I should do one of these “what I read” bits before October becomes too distant.
I should also mention my health. A little over a year ago a surgeon of genius
removed a cancerous tumor from my liver, taking much of my liver along with
it. My recovery went well, and my liver
grew back without, so far, another tumor.
An experimental immunotherapy treatment likely had a role in that. A doctor told me that my liver is now “funny
looking,” but who will get to laugh at it?
I am a lot healthier than I was a year ago, and much healthier
than I was two years ago. Fewer visits
to the doctor. More energy for reading,
maybe even for writing.
This was October.
FICTION
The Story of the Stone, Vol. 1: The Golden Days (c.
1760), Xueqin Cao
Memoirs of a Midget (1921), Walter de la Mare – surprising to find de la Mare writing such a Brontêish thing in 1921 – “with how sharp a stab reminded me of… the old, care-free days of Wuthering Heights” (Ch. 33)
The Haunted Woman (1922), David Lindsay – a weird one, neither as bad or unfortunately as good as Voyage to Arcturus.
Toad of Toad Hall (1929), A. A. Milne – I read this because Judi Dench mentioned that she played Mole in it alternate nights with Portia in Merchant of Venice. She greatly disliked the Shakespeare, but the Grahame / Milne was enormous fun. Maybe I will see it someday.
The Code of the Woosters (1938), P. G. Wodehouse
Angels in America: Perestroika (1992), Tony Kushner – I did see this one.
Watershed (1996), Percival Everett
The Other Name: Septology I-II (2019) &
I Is Another: Septology III-V (2020) &
A New Name: Septology VI-VII (2021), Jon Fosse
Not a River (2020), Selva Almada
Herscht 07769 (2021), László Krasznahorkai
The Oceans of Cruelty: Twenty-five Tales of a Corpse Spirit: A Retelling (2024), Douglas J Penick – my Halloween reading, thousand-year-old Sanskrit weirdness and moral puzzles as told by a horrible corpse demon carried on the back of a king. Penick has rewritten a public domain English translation of a Hindi translation of the Sanskrit. His piece on it is quite interesting; just ignore the word “translating” in the title.”
POETRY
Collected Poems (1953), Dylan Thomas – just the 1950s additions, really.
Another Animal (1954) &
A Cage of Spines (1958), May Swenson
Selected Poems (1955), Randall Jarrell
The Less Deceived (1955), Philip Larkin
Not Waving But Drowning (1957), Stevie Smith
TRAVEL & MEMOIR
A Time of Gifts (1977), Patrick Leigh Fermor
Shakespeare: The Man Who Pays the Rent (2024), Judi Dench – I expected a lifetime of theater stories, and there were plenty of those, but this is actually a book of serious textual Shakespeare criticism, with Dench and her interviewer friend working through every Shakespeare role she ever did, all of which she still has memorized. I wish she would sit down for a sequel covering her non-Shakespearian roles.
IN PORTUGUESE
Did I not finish a book in French? I guess not.
The book I had going was temporarily stolen by a hacker.
Tempo de Fantasmas (1951), Alexandre O'Neill – a key text of Portuguese post-Surrealism.
História Trágico-Marítima: Narrativas de naufrágios da época das conquistas (1735-6), António Sérgio – a school edition, pieces selected and modernized from an 18th century collection of narratives of famous Age of Exploration shipwrecks. What does it tell us about Portuguese culture that 10th graders are assigned a book about 400 year-old maritime disasters? My ship and sea vocabulary is now much improved. Quiz me about types of sails and masts! No, please, do not quiz me.
Your mother and father are happy beyond description that you are healthy and able to read and possibly write. With love, dad and mom
ReplyDeleteI am glad that you read Septology, and we could discuss it. I am gladder still that “you are healthy and able to read and possibly write.”
ReplyDeleteThanks!
ReplyDeleteI don't have the connection to Fosse that you do but I will likely read more. Publication of a new trilogy begins next year, and I believe we will also get an English version of an older book, three novellas each from the point of view of a dog. No way I can resist that!
A funny-looking liver is a great thing to have! So glad to hear that you've improved in health. (Jean @ Howling Frog)
ReplyDeleteYes, a good thing, and certainly better than several possible alternatives. I just fear the humor is wasted on most people.
ReplyDeleteThat is really excellent news about your funny-looking liver.
ReplyDeleteThat was me, Rohan! I didn’t press the right keys to not be anonymous.
DeleteThanks. Doctors say the darnedest things.
ReplyDelete