Harp
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Herman Wouk, The Hope
Haven't touched Wouk since The Winds of War and War and Remembrance
Haven't touched Wouk since The Winds of War and War and Remembrance
Caine nonwithstanding, I still say "Aurora Dawn" and "The City Boy" are the best things Wouk ever wrote. American literature lost a fine humorist/satirist when he decided to get serious.
As for me, I read the New York Times over lunch... and I remembered why I don't like to read the Times: they use that cheap ink that gets all over my fingers...
Caine nonwithstanding, I still say "Aurora Dawn" and "The City Boy" are the best things Wouk ever wrote. American literature lost a fine humorist/satirist when he decided to get serious.
As for me, I read the New York Times over lunch because they were all sold out of the Boston Globe at the drug store, and I remembered why I don't like to read the Times: they use that cheap ink that gets all over my fingers. I couldn't figure out at first why my hamburger bun started to turn grey.
The Times bleeds red ink, ouszes truth, and makes a distinctive crinkly sound when folded or page turned inside the Rock Island's designated "quiet car."
John le Carre’s last novel, ‘A Legacy of Spies’ was great, I’d recommend it but you have to be familiar with ‘The Spy Who Came in from the Cold’, so see it as an excuse to watch the movie again, parts of which were shot in my home town of Dublin, Ireland. Funnily enough, they were the parts set in bleak east BerlinI've read very little of le Carre or Greene for that matter, the genre itself never did much for me; but that 60 Minutes interview piqued
my interest in le Carre; whom does give the appearance of world weariness, yet still a vibrant active soul with a word or two to say to us.
Having been both places before the Wall came down, I have to admit I thought Dublin was far bleaker. Objectively, the DDR may have been worse but at least the people I saw on the street, and talked with, smiled at times. . . .John le Carre’s last novel, ‘A Legacy of Spies’ was great, I’d recommend it but you have to be familiar with ‘The Spy Who Came in from the Cold’, so see it as an excuse to watch the movie again, parts of which were shot in my home town of Dublin, Ireland. Funnily enough, they were the parts set in bleak east Berlin
American Gods, which I wanted to like a lot more than I did. I found the story really slow, Shadow lacking, and I figured out a good chunk of the "mystery" about half way through. I have other extensive thoughts on the book, but over all aside from the lavish descriptions, I found it kinda boring.
Try his The Graveyard Book. Not boring in the least. A top-notch fantasy adventure, inspired (as you'd guess from the title) by Kipling's Jungle Book, it stars a child who is orphaned and then raised in a cemetery -- by ghosts.American Gods, which I wanted to like a lot more than I did. I found the story really slow, Shadow lacking, and I figured out a good chunk of the "mystery" about half way through. I have other extensive thoughts on the book, but over all aside from the lavish descriptions, I found it kinda boring.
I'm halfway through Disobedience, by Naomi Alderman. A same sex relationship tucked into a super conservative Orthodox Jewish community in London. Not as good as the premise sounds. The movie comes out soon. I may bail and start on The Handmaid's Tale instead.
I read "The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society" by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows when it first came out ten or so years ago and remember enjoying it as a quick fun read that blended a good story, memorable characters and some decent (and seemingly well-researched) WWII niche history about the German occupation of Guernsey.
Now that they are about to release a movie of the book, I read it again so that I'd have my images and impressions in my head and not just the movie's. After a reread, I still like the book, but less so. On the second read, the story seemed a bit too obviously contrived and some of the characters were either too good or too "evil'.
I did enjoy noticing a parallel to a favorite light read of mine - "84 Charring Cross Road," which, like GL&PPPS uses a series of correspondence -.
When I think of the Rock, I think of those old 1920's "Al Capone" cars that they ran into the late 1970's, particularly on the Blue Island branch. No AC in the summer and I am certain that few commuters lament their passing... but it was like climbing aboard a time machine for an unapologetic foamer / CFRN like yours truly.
I’ve just started a biography of the great Polish poet Czeslaw Milosz, I’m looking forward to reading it, I’ve been a fan of Milosz’s work for over twenty years.
John le Carre’s last novel, ‘A Legacy of Spies’ was great, I’d recommend it but you have to be familiar with ‘The Spy Who Came in from the Cold’, so see it as an excuse to watch the movie again, parts of which were shot in my home town of Dublin, Ireland. Funnily enough, they were the parts set in bleak east Berlin
Absolutely loved this book, ashamed to admit weakness for chick lit but cannot deny it. Ditto 84 Charing Cross. Also made a fine flick....
Oh, that's a shame, because the premise is so interesting!
I've read The Handmaid's Tale multiple times, and I HATE first person narratives. I will say this, the tv show didn't push as hard as the book did, and the show did two things that I found laughable, it made the women more an enemy to each other than the system, and it ended racism, which I thought was the real science fiction of the show.
I hope you haven't watched the show yet before you read the book.