Derek Cavin
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 242
- Location
- Douglasville GA
Currently reading "West Point '41". A book about the class of 1941 at West Point and how WWII and beyond affected their lives.
Just finished my annual re-reading of John Kennedy Toole's "A Confederacy of Dunces," probably the greatest American novel of the last fifty years.
But I recognize Toole's comic genius.
Having read several Churchill biographies already, this was fun as a refresher, but the real fun is all the lifestyle elements from, mainly, the first half of the Twentieth Century.
William Manchester's The Last Lion is a magnificent portrait of this exceedingly complex man.
William Manchester's The Last Lion is a magnificent portrait of this exceedingly complex man.
Churchill: Taken From the Diaries of Lord Moran: The Struggle for Survival, 1940-1965, I found, was a very interesting read. Quite insightful as to just how self absorbed and self important he was.
I've been wanting to re-read Confederacy of Dunces. I need to dig up my copy. It's been a few years since my last reading.
I've been re-reading The Great Gatsby. I don't know why it's taken me until my third reading to realize how sleekly and elegantly it is constructed. And the prose is pure and limpid and original throughout.
That said, I always struggle with Daisy as a character of such infatuation as she is so vapid; however, I get that she represents an idealized world that a young Gatsby felt locked out of. I struggle to accept the passion he brings to his obsession. But I also understand that making her vapid was probably Fitzgerald's commentary on the world she represents. Even so, I still find her character as the fulcrum of the obsession challenging.
Regardless of one's view, the "Art" book is fun for its "Fedora Lounge" Era peak at his lifestyle.