Bibliophile

Kind of an orphan post tonight, a follow-up on Hugo von Hoffmansthal that would have made more sense several months ago.Despite the declaration of renunciation described, possibly, in “The Lord Chandos Letter” (1901), Hofmannsthal occasi...
Kind of an orphan post tonight, a follow-up on Hugo von Hoffmansthal that would have made more sense several months ago.Despite the declaration of renunciation described, possibly, in “The Lord Chandos Letter” (1901), Hofmannsthal occasionally returned to fiction. Andreas (written 1912-13) is a novella that threatened to expand into who knows what. Hofmannsthal pulled the plug on it, having finished the first seventy pages and two episodes as well as fifty pages of notes that suggest not one but several directions for the novel, each more abstract than the last.Andreas is a young Viennese man of unformed character on a sort of Grand Tour. He is robbed by a servant who turns out to be an escaped murderer and meets a weightless dream girl on an idyllic farm. In Venice, he finds a room with a family that is in the process of holding a lottery to auction off their daughter’s virginity – “’Well, it isn’t really so unusual, what she’s doing’” (53) – meets a Knight of Malta, and encounters other mysteries like women who transform into other women, one of whom is probably this woman, encountered in a courtyard atop a grape trellis:The whole pale face was wild and tense, with a flash of satisfaction, almost childish in its candour. The body lay somehow on the light trellis of the roof, the feet probably rested on a hook in the wall, the fingertips on the top of a post. The a mysterious change came over the expression of the face. With infinite sympathy, even love, the eyes rested on Andreas. One hand forced its way through the leaves, as if to reach his head, to stroke his hair; the four fingers were bleeding at the tips. The hand did not reach Andreas, a drop of blood fell on his forehead, the face above him turned white. “I’m falling,” cried the mouth… (64)Hofmannsthal was working on something that could have rivaled Alain-Fournier’s Le Grand Meaulnes, published the same year Andreas was abandoned, for sheer weirdness. Andreas is as Goethean as Alain-Fournier’sbook, drawing together pieces of a number of century-old books – Italian Journey, Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship, the Venetian Epigrams, and likely many more I have failed to identify or not read. One of the endings seems to have that Knight willing himself to death in a Rosicrucian ceremony – I must be misinterpreting the fragment, but it invokes the semi-Masonic initiations of Wilhelm Meister.Those metamorphosing women remind me of E. T. A. Hoffmann’s Princess Brambilla, also set in Venice.Since Hofmannsthal’s fragment is bizarre, complex, and unfinished, I am just banging books against it to see if any meaning drops out. The colliding texts produce a satisfying clank, at least.Well, some posts are themselves more fragmented than others, more like notes on a subject for future research.Hofmannsthal presumably got whatever he needed out of Andreas, anyway.Andreas can be found in Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Selected Prose, Bollingen, 1952, tr. Mary Hottinger.
32 minutes ago
Chinese Premier Li Keqiang has been visiting India, and this has led to a variety of protocols, agreements, and 'memoranda of understanding' getting signed, as the two nations try to work more closely together in a number of areas. ...
Chinese Premier Li Keqiang has been visiting India, and this has led to a variety of protocols, agreements, and 'memoranda of understanding' getting signed, as the two nations try to work more closely together in a number of areas. There's exciting stuff like 'coöperation in the field of sewage treatment' (something we certainly want the two most populous countries in the world to coöperate on) and 'coöperation in the field of water efficient irrigation' The one I'm most curious about, however, is number six: the "Memorandum of Understanding [...] on Cooperation in Mutual Translation and Publication of Classic and Contemporary Works". Yes, this: MoU provides for a Joint Working Group that will coordinate translation and publication of 25 books of Classic and Contemporary Works of each side over a period of 5 years in to Chinese and Indian languages respectively. I'd love to see the list of books each side submits -- but regardless of the exact titles, it sounds like a very worthy undertaking (and maybe the start of something even bigger and better ?). Translation -- and cross-cultural exchange --, after all, is always something good.
about 1 hour ago
Last year was the Patrick White centenary, and among the highlights surrounding that was the posthumous publication (in Australia and the UK) of a novel he had begun in 1981 but left unfinished. Now Picador has brought out a U...
Last year was the Patrick White centenary, and among the highlights surrounding that was the posthumous publication (in Australia and the UK) of a novel he had begun in 1981 but left unfinished. Now Picador has brought out a US edition (as a beautiful little (i.e. appropriately -- more mass-market than trade -- sized) French-flapped paperback original) of The Hanging Garden -- and my review of it is the most recent addition to the complete review. It got good but not great critical attention in the UK (a lot of papers skipped it), but it's great to see that US coverage begins with a bang: apparently the cover-review of the coming (26 May) issue of The New York Times Book Review will be John Sutherland's take on the novel. (White has been critically and, especially, popularly neglected in recent years, and only a few of his titles are still in print (barely any in the US) -- but it wasn't always quite like that: recall that even something like The Twyborn Affair had been reviewed in, of all places, People (!) back in the day.) As longtime readers know, I'm a huge fan of White -- a batch of nine reviews (rather thin ones, I'm afraid) of White titles were among the first fifty-odd to appear on the site, more than 14 years ago (yes, back in April 1999), and almost all of his work is now under review (I'm saving up The Tree of Man, for a last hurrah -- and I still need to get my hands on a copy of Happy Valley). Unfinished and posthumous it may be, but The Hanging Garden is well worth your attention.
about 1 hour ago
They've announced that Gerbrand Bakker's The Detour (published in the US as Ten White Geese), translated by David Colmer, has won the 2013 Independent Foreign Fiction Prize. (Interestingly, the Readers' Prize and the shadow iffp select...
They've announced that Gerbrand Bakker's The Detour (published in the US as Ten White Geese), translated by David Colmer, has won the 2013 Independent Foreign Fiction Prize. (Interestingly, the Readers' Prize and the shadow iffp selection both went to other books.) Ten White Geese (i.e. the US edition of The Detour) only came out in the US in 2013, so it wasn't eligible for the most recently (just a few weeks ago) awarded Best Translated Book Award (for 2012 titles), but will certainly be in the running next year. In 2010 Bakker won the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award for The Twin, so he already has two of the major English-language international book awards under his belt -- impressive (though two other author have also managed this particular double: Orhan Pamuk and Per Petterson (the latter with the same book)).
about 1 hour ago
Wow, thanks for all your comments on the previous post - I will reply to them soon, but basically it seems like we all make wishlists somewhere or other, and I'm very impressed by how organised some of you are!And I thought I'd treat you...
Wow, thanks for all your comments on the previous post - I will reply to them soon, but basically it seems like we all make wishlists somewhere or other, and I'm very impressed by how organised some of you are!And I thought I'd treat you with a little pile of books which have recently come to Stuck-in-a-Book Towers... let's work from the bottom up, shall we? (I hadn't realised until I put these together for the photo quite how blue books have dominated of late...)London War Notes 1939-1945 by Mollie Panter-DownesI thought this book was absolutely brilliant, and essential WW2 reading, when I reviewed it earlier in the year - but I didn't actually own a copy. When an affordable one came up in my abebooks alerts, I high-tailed it to... well, the internet. But the book is mine now, and I'm thrilled!Selected Poems by Anthony ThwaiteThe Norman Church by A.A. MilneThe Man in the Bowler Hat by A.A. MilneThese all came via a connection Claire/The Captive Reader brought to my attention - as you might know, A.A. Milne is one of my favourite authors, and the first one I loved wholeheartedly in my adult reading. 2012 was Claire's year of discovering AAM, and she read many of his books - and Ann Thwaite's exceptionally good biography A.A. Milne: His Life. I've read it a few times, in pre-blog days, but haven't posted about it yet. Anyway, Ann Thwaite spotted Claire's review and commented on it that she's looking to sell some of AAM books - read her comment on this post - and I got in touch with her. We had a chat on the phone, and she was lovely - and I bought the Milne books mentioned here. The collection of poetry by her husband came as a surprise bonus, and I must write to thank her soon :) I can't tell you have special it feels to have these books come from the author of a biography which affected my reading so much.The Maiden Dinosaur by Janet McNeillThis one was a recommendation by a SiaB reader, Tina, as mentioned in my previous post.Symposium by Muriel SparkOne of the few Spark novels I didn't already own. very kindly given to me by Karen. It might well be my next Spark read...The Towers of Trebizond by Rose MacaulayComing Up For Air by George OrwellWhat Was Lost by Catherine O'FlynnBy Grand Central Station I Sat Down And Wept by Elizabeth SmartI bought these in the brilliant Amnesty Book Shop in Bristol last weekend - I did already have a copy of the Macaulay, but not in this gorgeous NYRB Classics edition... I'm not the sort of person who could resist that, as well we all know. Mel recommended the Catherine O'Flynn, and the other two are books I've been intending to read for ages. Well, actually I just want to read more Orwell in general, and had hoped to find The Clergyman's Daughter, but this will more than do.Letters of Lewis CarrollWell, why on earth not? (Also timely, as I am going to see Judi Dench in Peter and Alice this weekend. Can't wait!)
about 7 hours ago
The Demon Lover by Juliet Dark Ballantine Books, 2011 Romance (Paranormal); 448 pgs I loved this book. My husband's been giving me a hard time for liking it at all, but it was so good! Juliet Dark (also known by the name Ca...
The Demon Lover by Juliet Dark Ballantine Books, 2011 Romance (Paranormal); 448 pgs I loved this book. My husband's been giving me a hard time for liking it at all, but it was so good! Juliet Dark (also known by the name Carol Goodman) is a master of description, weaving a tale that pulled me in and has me craving more. I was reminded of how I felt when I read Karen Marie Moning's Darkfever, although the books are very different. From the Publisher: Since accepting a teaching position at remote Fairwick College in upstate New York, Callie McFay has experienced the same disturbingly erotic dream every night: A mist enters her bedroom, then takes the shape of a virile, seductive stranger who proceeds to ravish her in the most toe-curling, wholly satisfying ways possible. Perhaps these dreams are the result of her having written the bestselling book The Sex Lives of Demon Lovers. Callie’s lifelong passion is the intersection of lurid fairy tales and Gothic literature—which is why she’s found herself at Fairwick’s renowned folklore department, living in a once-stately Victorian house that, at first sight, seemed to call her name. But Callie soon realizes that her dreams are alarmingly real. She has a demon lover—an incubus—and he will seduce her, pleasure her, and eventually suck the very life from her. Then Callie makes another startling discovery: Her incubus is not the only mythical creature in Fairwick. As the tenured witches of the college and the resident fairies in the surrounding woods prepare to cast out the demon, Callie must accomplish something infinitely more difficult—banishing this supernatural lover from her heart. I actually picked up this book to read only because I liked the sound of the second book in the series. I admit to being a bit turned off by the description of this book, afraid it would be more sex than story. And while there was a lot of sex, there was also quite a good story. When Callie first visits Fairwick, she has no real interest in taking the job there. She and her boyfriend had long ago agreed to settle in New York City once they finished school. But Callie is drawn to the town, particularly an old Victorian house once owned by a famous author. She buys the home and accepts the position even despite all her reasons not to. As Callie will soon discover, both she and the town of Fairwick are more than they at first appear. I loved the setting of the novel. From the old Victorian house and the woods behind with all its secrets to the university and its eclectic staff to the small town itself, with its charm and unique townsfolk. This is a place I would love to explore further, getting to know the people and taking in the beauty and heart of my surroundings. Callie is the typical heroine, strong and intelligent. Her students are important to her, and it shows in her teaching and in her interactions with her students. Callie is practical, but a romantic at heart. She doesn't want to believe the man who comes to her in her dreams is real, can't imagine he could be, but as the evidence mounts, she struggles with what to do. Callie's emotions are at war with what she knows is right. It's an age old dilemma, but one many of us can relate to on some level. The incubus haunting Callie isn't the only trouble she faces in The Demon Lover. There's also the curse on one of her student's family and a mysterious illness going around. There is also her grandmother, a formidable woman with her own agenda. The book has a distinct Gothic feel to it, which makes it all the more appealing. It is beautiful and intense. And I loved every word. I hated to leave the world Juliet Dark created and am anxious to jump into the second book of the Fairwick Chronicles, Water Witch. Rating: (Very Good +) To learn more about Carol Goodman/Juliet Dark and her books, please visit the author's website. Source:
about 9 hours ago
Something else I've been meaning to say.Writing a book and selling a book are two completely different things.That's all there is to it.God bless those who can do both, but being able to do one doesn't mean you can do the other.I've been...
Something else I've been meaning to say.Writing a book and selling a book are two completely different things.That's all there is to it.God bless those who can do both, but being able to do one doesn't mean you can do the other.I've been struggling with the dichotomy for two years now. Trying to find a way around it. Looking for loopholes.There aren't any. They are two different processes. Period.I'm interested in doing the one, but not only not interested in doing the other but actively repelled by the process.When I used to work for other people, I was always the guy who did the work without fanfare and got no credit. Which is why I'm self-employed. My work speaks for itself. It almost doesn't matter how good my writing is. I'd like to believe that a quality book would be rewarded, but there is too much evidence out there that that is a rare and lucky occurrence.There are just as many examples, if not more, of inferior books garnering tons of attention.But the truth is, I don't know how good my books are. The point I'm trying to make is, it doesn't matter. They are as good or bad as they are.Which has nothing to do with with the process of selling them. Obviously, it helps if you've written something really good. But you still have to engage in the process of selling, and that is a different skill.Good writer/bad promoter.Bad writer/good promoter.Bad writer/bad promoter.Good writer/good promoter.Any and all these possibilities exist, but in every case they are separate events.
about 9 hours ago
May 20, 2013 news standNew York City1963Street Exposure: The Photographs of Ronald Reis 289 photographs and contact sheets made between 1957 and 1973 primarily in London and New York CityDuke University Libraries Digital Collections ...
May 20, 2013 news standNew York City1963Street Exposure: The Photographs of Ronald Reis 289 photographs and contact sheets made between 1957 and 1973 primarily in London and New York CityDuke University Libraries Digital Collections Digging Up Bones Or, The Labyrinths Beneath Our Feet Tom Jacobs *** I told this story late at night the other day while I was making cocktails for friends, and I didn't think much about what it was about or what it meant or where it was headed. I just told it. But I can now see some kind of pattern, some kind of meaning in the bare fabric of the thing. A warped reflection of what's been passing through my mind lately. There's something there about what happens when we excavate and examine the past. It can as easily induce insanity as it can generate revelation. To some extent it's about how we regard it, about how we comport ourselves in the presence of history. We can choose to hold it close or to cast it away. It can engulf us or it can reignite something that's been lost or forgotten. Either way, the excavation will lead us to seeing and maybe even understanding something new and strange. There are labyrinths beneath our feet all the time. Beneath our apartments, our homes, our towns and cities. They are there. *** Emily Dickinson’s manuscript of “The way Hope...Emily Dickinson at Amherst College The way Hope builds his House It is not with a sill — Nor Rafter — has that Edifice But only Pinnacle — Abode in as supreme This superficies As if it were of Ledges smit Or mortised with the Laws — Excerpts from Children of the Days: A Calendar of Human History Memory on Legs (January 3) On the third day of the year 47 BC, the most renowned library of antiquity burned to the ground. After Roman legions invaded Egypt, during one of the battles waged by Julius Caesar against the brother of Cleopatra, fire devoured most of the thousands upon thousands of papyrus scrolls in the Library of Alexandria. A pair of millennia later, after American legions invaded Iraq, during George W. Bush’s crusade against an imaginary enemy, most of the thousands upon thousands of books in the Library of Baghdad were reduced to ashes. Throughout the history of humanity, only one refuge kept books safe from war and conflagration: the walking library, an idea that occurred to the grand vizier of Persia, Abdul Kassem Ismael, at the end of the tenth century. This prudent and tireless traveler kept his library with him. One hundred and seventeen thousand books aboard four hundred camels formed a caravan a mile long. The camels were also the catalogue: they were arranged according to the titles of the books they carried, a flock for each of the thirty-two letters of the Persian alphabet. The Perils of Publishing (April 24) In the year 2004, for once the government of Guatemala broke with the tradition of impunity and officially acknowledged that Myrna Mack was killed by order of the country’s president. Myrna had undertaken forbidden research. Despite receiving threats, she had gone deep into the jungles and mountains to find exiles wandering in their own country, the indigenous survivors of the military’s massacres. She collected their voices. In 1989, at a conference of social scientists, an anthropologist from the United States complained about the pressure universities exert to continually produce: “In my country if you don’t publish, you perish.” And Myrna replied: “In my country if you publish, you perish.” She published. She was stabbed to death. GardenviewAlfonse Van Besten(1865-1926) Belgian Autochromists Draft 74: Wanderer Rachel Blau Duplessisfascicle Book I This the place where hopes had left their traces, stark in storm, stoked in “astonishing nights, foreigners among humans,” whose eye thirl, window whorl they Open Wide seeking wordth and depth, if ever, given ques and querl, this wordth and depth cou
about 13 hours ago
by David Peak. One-hundred and fifty years ago, a famous battle from a great war spilled blood on the fields behind my family’s home. Now, these long summer days, we chase away men wearing dark baseball caps and bulky headphones, metal...
by David Peak. One-hundred and fifty years ago, a famous battle from a great war spilled blood on the fields behind my family’s home. Now, these long summer days, we chase away men wearing dark baseball caps and bulky headphones, metal detectors swaying wildly at their sides. Other days we crack off pistol-fire into the air and watch as they retreat to their little cars, great clouds of dust dispersing over the roads as they tear back to town. These men are searching for relics—unexploded and wood-wicked cannonballs, faded brass buttons, bullets the size of a human thumb, the rare stand of grape—because they want to hold a piece of history in their hands; they want to feel the weight of it, experience a touch of long-imagined glory. Not long ago, I stumbled into a chance meeting on my property near the crooked black locust tree. It was early morning, the crepuscular hours of rabbits. Burdock, our wizened Irish-mix lurcher, smelled him first and I simply followed his lead. The grey-faced dog’s gnashed teeth and the sudden sight of my shoulder-strapped .22 must have spooked him something bad, the barrel of his snub-nose a quaking black hole in my vision. I averted my gaze, a glimpse of the trowel near his feet, the immaculate cuff of his khaki pants hastily bunched around the black-leather ankle holster, and told him to go, that he was on private property. As soon as his back was turned, his running steps receding, I grabbed hold of the dog’s collar, commanding him to quiet. The only thing more unforgivable than raising the barrel of a gun to another man is doing so in vain. Days later came the anniversary of bloodshed, the day tradition dictates we lay wreathes around our town’s single and modest monument: a thin slab of limestone depicting two rifles, their barrels crossed, and below them, in pounded Roman numerals, the year of the battle. The passing seasons have stripped the stone of any relief and from a distance it almost looks curdled. It was there we gathered, my friends and neighbors, to pay homage. A familiar-faced reporter stood before a camera. The gas lamps glowed amber in the early evening shade. Two women, each dressed in memorial black, sat in small black folding chairs before the monument. The one with the cello wore her hair long, over her shoulders, the other, with the violin, had hair pulled back in a severe ponytail. Together they swept into long-fingered music of immense skill and communion. The notes unfolded slowly at first, languidly, then picked up. It seemed that as soon as I had a handle on the shape of the music, it further escaped me, altering itself into some new blank memory. The violinist plucked strings as the cellist bowed impossibly labyrinthine scales. It lasted all of five or six interminable minutes, and in that time I must have drawn as many breaths. As the years goes by, the relics stripped from our lands will only increase in value, their very rarity accelerating their endangerment. Many of our dead were lifted from these fields on canvas stretchers, piled high in rank horse-drawn wagons. Many of them had been left unburied for days, no more than dusted with a shovel-full of dirt to hide away the sun. All of those silver and pristine photos in history books show battlefields stitched with tight lines of compact white crosses, as neat as cornstalks, stretching endless and perfect. But those books aren’t taught in our schools, not to our children, no. Children—children need to know their roots. ABOUT THE AUTHOR David Peak is the author of The River Through the Trees, Glowing in the Dark, and Surface Tension. His fiction, non-fiction, poetry and criticism have been published widely in print and on the web. More at davidpeak.blogspot.com.
about 14 hours ago
By Anna Aslanyan. Andrew Whitehead, Jerry White (eds), London Fictions, Five Leaves, 2013 The term “Londonist” has become fashionable quite recently, so it is surprising to learn that it actually dates back to 1880. This is one of the n...
By Anna Aslanyan. Andrew Whitehead, Jerry White (eds), London Fictions, Five Leaves, 2013 The term “Londonist” has become fashionable quite recently, so it is surprising to learn that it actually dates back to 1880. This is one of the numerous facts – some less well known than others – to be found in London Fictions, issued by Five Leaves this spring. Based in “the Royal Borough of Nottingham”, the radical publisher has long been interested in London. Casting its net wider than Adrift in Soho or London E1, this collection focuses on 26 titles which take the reader to many more places in London. Each piece is a critical essay which often serves as a reading companion to the chosen book, concluding with a short article about recent developments in the area in question. This is a literary volume, and libraries feature in several of its pieces: for instance, in his postscript to Zoë Fairbairns’ tribute to Pamela Hansford Johnson, the author of This Bed Thy Centre, Andrew Whitehead mentions the closure of the 123-year-old Clapham Library on the last day of an exhibition dedicated to the late writer. The essay is an account of a trip to the suburb fictionalised in the 1935 novel. Wandering around Clapham Common and its surroundings, Fairbairns notices changes in its shops, which once included a newsagents’ where one could hire a copy of Lady Chatterley’s Lover at sixpence per day. She is approached by a couple of street preachers, who ask for her name and permission to pray for her. “’We’ll pray for your book’, said the man, and I hurried away before he could ask for the ISBN.” Angela V. John writes about Neighbours of Ours, a 1895 collection of short stories by Henry W. Nevinson, called by one reviewer “the best volume of tales which ever took as their theatre of action the desolate and fascinating region of the ‘East End’.” Nevinson lived in Whitechapel in the 1880s (before leaving for Hampstead) and was familiar both with its doss houses and with “do-gooders who uttered platitudes about the problems of poverty but remained secure in their suburban lives.” Apart from serving as a useful guide for social historians, his “spirited, witty stories” are fictions in their own right. The Jewish East End is also represented in the volume: there are Israel Zangwill’s Children of the Ghetto and Simon Blumenfeld’s Jew Boy, explored, respectively, by Nadia Valman and Rachel Lichtenstein. The latter outlines the novel’s plot in some detail and provides an extensive list of references and further reading suggestions – in fact, most essays are helpful in this regard. One of the liveliest pieces in the collection is by Ken Worpole, who chose Alexander Baron and The Lowlife as his subject. This book, with Hackney at its centre, touches on the Jewish theme too, “tentatively, but with great – and disturbing – effect.” It is interesting to hear that Baron won a scholarship to attend Hackney Downs Grammar School (later labelled “the worst in the UK” and forced to close in 1995, to be replaced by Mossbourne Community Academy, apparently a more successful institution, in 2004), and to learn from Worpole’s 1983 interview with the author that “when he joined the army he was surprised – pleasantly – to find that a lot of gentile East End recruits knew more Yiddish words than he did, which they had picked up in the street market or at the dog track.” Taking us closer to the city centre, Heather Reyes’ essay discusses Mrs Dalloway. Virginia Woolf’s characters are analysed in detail, the conclusion being that “[i]mmersion in city life can teach us about people, can make us more profound, broad-minded, perceptive.” It is also noted that the Thames is never mentioned in the novel; however, it seems essential to Nevinson – as well as to another, contemporary Londonist, Peter Ackroyd, notably absent from the collection. Among other omissions are Dickens and everyone who wrote b
about 17 hours ago