Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

book theft

I have never been so compelled to steal a library book as I was this afternoon, opening the 1928 Phoenix Library edition of Tarr, for the following reasons:

1) It is pocket-sized: at 4.5" by 7", this tiny hardcover is possibly the platonic ideal of book shape.

2) It smells like old books (the best non-food smell there is).

3) It is full of underlining and (sometimes illegible) notes in pencil, including "TEDIOUS!" and "nothing is what it is; it is always the possibility of smthg else, or the potential to effect smthg."

4) It is written in the inimitable style of Mr. Wyndham Lewis, who is a master of human nature and who elevates punctuation from the grammatical to the artistic:
Tarr needed a grimacing tumultuous mask for the face he had to cover. He had compared his clowning with Hobson's pierrotesque variety: but Hobson, he considered, was a crowd. You could not say he was an individual, he was in fact a set. He sat there, a cultivated audience, with the aplomb and absence of self-consciousness of numbers, of the herd—of those who know they are not alone.—Tarr was shy and the reverse by turns; he was alone.
5) It is orange, with a phoenix blind debossed onto the front. The text and flourishes on the spine are in gold leaf. You don't get much more flamboyant than that.

Please note that I did not actually steal the book, as I am far too susceptible to guilt.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

currently reading

I just finished Cormac McCarthy's The Road. If nothing else, it's engrossing, and there are certainly moments when the prose is beautiful and thought-provoking. The book is incredibly bleak and in that sense it accomplishes what it set out to, but in some ways the ending (without giving too much away) seems to subvert what the rest of the text establishes.

Before that, I read Sarah Schulman's The Mere Future, which is an incredibly beautiful book. The narrator's comment on art and loneliness is the most perfect moment in any novel, ever (ok, maybe that's an exaggeration).

And I've just embarked on Graham Greene's The Heart of the Matter. Greene never fails to quietly break his readers' hearts.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

stress dreams

I had an interview today. Last night, I dreamt twice that I had overslept, once that I showed up to find that my interviewer thought it was a date, and once that all my hair fell out.

On the plus side, the interview went well.

Currently reading: Lots of things, including The Road, Second Person Queer, Five Hundred Years of Printing, and The Daemon, the Gnu, and the Penguin (Oxford comma! The horror).

Currently knitting: Braided Riding Jacket, and I also have a secret incredibly late Christmas gift in the works.

Monday, December 28, 2009

updates

Currently reading: Cockroach by Rawi Hage.

Currently knitting: Eunny Jang's Endpaper Mitts in Cherry Tree Hill sock yarn (teal and burgundy).