Against Nature is better than La Bas for my money.
In his autobiography Klaus Kinski cliams that people often compared his writing to Celine's (probably favourably knowing Kinksi) - he's definitely got the misanthropy down pat, dunno about the rest of the package though.Currently read Louis-Ferdinand Celines 'Journey to the End of the Night', I'm pretty impressed by it. His writing is pungent, foul and hilarious. The excessive misanthropy is the type you can't help but grin at and it serves as an antidote to such feelings...one couldn't come close to that level of all pervasise hate, so better not to try. Reminds me of Michel Houellebecq, in a good way. Funny and dark and brutal.
Sounds really interesting. Is that some kind of Melville reference in the title?"I've just finished an interesting book called Bartleby & Co by Enrique Vila-Matas.
It's consists of the footnotes to an imaginary book, without the main text, written by a novelist who has abandoned novelism. All the notes are about writers who have similarly abandoned writing. Some of these are real cases and some are fictional."
g'day sheilas. i am reading robert hughes the fatal shore which i reccommend even if you dislike australians. it is a history of the transportation of convicts to australia. if you find swaggering priapic prose repugnant you better give it a miss though. im also reading the third volume of poems for the millenium which focuses on the romantic era and is maybe the best one of the series.
The Conversations - basically collected interviews of film editor Walter Murch by Michael Ondaatje. Murch is so awesome - I've been really into his sound design for ages, but somehow completely missed that he is an editor more generally. Amazing how big an influence an editor has in the final result of a movie - and I feel a bit dumb to have not realised this before now.
Excuse my ignorance but what's netsuke?"collection of netsuke"
Excuse my ignorance but what's netsuke?
My vintage copy of Tin Drum is pretty tiny font size too. I'm not too fussed by font size though - but I'd keep at it. Some of the scenes and quips in it are absolutely hilarious. The darkest of dark humour, a brilliant novel.The Tin Drum by Grass but my edition (hard back Everyman) has got a horrible font size and when I looked at the Vintage edition in a bookshop it was equally as bad. I know it sounds pathetic but it's really off putting and I want to read it (and i have to read it as part of a book group thing). I don't suppose there are other editions out there with better fonts - oh for the days of Black Swan books.
I should also add that the first chapter is excellent.
Just finished The Hare with Amber Eyes - really fascinating book that is essentially a Sebald like discovery of family history through the movement of a collection of netsuke between family members. It's a very delicately written account that starts in Oddessa, takes in 19th C Paris in its pomp, the rise of the Nazis and eventual return of the netsuke to Japan. And it's non-fiction. First class stuff
People who said Johnson wasn't truly 'experimental' would have a point, in that the formal innovations he talked up had already been made, more succesfully, by the French nouveau roman and our own Christine Brooke-Rose, not to mention various modernists, surrealists and so on before he was born.
But I don't think that matters. He was a unique and talented writer, equal parts Tony Hancock and Jean Luc Godard at times. There's a conflict between the inescapable crapness of British life, where the 50s didn't end until the 70s for most people, and his autodidact's awareness of artistic possibilities just within reach, that gives his stuff a manic drive I enjoy. Christie Malry's Own Double Entry captures that best, I think.
Me either but I only recently realised that all books have serif fonts because reading a huge block of text without it is massively wearing on the eyes. Someone told me that anyway and I couldn't prove her wrong by opening every book on my shelf."My vintage copy of Tin Drum is pretty tiny font size too. I'm not too fussed by font size though"