Harp
I'll Lock Up
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Selected Mystery Stories
G.K. Chesterton's Father Brown of The Church of Rome.
G.K. Chesterton's Father Brown of The Church of Rome.
Mojito said:Dear Dorothy! If it isn't Oscar, we assume it's her.
I love lurid, B-grade type covers for excellent books. Nice, refined night scenes of country houses and winter trees by Grimshaw are all very well for genteel Edwardian ghost stories (and I do love Grimshaw!), but a girl who looks like an escapee from a downmarket horror 70s slasher flick is tremendous fun, juxtaposed against the high quality contents of a book like 'The Haunting of Hill House'.
Great list of books - and I don't think I've read a single one! I have a soft spot for well-written biographies of minor historical figures, often the result of a lifetime's loving work and research.
Limb & Cordingly's biography of L E G Oates, "Captain Oates: Soldier and Explorer" is a beautifully written piece, although it's very apparent where Cordingly's contribution in the way of regimental history comes in (there are moments when we thoroughly digress to a dissertation on reformation and reactionism in the British Army in the pre- and post- Boer War period...all good fun, but I imagine a few readers skipped some pages!). It rises to a perfect, lyrical, elegantly understated recounting of Oates leaving the tent...in absolute accord with Oates' end.
Staying in the Antarctic - Sara Wheeler's "Cherry", the life of Apsley-Cherry Garrard, is gorgeous. She handles the highpoint of his life, the Antarctic years, very well, but what is even more accomplished is her sensitive handling of the fragile and sometimes less loveable aspects of his personality, and also his breakdowns, depression and mental illness. She also brings deftly to life with a few well chosen pars the wonderfully rich array of characters around him, and does so with more sympathy than the high-strung Cherry ever felt for such characters as Kathleen Scott.
Trulock's biography of Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain, "In the Hands of Providence" - this one, again, is elegantly researched and written. There have been other Chamberlain biographies before and since, and revisionism has grasped the Chamberlain story with sharp claws, but I still think this not only the best Chamberlain bio, but one of the best bios of any subject.
Then some of the larger figures of history - E. W. Ives recently revised and reissued his biography of Anne Boleyn, and it has managed to expand and improve on what was probably the best bio of Nan ever written (the only other contender for the title is Warnick's "Rise and Fall of Anne Boleyn" - both are magnificent works, even if not always in agreement).
Every few years I re-read Carl Sandburg's multi-volume Lincoln bio ('The Prairie Years' and 'The War Years'). I agree with the writer who said something along the lines of 'to read these works is to walk with Lincoln'. I have a shelf-full of Lincoln bios, many of which are more up-to-date in terms of information and methodology, but Sandburg's is a work apart. The quintessential American poet interpreting the quintessential American.
Harp said:reading Joyce's Ulysses. I'm in a Celtic agnostic mood for
some inexplicable reason.
Samsa said:This is a good mood to be in, methinks.
Thanks for the recommendation. I'm gonna put that on my "must read very soon" list.J. M. Stovall said:If you like ghost stories a good book is Vaporetto 13 by Robert Girardi. I read it several years ago and really enjoyed it, takes place in Venice too! I don't want to give anything away though.
Venice is really great, we went there on our honeymoon (plus all around central Italy). I was really trying to figure out a way to move there afterwards, but I want to move to every European city I visit.
Harp said:Joyce is an old nemesis from Christian Brothers' tutelage:
Omnis qui se exalt humiliabitur et qui se humilitat exalabitur.
*****skwerl-hat said:just finished the moon is down by steinbeck
incredible book.
Samsa said:Forgive me, I have very little Latin in me. Does that say "those who exalt themselves will be humbled, and those who humble themselves will be exalted"?