June 30th, 2007 by Brad
Today: Oscar Wilde’s contribution to the Gothic genre, The Picture of Dorian Gray. It’s an allegory of moral corruption, as you probably already know. The cover art is Narcissus by Gyula Benczúr. [More »]
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June 28th, 2007 by Brad
Today: Siddhartha: An Indian Tale. I’ve read it twice now: first to edit the grammar in the Project Gutenberg version, then for pleasure and enlightenment on my iPod.
As pretentious as it might sound—OK, as pretentious as it does sound—there are some books that one ‘has to’ read again every ten years. For me, there’s Moby-Dick (if only because, like a Simpsons rerun, it eventually seems brilliantly witty again). Siddhartha, thanks to its seven-ages-of-man structure, might be another.
While the Gutenberg version is fairly good, I had to administer coups de grâce, in the form of semicolons, to some of its endlessly appositional clauses. The resulting version is 95 per cent proper English. But the writing style, full of long sentences, is still hard to parse. Therefore I highly recommend the adagio version. [More »]
Posted in A book a day, Hermann Hesse |
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June 28th, 2007 by Brad
Stumbled across a beautiful track from The Mountain Goats:
Raskolnikov felt sick
But he couldn’t say why
When he saw his face reflected
In his victim’s twinkling eye.
Some things you’ll do for money
And some you’ll do for fun
But the things you do for love are gonna come back to you one by one.
Of course, Raskolnikov did it for a number of reasons…
Posted in Uncategorized, Dostoyevsky |
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June 27th, 2007 by Brad
Today’s book is the Gothic classic by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, subtitled The Modern Prometheus. “You seek for knowledge and wisdom, as I once did; and I ardently hope that the gratification of your wishes may not be a serpent to sting you, as mine has been.” [More »]
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June 25th, 2007 by Brad
You’ve seen Match Point, now watch the book.
As in most Russian literature, the patronymics and cute-names can be confusing. So here’s a guide to understanding Dostoyevsky’s masterpiece: ‘Rodion Romanovitch’ and ‘Rodya’ refer to the same person, the protagonist Rodion Romanovitch Raskolnikov. ‘Dounia’ refers to his sister, Avdotya Romanovna Raskolnikov. Their middle names indicate that their father was called Roman. It’s downhill from there! [More »]
Posted in A book a day, Dostoyevsky |
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