This audio poetry collection was much more successful than the Byron collection I last reviewed. After a short biography of Browning, it launched straight into the poems without further editorializing. I was surprised to recognize a few phrases here are there (the lark's on the wing) but most of the verse was unfamiliar. Frederick Davidson does a fantastic job as reader. I especially enjoyed his performance of the last piece, 'Mr. Sludge, "The Medium"'.
I also very much appreciated 'Beatrice Signorini' and 'Fra Lippo Lippi', which draw on his life in Italy. Browning and his wife lived in Florence for many years. I have a faint memory of visiting their house (now a museum) with my mother while we lived there. It was a modest building (by the standards of Florentine palaces) with a lovely garden in front.
The only thing that could have enhanced my experience would have been additional information about the poetry, about his life, about his wife's poetry as well. I will probably seek out some of this information independantly.
Recommended.
Reading Journal Entry: A Stroke of Midnight, by Laurell K. Hamilton
Laurell K. Hamilton is the soft-core porn author of choice for fantasy fans. Her 'Anita Blake Vampire Hunter' series is in the double-digits by now, and she's beginning to suffer from Big Author Syndrome (BAS - symptoms include an obvious lack of editing, meandering plotlines, and oversized volumes - see Robert Jordan).
A Stroke of Midnight is an entry in her other fantasy series, about 'Meredith Gentry, elf princess/private detective'. The first one was pretty good. The second one was a bit soggy. At the third one I was afraid she was going to run out of inventive sexual postures. This fourth volume marks a jump in quality. Hamilton thankfully gives Gentry and her coterie of stunningly beautiful elf studs something to do (a murder that needs solving) besides manuever for the throne, and she proves my fear that she would run out of ideas completely wrong. Meredith, it turns out, is far more than just a contender for the throne - she is to be instrumental in restoring magic to Faerie.
The book is crowded with plot points and if the murder gets, eventually, somwhat lost in the swirling mists of hormones and intrigue, it's perfectly forgiveable.
New readers should not start with this book, but with the first in the series.
A Stroke of Midnight is an entry in her other fantasy series, about 'Meredith Gentry, elf princess/private detective'. The first one was pretty good. The second one was a bit soggy. At the third one I was afraid she was going to run out of inventive sexual postures. This fourth volume marks a jump in quality. Hamilton thankfully gives Gentry and her coterie of stunningly beautiful elf studs something to do (a murder that needs solving) besides manuever for the throne, and she proves my fear that she would run out of ideas completely wrong. Meredith, it turns out, is far more than just a contender for the throne - she is to be instrumental in restoring magic to Faerie.
The book is crowded with plot points and if the murder gets, eventually, somwhat lost in the swirling mists of hormones and intrigue, it's perfectly forgiveable.
New readers should not start with this book, but with the first in the series.
Lord Byron: Selected Works
This selection of Lord Byron's poetry was only long enough to pique my curiousity. I haven't yet been able to find unabridged audio versions of his Childe Harold or Don Juan, but I intend to step up the search after listening to the excerpts contained here. Otherwise this particular version was not a success; the works are read by several different narrators (a bit jarring), separated by wacky instumental flourishes, and generally over-read. I do NOT recommend this as a purchase. But the poetry itself - great.
Reading Journal Entry: Cotillion, by Georgette Heyer
Georgette Heyer was so good at writing romances that she created an entire of genre of imitators, the Regency romance market. Her books are light, witty, and well-educated. They are extremely well-researched, and laced with literary references (I now must read Marmion), Cotillion is one of my favorite of her works. I love Freddy, the hero, as the antithesis of both the hero and the anti-hero. He is not brooding, dark, and sullen - or strong, manly, and serious. He is frivolous, fashionable, and addicted to comforts. Very refreshing.
How The Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents, by Julia Alvarez
If I had read this book at any other time, I would have loved it. Compared to Maya Angelou's I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings it seemed a little flat. It was nonetheless enjoyable; the lives of four sisters who immigrate, in the 1960's, from the Dominican Republic, with their parents. Their separate and joint stories are revealed backwards, with the story beginning in the present and proceeding back in time to the moment of their flight from the island. Each vignette is told from the perspective of a different family member. Not all of them are equally fleshed out, though; the father in particular seemed puzzlingly opaque.
I'm a sucker for books about families with four daughters....but The Poisonwood Bible was better.
I'm a sucker for books about families with four daughters....but The Poisonwood Bible was better.
Book News
One of our clients, Loung Ung, has just released her second book, Lucky Child. Her first book, First They Killed My Father: A Daughter of Cambodia Remembers, is an international best-seller. It's a memoir of her life from ages five to nine in Khmer-occupied Cambodia. I haven't yet had time to read Lucky Child, which tells the parallel stories of her life growing up in America and the sister she left behind, but I am sure it is wonderful.
Loung is a real survivor. She complained to me once that after people have read her book they look at her with sad eyes. Don't ever dare pity her.
Loung is a real survivor. She complained to me once that after people have read her book they look at her with sad eyes. Don't ever dare pity her.
A Walk on the Wild Side by Nelson Algren
This is a long, depressing Depression novel about the very poor people living in New Orleans in the early 1930's. Dove is a country boy from Texas - he goes to the city to 'rise in the world' and ends up as a pimp. It's filled with vivid description and Algren occasionally breaks into song with long alliterative passages evoking the rhythm, bustle, and heartbeat of city life.
It's a hard life that he describes, and hard people in it. There are moments of humour, but they are drowned by a fierce hopelessness. His characters are trapped by their origins and their situation, but they are also emotionally doomed, unable to genuinely connect to one another without causing crippling harm.
Masterfully written - but very grim.
In a moment of literary coincidence, the whores of this book work on Perdido Street. I read recently a horror/science fiction book called Perdido Street Station, by China Mieville. Perdido Street Station is a study in the life of a futuristic city, and I am sure that the title was a reference to Algren's work. And as I think about it, there are more similarities...which I won't discuss because of spoilers. I highly recommend it.
It's a hard life that he describes, and hard people in it. There are moments of humour, but they are drowned by a fierce hopelessness. His characters are trapped by their origins and their situation, but they are also emotionally doomed, unable to genuinely connect to one another without causing crippling harm.
Masterfully written - but very grim.
In a moment of literary coincidence, the whores of this book work on Perdido Street. I read recently a horror/science fiction book called Perdido Street Station, by China Mieville. Perdido Street Station is a study in the life of a futuristic city, and I am sure that the title was a reference to Algren's work. And as I think about it, there are more similarities...which I won't discuss because of spoilers. I highly recommend it.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
