Wuthering
Expectations

  A Distinguished Crankologist

Thursday, August 7, 2025

What I Read in July 2025 - books are quiet and unobtrusive, and do not try to hustle the reader

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In general, however, he [Louis XVI] preferred writing down his thoughts instead of uttering them by word of mouth; and he was fond of readin...
4 comments:
Monday, July 28, 2025

Daniel Kehlmann's G. W. Pabst novel The Director - Keeping it light. Keeping it carefree.

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Daniel Kehlmann’s previous novel , Tyll (2017), was about a magical clown wandering through the hellscape of the Thirty Years’ War.  Appare...
2 comments:
Wednesday, July 2, 2025

What I Read in June 2025 - A life of agony was all for naught.

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My summer plan was to read, short, easy books, and I almost succeeded.  I read short, difficult books in French, and accidentally read sever...
6 comments:
Tuesday, June 10, 2025

A draft Elizabethan Not Shakespeare syllabus

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In case yesterday’s invitation was a bit abstract, here is my current sense of a twenty-play Elizabethan Not Shakespeare syllabus that I wou...
8 comments:
Monday, June 9, 2025

Not Shakespeare - a preliminary, semi-formed invitation to read plays by Shakespeare's contemporaries

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Here’s something I’ve been wanting to do.  I’ve been wanting to return to the plays of Shakespeare’s contemporaries, Christopher Marlowe and...
2 comments:
Sunday, June 1, 2025

What I Read in May 2025 – “There’s the store that’s shaped like a duck,” Franca said.

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First, my poor email subscribers missed some of the installments of my newsletter about Anthony Powell.  If this keeps happening I will have...
12 comments:
Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Anthony Powell's style and sensibility - Life is full of internal dramas, instantaneous and sensational, played to an audience of one

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Nicholas Jenkins – I did not register his name at all for the entire first novel, but I know it now – goes to school, gets a job in publishi...
2 comments:
Monday, May 19, 2025

How A Dance to the Music of Time works, so far - I always enjoy hearing the details of other people’s lives, whether imaginary or not

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My writing here is often about what surprised me or did not.  So let’s have that about the first four novels of Anthony Powell’s A Dance to ...
5 comments:
Thursday, May 15, 2025

Preface to notes on the first four novels of Anthony Powell's A Dance to the Music of Time

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In France, at the Lyon public library, I was surprised to bump into so many romans fleuves , whatever those are.  They were notable on the s...
7 comments:
Thursday, May 8, 2025

What I Read in April 2025 – Have we cherished expectations?

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I should make that the new official slogan of the blog.  It is from p. 614 of Finnegans Wake , one of the books I recently read. FICTION ...
13 comments:
Thursday, May 1, 2025

Languages and literature - Finnegans Wake becomes unbeurrable from age

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More keys.  As Anna Livia Plurabelle says or thinks or dreams at the very end of Finnegans Wake , “The keys to.”  She is falling asleep so s...
5 comments:
Wednesday, April 30, 2025

Some of the difficulties of Finnegans Wake - Two dreamyums in one dromium? Yes and no error.

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I am too tired to write about  Finnegans Wake which is a good state for writing about this dream novel where characters keep falling asleep...
4 comments:
Tuesday, April 29, 2025

The key to Finnegans Wake - there is a limit to all things so this will never do

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Over the last month I read Finnegans Wake (1939).  I first read some bits of it in college, in a Norton Anthology of British Literature , a...
5 comments:
Monday, April 28, 2025

Two novels titled Attila - Maximal words striving to breach an angel

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I will write about two newly published translations of Spanish novels that comprise an amusing stunt by Open Letter Books.  They are Attila ...
5 comments:
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