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What I've Finished Reading

Not much! Uninteresting circumstances have made it hard for me to concentrate this week, so I didn't get far with any books that aren't super easy to read. I finished Mort, in which Death takes a human apprentice and tries to get a more relaxing job "maybe something nice with cats or flowers." The apprentice screws everything up due to excessive compassion and anyway, Death isn't allowed to take a break; it's as bad as being a fictional detective. I read Hot Water by P. G. Wodehouse, which was pleasantly full of American con artists trying to con one another.

I did finish The Body, which I liked a lot, though there was a caricature of myself at 19 at the back of my mind going, "Ugh, another book about male jealousy, ugh" and worrying that Bishop was going to kill his wife in the end. But my present self thought it was beautifully written, funny and suspenseful. It's like Leontes' monologue in The Winter's Tale, but suburban: two great tastes that turn out to go great together. And Bishop's jellyfish uxoriousness is appealing even as he's tearing himself to pieces for no reason - or possibly that's just me. Anyway, another hit from the 99 Novels list.

What I'm Reading Now

A bunch of things I keep closing after five pages, through no fault of their own.

I promised [personal profile] osprey_archer I would join her in reading Lady Chatterly's Lover, so I started that this morning. The last thing I read by D. H. Lawrence was in 2008 or so and I vaguely remembered his prose style being kind of overheated and fairy-taleish (possibly incorrectly) so I was surprised that the first two chapters of LCL are extremely straightforward and explanatory, almost like a Baby-Sitters' Club opening chapter, where everyone's traits are dealt out to us at the outset. Connie and Clifford married without knowing each other very well, then Clifford went to war and came back paralyzed from the waist down. Clifford wants to be a writer but is thwarted by his lack of an inner life, or something like that; Connie wants a sex life but is thwarted by Clifford's paralysis. Cultural osmosis (and the back cover) tells me that this book will be about Connie having an affair, or maybe several affairs, rather than about Clifford and Connie learning to work with Clifford's limitations. But we'll see!

What I Plan to Read Next

It's C. P. Snow time again! And I'll have to catch up with my other books sometime, hopefully soon.
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What I've Finished Reading

Shards of Honor and Barrayar by Lois McMaster Bujold

Two books in a longer sci-fi/space opera series by an author I hadn't read before. I found them both very easy and quick to read, almost like watching a really high-budget sci-fi TV show, and even though they probably aren't going to be my favorite anything, they did stick in my mind a lot. A little about that )


What I'm Reading Now

I saw Lila for the last time five years ago, in the winter of 2005. We were walking along the stradone, early in the morning and, as had been true for years now, were unable to feel at ease. I was the only one talking, I remember: she was humming, she greeted people who didn't respond, the rare times she interrupted me she uttered only exclamations, without any evident relation to what I was saying. Too many bad things, and some terrible, had happened over the years, and to regain our old intimacy we would have had to speak our secret thoughts, but I didn't have the strength to find the words and she, who perhaps had the strength, didn't have the desire, didn't see the use.

Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay by Elena Ferrante. Just like The Story of a New Name, opening this book is like switching on a giant eye magnet. It's very difficult to pick my head back up and go cook dinner or whatever else I'm supposed to be doing. This effect took hold in the first paragraph (see above) and has not noticeably abated. I'll let you know what I think when I get to the end and can call my eyes my own again.

William Sansom's The Body is not quite like that, but it's pretty good. A guy is jealous of his wife, probably without much reason. He prods at the canker in his mind in as many ways as he can, and it gets worse. That's the whole story so far -- a lit-fic cliche, maybe? but I don't mind about that. It's full of great/awful/startling details and painfully sympathetic social blunders.

What I Plan to Read Next

C. P. Snow, probably. Maybe this book I picked up at the book festival ("Do you prefer funny or not funny?" the guy asked me. "Funny," I said. He stacked five books in front of me. "Give me the funniest one you have," I said, and got Saved by Mr. F. Scott Fitzgerald and Other Stories by Allen Woodman. It's all wrapped up in plastic and I haven't unwrapped it yet). Probably I should read the rest of The Dispossessed.

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