Lionel G. Fawkes, Chapter 37: ‘The Board-Room”, The Way We Live Now “My Lords and Gentlemen,” said Melmotte. “I hope that you trust me.” This is part of The Classics Circuit, which is currently reading and posting on Anthony Trollope’s novels. Never having read anything by Trollope, I thought I would take the plunge with […]
Author: Dwight
The Truth about the Savolta Case by Eduardo Mendoza Translated from the Spanish by Alfred Mac Adam, Pantheon Books, 1992 Mendoza’s novel, released in 1975, is set in Barcelona at the end of World War I amid political, economic and social turmoil. When reading about the political movements during the early part of last century, […]
The dedication of the Soldiers’ National Cemetery in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, November 19, 1863: Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal. Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that […]
At the risk of mentioning the book too often, Katie Low has a review of Carthage Must Be Destroyed: The Rise and Fall of an Ancient Civilization by Richard Miles in The Oxonian Review (link is dead). Her review and summary are pretty spot on. Here’s part of the review: Miles weaves into his account […]
Picture source I want to make sure I give proper credit for these amazing pictures so I highly recommend checking out the other pictures and write-up from Martino – NL on his visit to an abandoned castle in Spain. The bookcase above looks nice from a distance, but upon closer inspection (below) the books have […]
Reading has taken a back seat lately so it follows that writing about reading has as well. But since I can’t write about what I’ve read, I’ll write about what I’m planning to read. While reading Petersburg I kept thinking that it reminded me of something I had already read and it finally dawned on […]
Demonstration on October 17, 1905 by Ilya Yefimovich Repin Picture sourceWhat an amazing, strange, wonderful, funny, frustrating, magical book. Needless to say, I highly recommend it. So what have you heard about Petersburg? Vladimir Nabokov declared it one of the most important works of the twentieth century, but he also stated no good English translation […]
Woman Sitting on a Red-Flowered Sofa by Gustave Caillebotte (1882)Picture source Anna Petrovna! We had forgotten about her: but Anna Petrovna had returned and now she was waiting…but first: —those twenty four hours! — —those twenty-four hours in our narration expanded and scattered throughout psychic spaces: as a hideous dream; and the closed off the […]
Work is taking all my time…and then some. But I wanted to share a passage I read last night that captured much of what I’m enjoying about Petersburg. There have been many plot twists and revelations. What should I do when I want to comment on what I’ve read before more is revealed and before […]
Yet another extended quote from Petersburg. Many of the themes and motifs I mentioned in the first post continue to surface. Early in Chapter Six, the crowd in the streets is described as a wave, made up not of people but parts of bodies and articles of clothing. Bely captures the feeling surrounding the loss […]