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Books I read over and over but never get to the end.
- Mowing the Lawn - no wait that's a task not a book
Just to make sure, there are at least two films with the title Crash--the 2004 Oscar-winning film about various aspects of race relationships and the 1996 film featuring an "underground sub-culture of scarred, omnisexual car-crash victims who use car accidents and the raw sexual energy they produce," that is the one based on Ballard's book.I forgot to add that I loved the film Crash. I'm going to read the book. So thank you.
Just to make sure, there are at least two films with the title Crash--the 2004 Oscar-winning film about various aspects of race relationships and the 1996 film featuring an "underground sub-culture of scarred, omnisexual car-crash victims who use car accidents and the raw sexual energy they produce," that is the one based on Ballard's book.
Both a good films, but they are very different.
1996 film[/URL] featuring an "underground sub-culture of scarred, omnisexual car-crash victims who use car accidents and the raw sexual energy they produce," that is the one based on Ballard's book.
Both a good films, but they are very different.
Tzara funny you should mention Vikram Seth. I love reading fiction that helps me learn about different cultures. East Indian cultures especially fascinate me. I've been meaning to read Seth's A Suitable Boy for years. It always eludes me as I get caught up with other books, but I've heard he's a terrific writer. I also love A Fine Balance by Rohinton Mistry (he has a few other books published and they're all good. And Behind the Beautiful Forevers, the story of a Mumbai "undercity" by Katherine Boos (which won the National Book Award for nonfiction around 2012), is riveting and reads like good fiction.
So many books and so little time!
- The Glass Hotel, by Emily St. John Mandel. There are a lot of characters in this book--a young woman bartender named after Edna St. Vincent Millay, her wannabe musician brother, a financial superstar, a shipping executive, and several others. The book twines all of these lives together in various settings--a luxury hotel in the wilderness of northern Vancouver Island, the financial district of New York City, life on international cargo boats. It's kind of a mystery, but more like a novel of how characters' lives intersect. Mandel has been nominated for the National Book Award and the Giller Prize (yep, Piscator, she's Canadian), and Barack Obama named this book as one of his favorites for 2020.
Read it over the summer but I remember more of Station Eleven perhaps because I read it at the beginning of covid. THe story ends but I;m less sure about covid.
Richard Powers is a good recommendation.Richard Powers The Overstory
Redwoods abide
That was the book that really made her name, but I haven't read it yet. It's currently in my multistory sculpture of Books I Intend to Read.Read it over the summer but I remember more of Station Eleven perhaps because I read it at the beginning of COVID.The Glass Hotel, by Emily St. John Mandel.
That was the book that really made her name, but I haven't read it yet. It's currently in my multistory sculpture of Books I Intend to Read.
Your recommendation might move it a bit closer to the top of the stack.
Thanks, Fishy.
Shakespeare: Plays and Sonnets
Chaucer: Canterbury Tales
Elis Peters: Cadfael stories
Sapper: Bulldog Drummond and his WW1 works (despite incorrect racism)
H Rider Haggard
John Buchan (despite incorrect racism)
Raphael Sabatini
Baroness Orczy: Scarlet Pimpernel etc.
Some Zane Grey
Some Louis L' Amour especially The Sacketts.
Alastair McLean
James Clavell: Shogun
Tom Clancy (earlier works only)
Jack Higgins
Ursula Guin: Earthsea
Ernest Bramah: Kai Lung
Russell Thorndyke: Dr Syn
Thorne Smith: Topper et al.
C J Dennis: Australian Poetry
Richard Powell: Pioneer, Go Home! and Don Quixote, USA
and many more...
So true.I have several but one I will mention is "Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil" by John Berendt. I adore the wide variety of Southern eccentrics that pepper the book. It reminds me of one of the more gracious things about the living in the South. I usually reread before homecoming at the church aka a family reunion.
To quote Dixie Carter, “This is the South and we’re proud of our crazy people. We don’t hide them up in the attic, we bring them right down to the living room to show them off," Makes my cousin that drives around with a billy goat in the back of his pick-up seem almost too tame to mention.