A nice little run at Persian literature this month. And I am reading in Portuguese again, slowly, slowly.
PERSIAN LITERATURE, MOSTLY CLASSICAL
Shahnameh: The Persian Book of Kings (1110), Abolqasem Ferdowsi – See here for notes on this
big epic in Dick Davis’s translation.
The Essential Rumi (13th c.), Rumi – I am not much of a mystic but Rumi, in
Coleman Barks’s translations into American free verse, impressed me with his
variety of imagery, earthiness, and irony.
I remember Rumi as a major source of little gift books by bookstore cash
registers, next to those little volumes of Rilke, but his wisdom is more ironic
than that might suggest.
Faces of Love: Hafez and the Poets of Shiraz (14th
c.), Hafez, Jahan Malek Khatun, & Obayd-e Zakani – There was a “scene” in
Shiraz for a while. Hafez is the drunk
pretending to be a Sufi mystic, or vice versa; Jahan Malek Khatun is a love
struck princess, an actual princess; Obayd-e Zakani is a dirty young man, then
a dirty old man, full of gusto. Fun
stuff, via Dick Davis.
The Colonel (2009),
Mahmoud Dowlatabadi – A grim and depressing novel about betrayal and
grief in Iran circa 1988, and before, and after. Tom Patterdale translated and wrote the
detailed, useful notes. Plenty of
references to Shahnameh.
FICTION
The Demon Lover and Other Stories (1945), Elizabeth Bowen – Jamesian indirection during
the London Blitz, part of almost every story.
Bowen is a lot more material than James, with lots more food and
furniture, although in Jamesian fashion food, furniture, and for that matter
entire buildings are present in their absence.
Very much to my tastes, except that I have a heck of a time remembering
Bowen stories, a cost of indirection. An
invitation to reread.
Eleven (1970),
Patricia Highsmith – If you are asking if I read this collection of
horror stories because it plays a part in the recent Wim Wenders movie Perfect
Days (2023), yes, that is right. The
story “The Terrapin,” specifically.
Angels in America: Millennium Approaches (1991), Tony Kushner – I will see it performed in May. Eager.
The Lowering Days (2021), Gregory Porter – A Maine novel, earnest and
violent. The striving for wisdom, often
aphoristic, was not to my taste – if just one character had a sense of humor –
but the George Eliot-like exercise in sympathy was well-done. And I learned a lot about my neighbors Down
East, who are more violent than I thought.
Dr. No (2022),
Percival Everett – The narrator is a mathematician specializing in
nothing who is hired by a billionaire who wants to be a Bond villain, so there
we have two Dr. Nos, and a good sense of Everett’s sense of humor. Charles Portis, Ishmael Reed, Thomas Pynchon,
César Aira; Everett, or anyway this book, fits in there somewhere.
POETRY
Ovid's Poetry of Exile (9-17), Ovid – David Slavitt’s “very loose” translations
of Tristia and Epistulae ex Ponto, Ovid complaining from exile with
humor and personality.
The Wild Iris (1992),
Louise Glück
IN FRENCH AND PORTUGUESE
O Alcaide de Santarém (1845), Alexandre Herculano – a bit of Portugal’s
Walter Scott. If you’ve been to the Jerónimos
Monastery in Lisbon you’ve seen his gigantic, ornate tomb, near Pessoa’s little
Modernist one.
As Mulheres de Tijucopapo (1981), Marilene Felinto – An angry feminist
Brazilian novel, recommended by my Portuguese teacher.
Contos de morte (2008), Pepetela – Occasional stories by the Angolan
writer, just my reading level.
La plus secrète mémoire des hommes (2021), Mohamed Mbougar Sarr – I hope to write a bit about
this one. The bit in the title, in my translation, is on p. 232.
How were the other stories in Eleven? My brother likes Highsmith's novels and I'm always on the lookout for giftable books...
ReplyDeleteThe Highsmith stories were good. But horrifying. They are really non-supernatural horror stories. Mostly non-supernatural. My edition had a snail on the cover, so I was not surprised when there was a story with killer snails. I was surprised that there were two stories with killer snails!
ReplyDeleteDefinitely a good gift.
My wife and I are reading Everett's I Am Not Sidney Poitier: A Novel and enjoying it greatly, so I just bought Dr. No: A Novel on your recommendation.
ReplyDeleteI just finished James and have Erasure on hold at the library, so I am continuing on with Everett. I Am Not Sidney Poitier sounds like it shares Dr. No's goofiness. (For those who do not know, the main character is named Not Sidney Poitier). James is much less goofy, mostly, playing a different game.
ReplyDelete