Author: Dwight

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I was too freaked out to deal with it all

Officially declaring myself overwhelmed, I’m changing plans for August and will read some ebooks I’ve been wanting to tackle. I’ve downloaded three that should help me get through everything. The first two aren’t too long so I should have something up on them soon. I’m impressed with the quality of output from the self-publishing firms […]

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Please stand by

Between work (the joys of a start-up), home (fortunately everyone survived a camping weekend in one piece–each), and now having to completely reinstall everything on my computer I’m way behind on everything. My apologies for the lack of posts. Hopefully I’ll be back to a normal schedule soon…

Uncategorized Dwight 

A Sportsman’s Notebook summary

Preparations for Hunt by Evgraf Krendovsky (1836) Picture sourceI come back to Turgenev’s own description of this book (which I quoted on the resources post): “Much has come out pale and scrappy, much is only just hinted at, some of it’s not — right, oversalted or undercooked — but there are other notes pitched exactly […]

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A Sportsman’s Notebook discussion: three

A brief post on the last nine stories in (my version of) A Sportsman’s Notebook: “The Singers”, “Pyotr Petrovich Karataev”, “The Rendezvous”, “Prince Hamlet of Shchigrovo”, “Chertopkhanov and Nedopyuskin”, “The End of Chertopkhanov”, “The Live Relic”, “The Knocking”, and “Forest and Steppe”. The text and other links related to A Sportsman’s Notebook can be found […]

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A Sportsman’s Notebook discussion: two

Landscape with Oaks by Alexey Savrasov (1850s) Picture sourceA brief post on the next nine stories in A Sportsman’s Notebook: “Bezhin Meadow”, “ Kasyan from Fair Springs”, “ The Bailiff”, “The Estate Office”, “The Bear”, “Two Landowners”, “Lebedyan”, “Tatyana Borisovna and Her Nephew”, and “Death”. The text and other links related to A Sportsman’s Notebook […]

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A beautiful July day

There is July, and then there is Turgenev’s July. Here is the wonderful and magical first paragraph of “Bezhin Meadow” (translation by Charles and Natasha Hepburn): It was a beautiful July day, one of those days which come only after long spells of settled weather. From the earliest morning the sky is clear; the dawn […]