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When the fire is racing up the ravine, don't believe you can outrun it."Always keep in foot in the black." That has sort of become my motto in life.
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When the fire is racing up the ravine, don't believe you can outrun it."Always keep in foot in the black." That has sort of become my motto in life.
I picked this up at random from the library book sale a number of years ago and basically read it all in a single sitting, it's so good. I read another of McCann's not too long ago, Transatlantic, that was also really good. Kind of along similar lines where there are intertwining stories, in this one it's of people/ancestors/descendents who meet and separate over the years on various sides of the Atlantic.
The Giving Tree is a great read on how to lose yourself to a bad relationship. Zero starsI started a new plan a couple weeks ago. I am re-reading children's books as a 67 year old. It's been really fun so far and there is so much deeper meaning than I remembered already. So far, I've completed:
The Snowy Day, Ezra Jack Keats
The Giving Tree, Shel Silverstein
Olivia, Ian Falconer
Reynard the Fox, not sure as my copy says both Scandinavian and French influences
The House at Pooh Corner, AA Milne
There are even those (the Austrian School lovers) who claim it's about the ills of socialism.The Giving Tree is a great read on how to lose yourself to a bad relationship. Zero stars
Odd. I'm doing more or less the opposite. I'm on a jag of reading classics I "missed the first time around" as it were. I'm about halfway through War and Peace at the moment. Before that it was A Brave New World and before that it was Gatsby.Presently working through LOTR again.
I'm revisiting books that held particular influence in adolescence, with a curious eye towards how they may influence my systems of thinking and compass, today (e.g. To Kill a …, Old Man and the Sea, Night, Of Mice and Men, Candide, amongst others). It's quite navel gazey and not executed with rigor, but has served a meditative and meta-cog practice role, both of which needed a reboot in my routine. There's also a bit more color to the various environs of Middle Earth now that I know a bit about Tolkien's WWI inspirations.
Had to read parts of it in a class in Greenlaw and both liked and hated it. Tedious read, but perhaps should try again. Gravity's Rainbow that is.Not sure if this a favorite novel thread or recently read novel thread, but here's both:
Gravity's Rainbow - Pynchon {{{ sometimes replaced in my thought ranking by Lolita - Nabokov }}}
Victory City - Rushdie
I tried several times over the many years to get into Gravity's Rainbow. Just sits on a shelf.Had to read parts of it in a class in Greenlaw and both liked and hated it. Tedious read, but perhaps should try again. Gravity's Rainbow that is.
The only way I got through "Gravity's Rainbow," was to convince myself there was no narrative to follow and just try to enjoy each sentence on it's own. Sort of the literary form of Abstract Expressionism. B/T/W - I don't like Abstract Expressionism, but it at least it has the virtue that after looking at it for 10 seconds, I can walk away feeling satisfied that I gave it a chance.I tried several times over the many years to get into Gravity's Rainbow. Just sits on a shelf.
Jesus, you actually finished Gravity’s Rainbow? I’ve tried and failed a half dozen times over the years.Not sure if this a favorite novel thread or recently read novel thread, but here's both:
Gravity's Rainbow - Pynchon {{{ sometimes replaced in my thought ranking by Lolita - Nabokov }}}
Victory City - Rushdie
Excellent read. Lots of humor and pathosGW, have you read My Effin' Life yet? It's wonderful - and I realize I'm biased - but I found it to be very engrossing learning about Ged's family history and his influences growing up.
In Science Fiction: I like and recommend books by Martha Wells, John Scalzi, and Andy Wier.