love in a Time of Cholera on a whim in an airport bookshop. I’m glad I did as was beautifully written and I couldn’t put it down. It was my first time reading Gabriel García Márquez but won’t be my last. I have the FS One Hundred Years of Solitude on the way.

659coynedj
Jun 3, 10:56 pm

>658 assemblyman: One Hundred Years of Solitude has, in my opinion, one of the greatest opening sentences I've ever read. And the rest of it is terrific as well!

660booksaplenty1949
Jun 4, 9:10 am

A friend now living in London and consequently occasionally serving as my “poste restante” for items which the seller will only mail to an English address has been back home for a visit and dropped off two Folio Society books I had obviously ordered, but so long ago (?) I had completely forgotten when or why. I think Leave It to Psmith was intended as a potential gift for a Wodehouse-loving relative, but With Napoleon in Russia 1812? It does coincidentally tie in with last month’s theme in The War Room Challenge, a sub-group of the 75 Book Challenge curated by Paul Cranswick, so all good, but alarming to know that I am apparently ordering Folio Society vols in my sleep.

661assemblyman
Jun 4, 10:38 am

>659 coynedj: That's great to hear. I intend to start it once it arrives.

662PartTimeBookAddict
Jun 15, 3:42 pm

Caught a case of covid, so picked up Agatha Christie's "Murder in the Vicarage" as a sick read. Really enjoying it.

663Ragnaroekk
Jun 15, 5:26 pm

I can highly recommend UBIK by Philip K. Dick and Roadside Picnic by the Strugazki brothers.

I read A Scanner Darkly by Dick before and halfway through I stopped. Didn't enjoy it very much.
Although Do Androids dream of electric Sheep was superb 👌

664Jeremy53
Jun 15, 6:03 pm

Just finished FS edition of The Fatal Shore. Amazing. Very, very thorough - an impressive historical record / testament, but also brilliantly written and evocative. The descriptions about the state of society in London in the mid to late 18th century were terrifying. A reminder that things have indeed come a long way, and it’s not all doom and gloom. His descriptions of the Australian landscape were glorious too. Convict life, yikes.

I might dip into Amor Towles’ latest next.

As for next FS edition, maybe The Good Soldier.

665woodstock8786
Jun 16, 2:12 pm

>662 PartTimeBookAddict: It’s really strange, but I also love Christie as a kind of „comfort read“. There are murders of course, but still it is always so soothing in a way.

I really wish FS would republish the Marple books and some more of the others. Shame they stopped with Murder on the Orient Express. I was hoping there would be more of them incoming

666booksaplenty1949
Jun 16, 2:24 pm

>665 woodstock8786: I think murder mysteries can be comfort reads if a) the victim is someone we won’t miss b) solving the case restores moral order. Good is seen to triumph over evil, at least in this limited instance, and that is reassuring.

667Son.of.York
Jun 16, 5:48 pm

I finally got around to the LE Moby Dick (https://www.librarything.com/topic/335111) and I'm loving it! And such a well-made volume.

668L.Bloom
Jun 17, 9:20 am

>667 Son.of.York: It really is a delight. I read this one last year and the work as well as the LE itself live up to the hype.

669L.Bloom
Jun 17, 9:23 am

Anna Karenina in the 1/4 brown buckram printing. What can I say? Tolstoy never disappoints.

670coynedj
Jun 18, 10:54 pm

Recently finished:

1177 BC: The Year Civilization Collapsed, by Eric Cline. This was very informative, but fell prey to the fact we simply don't know much about what happened then. That said, I learned a lot about the civilizations of the time and the struggles they had, and am now disabused of the "sea peoples" narrative surrounding the collapse (though they seem to have taken advantage of it, or played a part in it - like I said, we don't know much).

Not the End of the World: How We can Become the First Generation to Build a Sustainable Planet, by Hannah Richie. This is a well thought out book with plenty of sensible arguments - Richie studiously avoids/debunks the pronouncements of the doomsayers and the "everything is fine" crowd. It gave me hope. But a lot will have to go right to see her path followed. And of course, the U.S. in November will make a crucial decision here.

The Iliad, by (you guessed it) Homer, translated by Emily Wilson. I compared this translation to my Fagles, and while both are very good, this one reads a bit easier. Of course, I don't read ancient Greek and can't say how faithful either is to the original.

Wyrd Sisters, by Terry Pratchett. A fun book. Not deep like the Iliad of course, but I needed something lighter and this fit the bill quite well. I plan to continue reading Discworld books - this is my third.

Crooked Plow, by Itamar Vieira Junior. Very good, but not quite the masterpiece that some folks say it is (at least in my opinion). But, still a quite good tale of a peasant community in Brazil, filled with superstitions and rituals and crushing poverty.

A Psalm for the Wild-Built, by Becky Chambers. The same Becky Chambers who wrote The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet. Very short, and very nice - not nice like "it was good", though it was, but nice as in kind, not a common thing in science fiction.

Currently reading A World Lit Only by Fire: The Medieval Mind and the Renaissance, Portrait of an Age, by William Manchester. Also The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, by B. Traven - I've done well with western books overshadowed by their film/miniseries adaptations (the excellent FS edition of True Grit, plus Little Big Man and Lonesome Dove). We'll see how this measures up.

Coming soon: The Odyssey, Emily Wilson translation. How could I read the Iliad and not follow it up with this? And the same goes for A Prayer for the Crown-Shy, the follow-up to A Psalm for the Wild-Built. Also very short. But a good bit of my time will also be taken up with season 1 of Wednesday, which is awaiting me at the library. I loved the old Addams Family TV show (I'm old and watched it when it has its original run), and the two films starring the superb and much missed Raul Julia.

671assemblyman
Edited: Jul 1, 6:49 am

I recently finished One Hundred Years of Solitude following my read of Love in a Time of Cholera earlier this year which was my first time reading Gabriel Garcia Marquez. I really enjoyed it and it was the FS edition which made the reading experience even nicer. I was thinking if picking up The General in his Labyrinth for my next Marquez read but would welcome any suggestions here.

672Jeremy53
Edited: Jul 1, 6:55 am

>671 assemblyman: One Hundred Years of Solitude is incredible. Love in the Time of Cholera almost as good. General in his Labyrinth is very good without reaching the same heights - I.e. transcendent.

News of a Kidnapping and Autumn of the Patriarch are also very good.

673assemblyman
Jul 2, 9:52 am

>672 Jeremy53: Thanks, I will add them to my TBR list.

674booksaplenty1949
Jul 2, 2:32 pm

Have started The Ottoman Empire. A doorstop, but I like the bold binding, and appreciated the introduction by Norman Stone which highlighted Lord Kinross’s strengths and (relative) weaknesses as a historian.

676podaniel
Jul 3, 11:16 am

>674 booksaplenty1949:

I've had that book glaring at me from my bookshelves for years (decades?). Once read, I'd be curious what you thought of it.

677booksaplenty1949
Jul 3, 8:35 pm

>676 podaniel: Will let you know. Have finished Part I (of VII) so far and am finding it highly readable.

678coynedj
Jul 3, 11:23 pm

>577 PartTimeBookAddict: I too have had it glaring at me for years. At least I bought it second hand, for just a few dollars, but books are meant to be read. Looking forward to hearing what you think of it once you finish it.

679PartTimeBookAddict
Jul 4, 2:36 pm

>678 coynedj: Might be a while yet, but it is on the ever growing TBR list.

681PartTimeBookAddict
Jul 4, 3:32 pm

>680 coynedj: No worries. I also have an unread copy of Kinross to get to as well. Thanks for all the reminders.

This week I read "The Island of Missing Trees" by Elif Shafak. A novel dealing with grief with chapters that alternate POVs between a young woman and a fig tree. It was okay and I learned a lot about the Turkish invasion of Cyprus in the 70s.

Also "The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs" by Steve Brusatte. Non-FS edition. It's very interesting and readable, even though the prose is pretty dorky. But what do you want from a palaeontologist? Apparently Brontosaurus is a thing again. Shows that I haven't been following dino news since I was a kid.

I'm half-way through a re-read of "1984" (not the LE) and am finding it depressing as always.

Up next: Finishing "Manhattan '45" and either "Period Piece" by Gwen Raverat or "The Living Mountain".

682booksaplenty1949
Edited: Jul 4, 3:39 pm

>678 coynedj: Have now finished The Ottoman Empire Part II (of VII) so as you can see it’s something of a page-turner. As Norman Stone says in his introduction “You are not overwhelmed by details and complications. The author writes about what he wants to write about—battles and characters—and takes a lordly view of things that bore him, such as economics or religious sectarianism.” Works for me.

683coynedj
Jul 5, 12:25 am

Recently finished:

A World Lit Only by Fire: The Medieval Mind and the Renaissance, Portrait of an Age, by William Manchester. A survey of the time (Manchester admits that he presents no original research), but that's fine with me - I learned a lot, especially about the corruption (and other odious goings-on) of the Church in those days. And Manchester writes so well!

The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, by B. Traven. Fairly clunky writing - there's no way those characters would speak the way Traven presented. But it's a cracking good story, and I see why Hollywood made a movie from it. I then re-watched the film after many many years, and while the film had some minor emendations, and a few major emendations, it followed the book more than I recalled, and I think this might be a case of a movie better than the book. I was surprised by the amount of dialogue in the film that was in Spanish, with no interpreter putting it into English.

The Midnight Library, by Matt Haig. This was recommended to me, and while it had a major plot device that rankled me, I got caught up in it. Not Booker Prize worthy, but it was an enjoyable, quick read.

Octopussy, and the Living Daylights, by Ian Fleming (of course). It paints a wildly different portrait of James Bond than the movies. Let's just say that the book (quite short) and the movie have little in common. There were a few examples of then-common attitudes/thoughts/statements that would not get into print today, but I enjoyed it nonetheless.

A Prayer for the Crown-Shy, by Becky Chambers. The follow-up to A Psalm for the Wild-Built, mentioned somewhere up above. Perfectly fine, but neither of the two books presents the characters with any challenges or obstacles to overcome, and that's an important part of what makes a book worth reading. There is no Part 3 so far, and if there was, I suspect I wouldn't bother with it.

Currently reading The Quantum Age, by Brian Clegg. I suspect that Feynman was right when he said that no one understands quantum mechanics. While I'm learning some things about what happens and how quantum effects are used in our lives, I have no hope of ever understanding the how and why. But, I have children, so I gave up the thought of understanding the how and why long ago. Especially the why.

I'll still read the Odyssey when it arrives at the library, and I'm soon to begin Paul Auster's New York Trilogy, in the lovely-looking FS edition.

684HonorWulf
Edited: Jul 7, 3:41 pm

Finished Journey to the Centre of the Earth by Jules Verne (Folio, 2001). With its breakneck pace, earnest pseudo-science, and amusing satire, Verne architects the definitive blueprint to the modern day adventure yarn that's been emulated in movies and books in the many years since. The Folio edition includes the faithful William Butcher translation, a research-paper by way of introduction from Michael Crichton, and lavish illustrations by Folio luminary Grahame Baker. Splendid package all around.

685Ragnaroekk
Jul 7, 3:42 pm

>684 HonorWulf:
You would recommend it? I have never read it, because iam sceptical

686BionicJim
Edited: Jul 7, 4:44 pm

>684 HonorWulf:
>685 Ragnaroekk:
Yes, this is a fun book to re-read as an adult and enjoyable even after watching one of the two famous movie versions - 2008's Brendan Fraser or 1959's James Mason.

I read the beautiful FS edition last year with my book club friends and we had a lot of fun discussing what secret code message one friend should leave in the volcano when visiting Iceland. In fact, it inspired a trip to Tokyo this summer so that I could see the "real life" volcano as recreated at DisneySea. As a book geek I couldn't resist surprising my daughter with a friend who showed up there unannounced (to her) having been "blown out of the volcano." She didn't get it, but it was a great laugh when my daughter's first comment to him was "I thought you were in Iceland!" Here's the very worthwhile Disney volcano from inside the caldera:

687ubiquitousuk
Jul 7, 5:01 pm

>685 Ragnaroekk: >686 BionicJim: It was fun but I much preferred a couple of Verne's other works, 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea and especially The Mysterious Island.

As for me, I finished reading The New York Trilogy on the recommendation of >616 red_guy:. It was indeed a lot of fun, and also a nice edition from Folio, notable for its generous helping of illustrations.

688HonorWulf
Jul 7, 8:46 pm

>685 Ragnaroekk: Yes, for sure, especially the Butcher translation used by Folio and Oxford. I'm positive the version I read in my youth was the woeful rewrite that was dumbed down for kids. But this was a pleasant surprise (and a very swift read).

689HonorWulf
Jul 7, 8:47 pm

>686 BionicJim: Nice! My wife's been puzzled why I keep bringing up Iceland for our next vacation :)

690DZWB
Jul 7, 9:17 pm

I have just finished Troubles (JG Farrell) in a NYRB paperback edition. Wonderful book, which would make a fantastic Folio edition to go with the Siege of Krishnapur.

691Ragnaroekk
Jul 7, 10:45 pm

Iam reading the Fifth Season currently and its fantastic. Iam glad to finally have finished the first book. I have started 5 times over and over again, because the beginning of the book was so weird...

692BooksFriendsNotFood
Edited: Jul 11, 10:39 pm

I finally finished the batch of FS books I ordered during the last seasonal release and ehhh I didn't love these. I'm going to be SO picky during the next season release and aim to get the minimum number of books possible.

• The Magicians of Caprona: I think I'm just too old for Diana Wynne Jones books. I adored the Howl's Moving Castle novel as a kid (although I did not like the film adaptation), but this is the second Chrestomanci book I've read and they're fine/good but I don't enjoy my time with them. I realize this is just one series, but I'm not going to go out of my way to read more of the author's books any time soon.

• Pandaemonium: This was quite good - probably the most interesting of the bunch, and I actually had a flawless time with it - but after having just finished all the FS books I bought in this batch, I'm feeling salty and like I could've lived without this.

• The Song of Achilles: Very subpar experience. The illustrations were mostly repetitive, with a few interesting ones, but ultimately they were boring (which wasn't the case with The King of Elfland's Daughter). Also, while I enjoyed the first half of the story, the second half bored me to pieces even though the ending was somewhat redeeming. This also just felt like a very under-impressive Folio edition.

• DC: Batman: I loved the first half with the "classic" style of comics, but as soon as they hit the 1980s comics, they had a much more modern style (which was much sooner than I expected for this art style tbh) and the issues ranged from tolerable to I hated it (*cough* The Dark Knight Returns #1 *cough*). I'll probably get the next DC Ages book - assuming there is one - if it's all still the older comics style, since I loved the first installment. I don't really want to continue with this individual character series, but I'll probably just get Superman if they do him because hello, it's Superman. And at any rate, I know Superman has at least one amazing modern comic, i.e. Superman Smashes the Klan, which reads a lot like the old Superman radio shows.

• The Player of Games: Obviously a brilliant story, but I didn't really need this edition and could've read it on my kindle or as a library book. The edition didn't really enhance the experience for me or anything.

• Band of Brothers: I kind of never want to read non-fiction again. I hoped I would like this because The Right Stuff was also military-ish since the original astronauts actually came from the Air Force, but I was so wrong. Also, compared to the authors of The Right Stuff and The Six Wives of Henry VIII, who presented the content in an interesting, compelling way, the author of Band of Brothers was very unimpressive / not great. I have The Golden Road: How Ancient India Transformed the World on pre-order from Waterstones but I'm very close to canceling it because I'm seriously so put off nonfic right now / forevermore (?). I read the first 140 pages of Band of Brothers and it was okay, but I didn't really understand why this was supposed to keep my attention, so I ended up skim reading the rest just to get it over with (and indeed, it never regained my attention).

693santiamen
Jul 12, 7:28 am

>692 BooksFriendsNotFood: If you haven't, watch the Band of Brothers miniseries. It's brilliant.

694booksaplenty1949
Jul 12, 9:36 am

I recently found a 1959 Folio Society edition of The Struggle for Greece. With a slipcase. Letter-press, of course, and beautiful wood-engravings by Raymond Hawthorn. A delight.

695BooksFriendsNotFood
Jul 12, 11:42 am

>693 santiamen: That’s what I’ve heard, that the miniseries is much better! I thought the book couldn’t be that bad, but I was wrong lol.

696HonorWulf
Edited: Aug 6, 2:37 pm

Finished The Player of Games by Iain M. Banks (Folio, 2024). Perhaps the most popular novel in the Culture series, it presents a master gameplayer from a future utopia who is pressed into service as an envoy to a warlike alien culture that revolves entirely around games. A catchy hook with a quick pace, it's not quite as imaginative or gonzo as Consider Phlebas, but Banks is far more in command of his ideas here and it pays off in a more focused narrative. Like the previous book, there's no introduction, but the illustrations from Daniel Taylor are clean and catching.

697PartTimeBookAddict
Aug 11, 2:57 pm

Finished "The Living Mountain". It is nature writing at it's finest. Hypnotic, soothing and the perfect balm for a summer's heat wave.

I'm glad to have picked it up in the winter sale before it sold out. ubiquitousuk did a wonderful review of it on youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GWX2TK1t6gA

I'm halfway through a re-read of "A Canticle for Leibowitz" (not the LE). Discovering new things and realized I had forgotten most of the middle section. Has anyone read the sequel? Is it worth tracking down?

698LesMiserables
Aug 12, 12:15 am

>697 PartTimeBookAddict: Yes, The Living Mountain, was one I literally couldn't put down: read it in one sitting.

699LesMiserables
Edited: Aug 12, 7:35 am

Having just read the first couple of Lewis's Narnia books, The Magician's Nephew and the The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe, I have quickly polished off The Horse and His Boy, Prince Caspian, The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, and The Silver Chair.
Final one of the 7 Narnia novels, The Last Battle, is underway.

700HonorWulf
Aug 12, 9:34 am

Finished The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin (Folio, 2018). A bit of deja vu reading this on the heels of Player of Games as both deal with future utopian societies sending representatives to more primitive worlds that do not conform to human gender norms. The similarities mostly end there as this is a far more meditative piece dealing with themes of alienation, identity and loyalty set against the backdrop of an unforgiving world of perpetual winter. Becky Chambers provides an introduction and David Lupton the moody illustrations, which are nicely incorporated directly into the text.

701booksaplenty1949
Aug 12, 10:36 am

Finally visited my vacation home this summer and retrieved the FS edition of The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich which I’d had mailed there rather than to my house for reasons of postage. Family members have been there in the interim but could not be convinced to check an extra bag for Shirer’s doorstop, even though it is the four-volume edition, not the earlier two-volume FS edition with the red covers and giant swastikas. Now just have to clear a spot on the shelf, next to the one-volume copy I read in high school. Think it was a BOMC selection. Rare that a non-fiction book on a subject which continues to be written about remains in print for 60+ years. Glad to have this impressive edition.

702PartTimeBookAddict
Aug 23, 3:12 pm

Finished "Leibowitz". It is very good sci-fi. Love the little coda with the sharks.

Did a re-read of "The Bell Jar". It's a whirlpool that sucks you into Esther's point of view. A masterful novel.

Now I'm halfway through Tom Holland's "Dominion". His histories are good general overviews, but maybe a bit too scattershot to really engage with. It all feels like skimming, which you have to do when covering so much ground. It's not my favourite type of writing.

Up next: "The Book Thief" because of the upcoming FS LE release.

703Ragnaroekk
Aug 23, 3:32 pm

>702 PartTimeBookAddict:
How would you compare dominion with other Tom Holland books ?
I thought about buying it aswell, but am not sure.

704PartTimeBookAddict
Aug 23, 4:27 pm

>703 Ragnaroekk: I've only also read PAX, which is the third in his sweep of Rome series. It is also done in a similar "greatest hits of history" style. It's as if someone was taking you through wikipedia listings to cram for a finals exam.

That's not to say they're bad. The writing flows fairly well and it's very conversational. They are a great entry point to ancient history. Dominion covers that same ground, but through a Christian lens. I'm now up to Charlemagne and only halfway through the book. So, you're getting some 2500 years in a 500 page book.

I have Rubicon and Persian Fire as trade paperbacks from Abacus press. I think I bought them each for $10 and they have maps and colour photos.
https://www.amazon.ca/Holland-Collection-Rubicon-Dynasty-Millennium/dp/912372142...

I wouldn't waste money on the secondary market for the FS Rubicon. The price of that one is out of control and in all likelihood FS will reprint it along with PAX at some future date.

705elladan0891
Aug 23, 5:56 pm

>699 LesMiserables: Whoever tricked you into reading The Chronicles in the wrong order needs to be turned into a statue. And HarperCollins as a whole will not escape Aslan's wrath for their ridiculous insistence on peddling that artificial silly sequence. :)

706LesMiserables
Aug 23, 7:40 pm

>705 elladan0891: Ha ha. Please explain.

707Ragnaroekk
Edited: Aug 23, 10:51 pm

>704 PartTimeBookAddict:
I hope they will do PAX. Read a couple of Tom Holland books, but with Dominion I wasn't really sure what to do. Its the thematic I think. 2500 years christian mind, I dont know... Maybe I get the Paperpack first.
>706 LesMiserables:
Here are some information:
https://www.narniaweb.com/books/readingorder/

708elladan0891
Edited: Aug 24, 12:16 am

>706 LesMiserables: Well, you might not be aware, but the first Narnia book written and published was The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. Huge part of the book's magic is discovering Narnia together with the children, through the wardrobe in the mysterious mansion. For decades generations of kids (and adults!) had been reading the series in the order the books were published. However, when Harper Collins acquired Narnia publishing rights in the 90s, some genius who will forever burn in hell decided that they need to put a new spin on the series and add a unique Harper touch, so they re-arranged the books in the Narnian chronological order.

To justify the asinine idea, they used a response C.S. Lewis sent to a boy who wrote him a letter asking to settle his dispute with his mother: the mother, being a sensible adult, thought that it was proper to read the books in the order they were released, while the child came up with an imaginative but stupid idea to read the books in the order of Narnian timeline. Of course, Lewis did what any of us would - he decided not to disappoint the boy. Even then he didn't have the will to boldly lie through his teeth and mumbled rather inconclusively in response: "I think I agree with your order for reading the books more than with your mother's...So perhaps it does not matter very much in which order anyone read them." And yet, Harper's marketing lowlifes had the guts to claim that C.S. Lewis actually wanted and intended the books to be read in the Narnian chronological order, and that the great Harper Collins house finally restores justice and presents the series in the order the late author always wanted.

This, of course, doesn't make any sense whatsoever, and is akin to insisting that everyone should read The Silmarillion before The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings simply because the events there happened first on the timeline of the Middle-earth. In doesn't make sense not to unravel the narration gradually as the author wrote it. In The Magician's Nephew the word "Narnia" is used in the very first paragraph, and the book assumes readers' familiarity with the world as it's actually the sixth of the series. On the other hand, if you read The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe second, you'll be reading sentences like "None of the children knew who Aslan was, any more than you do" - while you, of course, already know who Aslan is as you've already read the sixth book first. There is actually a whole body of critical work by various scholars going into detail of how stupid Harper Collins' decision to rearrange books is and how it lessens the impact of the series.

709LesMiserables
Edited: Aug 26, 4:05 pm

>708 elladan0891: Thanks, very informative. I enjoyed them nonetheless. Favourite character of the series is the marsh dwelling creature Puddleglum. Hilarious.

710TonjaE
Aug 24, 9:32 am

I've just picked up In Flanders Fields and will open it right after F1 qualifying is done. Hope everyone is enjoying their weekend. Cheers.

711LesMiserables
Aug 25, 10:45 pm

Currently got a few books on the go at the moment.

The Letters of JRR Tolkien compiled by Humphrey Carpenter

Monks and Wine by Desmond Seward

Out of the Silent Planet CS Lewis

The Holy Bible Douay Rheims translation.

712LesMiserables
Aug 26, 6:38 am

Picked up and devoured this evening, the wonderful Sir Gawain and the Green Knight trans. Simon Armitage, as shown in Warwick's recent thread of same edition.

713podaniel
Aug 26, 10:08 am

>711 LesMiserables:

I am curious what you make of Seward's Monks and Wine. I very much enjoyed the FS edition of his The Monks of War. I guess wine and war are the yin and yang for monks.

714LesMiserables
Edited: Aug 28, 5:51 am

>713 podaniel: Thanks. Enjoying it as I thought I would though still early into it. I've been waylaid by an outing of Sir Gawain, then had a marathon read of Lewis's Out of the Silent Planet to finish it this evening.
So I'm just moving into the third chapter The Benedictine Wines of France.
I find Seward's writing both interesting and engaging. He never disappoints.
I felt I had some gaps in English history a while back especially on the 100 Years War and also the War of the Roses.
I turned to Seward's exposé on both and loved them both.
This particular read on Monks and Wine, is organised for the most part by how individuals orders like the Carthusians or the Benedictines established their relationship with wine. Everything from Dom Pérignon to the Templars is covered.
Looking forward to moving through this.

Edited to add: this is an absolute education in wine. Regions, varietals etc. love it.

715Macumbeira
Aug 28, 10:08 am

Proust's biography by Ghislain de Diesbach

a good read : informative, funny, intriguing

716podaniel
Aug 28, 12:25 pm

>714 LesMiserables:

Thanks--although you are such an enabler.

717LesMiserables
Aug 28, 2:15 pm

>716 podaniel: You're welcome. 😁

718PartTimeBookAddict
Aug 29, 3:34 pm

This has been rough reading week. Bear with me.

I finished “Dominion” and it is not good. Eighty percent of the book is Moments from History that involve Christianity. None of them flow one into another. Most feel thin, and I’m sure you could get a broader picture from looking up the corresponding wikipedia article (e.g. Copernicus, Abelard and Heloise). Take any of them out and it would not hurt or help the book in the slightest. They are all lazy filler.

At the end of the book Holland realizes he has to make some kind of point, so he sets up straw-man arguments that everything good has happened because of Christianity, even when doing the current “right thing” went against pervious Christian doctrine, because it was ALREADY Christianity to act like that and didn’t you already know that? And it’s the only good religion. And people who do bad things are part of bad religions (alluding to the Harvey Weinstein rapes being an echo of the Roman gods because they also raped was a real head-scratcher).

I have the feeling that Holland might be a Bible literalist, but too cowardly to present that way in the book (he protests too much throughout that history is all up for debate, anyway). I looked up a few interviews and he just seems like a twerp. Very happy not to have paid FS prices on this one.

Then I read “The Book Thief.” Boy is it slow. It creaks and groans through some kind of Pollyanna-ish tale that thinks because it is long it is important. No. It is just boring. This should have been 200 pages, not 600. It has an interesting idea to make Death the narrator, but doesn’t really do anything with it. It just fizzles out. A better YA book set in that period is Ian Serraillier’s “The Silver Sword”. That is full of adventure and excitement and flies by. The FS did a wonderful version of it.

Up next: Finishing the "Folio Book of Comic Short Stories" (enjoying that one so far) and Garner’s “The Owl Service.”

719LesMiserables
Aug 29, 5:43 pm

>718 PartTimeBookAddict: You're struggles with above, remind me of my own hopeless exertion with Don DeLillo's Underworld.

The Silver Sword is admirable: completely agree.

720PartTimeBookAddict
Aug 29, 6:26 pm

>719 LesMiserables: I like Underworld quite a bit, but really the standout is the baseball game prologue. You can read that and call it a day.

721BooksFriendsNotFood
Aug 30, 4:12 pm

I got a new e-reader so I'm christening it by reading The Story of King Arthur and His Knights written and illustrated by Howard Pyle, and I'm really enjoying it so far! In addition to the illustrations, I'm particularly having a blast with the language and the episodic narrative structure.

722GardenOfForkingPaths
Aug 31, 6:51 am

I just finished a first reading of The Makioka Sisters in the always dependable Everyman's Library edition. I say 'first reading' because I will surely read this brilliant work again in the coming years. An exquisite, beautifully restrained novel with so much going on between the lines. I'm a bit sad to have come to the end of my journey with the Makioka family today.

With the recent success of the Murakami novels, might FS consider branching out to Tanizaki? Apparently it was a title they were considering in 2011. I can imagine a beautiful edition in a patterned silk binding with period photographs or Japanese style illustrations to accompany the text.

723coynedj
Sep 1, 7:54 pm

Recently finished:

The Quantum Age, Brian Clegg - I learned some and also learned how much I will never understand. There comes a point in some fields when I decide not to try to understand why things work as they do, and instead concentrate on what these unknown forces (indistinguishable from magic) mean for a lowly person such as I. Very useful for that purpose.

Persian Fire: The First World Empire and the Battle for the West, Tom Holland - quite a good read, and very informative. I knew what was going to happen, but still wanted to read on to see what would happen. That's a sign of good writing, in my opinion.

The End of Everything: How War Descends into Annihilation, Victor Davis Hanson - well, let's just say that Holland is a far better historian, in my opinion of course. Hanson tried to make the stories he told connect to current situations, but with very little success. I gave up on it.

In Trouble Again; A Journey Between the Orinoco and the Amazon, Redmond O'Hanlon - regrettably not the FS edition, but a terrific read. I never would have made it.

An Inkeeper's Diary, John Fothergill - FS edition, and a wonderful reminder of the type of books they once published. Despite being an American and not recognizing many of the names and locations mentioned, I found it very entertaining.

The Odyssey, Homer, translated by Emily Wilson - to go with my earlier reading of the Iliad. As with that book, I found this to be quite readable despite my occasional exasperation at the lists of names and such. But, a translation is still a translation - the original book remains the same. Of course we all should read these books, and I find these translations to be an excellent way to do so.

Up next -

The last story in Paul Auster's New York Trilogy, FS edition. I took a break to read The Odyssey, but finish it I will.

Children of Ash and Elm: A History of the Vikings, Neil Price - recommended by Ragnaroekk, and with a user name like that, how could I refuse?

Maybe my next fiction book will be The Forever War, by Joe Haldeman. But one never knows what new shiny object might distract me.

724LesMiserables
Sep 2, 8:15 pm

>716 podaniel: And of course, reading such gems as this is self enabling. From Chapter 6 'Carthusian Wines'
The “Black Wine of Cahors”—Morton Shand calls it “almost as black as ink”—is nowadays no longer black but only a deep red. In its old, black days its principal vine was the Malbec (or Auxerrois) and its best growths were on terraces carved out of the slopes of the valley of the river Lot between Cahors and Puy-l’Evêque. None the less it has some claims to be considered a classic French wine. It was imported into England on a large scale until the eighteenth century, the painter Ingres always drank it for his health despite living in Paris, and Alexandre Dumas respected it. The “Fontaine des Chartreux” in modern Cahors commemorates the charterhouse of Nôtre-Dame-de-Cahors, founded in 1328; like Bompas it had been a Templar commandery—a famous banking centre—which had passed into the hands of the Knights Hospitaller, who handed it to the Carthusians. The monks must have been well used to the black wine and almost certainly produced it for their own consumption. (The fountain itself is over the source of an ancient spring whose spirit was once worshipped by the Gauls and then by the Romans.)

The Black Wine of Cahors! Never heard of it till now. And now I'm intrigued. A must be sampled. The whole book so far is like this.

725A.Godhelm
Edited: Sep 3, 4:48 am

>718 PartTimeBookAddict: Diarmaid MacCulloch did a grand job on A History of Christianity (previously available as a FS set) which sounds like what Holland was aiming for with that book (eg. the history of and influence of Christianity). He's got a lot more space to work with, but I thought he was able to show how changes in theological interpretations, and the schisms, also send forth new ideas and seeds that ultimately change the course of history.
Bart Ehrman has a closely themed (and shorter) book called The Triumph of Christianity, where the focus is instead on explaining how the religion quickly became so prevalent in the early stages.
I think both of them are well worth the read.

As to my own reading it's currently Austerlitz by Sebald to be followed by A Man in Full by Wolfe.

726N11284
Sep 3, 8:30 am

>724 LesMiserables: I will be making my bi-annual visit to the Lot in a few weeks time. I intend to drink copious amounts of the stuff. :-)

727affle
Sep 3, 9:18 am

>724 LesMiserables:

I don't think the black wine in its traditional form ever returned after the phylloxera calamity of the late C19. I had a house close by the Lot for 20 years until a few years back, and can confirm the modern wine is most agreeable.

728podaniel
Sep 3, 9:52 am

>724 LesMiserables:

Stop it! I've already ordered a copy. And I don't need any new wine recommendations--enabler.

729PartTimeBookAddict
Sep 3, 11:56 am

>725 A.Godhelm: Yes. I need to try that one. I've had MacCulloch recommended to me before.

Thanks for the Ehrman recommendation. That's a particularly interesting time frame. I'll search it out.

730cronshaw
Sep 3, 4:19 pm

Treasure Island, in Folio's 2014 edition. I'm thoroughly enjoying being catapulted back to my childhood.

731BooksFriendsNotFood
Sep 3, 5:29 pm

>730 cronshaw: I only read this (not FS) for the first time a month or two ago and it was fantastic! N.C. Wyeth's illustrations are also great.

732LesMiserables
Edited: Sep 4, 2:42 am

>730 cronshaw: A firm favourite too.
>728 podaniel: I will desist. Quite unintended enabling of course. 😉
>727 affle: No doubt, but wouldn't it be nice for someone to reproduce as closely as possible the original tipple? All the rage these days.
>726 N11284: Quite envious. Down in Australia we do have some wonderful wine regions especially in South Australia: Clare, Coonawarra, McLaren Vale, Adelaide Hills, Barossa etc. The cépage is driven around Shiraz however and I'm reliably informed that despite some beautiful expressions, of which I have quaffed far too many, they don't hold a candle to the French vineyards.

Finally, lest one thinks that my proliferation of this book may be in the making injurious and imprudent, let me close with this quote from later in the Carthusian chapter to set minds and livers at ease...

"Ironically, the Carthusian diet seems to make for health and old age. In 1948 the British Ministry of Health was so impressed by the longevity of the death certificates from the only modern English charterhouse that it actually sent a team to investigate the phenomenon. The team was unable to discover any explanation.

733podaniel
Sep 4, 12:03 pm

>733 podaniel:

I have received my copy of Monks and Wine. You failed to mention that it was one of those old-time "deluxe" productions lavishly illustrated throughout. At one time, FS would do these kind of editions, too (particularly the presentation volumes). I miss them. Grudgingly, thanks for the enablement.

734elladan0891
Edited: Sep 4, 3:45 pm

>724 LesMiserables: The black wine of Cahors had a long history of being imported into Russia. If you need recommendations, Peter the Great loved the stuff; according to one legend he even forced the Russian Orthodox Church to use it as Sacramental wine.

Whether the legend is true or not (more likely not), Cahors did become a popular Sacramental wine in the Russian Empire, without a doubt helped by its deep red color adding to the blood symbolism. Moreover, it led to the development of a new Russian fortified wine Kagor (named directly after Cahors - both are spelled the same in Russian) which built on features of Cahors such as the deep red color which stayed even after being diluted with water and added new ones considered improvements in terms of using it for the Eucharist by the Church, such as longevity of the fortified wines (helps with storage) and sweetness (works better for kids). Eventually the word "Cahors", or "Kagor" even became synonymous with sacramental wine.

735elladan0891
Sep 4, 3:43 pm

>722 GardenOfForkingPaths: With the recent success of the Murakami novels, might FS consider branching out to Tanizaki? Apparently it was a title they were considering in 2011.

I'd say unlikely. 2024 FS is very different from 2011 FS. Murukami is very popular, bestselling and cultish. Tanizaki is classic - not mainstream, without large cult following, no elves or space ships involved - a hard sell for FS now.

>722 GardenOfForkingPaths: I can imagine a beautiful edition in a patterned silk binding with period photographs or Japanese style illustrations to accompany the text.

I'd buy that!

736LesMiserables
Sep 4, 4:18 pm

>733 podaniel: I'm glad you're happy with it. You will enjoy it for sure.

>734 elladan0891: Really interesting. Thanks, I didn't know that.

737cronshaw
Edited: Sep 4, 6:16 pm

>735 elladan0891: Tanizaki is classic - not mainstream, without large cult following, no elves or space ships involved - a hard sell for FS now,

Sad and probably true, but it made me chortle, thanks!

>731 BooksFriendsNotFood: N.C. Wyeth's illustrations are great. I was torn between an edition that has Wyeth's images and the latest F.S. edition illustrated by Sterling Hundley. It was more the binding design and endpapers that decided me initially, Hundley's other illustrations have since grown on me: I like their general darkness though a couple of them including the frontispiece have rather a CGI feel which I'm not crazy about. I would have liked more landscape illustrations and fewer close-ups of individual figures, there's a notable absence of images of Treasure Island itself. Overall it's a beautiful edition and Stevenson's original map is well reproduced.

(edited to remove an erroneous reference to an earlier Folio edition of Treasure Island having illustrations by N.C. Wyeth)

738BooksFriendsNotFood
Sep 4, 4:44 pm

>737 cronshaw: Thanks for sharing your thoughts on it!

739LesMiserables
Sep 4, 4:55 pm

>737 cronshaw: On the topic of Folio's Stevenson publications, my preference lies with the Bannister illustrations. I have three: Treasure Island, Kidnapped, and Catriona.

I might also recommend a really excellent reading/study edition, edited by Barry Menikoff using the 1886 William Boucher illustrations. It provides the original text along with copious introduction, notes on the text, endnotes, glossary, and gazetteer.

Apologies for any enabling.

740cronshaw
Edited: Sep 4, 5:36 pm

>739 LesMiserables: Thank you. I've never been even slightly offended by any enabling.

Correct me if I'm wrong but I thought Folio used Bannister only for Kidnapped and Catriona, and that Mr. Wyeth's old illustrations were reproduced for the matching Treasure Island of that series of five Stevenson editions from around 2006. I didn't care for Bannister's illustrations particularly nor for the general buckram binding design of that series, though I do have the Master of Ballantrae from the set as it's the only edition Folio have done of the work and I like Graham Baker Smith's illustrations. As a result I have a very motley FS set of Stevenson's works: Dr Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1948) with Mervyn Peake's inimitable illustrations, The Beach of Falesa (1959), Travels with a Donkey (1981) with Edward Ardizzone's classic drawings, Kidnapped (1986), Catriona (1988), Master of Ballantrae (2006) and Treasure Island (2014). Heretically, I also have the Heritage Press (1957) edition of Travels with a Donkey interloping in the line-up as I love the quirky colourful illustrations by Roger Duvoisin. I'm partial to the resulting higgledy-piggledy presentation on the shelf.

741Jayked
Sep 4, 5:45 pm

>740 cronshaw: Bannister did TI, K and C; Graham Baker Smith did Master of Ballantrae and Jekyll and Hyde.

742cronshaw
Sep 4, 6:06 pm

>741 Jayked: Thank you for correcting me and apologies to LesMis for doubting his recollection :)

743LesMiserables
Sep 4, 6:35 pm

>741 Jayked: Thanks for clarifying.

>742 cronshaw: No bother at all. I do recall buying my particular copy as it came from an unusual source (at least to me). Back in 2009 I came across the British Library online shop and got it as part of a wider order. Interestingly, the books in the BL were actually discounted and cheaper than the FS at the time. It cost me the princely sum of £19.96.

The whole and very interesting thread about pricing and as an offshoot, the British Library online shop selling FS books at a 20% discount including LEs with free shipping worldwide , is here. https://www.librarything.com/topic/70511#1509948

744LesMiserables
Sep 4, 7:27 pm

>740 cronshaw:

I don't have that Heritage Press ed. of Travels with a Donkey. I must look that up.

I too have a few RLS Folio treatments (15 volumes with date of printing and illustrator):
- A Child's Garden of Verses 1998 (Helen Smithson)
- The Amateur Emigrant and the Silverado Squatters 1991 (Multiple illustrators/photographs) Endpapers by Denys Baker
- The 3 Volume Boxset 2004 An Inland Voyahe, In the South Seas, Across the Plains (Nick Hardcastle)
- Travels with a Donkey 2004 (Edward Ardizzone)
- Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde 2022 (John Hampden)
- Treasure Island 2017 (Sterling Hundley)
- The Body Snatcher and Other Stories 2007 (Michael Foreman)
- The Isle of Voices and Other Stories 2007 (Michael Foreman)
- Treasure island 2007 (Philip Bannister)
- The Master of Ballantrae 2006 (Graham Baker Smith)
- Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde 2006 (Graham Baker Smith)
- Catriona 2006 (Philip Bannister)
- Kidnapped 2007 (Philip Bannister)

745homeless
Sep 4, 8:06 pm

>684 HonorWulf: Does Folio publish the unabridged editions of Verne's books?

746HonorWulf
Sep 4, 9:03 pm

>745 homeless: Yep. 20,000 Leagues and Journey use the William Butcher translation, same as Oxford Press. The current edition of Around the World uses the Desages translation (I would avoid the old 1982 edition that uses the Towle translation).

747DZWB
Sep 5, 3:49 am

Regeneration - the trilogy would make a lovely Folio edition, perhaps as a set. It's a beautiful book.

748David_Mauduit
Sep 5, 4:23 am

I finished Parable of the Sower. It was my first Butler novel. I really enjoyed it a lot.
A FS edition in the still of Kindred would be nice. I'm now curious to read Kindred and to see how the Conversation Tree Press edition will look like.

749Dr.Fiddy
Sep 5, 7:36 am

Just finished the FS editions of Kafka's The Trial and The Castle. I need something lighter and something with a plot now...

750podaniel
Sep 5, 11:34 am

>747 DZWB:

Agreed--I'd buy that in a heartbeat. Pat Barker also wrote some "sequels" I'd be interested in.

751PartTimeBookAddict
Sep 6, 2:21 pm

Finished "The Folio Book of Comic Short Stories". It is a good collection. The standout is P.G. Wodehouse, as always. I also liked Muriel Spark's quite a bit.

Alan Garner’s “The Owl Service” is a really strange, haunting book. I had no expectations going in. It is much more of a tense poltergeist book than a children's story and has a very ambiguous ending. I'm grateful for the introduction by Susan Cooper and the illustrations were great. Recommended.

Up next: Halfway through "Heretics of Dune". The fifth in the series and it's loosing steam for me. I'll finish the 6 Frank books and end there.

752LesMiserables
Edited: Sep 10, 12:04 am

Just finished the wonderful Monks and Wine by Desmond Seward.

Absolutely loved reading this. Perhaps my favourite read of 2024 to date.

So many places to read further about and visit, even in my neck of the woods like Sevenhills in Clare Valley, South Australia, and Mission Estate Winery in Hawke's Bay, New Zealand.

753LesMiserables
Edited: Sep 8, 5:09 am

Just finished reading Mr. Bliss by JRR Tolkien. Love Tolkien's illustrations which are indispensable to the story as he refers to them as narrator. I do think JRRT was being overly modest when he remarked in his letters to Allen and Unwin that all he could draw were maps.

Also just finished Farmer Giles of Ham and The Adventures of Tom Bombadil by JRR Tolkien with Pauline Baynes' illustrations.

Reading on today, I completed the Harper Collins edition of JRR Tolkien's, The Lay of Aotrou & Itroun which includes Corrigan Poems 1 and 2. Edited by Evelyn Flieger.

754Macumbeira
Sep 8, 6:20 am

Finished my Proust bio. It was so good, I am tempted to reread it for the pleasure of the exquisite French in which it is written.
On the other hand, there is a reprint of Davenport's "Geography of Imagination", which reminded me that I have this genius' work in my library. I read it almost a decade ago. Time for a reread ?

755LesMiserables
Sep 8, 6:38 am

>754 Macumbeira: I really should read A la recherche du temps perdu. Another one that got away.

756Macumbeira
Sep 8, 12:03 pm

Don't regret the ones that got away. Remember with fondness the ones you did enjoy.

757LesMiserables
Sep 9, 2:04 am

Maiden read of The FS published War Horse by Michael Morpurgo.
Charming illustrations and a quaint narrative, touching towards the end.

758LesMiserables
Sep 10, 12:02 am

Now reading Bilbo's Journey by Joseph Pearce.

759LesMiserables
Sep 12, 6:21 am

Just started reading City of God by St Augustine, translation by Dods. Folio Edition 2012.

760podaniel
Sep 12, 11:22 am

>759 LesMiserables:

Finally--a book (in the FS version) that I've read before you. The translation is great and although some consider the first part (the apologia for Christianity against Pagan attacks) tedious, I thoroughly enjoyed the entire work.

761HonorWulf
Sep 12, 2:40 pm

Finished Sharpe's Tiger by Bernard Cornwell (Folio, 2020). More entertaining than historically insightful, this is a quick romp through the Siege of Seringapatam of 1799, which marked the end of the Anglo-Mysore Wars. It also serves as the first part of Cornwell's India Trilogy; a prequel to his long-running Napoleonic Wars series that explores the formative days of the future Duke Wellington through the eyes of his fictional protagonist, Richard Sharpe. The book sports an attractive cloth cover, with (too few) illustrations from Douglas Smith, and a brief introduction from Cornwell himself.

762Ragnaroekk
Sep 12, 4:28 pm

>761 HonorWulf:
What do you think about the flogging of Sharpe ?
I think it was unrealistic and destroyed alot of charme.
He was flogged to the bone and had a new mission immediately after... what ?? 99% of all people wouldn't survive such wounds in such a time. There wasn't even time for him to properly heal his wounds...
I didn't read the other books though.

763LesMiserables
Sep 12, 4:46 pm

>760 podaniel: Hooray! Actually this was one high on my TBR list for a while, but just as I sat down to read the FS edition, just to the right shoulder sat on a shelf, the Henry Bettenson translation by Penguin. However in a personal crusade I'm starting to actually read my Folio books, rather than them watching me from the shelves, I stuck to task and got stuck into it.

It's very readable so far and glad to finally get this off and running.

764ubiquitousuk
Edited: Sep 12, 4:52 pm

I am reading the Folio edition of Misery and it prompts a lot of mixed feelings. King is a global mega-seller for a reason and it makes nice light reading after a looong day, even if utterly frivolous. Also, the edition is quite nice and I like Kinsella's illustrations. But I am not convinced I really need a deluxe edition of a book like this.

765HonorWulf
Sep 12, 4:55 pm

>762 Ragnaroekk: Definitely unrealistic, but that's the thing with prequels - it's hard to create that sense of dread when you know what's going to happen. Cornwell boxed himself into a corner with a need to explain the back scars and sacrificed some credibility to make it "epic". Probably would have bothered me more if I wasn't already familiar with the series.

766Ragnaroekk
Sep 13, 2:19 am

>764 ubiquitousuk:
One of his best, in my opinion. The movie is great aswell.

767CJDelDotto
Edited: Sep 13, 2:00 pm

I've recently been reading New Selected Stories by Thomas Mann, translated by Damion Searls. It occurred to me to check which Mann works FS has published, and there are surprisingly few, only Buddenbrook in the terrible, old Lowe-Porter translation, Magic Mountain in the more recent translation by John E. Woods, and Death in Venice as part of The Folio Book of Short Novels. I was taken aback that there was never a separate FS edition of Death in Venice, but I probably shouldn't have been, given how little German literature has been published by FS.

768LesMiserables
Sep 15, 8:11 am

Just finished reading The Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien: Revised and Expanded Edition edited by Humphrey Carpenter and Christopher Tolkien.

Outstanding collection.

769cronshaw
Edited: Sep 15, 8:25 am

I'm reading The Maltese Falcon for the first time and thoroughly enjoying Sam Spade & Co.

The Folio edition is charming, bound in full red cloth with appropriate noir comic style illustrations, very inexpensive on the secondary market - there are several copies available for below £15 including P&P!

770LesMiserables
Sep 15, 11:17 pm

Back into Livy: just completed Book 8 of the History of Rome (unabridged) translated by Rev. Canon Roberts.

771N11284
Sep 16, 6:09 am

Reading Montaillou prompted by wcarter in another thread. This has been sitting on my shelf since February 2016. The invoice is still inside the cover showing the price of £5.99 from e-Bay. As he says, not one for a full read but full of interesting sections.

772LesMiserables
Sep 16, 6:41 am

Adding How to Cook a Hippopotamus to my current reads. Just arrived today after coming across Warwick's enabler.

773Ragnaroekk
Sep 16, 3:28 pm

Just finished Red Rising by Pierce Brown. Just took me one day. What an absolutely brilliant book. I absolutely love it.

774assemblyman
Sep 16, 3:39 pm

I just finished East of Eden. While I did enjoy it I think I prefer The Grapes of Wrath and Of Mice and Men. Both of the latter made more of an impression on me.

The FS edition is a great edition to read though.

775PartTimeBookAddict
Sep 16, 3:53 pm

>774 assemblyman: I find "Eden" a little too long.

Have you read "Cannery Row" and "Sweet Thursday"? They're the lighter side of Steinbeck and very good.

776assemblyman
Sep 16, 4:19 pm

>775 PartTimeBookAddict: I have read neither yet. Thank you for the recommendations. I will add them to my ever growing TBR :)

777PartTimeBookAddict
Sep 16, 4:26 pm

>776 assemblyman: You're welcome. They're only novellas. I reread them this year back to back and really enjoyed them.

778LesMiserables
Sep 16, 5:13 pm

>774 assemblyman: Interesting. East of Eden definitely left a deeper impression upon me: so much darker.
I thoroughly enjoyed the others you mention, GoW and OMaM.
About 8 years ago I visited the US, and partly due to how magnificent EoE was, I made sure I drove up from Santa Ynez region where I was visiting (because of impression the film Sideways made upon me), up though the Salinas Valley to San Francisco. Visited the Steinbeck museum, Monterey etc.
Also brilliant to get to the Robert Louis Stevenson House in Monterey. Unfortunately we visited St Helena on the day the RLS museum was closed! But we did go for a hike up a shoulder of the mountain to the spot, now derelict, where RLS stayed in Silverado Squatters.
Great trip.

779assemblyman
Sep 16, 6:08 pm

>778 LesMiserables: It’s a bit hard to articulate. I think I just felt a disconnect with some characters at times during the book. It did not stop me from enjoying it overall. I didn’t have that issue with the other two books I have read. It may be a case I reread it sometime in the future and have a different view as has happened with some other books I have read in the past. I do enjoy Steinbeck’s writing in general.

Wow, it sounds like a great trip.

780PartTimeBookAddict
Sep 16, 7:07 pm

Finished "Heretics of Dune". I found it enjoyable enough, but nothing that exceeds the others in the series. There were some neat The Flash/bullettime fight scenes though.

Thanks to this group I also read "Nightmare in Berlin" by Hans Fallada. (from The Book Thief Thread). A new discovery for me. Bleak WW2 fiction from a German civilian perspective.

Also, thanks to A.Godhelm, "The Triumph of Christianity" by Bart D. Ehrman. A much more thoughtful and better researched book than Holland's "Dominion". I recommend it.

Next up: A re-read of "Hell's Angels" by Hunter S. Thompson and "A Brief History of Time" by Stephen Hawking.

781LesMiserables
Sep 16, 8:09 pm

>779 assemblyman: Yes, fond memories.

782bacchus.
Edited: Sep 18, 4:24 pm

>769 cronshaw: I just finished it, and although it was fun to read, I don’t understand why it’s (still?) considered a classic. Sam’s character probably didn’t age that well :) It’s probably the only detective book I’ve ever read, so I’m definitely clueless on the genre. I might follow up with the film. The FS edition is charming indeed.

783coynedj
Sep 18, 5:10 pm

>782 bacchus.: If you do watch the film (which I recommend), realize that you've already read the screenplay. Rarely does a film follow the book so tightly, down to using the exact same dialogue.

784PartTimeBookAddict
Sep 18, 6:04 pm

>782 bacchus.: It's considered a classic because it kicks ass and takes names.

Read "Red Harvest" and "The Thin Man" next and thank me later.

785booksaplenty1949
Edited: Sep 20, 11:40 pm

>779 assemblyman: Have to admit I know East of Eden only from the (quite worthwhile) movie (with James Dean) but a blogger I follow sporadically thinks that the novel explores more important themes related to ongoing American conflicts than the movie had time to deal with. So do mean to get to it one of these days. Turned off Steinbeck after being forced to read The Pearl in high school but when I finally got to The Grapes of Wrath in later life I found it quite powerful. Read deteriorating paperback I’d picked up years earlier at a yard sale or some such but then replaced with FS edition when I realised this was an important novel.

786booksaplenty1949
Sep 20, 11:37 pm

>782 bacchus.: Film is a lifetime must.

787LesMiserables
Sep 21, 4:29 am

>785 booksaplenty1949: Please invest the time in reading EOE my friend. In places the raw evil is palpably written. It took me aback actually.

788bacchus.
Sep 21, 5:56 am

>783 coynedj: >786 booksaplenty1949: I watched the film last night and, although I enjoyed my depiction of Spade more, aside from a few scenes, the film followed the book very faithfully (indeed word for word most of the times). If I’m ever given the opportunity to recommend the book to someone, I would suggest watching the film. In my opinion, it’s one of the rare cases where the film fully captures or even surpasses the book.

>784 PartTimeBookAddict: Thank you, I will keep these in mind. For “The Thin Man” I’ll definitely watch the film first.

789assemblyman
Sep 21, 5:56 am

>785 booksaplenty1949: I would definitely recommend reading it. I found it worthwhile overall. It has a lot more depths to it than the film. I just found GOW and OMAM affected me more after reading them.

790booksaplenty1949
Sep 21, 7:00 am

>789 assemblyman: In the case of OMAM one can also see the opera!

791cronshaw
Edited: Sep 21, 7:38 am

Seeing the garish green-on-black colouring of the cover of the new FS edition of To Kill a Mockingbird made me appreciate my old 1999 Folio copy all the more, to the extent I'm now re-reading it and having much fun meeting Scout, Jem, Dill, Atticus and Calpurnia again.

792cronshaw
Sep 21, 7:40 am

>782 bacchus.: >783 coynedj: >786 booksaplenty1949: I had no idea there was a film (one must get out more), so I shall look out for it, thanks.

793coynedj
Sep 21, 10:07 am

>788 bacchus.: While The Maltese Falcon film followed the book incredibly closely, The Thin Man does not, in a way that spoiled it for me. I don't want to go into detail and spoil it for you, but I'd recommend reading the book first.

794FitzJames
Edited: Sep 21, 10:30 am

>793 coynedj: The first Thin Man leaves something to be desired, but deserves to be watched alone for the sheer delight that is William Powell and Myrna Loy together. That and the following three likewise (the first four being directed by W. S. Van Dyke).

795LesMiserables
Oct 5, 7:52 am

Finally completed the Holy Bible, the Douay-Rheims Version. I have been following a 1 year reading plan that mirrors the liturgical year from Advent through to the last week after Pentecost. So finished 5 weeks ahead of schedule as I found the eschatological works in the prophets compelling reading.
Will be starting again on the first Sunday of Advent.

Also finished a good few books of Livy recently from books 8 through to 34. So working my way hopefully in next couple of weeks on the last 11 surviving books.

796booksaplenty1949
Oct 5, 8:40 am

>795 LesMiserables: Will you be re-reading the same version? “And God said ‘Be light made.’ “ It’s not famous for its prose style, despite Challoner’s heavy editing of the original effort.

797LesMiserables
Oct 5, 8:48 am

>796 booksaplenty1949: Yes, probably, as I’m used to hearing the DR at Church each Sunday and it’s what I’m used to. If I could improve my Latin I’d read St Jerome’s Vulgate but I’d need to put some serious hours into that.

798booksaplenty1949
Oct 5, 8:56 am

>797 LesMiserables: It’s what you’re used to, and you’ve read it all the way through. Now, perhaps, another version would provide a fresh perspective on things previously unconsidered. Just a thought.

799ubiquitousuk
Oct 5, 9:19 am

I just finished The Journals 1768–1779 by James Cook. It was sometimes a bit of a slog to get through 630 pages of nautical logs, many of which dryly report latitudes, longitudes and prevailing wind conditions. But it is rewarding to reach the end and see the story come to its conclusion, distressing as that conclusion is. It's also quite interesting to read first hand accounts of early encounters with the natives of distant lands.

I personally found the accounts of the first and third voyages quite interesting, whereas the second was particularly dry. But the good news is that there is an excellent account of that voyage by Anders Sparrman in a nice edition by the Golden Cockerel Press.

800LesMiserables
Oct 5, 4:27 pm

>798 booksaplenty1949: Perhaps, although there are some really awful versions out there, especially those of a more modern ilk. And of course some versions are consciously mistranslated to suit sectarian agendas, which is another consideration, and finally some versions omit sections altogether.

801booksaplenty1949
Oct 5, 7:51 pm

>800 LesMiserables: Of course. But there are readable versions with an imprimatur. Think about it.

802LesMiserables
Oct 6, 1:07 am

>801 booksaplenty1949: Any suggestions? I’ve looked at Knox, but not much of the more modern options, although I hear promising things about the Ignatius Study Bible volumes.

804LesMiserables
Oct 6, 6:18 am

>803 booksaplenty1949: Thanks. Appreciated. Keen to carry on the conversation but maybe not to hog this channel. I’ll PM you.

805jillmwo
Oct 6, 1:09 pm

Working my way through the three-volume set of Poirot short stories (Folio Society, 2003). I've read the stories before in other formats, but the print versions here offer a different kind of reading experience. On one level, I'd almost say they allow space for slower consumption and consideration. Sometimes the PBS Masterpiece adaptations with David Suchet made changes that shifted the narrative emphasis found in the original material.

806PartTimeBookAddict
Oct 6, 1:32 pm

>805 jillmwo: That is a great set.

I'm going through Christie's Battle books. "The Secret of Chimneys" & "The Seven Dials Mystery" are twists on interwar espionage books. "Towards Zero" is closer to a Poirot style murder mystery.

Up next: "Murder is Easy"

807booksaplenty1949
Oct 6, 1:33 pm

>805 jillmwo: When Poirot TV show was more or less in first run I made a habit of reading the relevant short story after watching each epi. Have to say that generally speaking the writing in the TV series was better: inherent humour in Poirot’s character brought out more effectively, more byplay with Hastings, who was written into some TV epis where he did not appear in the short story. Let’s face it—-Christie was a master of plotting but not much else. I read an exchange somewhere between her and Dorothy Sayers to the effect that she came to hate Poirot almost as much as Sayers hated Wimsey. Or maybe that was a myth.

808PartTimeBookAddict
Oct 6, 2:10 pm

>807 booksaplenty1949: The humour in the tv show is a lot cornier than in the books. It makes sense because I don't think the average tv audience would have much patience for the acerbic and prissy book Poirot. Suchet is still the best live-action Poirot though.

Also, let's face it, you don't create TWO of of the most enduring detective characters of all time on plotting alone. There's more going on there.

809booksaplenty1949
Edited: Oct 6, 2:43 pm

>808 PartTimeBookAddict: Presumably Christie saw Poirot as a more-or-less realistic portrayal of a Franco-Belgian, at least initially. She’s pretty big on crude ethnic stereotypes. Obviously that wasn’t going to cut it in 1990.

810PartTimeBookAddict
Oct 6, 2:47 pm

>809 booksaplenty1949: Yes. Her snobbery is evident in most of her books. Still, characters going strong over a century later is quite an achievement.

811jillmwo
Oct 6, 3:24 pm

>810 PartTimeBookAddict: and >809 booksaplenty1949: Certainly her writing reflects the perceptions of social structure and attitudes of the time. However, based on some of the stories, I think people underestimate her. The one I'm reading right now is Dead Man's Mirror and Christie makes clear that she doesn't share the prejudices of the overweening Sir. Gustave Chevenix-Gore. His adopted daughter will go on and marry the man she prefers -- not the man her adopted father thinks more appropriate to the family standing. She'll do without the family funding if need be. Another story, The Underdog is very much about the blurring of social boundaries and that is one that the television adaptation totally corrupted in terms of meaning. In the episode, it's all about corporate espionage (and the original story has nothing at all to do with that).

812booksaplenty1949
Edited: Oct 6, 4:16 pm

>811 jillmwo: I’m not talking about snobbery. Accounts of her childhood and background found on the web are somewhat inconsistent, but with an American father and an Anglo-Irish mother she doubtless enjoyed affluence but no particular social cachet. The fine points of class distinction are beyond her. I am talking about ethnicity. Title of Ten Little N-words has had to be changed twice.

813BooksFriendsNotFood
Oct 6, 4:12 pm

Yeah, you can't get away from racism in some Christie mysteries or in many books considered classics today. I haven't watched the Poirot or Marple shows but my favorite Christie screen adaptations have got to be Agatha Christie's Criminal Games (which is the English title). It's part of the Les petits meurtres d'Agatha Christie series and it's cool because it's set in 1950s France and the Christie detectives (Poirot, Marple, etc.) aren't even characters in it. It's visuals, characters, settings and context for each mystery are super fun.

814booksaplenty1949
Oct 6, 4:27 pm

>813 BooksFriendsNotFood: I gather Christie’s early novels have been laundered of their casual anti-Semitism in re-release.

815PartTimeBookAddict
Oct 6, 4:38 pm

>812 booksaplenty1949: Class-snobbery, racism, jingoism, chauvinism all boils down to the same thing: I'm better than the "others".

Christie had it to a small degree and I'm sure all the leftist book burners will get around to her soon enough.

She also had incredible talent. She wasn't just "a master of plotting and not much else." Which, even if that was all she was good at, is still nothing to curl up your nose at. I would like to see you try it. It is incredibly hard to do well.

816BooksFriendsNotFood
Oct 6, 6:09 pm

Christie is one of my favorite authors (even though I have yet to read her non-mysteries) so I really love the plotting, writing, characters, sense of humor, etc. in her books. The author I have found closest to her personally is Georgette Heyer, which is why I love her as well.

817A.Godhelm
Oct 6, 7:36 pm

>813 BooksFriendsNotFood: I've seldom heard a bad word about Suchet's Poirot. He's iconic in that role.

818BooksFriendsNotFood
Oct 6, 8:17 pm

>817 A.Godhelm: I read more widely than I watch so I haven't seen it, but I absolutely believe it!

819booksaplenty1949
Edited: Oct 6, 9:08 pm

>815 PartTimeBookAddict: I wasn’t knocking plotting—-especially in a mystery story it’s a crucial element. When mystery authors like Elizabeth George and Louise Penny start writing longer and longer books with lots of character development and plots that continue from one book to the next it’s clear to me that they have lost interest in the mystery genre and are trying to write novels. Falling between two stools is the usual metaphor for the result. The Tommy and Tuppence series is the closest Christie came to this and they are pretty dire, IMHO, but at least they are short.

820booksaplenty1949
Oct 6, 9:11 pm

Poirot’s suicide also v problematic. This man was supposedly a practising Catholic, for heaven’s sake!

821BooksFriendsNotFood
Oct 6, 9:13 pm

>820 booksaplenty1949: Ah shoot I haven't read all the Poirot books yet. Hopefully my brain will forget this in time.

822Eumnestes
Oct 7, 9:34 am

I've started reading the FS selection of John Donne's prose, originally published by the publisher in 1997. It's a pretty if not spectacular edition, bound in vellum and blocked with text, the "no man is an island" passage from the Devotions, the phrase that in fact FS uses to title this volume.

As you would expect, the volume is thoughtfully put together. Edited by Rivers Scott, it includes the juvenalia, the treatise on suicide, some of the most entertaining letters, the Devotions (Donne's autobiographical account of a serious illness), and selections from the best sermons (Donne was a kind of rock star London preacher). Scott chose to include almost no notes and to silently trim phrases and sentences that would likely impede modern readers. This creates a pleasing minimalism, although some readers might appreciate a few more judiciously placed notes. I haven't compared to Donne's original to see if Scott's trimming distorts anything.

I have read most of the material before, but this time I am struck by how quickly Donne can oscillate between sincere feeling and ironic amusement. I'm reading Biathanatos (the first defense of suicide in the English language), and am simply not sure if Donne is motivated by a sympathy for spiritually desperate/mentally ill people, or if he's carrying out a kind of academic exercise of defending an indefensible (from a premodern Christian point of view) position.

In any case, if you have every been tempted to sample Donne's prose, I would say that this is an excellent volume to use.

823abysswalker
Oct 7, 9:52 am

>822 Eumnestes: the introduction to this Donne volume is also quite enjoyable and informative. This was one of the first Folio books I bought, purchased secondhand.

824booksaplenty1949
Edited: Oct 7, 10:56 am

>821 BooksFriendsNotFood: Sorry. Didn’t mean to be a spoiler. Christie wrote the novel/story in question relatively early on but was persuaded to withhold its publication. Like Sherlock Holmes going over the falls, I imagine—-a sign that she was tired of the character, even if readers were not. Not really in character for Poirot.

825HonorWulf
Oct 7, 11:09 am

>824 booksaplenty1949: I thought Curtain was written at the onset of WW2 as an insurance policy for her daughter, locked away in a vault, and always intended on publication after her death. She did likewise with Miss Marple and Sleeping Murder for her husband.

826booksaplenty1949
Edited: Oct 7, 1:50 pm

>825 HonorWulf: Well, it was published while she was still alive. Her motivation for locking it away seems unclear—there is no citation given for Wikipedia’s speculation on the subject. Article does reiterate her eventual dislike for Poirot.

827HonorWulf
Oct 7, 2:49 pm

>826 booksaplenty1949: Yes, when Christie had Curtain and Murder In Retrospect (later Sleeping Murder) locked away, she also assigned the copyright to her daughter and husband respectively so that they would be guaranteed to profit off of them after her death. After Christie became crippled in 1974 and could no longer write, she authorized them publish the final books and she died shortly after Curtain was published but before Sleeping Murder. I always viewed this as an act of love for both her characters as well as her family, despite her obvious love-hate relationship with the character of Poirot.

828BooksFriendsNotFood
Oct 7, 5:00 pm

>824 booksaplenty1949: Reading the Sherlock stories in order was definitely amusing because the author really kept trying to be done with Sherlock but nobody would let him quit XD

829booksaplenty1949
Oct 7, 9:25 pm

>827 HonorWulf: Christie’s estate already worth millions by the 1940s so I’m not sure why these mss were financially important, but we do not generally look to mystery story writers for investment insights.

830Ragnaroekk
Oct 8, 1:46 am

>828 BooksFriendsNotFood:
The author continued the series because his other novels found no big success with the masses

831BooksFriendsNotFood
Oct 8, 7:44 am

>830 Ragnaroekk: This explanation seems to match up with my impressions during reading but I can’t guarantee that it’s all correct: https://literature.stackexchange.com/questions/255/why-did-sir-arthur-conan-doyl...

832LesMiserables
Oct 8, 7:49 am

Thoroughly enjoying Trollope's The Warden on a recommendation: the FS 1995 edition with excellent illustrations.

833booksaplenty1949
Oct 8, 8:31 am

>832 LesMiserables: Apropos of Trollope, I recall hearing an anecdote to the effect that after overhearing someone comment at a party that s/he was getting tired of a continuing character in the Barsetshire novels (whom I will not identify for fear of dropping another spoiler), he “went home and killed” that character. There’s a big difference between being a starving artiste and being a commercial novelist. For the latter, the consumer is King.

834HonorWulf
Oct 8, 9:11 am

>829 booksaplenty1949: 'Tis a mystery, but this was during The Blitz, so one would have to assume that fear of Nazi occupation and subsequent confiscation of physical wealth was a driving factor.

835booksaplenty1949
Oct 8, 12:33 pm

>834 HonorWulf: Might have been more straightforward to transfer money to an American bank. I’m sure that was the usual strategy of wealthy Brits.

836Eumnestes
Oct 9, 12:07 pm

>823 abysswalker: Yes, I agree; Scott strikes just the right tone and length in his introduction. FS does a nice job selecting its editors.

837Boschfan
Oct 10, 2:55 pm

>832 LesMiserables:

Glad you're enjoying this. There are plenty of riches to be found amongst his other works.

Currently reading the FS 1994 John Mortimer Rumpole stories and thoroughly enjoying.

838HonorWulf
Edited: Oct 12, 8:18 am

Finished Rendezvous with Rama by Arthur C. Clarke (Folio, 2020). A clinical and interesting take on the first contact story, with a future space crew encountering an alien artifact that enters the solar system. Will make a wonderful Denis Villeneuve film one day. Beware the introduction by sci-fi critic John Clute if you haven't read the book before as it walks through the plot (including the ending) and is better positioned as an afterword. The illustrations by Matt Griffin are few and far between, but clean and appealing when they do appear.

839bacchus.
Oct 11, 9:45 am

>838 HonorWulf: I’d recommend Rama 2 also. The others not so much.

840HonorWulf
Oct 11, 9:57 am

>839 bacchus.: Thanks! Have heard mixed things about the sequels as they're mostly by Gentry Lee working off of some plot notes from Clarke, but will add Rama II to the back pile :)

841ubiquitousuk
Oct 11, 11:45 am

>838 HonorWulf: I have been saying for some time that if the introduction contains spoilers it should be printed as an Afterword. I have no idea why Folio (and others) won't do this.

842DivinaCommedia
Oct 12, 8:15 am

>841 ubiquitousuk: I always treat introductions as afterwords these days, having been caught out by spoilers too many times. I find that it is also a useful way to reflect on the text.

843booksaplenty1949
Oct 12, 1:07 pm

>842 DivinaCommedia: I can see that discussing a text without being able to talk about the plot as a whole is a special kind of challenge. I guess an “introduction” should, ideally, give us a context for appreciating the work rather than an analysis of it. Larger assessment is then an “afterword.”

844Jeremy53
Oct 12, 3:32 pm

I’m the same. Always read the foreword afterwards. I just want to experience the book on its own merits first anyway, regardless of spoilers. The person writing the foreword is very familiar with the book of course, so it will always have that perspective. I get much more out of them when I too have read the book.

845HonorWulf
Oct 12, 3:47 pm

I love intros that give context and background into the book, especially for older works. Even a discussion of themes can be beneficial. But grinding through plot points is pretty lazy, and major spoilers are just annoying. Even more so for speculative fiction that often hinges on plot reveals to be effective.

846PartTimeBookAddict
Edited: Oct 15, 10:06 pm

Finished two series this week. The first with "Chapterhouse: Dune". It spun its wheels and ended with a whimper. I don't care about visiting this world anymore. The series ranked best to worst:
1) Dune
2) Children of Dune
3) God Emperor of Dune
4) Dune Messiah
5) Heretics of Dune
6) Chapterhouse Dune

The second, and much more enjoyable, was the Chrestomanci series with "Conrad's Fate" and "The Pinhoe Egg." I love the freewheeling spirit of these books and the wild magic systems. Just good fun.

Up next: Mary Beard's "Emperor of Rome".

847LesMiserables
Oct 15, 9:43 pm

>846 PartTimeBookAddict: Thanks for sharing. The Dune series has never enticed me after reading the first and probably won't go there again. I haven't before heard of the Chrestomanci series: is this akin to Harry Potter etc?

848PartTimeBookAddict
Oct 15, 10:12 pm

>847 LesMiserables: I guess so. I only read the first Harry Potter. From what I gather the Harry Potter series is a long continuous saga of good and evil.

Chrestomanci are more like one-off stories set in the same world. The timeline is scattered and certain characters will appear willy-nilly. If you like the whimsy of "Howl's Moving Castle" you'll also like these. You don't have to hold a bunch of relationships and histories in your head as you read it.

Definitely for young readers.

849LesMiserables
Oct 15, 10:44 pm

>848 PartTimeBookAddict: Ah okay, interesting: sounds a bit like the Narnia novels by Lewis. Different eras, some continuity through some characters, and all underpinned by largely unspoken theme or motif.

850coynedj
Oct 17, 11:27 pm

It's been a while since my last post.

Recently finished:
Children of Ash and Elm: A History of the Vikings, by Neil Price. If anyone wants an up-to-date history, this is probably the choice. I learned much, of which I expect to retain 5% at best.

The Forever War, by Joe Haldeman. Often listed as a classic of the genre, but I didn't see it. It may have packed more of a punch in the Vietnam War era, and while it was fine, it wasn't great - others have covered similar ground to better effect. The two big plot resolutions at the end were quite predictable.

The New York Trilogy, by Paul Auster (FS edition, 2014). Another disappointment. It had Auster's familiar devices, such as central actions that make you say "why on earth would someone do such a thing?" (without answer, of course), but to me the stories went nowhere at all. I had read Auster's The Music of Chance previously, and I much prefer that one.

The Secret Agent, by Joseph Conrad (FS edition 1999). Quite different from his seafaring stories. Very good.

I've also been reading some short stories, from Bibliomysteries (edited by Otto Penzler) and William Trevor's Complete Stories. Trevor is, of course, a superb writer, though I haven't read many of the stories quite yet. Bibliomysteries is very hit and miss, and Penzler really should have employed a proofreader. I must have spotted more than a dozen problems in the Joyce Carol Oates story alone, quite a total for a story that's only 40 pages long.

Up next:

Pond, by Claire-Louise Bennett. One of the Fitzcarraldo Editions books discussed in another thread, though I won't be reading their edition. I checked them out, saw what sounded interesting, and checked to see which of them my local library has. This and The Netanyahus are available - I'll get to that one later. And I've already read Olga Tokarczuk's superb Flights.

The Truth About Immigration: Why Successful Societies Welcome Newcomers, by Zeke Hernandez. Hint, hint, you politicians and nativists.

Plus some video entertainment.

851booksaplenty1949
Oct 18, 10:32 am

>850 coynedj: Alfred Hitchcock’s film Sabotage is based on The Secret Agent.

852coynedj
Oct 19, 12:51 am

I forgot to mention that one of the pleasant notes with The Secret Agent is the Balmoral Wove paper. An excellent choice.

853LesMiserables
Oct 21, 12:52 am

Finally finished The History of Rome by Livy, well the extant books anyway: 1-10 & 21-45.

I'd say in total length they amount to a similar word count, depending on the translation, to just over 500000 words or so. Around about the length of War and Peace or Les Miserables etc.

Thoroughly enjoy Livy. Even the books on the Macedonian Wars, which draw some criticism for length, I found to be very engaging and rewarding.

854LesMiserables
Oct 21, 7:04 pm

Just started reading Plutarch's Lives, the Dryden Translation, edited by Arthur Hugh Clough.

855Pendrainllwyn
Oct 22, 4:03 am

Selected Poems by Wilfred Owen. Such a beautifully presented book, such a tough read. Last week I read The Dam Busters by Paul Brickhill which was gripping and humbling. Two completely different accounts of war.

856podaniel
Oct 22, 9:31 am

>854 LesMiserables:

I assume that is the FS version? How does it read?

857HonorWulf
Oct 22, 10:39 am

Finished Casino Royale by Ian Fleming (Folio, 2015). While you gents were reading Plutarch, Livy and Owen, I was visiting the Casino Estoril in Cascais outside of Lisbon and was compelled to stick my toe into Folio's Bond series, being it the inspiration behind the first novel. As expected, it begins by introducing many of the familiar tropes that we've come to know and love, but it does take an interesting turn down the stretch that borders on deconstruction as Bond begins to question his own existence in a world where the boundaries between good and evil are becoming more and more arbitrary. Coupled with one of the best closing lines of any novel, this was a pleasant surprise that may nudge me forward into more Bond next year. John Banville provides a timely introduction and Fay Dalton is an inspired artistic choice for the series (current controversy aside).

858LesMiserables
Oct 22, 3:40 pm

>856 podaniel:

No, unfortunately I don't have the Folio Plutarch, and I know from looking out to, it's a splendid set. I have a few different mediums and translations in pb/ebook/audio. It will have to do for now.

I'm concurrently reading St Augustine's City of God, which has benefited greatly from my recent reading of Livy and now Plutarch.

859podaniel
Oct 23, 10:29 am

>858 LesMiserables:

Well, you still managed to enable me--I found a decently priced set on abebooks that is now heading my way.

860LesMiserables
Oct 23, 7:10 pm

>859 podaniel: Oh great! Maybe one day.

861PartTimeBookAddict
Oct 28, 2:22 pm

I read Mary Beard's "Emperor of Rome". It was very good. It explores how similar and different the lives of the Emperor was, rather than a chronological history. A look at daily life in Rome, if you're the boss. Excellent photos throughout.

I also re-read "To Kill a Mockingbird". It holds up very well. Lee was just a natural storyteller. She made it look easy.

Up next: "Tom's Midnight Garden" by Philippa Pearce.

862CJDelDotto
Oct 30, 9:24 pm

I finished a short story collection by Julian Barnes, The Lemon Table, a few days ago. Some of the stories in it, particularly "The Story of Mats Israelson," were outstanding. In honor of spooky season, I've also been re-reading or, in some cases, reading for the first time various tales by Edgar Allan Poe. Among those I'd never read before, "The Murders in the Rue Morgue" stands out. Because my wife subscribed to the Starz channel and I want to watch the adaptation of Lisa Taddeo's literary nonfiction work Three Women, that's the book I plan to tackle next.

863PartTimeBookAddict
Nov 5, 1:55 pm

I read "Tom's Midnight Garden" this week. A nice YA book. Very melancholy, but sticks the landing well.

I also read "A Wild Sheep Chase" by Murakami. It's... Murakami alright. Very similar in plot and structure to "Killing Commendatore". So much so, that at points I thought I had already read it. If you're looking for an intro to this author, this would be a pretty good one to start with.

Up next: "Period Piece" by Gwen Raverat.

864HonorWulf
Edited: Nov 11, 11:23 am

Finished The Turn of the Screw by Henry James (Folio, 2022). Rang in All Hallows' Eve this year with James' self-proclaimed gothic pot-boiler that plays the subtle trick of providing just enough rope to weave your own horrors in your own mind without providing explicit answers of its own. Absolutely brilliant. Colm Toibín pens a decent introduction, Audrey Benjaminsen provides the haunting illustrations, and James himself has the last word with the preface from the 1908 edition included as an afterword.

865booksaplenty1949
Edited: Nov 11, 2:27 pm

Read The Betrothed recently and was once again reminded of the immense influence Sir Walter Scott had on European literature. I read two of Scott’s less well-known novels this year—-Anne of Geierstein and A Legend of Montrose—-for an LT challenge involving books about war, but had to read them on Project Gutenberg. I own a complete set of Scott’s novels, purchased at a used book sale when I was a student, but when I read the first volume—-Waverley—-it more or less disintegrated in my hands so now the set is just for show. But I am motivated to give Scott’s more famous novels a go. Very sad that the FS has not embraced him. Nor has my local library. Was forced to go to an academic library for a copy of Waverley, of which I remembered nothing from first reading.

866HonorWulf
Nov 11, 2:44 pm

>865 booksaplenty1949: Agreed! I have the three Folios by Scott including Waverly, Rob Roy and The Bride of Lammermoor, but it's pretty headscratching that we don't have Ivanhoe, The Heart of Midlothian and Kenilworth by this point.

867coynedj
Edited: Nov 11, 9:41 pm

Recently completed:

Pond, by Claire-Louise Bennett. I've complained before about stories that go nowhere. This is such a story, but I enjoyed the trip. Her style here is unusual, and I think that it isn't a style to build a career on, but it worked this time. Sure, there was a stretch where it seemed to veer off track, but it got back on track before it finished.

Red Rising, by Pierce Brown. Thematically quite derivative, and there were passages that I recognized from elsewhere, but it was a quick and engaging read and I never considered giving up on it. I'd like to find out how things progressed, but I don't want to read another four books to find out.

One Nation Under Guns: How Gun Culture Distorts Our History and Threatens Our Democracy, by Dominic Erdozain. Should be required reading for anyone engaged in public policy in my country (the USA), especially the early chapters on the foundation of the Second Amendment and the later chapters on the distortion of it to enshrine our current gun culture. Given recent events hereabouts, I don't see anything changing for quite some time, I'm afraid.

Up next:

The Truth About Immigration: Why Successful Societies Welcome Newcomers, by Zeke Hernandez. Yes, I said this before. But this time I'm really going to read it.

The Book of Ebenezer le Page, by G.B. Edwards, in the wonderful Extraordinary Editions incarnation (my copy is number 21). There are few books that I read a second time - Moby Dick, Paradise Lost, Pride and Prejudice, The Tartar Steppe, and A Canticle for Liebowitz are the only ones that come to mind. This definitely belongs in their hallowed company.

868LesMiserables
Edited: Nov 13, 2:12 am

Currently read Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy

869PartTimeBookAddict
Nov 17, 1:52 pm

Finished "Period Piece" by Gwen Raverat this week. A charming look at turn of the century living. It reminded me somewhat of "My Brilliant Career" although diametrically opposite in location and social strata. The cartoons integrated also had a dry wit reminiscent of Roz Chast. Very good.

Non-FS:
"The English Patient" by Michael Ondaatje. A re-read. Less enjoyable than the first time, but still a good book.

"Nightwoods" by Charles Frazier. I think any fan of Cormac McCarthy would get a kick of this backwoods thriller.

Up next: My FS edition of "Shah of Shahs" by Kapuściński.

>867 coynedj: I have to try "Ebenezer" soon. How would you rate the Extraordinary Editions production? I'm eyeing the Island Edition.

870coynedj
Nov 17, 5:53 pm

>869 PartTimeBookAddict: I have the Island Edition, and while it doesn't have a slipcase I find it a lovely book. I especially like the practice of starting each chapter with a large typeface, and then reducing it line by line until it reaches the regular type size at the fifth line. The illustrations are good, but I'll have to see what I think of them in context. At the price offered, I think it's quite a bargain.

871booksaplenty1949
Nov 18, 9:26 am

I am currently reading Under Fire by Henri Barbusse and have just noticed that it is available in a FS edition. Does anyone here have it? I am actually finding it very dark, even by WW I standards. Who knew bodies could decompose in so many different ways? I would be interested to know what the illustrations are like.

872anthonyfawkes
Nov 18, 9:42 am

>871 booksaplenty1949:
I have a copy, it uses wartime photography of French soldiers instead of illustrations.

873booksaplenty1949
Nov 18, 11:11 am

>872 anthonyfawkes: Thank you for responding. Are the soldiers in the pictures alive?

874anthonyfawkes
Nov 18, 2:12 pm

>873 booksaplenty1949: Mostly yes, there is a picture of a corpse being disposed of by some living soldiers but the quality is understandably low. It’s mostly shots of groups of soldiers together.

875PartTimeBookAddict
Nov 18, 2:13 pm

>870 coynedj: Thank you. It’s on the wish list.

876booksaplenty1949
Nov 18, 3:05 pm

>874 anthonyfawkes: I guess I could handle that. I see that is a more recent translation than the one I am reading.

877Redshirt
Nov 18, 3:09 pm

I finished the Folio Society edition of Stephen Ambrose’s “Band of Brothers” this past weekend. The title is taken from the famous St. Crispin’s Day speech from Shakespeare’s Henry V. I’ve previously watched the HBO miniseries based on the book and have also read Ambrose’s “D-Day” and “Citizen Soldiers.” Like Ambrose’s other books, his focus is on the front-line soldiers who fought in WWII. In this book he narrows that focus to one particular group of soldiers, the members of “Easy Company” of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division of the US Army. It begins with this elite group’s initial training and follows them through their parachute drop into Normandy as part of D-Day, their second drop into Holland as part of Operation Market Garden, their key role in the Battle of the Bulge in the Ardennes Forrest, and their capture of Hitler’s Eagle’s Nest. The focus of the book is the heavy price paid by this group of men and the special bond that they developed. They were a remarkable group of young men and their story is compelling reading. While the book might be a little difficult to follow at times because it covers a large cast of characters, it is worth the effort to get to know these soldiers and learn their story. And it is almost impossible to read without developing particular admiration for Lieutenant (later Captain, then Major) Dick Winters. For those with an interest in WWII, I highly recommend the book (as well as the miniseries).

878LesMiserables
Nov 20, 7:59 am

Finished reading Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy by John le Carre.

Outstanding read. One of the best this year.

879LesMiserables
Nov 21, 7:01 am

Reading Ivanhoe by Sir Walter Scott.

880booksaplenty1949
Edited: Nov 24, 10:33 am

>879 LesMiserables: My FS copy of Waverley is on its way so in the meantime I am reading The Chaplet of Pearls. I have avoided Charlotte Mary Yonge’s historical novels in favour of those set in her own time, but was forced to pick up Grisly Grisell and The Prince and the Page to fill in gaps in my reading for The War Room Challenge and found them quite enjoyable. Influence of Sir Walter Scott is of course evident.

881LesMiserables
Nov 21, 4:07 pm

>880 booksaplenty1949: Oh, very interesting. You had me going down the rabbit hole as soon as I clocked the Oxford movement in relation to looking up Charlotte Yonge.

882booksaplenty1949
Nov 24, 10:38 am

>881 LesMiserables: CMY is well-positioned to create a novel whose plot revolves around religious controversies, in this case those which led to the St Bartholomew’s Day Massacre. More entertaining than it sounds, I assure you.

883HonorWulf
Dec 3, 1:26 pm

Finished Starship Troopers by Robert A. Heinlein (Folio, 2018). Heinlein spares no punches in his controversial and unapologetic criticism of 1950's American society that is entertainingly wrapped in the shiny veneer of space opera. Probably best known today for popularizing militarism in the sci-fi genre, Troopers also serves as a bridge from Heinlein's earlier sci-fi writing to the more serious works to come. The Folio edition includes an introduction by Joe Haldeman, whose own Forever War novels were a counter-reaction to the book, as well as retro art illustrations by Stephen Hickman.

884anthonyfawkes
Edited: Dec 4, 3:14 am

>883 HonorWulf: I read that this year as well and I found Heinlein’s depictions of military brainwashing so overt that I thought it was a very clever satire and anti-war/military. I was so surprised to read after, that this was not the case.

885LegioKraken
Dec 4, 7:03 am

I'm reading The Foundation Trilogy by Isaac Asimov. Fascinated by the world-building and dialogues. That's my first Folio Society books and their quality is just stunning. Happy to have them and happy to be here.

886HonorWulf
Dec 4, 10:00 am

>884 anthonyfawkes: Yes, and the confusion is even more compounded by the release of the Paul Verhoeven film, which intentionally converted Heinlein's themes to satire despite not being the original intent.

887HonorWulf
Dec 4, 10:02 am

>885 LegioKraken: Congrats and welcome! That's a great set of books to start with. Still one of my favorite releases in the past decade or so.

888DukeOfOmnium
Dec 4, 1:13 pm

I'm reading The Day of the Jackal at the moment. I've obviously seen the film, but reading the book for the first time is really enjoyable. The FS edition enhancing the pleasure enormously.

The discussion of the Foundation set makes me want to re-read them. I'm not sure it'd appeal to all, but I'd like to see some more Asimov from FS.

889Ragnaroekk
Dec 4, 2:32 pm

>888 DukeOfOmnium:
Would like to see I, Robot again. It has hilarious prices at the secondary market.

890LesMiserables
Edited: Dec 5, 6:07 pm

Dusting off the annual reading of Stevenson's Kidnapped.

https://www.librarything.com/pic/11296848

891booksaplenty1949
Edited: Dec 6, 2:39 am

>888 DukeOfOmnium: I see that the illustrations sprawl over the printed pages of the FS The Day of the Jackal. Is that distracting?

892DukeOfOmnium
Dec 6, 2:48 am

Very slightly at first - but after getting used to it I quite like the way the text and illustrations are mixed. Think for the genre it works.

893SpottedDick
Edited: Dec 6, 5:03 pm

Busy tacking through Post Captain after having very much enjoyed Master and Commander, my first ever Folio book. Patrick O'Brian is an impressive writer, his research is extraordinary and his prose wonderful. These Folio editions really enhance one's reading pleasure!

894assemblyman
Dec 6, 5:51 pm

I’m currently reading Jude the Obscure. I have the four Thomas Hardy titles last released by FS and this is the last of the bunch I have to read. Happy endings seem to be hard to find in a Hardy novel and poor Jude seems to be following that pattern. But like the previous three it is beautifully written and it is totally engrossing. I think I can safely say I am now a Hardy fan. I have the older FS The Return of the Native ordered and it is in the post.

895HonorWulf
Dec 6, 9:07 pm

>893 SpottedDick: Welcome to the club! Master and Commander is a great place to start.

896LT79
Dec 6, 10:10 pm

>894 assemblyman: I've only read The Mayor of Casterbridge by Hardy and despite relying heavily on miraculous returns and depressing turn of events he does write very well like you said. I've been meaning to pick up another one of his novels for years.

897LT79
Dec 6, 10:41 pm

I just finished the FS Canticle for Leibowitz and Invisible Cities. Two suberb books. Being new to both writers I was pleasantly surprised and the FS editions are now two of my favourites FS books.

898booksaplenty1949
Dec 7, 9:28 am

>896 LT79: We had to read two Hardy novels in high school. That means he’s pretty much dead to me—-only Dickens and Shakespeare survived that experience. I accept that the whims of fortune—-generally the worst possible thing happening at the worst possible time—-probably summed up reality for those at the lower level of English society in Hardy’s time. And “Always Look on the Bright Side of Life” was never his personal theme song, in any event. But if I want to feel hopeless I can just look at the newspaper. Enjoy his poetry from time to time, however. In Six Poets: Hardy to Larkin Alan Bennett presents the work of poets who eschewed modernist technique in favour of accessibility and he enabled me to appreciate Hardy the poet in a new light. I highly recommend this anthology.

899LT79
Dec 7, 10:33 am

>898 booksaplenty1949: Larkin, another happy chap! It's all your mum and dad's fault anyway. I have a soft spot for English misanthropes as long as they do it well! If I do pick up another Hardy novel (not sure where I'd start) I will definitely ease myself back in with this Alan Bennett book you've kindly recommended!

900booksaplenty1949
Dec 7, 2:09 pm

>899 LT79: If Larkin’s poetry seems a downer, try watching Love Again, a 2003 TV movie about his life where we see him carrying on affairs with three women simultaneously and generally enjoying life a lot more than you might have guessed. A scene where he is watching the news on TV and Queen Elizabeth is apparently reciting “This Be the Verse” sticks in my mind.

901LT79
Edited: Dec 7, 2:56 pm

>900 booksaplenty1949: This sounds great! Right up my street. Instant watch! Then maybe followed by Santa Claus Conquers the Martians to pep me up.

902LesMiserables
Dec 7, 7:10 pm

Quick deviation from Stevenson to Henry James to read The Turn of the Screw.

903SpottedDick
Dec 8, 8:47 am

>895 HonorWulf: Thank you! I'm not enjoying Post Captain quite as much as Master and Commander, I'm only about a quarter of the way into the book, but it seems so far to be more land based and focused on romance.

904Chemren
Edited: Dec 8, 12:13 pm

>903 SpottedDick: I love the Aubrey/Maturin books. They are my desert island reads. That said, Post Captain was my least favorite novel in the series, for the very reason you mention. It felt like he was trying to be Jane Austen and he is no Jane Austen. Important character relationships are set up in that book so you can’t skip it, but the series really picks up steam with H.M.S. Surprise, the next book. To give you the idea: when I first read these, book 15 had just been released. It took me a week to read M&C, two weeks to read Post Captain, and then 2 more weeks to read the next 13. When I finished, I turned right around and read 3-15 again. I was obsessed.

905SpottedDick
Dec 12, 5:42 am

>904 Chemren: Thanks for the encouragement! I've just finished Post Captain and very much enjoyed it in the end, it just took me that little while to adapt to the pace of life on land during the first quarter or so of the book. In any case, it was interesting to read about tipstaffs and other aspects of the shore life sailors experienced. I'm definitely going to press on with studdingsails to HMS Surprise.

906LesMiserables
Edited: Dec 13, 11:41 pm

Finished reading Henry James' The Turn of the Screw.

Back to Stevenson's Kidnapped.

907LT79
Dec 14, 5:36 pm

I just finished reading the Exeter Riddle Book on recommendation. It's a fairly quick read.

Some of the riddles are more like poetic descriptions than actual riddles, focusing on objects that were important in the Anglo-Saxon world (objects in farming, battle, eating, drinking, etc). The more difficult riddles focus on abstract ideas (like soul, creation, time) or the elements (fire, wind, water, etc). Through approaching the objects and ideas in a roundabout way it forces participation in the act of discovering the word and helps in understanding how these things/ideas were percieved at the time. They were also quite fond of innuendos too, some more successful than others. A fun read!

908LesMiserables
Dec 18, 3:33 am

Completed my annual reading of Kidnapped. I have a final Stave left of Dickens' Christmas Carol, which I might just polish off tonight.

909booksaplenty1949
Dec 18, 9:59 am

>908 LesMiserables: Can I ask what connection to Kidnapped prompts this annual ritual, or have you explained before and I missed it?

910LesMiserables
Edited: Dec 18, 2:36 pm

>909 booksaplenty1949: Great question. We had a good natter about it here https://www.librarything.com/topic/169005#n6847159

Given some water had flowed under the bridge since then, I'd say that one other thing on reflection comes to mind. There is the theme of charity and goodwill that underpins much of the narrative, and to a degree, these elements are fundamental to the Christmas message, and perhaps part of why I dust it off every year at this time. It had such a warm homely feel about it too, that I can't imagine a more fitting season to read it.

911CJDelDotto
Dec 18, 3:55 pm

>908 LesMiserables: I'm currently reading a different Dickens novel, Hard Times. One of my lifelong goals as a reader is to get through all 15 major novels, so after after Hard Times, I'll be one-third of the way there.

912LesMiserables
Edited: Dec 18, 7:39 pm

>911 CJDelDotto: Ah yes, great novel. I beat myself up on my superficial experience of Dickens somewhat. To date just, A Christmas Carol, Hard Times, Oliver Twist, David Copperfield, Nicholas Nickelby, A Tale of two Cities, Great Expectations.

913Betelgeuse
Edited: Dec 18, 5:07 pm

>911 CJDelDotto:
>912 LesMiserables:
Only five to go for me: Barnaby Rudge, Nicholas Nickleby, Martin Chuzzlewit, Dombey & Son, and Edwin Drood. I'm finishing the Christmas novellas right now.

914booksaplenty1949
Edited: Dec 18, 6:12 pm

Finally recently re-read the only Dickens novels I had read only once: Barnaby Rudge and A Tale of Two Cities. Thought that BR, set at the time of the Gordon Riots, might have some relevance to the so-called “Freedom Convoy” organised in 2022 to protest COVID-19 restrictions. A tenuous connection, I decided, but I found the novel more engaging than I remembered. ATofTC, on the other hand, read in May apropos of a reading challenge involving Napoleonic Wars, was fairly dire. Dickens’ shortest novel, with few of the entertaining secondary characters who normally take your mind off the sentimentality of his plots and issues with women. Critics do point out that the novel shaped British views on the French Revolution for at least a century.
Can highly recommend Claire Tomalin’s bio of Dickens (Charles Dickens: A Life).

915CJDelDotto
Dec 18, 6:46 pm

>913 Betelgeuse: >912 LesMiserables:

To date, I've read (in order) Great Expectations, Nicholas Nickleby, Bleak House, and A Tale of Two Cities. I got about halfway through Our Mutual Friend last year. However, the tiny font size of the Penguin Classics edition of OMF that I was reading finally defeated me; I bought my first pair of reading glasses over the summer, and they've made an enormous difference, so I'll give it a go again next year.

916Betelgeuse
Dec 18, 8:16 pm

>915 CJDelDotto: Dickens is one of my favorite authors, with my favorites of his being David Copperfield and Bleak House. OMF is the one I completed most recently -- I didn't like it as much as many of his others, but it wasn't my least favorite, either (that would be the Old Curiosity Shop). Good luck with the re-read!

917LT79
Dec 21, 5:19 pm

>911 CJDelDotto: I think Hard Times has one of the best opening paragraphs of any novel I've ever read.

918booksaplenty1949
Edited: Dec 21, 5:49 pm

>915 CJDelDotto: Our Mutual Friend is my favourite Dickens novel—an indication of where his writing career could have gone if he had lived longer. Perhaps going out on the upward arc is a better fate than the decline we see in the late works of, say, Hemingway.

919LesMiserables
Dec 21, 10:33 pm

>917 LT79: It's good but does it surpass A Tale of two Cities or A Christmas Carol?

920LT79
Dec 21, 11:33 pm

>919 LesMiserables: Sorry, I'm getting confused, it's been a long time since I read Hard Times. It was the paragraph describing Coketown I liked "It was a town of red brick...". That paragraph. It's superb. But it's well into the novel not the opening. The descriptions like "interminable serpents of smoke trailed themselves for ever and ever", and "where the piston of the steam-engine worked monotonously up and down, like the head of an elephant in a state of melancholy madness".

I think you are probably right about A Tale of Two Cities. But it has got me thinking, which is the best opening to a Dickens novel?

921LesMiserables
Dec 21, 11:59 pm

>920 LT79: I'll stick with A Christmas Carol, but I do like the opening salvo of Old Curiosity Shop.

922LT79
Dec 22, 6:55 am

>921 LesMiserables: that is a nice one. I think David Copperfield opens well too.

923LesMiserables
Dec 25, 5:31 pm

Reading a facsimile of the 1st edition of The Hobbit.

924Son.of.York
Dec 25, 6:24 pm

I'm nearly finished Nicholas Nickleby in the burgundy leather "Dickens III" set, and enjoying it. Nicholas and Kate are a little dull, but the supporting characters are fun in that exaggerated Dickens way.

925LesMiserables
Dec 25, 8:16 pm

>924 Son.of.York: I thoroughly enjoyed NN. Glad you're enjoying it too.

926HonorWulf
Edited: Dec 27, 4:17 pm

Mr Norrell by Susanna Clarke (Folio, 2024). Last Folio of the year for me, but the first volume in Susanna Clarke's Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell trilogy that introduces a pre-Victorian England where magic once existed but has long faded... until the titular magician (and curmudgeon) attempts to bring it back. Good opening salvo choke full of world-building that should find a warm reception with Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett readers. Gaiman provides a brief introduction and his Sandman and Stardust collaborator, Charles Vess, the whimsical illustrations.

927Macumbeira
Yesterday, 2:37 pm

Orbital, the Booker Prize Winner

928booksaplenty1949
Edited: Yesterday, 7:52 pm

My FS edition of Waverley arrived, as a little Christmas present to myself. But first I must finish Charlotte Mary Yonge’s The Chaplet of Pearls. In her preface Yonge discusses, with reference to Scott, the rival claims of historical accuracy and reader entertainment. Of course my limited knowledge of history preserves me from getting too distracted by any poetic license with the facts, in either author.