Not long ago I finally finished Moby Dick. I admit there would have been an acute danger of failing to finish it if I hadn't been in an internet group dedicated to it, if I hadn't been one of the leaders of aforesaid group. Yup, "reading in public!" The pressure. I am very glad to have read it now; it was worth the while. When you're somehow involved with Melville, he seems to turn up everywhere - this, today, for example.
Afterwards, quite exhausted, I had a quick romp with The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime, which had a good plot but which I found so-so. It was a fast read, though, which is often a plus point. To me it seemed like YA literature, though I understand that wasn't its original category. My take: skippable, unless you have an interest in Asperger's Syndrome.
Now I'm reading The Tin Drum and feeling underwhelmed after my high expectations. What I think of wistfully nearly every day is re-reading The French Lieutenant's Woman, which I loved last year. I even pulled it out this morning and re-read the first couple pages. Later in the day I talked to my mom who spent four hours in a doctor's waiting room today reading something I'd recommended, which turned out to be this! I could have cried. My only problem with my copy, I remembered this morning when I pulled it out, is the goofy cover with cutesy girlwoman playing peekaboo.
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
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5 comments:
What an amazing cover. It does not lend itself in any way to the story. James Bond. I love the F lurking at the top of the cover like a vulture. Is this a Penguin?
Mine was a paperback with an all-red cover that I read in the oral surgeon's waiting room, then completing the book with yet another ending (rui)* while my wisdom teeth were being taken out.
*"reading" under the influence of dentist's gas....
The edition is from Back Bay books, a unit of Little Brown. They have since re-issued it with a much more interesting cover.
Never read it. Always thought it was "dense," but where reputations of books come from -- esp. books you've never even sampled -- I cannot say. Anyway, I loathe thick Victorian-type books and always pronounced this guilty of that before proven innocent. I know, I know. Not the American way, at least on paper. Very much the American way otherwise....
You probably wouldn't like it then, Ken. It is steeped in the Victorian, though knowingly. I don't know... maybe you would like it.
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