Random books from slickdpdx's library
Letters of the Century: America 1900-1999
One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
EDWIN MULLHOUSE The Life and Death of an American Writer 1943-1954 by Jeffrey Cartwright by Steven Millhauser
The Book of Gods and Devils by Charles Simic
The Sheltering Sky by Paul Bowles
And the Ass Saw the Angel by Nick Cave
The Buddha of Suburbia by Hanif Kureishi
Members with slickdpdx's books
Member connections
Friends: abductee, ajourneyroundmyskull, benwaugh, bradrice76, coffeezombie, eine, EnriqueFreeque, FredSmeegle, Ganeshaka, jasonpettus, joltbklyn, junevonjune, kswolff, mamalaz, marc_beherec, mondschaf, mysticskeptic, pixletwin, rmckeown, ryangattis, wordtron
Interesting libraries: abbot, abductee, abirdman, ajourneyroundmyskull, angrystarlyt, anisoara, araridan, arthurfrayn, bardsfingertips, benwaugh, bertilak, book_up, butidrifted, ChazzW, christ_on_toast, coffeezombie, crucifer, cwc790411, damsorrow, DavidX, dcozy, doomented, dutts, efeltonf, eine, EnriqueFreeque, eswnr, FaustoMaijstral, gallais, Ganeshaka, gbusters, Gelderbach, gregtmills, hasprintwillread, humblenarrator, ifjuly, imbolcfire, jasonpettus, jfclark, jodavid, John, jolijtje, junevonjune, justifiedsinner, JZTamer, KentonSem, kinoeyevertov, kjarvinen, knomad, KromesTomes, kswolff, LizzySiddal, LolaWalser, LordNigelKnickKnack, lriley, LudicDespair, Makifat, marc_beherec, MarquesadeFlambe, Maurice_Joost, MayorWhitebelly, meadcl, MichaelMenche, milkyfangs, mysticskeptic, natbeourfriend, NativeRoses, Nicholae, noumenoid, opuscule, orbis_quintus, OsBrooks, panurg, papalaz, pclittle, Pepys, plaugher, poetontheone, popa, Porius, princemuchao, prophetandmistress, readfast-dieyoung, rmckeown, RSHabroptilus, ryangattis, Scratch, scriveners_lot, Sead, shearrob, SilentInAWay, snykanen, Stig_Brantley, StompingDionysus, Stronghart, Stumbler, TerryWeyna, ThePerpetualOrgy, thinandlight, thujone, Tigardite, timwink, tomcatMurr, tros, unlucky, valancourtbooks, vespertine210, vulgarboatman, WilliamBeavers1, wordtron, wunderkind
LibraryThing authors: Arthur Phillips (arthurphillips), Andrea Wyatt (awsexton), Clare Wigfall (clare.wigfall), Mark Dery (markdery), Matthew Pearl (matthewpearl), Richard Price (rixsal), Ryan Gattis (ryangattis), Robert Shearman (shearrob)
Member: slickdpdx
CollectionsYour library (1,617), Wishlist (32), Currently reading (3), To read (691), All collections (1,628)
Reviews37 reviews
Tagsnovel (832), tbr (717), r (657), stories (184), f (115), essays (104), lit (92), memoir (81), on deck (77), history (74) — see all tags
Cloudstag cloud, author cloud
GroupsAmerican Postmodernism, Asian Fiction & Non-Fiction, Books Compared, Exotic Male Dancers Who LibraryThing, Japanese Literature, Le Salon Litteraire du Peuple pour le Peuple, LibraryThing Coffeehouse, New York Review Books, Oulipo's Virtual Headquarters, Rock 'n' Roll, Records and Record Collections — show all groups
Favorite authorsKōbō Abe, Martin Amis, Paul Auster, Nicholson Baker, Donald Barthelme, Madison Smartt Bell, Pinckney Benedict, Simon Black, William Blake, Jorge Luis Borges, Paul Bowles, T. C. Boyle, Scott Bradfield, Charles Bukowski, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Italo Calvino, Albert Camus, Peter Carey, Daniel Clowes, Wilkie Collins, Roald Dahl, Joyce Ellen Davis, Richard Dawkins, Kim Deitch, Don DeLillo, Charles Dickens, Philip K. Dick, Alexandre Dumas, Umberto Eco, Harlan Ellison, Ian Fleming, William M. Gaines, Ryan Gattis, Alasdair Gray, Alex La Guma, Thomas Hardy, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Robert Irwin, Kazuo Ishiguro, Denis Johnson, Franz Kafka, Rudyard Kipling, John Lanchester, Mark Leyner, John L'Heureux, H. P. Lovecraft, Javier Marías, Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, Guy de Maupassant, Henry Miller, Steven Millhauser, Yukio Mishima, Rohinton Mistry, Michael Moorcock, Haruki Murakami, Álvaro Mutis, Vladimir Nabokov, Orhan Pamuk, Thomas Pynchon, Bruce Robinson, W. B. Seabrook, William Seabrook, Dr. Seuss, Charles Simic, Gilbert Sorrentino, Alexander Theroux, Su Tong, William T. Vollmann, Voltaire, Nathanael West, Colson Whitehead, Marianne Wiggins, Basil Wolverton, Stefan Zweig (Shared favorites)
About meThe bird is in the bag; the bag, in the egg; the egg, in the rock; the rock, in the little finger; the little finger, in the moon; the moon, in the hunting dog; the hunting dog, in the steamship; the steamship, in the forest; the forest, in the powder-box; the powder-box, in the ring; the ring, in the kitten; the kitten, on the desert island; the desert island, in the the blotter; the blotter, in the empty head; the empty head, in the night.
- - Paul Colinet; trans. Paul Bowles
.
Tuxedomoon - The Stranger - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FV0_AFNLu...
Tuxedomoon - Jinx - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dBaAe30E8...
Tuxedomoon - No Tears - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W5BZOF8t8...
Monochrome Set - Jet Set Junta - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4ouBnu9AQ...
.
About my libraryNow reading:

Previously read: 2009 - The Hour of the Star; Cockpit; A Night in the Lonesome October; The Dark Chamber; The Scorpions; The Mysteries of Algiers; The Master and Margarita; Fantastic Night & other stories; The De-moralization Of Society: From Victorian Virtues to Modern Values; Monsieur de Phocas; Infinite Jest; Twelve Historical Miniatures; The Cabala; The Life and Opinions of the Tomcat Murr; The Devil Rides Out; Shantaram; Ulysses; Three Drops of Blood; The Odyssey; Melmoth the Wanderer; Voyage Around My Room: Selected Works of Xavier de Maistre; The Polar Treasure; The Pickwick Papers; Travel Pictures. 2008 - Demons of the Night: Tales of the Fantastic, Madness, and the Supernatural from Nineteenth-Century France; Dirty Snow; The Idiot; Kolyma Tales; Jane Eyre; The Horned Man; Politics and the Occult; The Blood Countess; Never Let Me Go; The Well; The Man Who Was Born Again; The Golem; The Adventures and Misadventures of Maqroll; The Three Imposters; The Yiddish Policemen's Union; Walk, Don't Walk; The Mysterious Island; Bad Monkeys; Unlikely Stories, Mostly; The Lone Conformist; The Magic Island; Project for a Revolution in New York; The Goalie's Anxiety at the Penalty Kick; The Secret Life of Salvador Dali; Too Loud a Solitude; Waiting for the End of the World; Decline of the English Murder and Other Essays; My First Two Thousand Years; All Souls; The Associate; Withnail & I and How to Get Ahead in Advertising; Sayanora, Gangsters; The Feverhead; Slow Learner; The Scarlet Letter; Apex Hides The Hurt; Riding Toward Everywhere; The Adventures of Simplicius Simplicisimuss; The Occult Philosophy in the Elizabethan Age; The Impressionist; Darconville's Cat. 2007 - The Arabian Nightmare; Roo KickKick and the Big Bad Blimp; Indecision; My Life As Emperor; The Thought Gang; Dracula; The Burnt Orange Heresy; After The Banquet; Diamonds Are Forever; Life, a User's Manual; Cool Hand Luke; Hidden Camera; The Three Musketeers; Maldoror; North America; The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman; Parasites Like Us; Room Temperature; The Terminal Beach; Zorro; Lunar Park; Moon Palace; The Buddha of Suburbia.
.
Since I don't keep or rate books I dislike, my five-star ratings are about distinguishing between worthy books.
2 = disappointing, 3 = good, 4 = really good, 5 = great
Homepagehttp://knownunknowns.blogspot.com
Also onLast.fm, Rate Your Music
LocationOregon
Emailslickdpdx
gmail.com
Account typepublic, lifetime
Connection NewsConnection News
URLs
http://www.librarything.com/profile/slickdpdx (profile)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/slickdpdx (library)
Common KnowledgeSeries (158), Awards (263), Characters (3003), Places (715)
Member sinceApr 13, 2007
Currently readingTHE GOLDEN BOUGH: A NEW ABRIDGMENT OF SIR JAMES GEORGE FRAZER'S CLASSIC WORK by James George Frazer
Selected Writings of Guillaume Apollinaire (New Directions Books) by Guillaume Apollinaire
Fifth Business (Deptford Trilogy) by Robertson Davies











Leave a comment
Sign up or sign in to leave a comment.
posted by Porius at 3:32 pm (EST) on Nov 5, 2009
posted by Porius at 3:23 pm (EST) on Nov 5, 2009
posted by Macumbeira at 3:06 pm (EST) on Nov 5, 2009
posted by Porius at 9:19 pm (EST) on Nov 4, 2009
Why am I not surprised?
posted by Makifat at 4:50 pm (EST) on Nov 4, 2009
posted by book_up at 12:08 pm (EST) on Nov 4, 2009
posted by Porius at 11:30 pm (EST) on Nov 3, 2009
posted by Porius at 8:48 pm (EST) on Nov 3, 2009
posted by Carnophile at 12:46 pm (EST) on Oct 30, 2009
posted by A_musing at 10:39 am (EST) on Oct 30, 2009
Great seeing you back in action all over the place. I'll be out of commission the next couple days, but I'll respond more this weekend.
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 1:12 am (EST) on Oct 29, 2009
posted by urania1 at 9:08 pm (EST) on Oct 26, 2009
Keep them coming, I love them.
But where are the Gallas?
Oh, is there anything about Formosa in there?
posted by tomcatMurr at 12:03 pm (EST) on Oct 23, 2009
(where are the Gallas?)
You are almost persuading me to get and read Frazer. I had no idea it was so....mad?
posted by tomcatMurr at 8:38 pm (EST) on Oct 22, 2009
posted by prophetandmistress at 2:36 pm (EST) on Oct 21, 2009
posted by Porius at 5:07 pm (EST) on Oct 19, 2009
Oh, btw, your Scorpions review is on HR! So take that Mister!
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 10:42 pm (EST) on Oct 17, 2009
P.S. tomcat does think he's Rushdie . . . and whole bunch of other people as well.
posted by urania1 at 11:44 am (EST) on Oct 17, 2009
does tomcat think he's Salman Rushdie suddenly?
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 8:24 pm (EST) on Oct 14, 2009
posted by tomcatMurr at 11:21 pm (EST) on Oct 11, 2009
the Algiers book sounds great. I would really like to get immersed in a good read like that.
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 5:48 pm (EST) on Oct 11, 2009
I recently input an anthology owned by only three other members and, of course, ben was one of them!
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 5:42 pm (EST) on Oct 11, 2009
"A sensational novel of Washington intrigue and witchcraft by Watergate conspirator
E. HOWARD HUNT"
It also says "writing as David St. John" and attributes 3 other books to Hunt/St. John (mostly Satan/witch
related!)
posted by LudicDespair at 5:38 pm (EST) on Oct 11, 2009
Where do you suppose the Celebes are?
posted by tomcatMurr at 9:26 am (EST) on Oct 11, 2009
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 12:42 am (EST) on Oct 6, 2009
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 11:32 am (EST) on Sep 26, 2009
The last three digits of my home phone # are 666. There's 666 in my license plate. I'm doomed.
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 7:17 pm (EST) on Sep 24, 2009
Presumably there will be a soft-cover of the Hackney one of these days?
posted by dcozy at 9:56 pm (EST) on Sep 18, 2009
posted by dcozy at 9:38 pm (EST) on Sep 18, 2009
posted by dcozy at 1:59 am (EST) on Sep 5, 2009
posted by wisewoman at 4:54 pm (EST) on Aug 14, 2009
It will never end my friend. I'd be a fu#$%ng fool to let it end.
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 1:45 am (EST) on Aug 5, 2009
posted by djashley at 5:47 pm (EST) on Jul 28, 2009
posted by LudicDespair at 11:22 pm (EST) on Jul 19, 2009
posted by LudicDespair at 1:58 am (EST) on Jul 16, 2009
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 12:23 pm (EST) on Jul 10, 2009
Very astute observation, slick. How that's group read over on facebook going?
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 12:22 pm (EST) on Jul 3, 2009
posted by anna_in_pdx at 1:08 pm (EST) on Jun 30, 2009
Well share away on the SDs - please! And no worries on the Sierras. I've done a ton of editing on what's already there, but probably not more that five or six pages total of new material. Most added in chap 1., which I believe I'll break down into two chaps at this point, so it may look like I've added a fourth chapter when in fact I merely a cup one chapter in half that was getting too unwieldy.
I'm so glad you're really digging IJ. I mean think about it, he was pretty much our age, maybe a little older, and knew and loved and parodied consumer culture like no other. I meant to tell you to check out that page - somewhere in the 200s - which lists the years chronologically, thus making the time structure more understandable. You've probably already gotten to that point. I think it just snowballs on itself, except that the snowball stops suddenly going down the slope. The depictions of addiction & that halfway house are spot on and hysterical & sad simultaneously. I too like him better than Pynchon for similar reasons - he's indeed easier to read and follow imo too.
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 8:32 pm (EST) on Jun 29, 2009
posted by Archiver at 6:47 am (EST) on Jun 27, 2009
Translated by Charles Cotton
Selected and Illustrated by Salvador Dali
Doubleday & Company, Inc.
Garden City, New York
1947
posted by Porius at 3:09 pm (EST) on Jun 24, 2009
posted by tomcatMurr at 10:22 pm (EST) on Jun 21, 2009
posted by Auto_Da_Fe at 6:52 pm (EST) on Jun 21, 2009
posted by tomcatMurr at 12:12 pm (EST) on Jun 19, 2009
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 1:10 am (EST) on Jun 19, 2009
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 12:20 am (EST) on Jun 19, 2009
posted by lindsacl at 8:06 pm (EST) on Jun 16, 2009
posted by Macumbeira at 11:40 pm (EST) on Jun 15, 2009
Thanks so much,
Maki
posted by Makifat at 7:22 pm (EST) on Jun 15, 2009
posted by kswolff at 3:53 pm (EST) on Jun 13, 2009
posted by kswolff at 3:52 pm (EST) on Jun 13, 2009
posted by dcozy at 5:36 pm (EST) on Jun 7, 2009
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 12:18 am (EST) on Jun 5, 2009
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 5:40 pm (EST) on Jun 4, 2009
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 6:01 pm (EST) on Jun 3, 2009
Yes, a good (though very sad) shopping day indeed! Just happened to be in the area of one of my fave secondhand haunts in Hunt. Bch. (Bookman Too) only to find they're going out of business :(, but having a liquidation sale :) Everything in the store priced over $15 was selling for $3, so I was able to obtain an 1852 copy of Bulwer's Kenelm.../Godolphin. Not a bad day, eh? 17 volumes in all for under $30. They're selling their stuff on CraigsList too if you're interested; I passed on Nabokov's complete novels from like the years 64-74 (two volumes) which would've been only six bucks. I'll send you a link to the store if you're interested.
Great new thread too btw. Very cool autopsies!
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 12:21 am (EST) on Jun 3, 2009
posted by Porius at 1:59 pm (EST) on May 22, 2009
Yay! Enough to by me a set? There's a near-fine copy in South Africa going for USD 3900.00.
:)
Book Description: New York, The Tea and Coffee Trade Journal Company, 1935, 2 vols in-4°, 26 x 18,5 cm, xiv + 559 pp ; viii + 568 pp, index, bibliography of over 1100 entries, b/w ills. Uniform green publisher's cloth with gilt lettering on front cover and spine, with original dustjackets. Very fine, nearly mint copies notwithstanding some damage at the dustjackets (small tears at top and bottom of spine, spines of wrapper a bit thumbed, cover of vol. 2 slightly soiled), and an unobtrusive tear at pp. 423 of vol.1 No markings whatsoever in the books. Still one of the most important books ever to be published on tea. Extremely rare in this condition.
posted by LolaWalser at 10:29 am (EST) on May 16, 2009
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 4:01 pm (EST) on May 15, 2009
In the meantime I'm literally working on becoming "The Ewers Translator". One or two more books should do that.
Hope you are enjoying your copy of Hanns Heinz Ewers Volume I!
-joe
posted by anarchistbanjo at 6:09 pm (EST) on May 9, 2009
That's what I'd really been searching for (obviously not hard enough)...Neil Peart is mind blowing on that. Thanks!
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 3:41 pm (EST) on May 9, 2009
Thanks for the comment on the story I wrote. I hope to get more of my stuff published, one of these days...
posted by aethercowboy at 2:13 pm (EST) on May 7, 2009
posted by dyoneo at 9:02 pm (EST) on May 4, 2009
best wishes,
G
posted by Gelderbach at 4:40 am (EST) on May 4, 2009
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 6:17 pm (EST) on Apr 30, 2009
>>How is Ushak?
It hasn't arrived yet, but has been ordered. I've read it's the author's first fiction book. New Decadent work is hard to come by, so I made sure to pick this one up.
>>Have you purchased other books from that publisher? What is the quality of the writing and the bindings?
Yes. I've ordered all their books, save one. The production quality is very good, for the price. However, I do wish they would send their books in a box rather than padded envelopes. They've all arrived ok so far, but it's just a matter of time...
I would highly recommend their book by Reggie Oliver, MADDER MYSTERIES.
posted by Dead_Dreamer at 5:39 pm (EST) on Apr 27, 2009
posted by coffeezombie at 5:51 pm (EST) on Apr 23, 2009
posted by eswnr at 6:06 pm (EST) on Apr 22, 2009
posted by infogirl2k at 6:29 pm (EST) on Apr 21, 2009
posted by lriley at 12:12 am (EST) on Apr 17, 2009
posted by orbis_quintus at 9:34 pm (EST) on Apr 13, 2009
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 8:27 pm (EST) on Apr 4, 2009
think i'm about to get on a saramago binge. how's ulysses coming along? i've yet to get to that one.
i'm not on librarything very often, but i do check in here and there. i added your blog to my google reader...
posted by wordtron at 10:58 pm (EST) on Mar 8, 2009
posted by jasonpettus at 12:02 pm (EST) on Feb 26, 2009
I am glad you noticed something by me - it is not that exciting though, and merely an article that I've had published in an obscure French journal. I vaingloriously put it in under by surname. But hey - it's my library!
See you are reading Fagles' Odyssey. Let me know what it's like - I gave his Iliad a run-through about ten years ago, and he made my jaw drop and skin prick in one of my most pleasurable reading experiences. I took the day off work for it and truly immersed - best way to read...
posted by eine at 2:00 pm (EST) on Feb 24, 2009
posted by Ganeshaka at 11:36 am (EST) on Feb 19, 2009
Don't mean to be a pest, but if you like my reviews you might want to check out my blog: http://www.readingtheleaves.com. I've also just started reviewing at SFSignal -- my review of Felix Gilman's Gears of the City went up just a little while ago. (I'm reviewing Ellen Datlow's Poe there next.
I see we share an affinity for Calvino, Borges, Millhauser, Kafka and Nabokov. Are you a fan of the New Weird movement in SF and fantasy?
posted by TerryWeyna at 11:38 am (EST) on Feb 6, 2009
Cheers,
CZ
posted by coffeezombie at 4:22 am (EST) on Feb 6, 2009
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 6:27 pm (EST) on Feb 3, 2009
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 1:16 am (EST) on Feb 3, 2009
posted by marc_beherec at 5:18 pm (EST) on Feb 1, 2009
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 2:11 am (EST) on Jan 27, 2009
I probably made the wise (not necessarily right, but wise) decision and deleted the Normans group once 5 people had flagged the group and one user mentioned that I'd hurt someone feelings in The Green Dragon group. I'm here to make people laugh (if I'm lucky, the stars align, and maybe people are loaded on something) not to hurt fragile feelings and start anger-fests. Did you see the group before it got deleted? I'll forward you the text if you like (though I didn't save the posts damn it, now that I think about it). It was going to get nasty if it hadn't already.
Aak! at'chu! Yeah yeah yeah. You've got me pegged man. Mucho Maxilisimo Grande. Though I do like the minimalist works of early Joan Didion (Play It As It Lays, in particular) and early Hemingway short stories and early Bret Ellis, but yeah, I'm turning 40 in March. Can you tell? Hey, how was Pickwick? Impressions please.
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 8:26 pm (EST) on Jan 23, 2009
Speaking of under the radar, I liked your review of "The Feverhead", which is something that qualifies in that regard. So thanks for that and I gave you a "useful" thumbs up thingy. Haven't read it yet, but that might've put it higher up in the TBR pile.
Been through your library again -did you put up a whole bunch of new stuff in recently, or did I miss the first time around? I don't remember anyone else having the Nat Lamp DVD-Rom...
posted by arthurfrayn at 2:11 pm (EST) on Jan 20, 2009
posted by arthurfrayn at 10:48 pm (EST) on Jan 18, 2009
posted by coffeezombie at 9:50 pm (EST) on Jan 17, 2009
posted by wunderkind at 11:08 pm (EST) on Jan 16, 2009
posted by thenaughtyhottie at 6:27 pm (EST) on Jan 13, 2009
posted by Dan_Park at 8:59 pm (EST) on Jan 11, 2009
Let's face it, while Fleming writes what are essentially formulaic penny dreadfuls, he writes them damn well (some fancy prose he be tossin' roun').
After a 6-month-long reading slump, I think I'm gonna try to force myself back into reading. God, I miss it. Just came back here to rate my first book since November: Vonnegut's Sirens of Titan, a book that started off surprisingly well (I'm not the biggest Vonnegut fan), but got worse and worse as it dragged on, and ended long after blood stopped rushing to my genitalia. /etcetcetc
posted by RSHabroptilus at 2:52 am (EST) on Jan 10, 2009
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 5:35 pm (EST) on Jan 9, 2009
I lived in Portland for a short time (Feb 2003 - May 2004). A couple blocks south of Portland State. I sort of miss the place.
posted by Dan_Park at 12:09 pm (EST) on Jan 3, 2009
I've searched reviews and group posts for what you're referring to re. virg144s take on FW, to no avail. Could you direct me. Thanks!
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 3:03 pm (EST) on Jan 2, 2009
I also see we have many friends in common. It's nice to meet a new one!
Best wishes for 2009
Murr
posted by tomcatMurr at 12:48 am (EST) on Dec 31, 2008
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 7:19 pm (EST) on Dec 29, 2008
posted by Gelderbach at 4:50 am (EST) on Dec 28, 2008
Thanks
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 4:29 pm (EST) on Dec 20, 2008
posted by DavidX at 8:43 pm (EST) on Dec 19, 2008
posted by book_up at 1:20 pm (EST) on Dec 19, 2008
What are you reading these days?
posted by Makifat at 5:07 pm (EST) on Dec 16, 2008
(I feel like I'm in a noir film...)
Have you read any Zizek or seen any of his lectures? I'm currently having a fascination with him.(A One sided one.)
I see you have Kobo Abe as one of your faves, he is what got my interested in Japanese lit. He is still my absolute fave.
jvj
posted by junevonjune at 8:32 pm (EST) on Dec 12, 2008
first that's quite a name. the last slick heard from up that way was slick watts, buts that's another story. thanks and many thanks for the lists. i have a special affinity for the obstinate cymrics. gwyn thomas, r s thomas, dylan thomas, caradoc evans, to name just a few. the mix of humour and bathos suits me just fine. tho i will admit that these fellas don't make ideal house guests. dylan thomas visited the historian a j p taylor with disasterous results. but we wont hold it against him. i will attempt to track down some of the titles and see what i can see. thanks again for forwarding the lists.
pgt
posted by Porius at 11:04 pm (EST) on Dec 7, 2008
posted by marc_beherec at 6:47 pm (EST) on Nov 26, 2008
posted by benwaugh at 9:34 am (EST) on Nov 19, 2008
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 1:20 pm (EST) on Nov 17, 2008
Btw, Alexander Theroux reviewed a new translation of The Canterbury Tales in yesterday's LA Sunday Times. It's also available on their website. Rare treat to read anything by him in the paper.
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 1:09 pm (EST) on Nov 17, 2008
posted by benwaugh at 8:37 pm (EST) on Nov 14, 2008
posted by benwaugh at 6:15 pm (EST) on Nov 14, 2008
Is there much mention of Arthur Rimbaud in your recent acquisition, "The Book of Masks"? I still have the introductory poem from "A Season In Hell" inadvertently memorized from reading and reflecting on it so much in my late teens/early twenties. Something about that young genius' writings I just couldn't shake, still can't, so many years later since I've read him; perhaps his uncanny knack of creatively tapping into the metaphysical universe swirling all around us, his door into the unknown: surreal prose poems, language, imagination, giving the invisible a voice, a form, an identity. Cool stuff.
Always a pleasure, slick.
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 2:18 pm (EST) on Nov 9, 2008
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 9:04 pm (EST) on Nov 8, 2008
posted by book_up at 12:18 pm (EST) on Nov 6, 2008
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 11:18 am (EST) on Oct 18, 2008
...and don't get me started on Genoa! Good for you getting your hands on a copy. I've probably praised that book too much partly because Metcalf is so underappreciated, but still, one of the most uniquely written multiple-narratives I've encountered.
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 11:14 am (EST) on Oct 11, 2008
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 2:52 pm (EST) on Oct 4, 2008
doubt I'd have any useful info.
The Three Impostors is, also, an old favorite. Ever get "into"
19th cent. gothic? I'm working my way through "Dedalus 19th cent. French Horror". Some great little tid-bits in there. ;-)
posted by tros at 8:22 pm (EST) on Oct 1, 2008
posted by jfclark at 12:17 pm (EST) on Sep 28, 2008
posted by benwaugh at 9:59 am (EST) on Sep 27, 2008
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 8:33 pm (EST) on Sep 15, 2008
posted by benwaugh at 9:00 am (EST) on Sep 15, 2008
You're upsetting me though Slick. Did you just input the Jade Cabinet, vol. 4 of The Four Elements Tetrology? Don't tell me you already have the first three volumes, The Stain, Entering Fire, & The Fountains of Neptune. Well do you?! I've searched second hand store after second hand store since she's been on my radar -- three years -- (I refuse to order it, I'm old school) and all I've found of hers used is The Complete Butcher's Tales, and I live near LA! You'd think LA would have some freaking Rikki DuCornet available to the reading public!
Good for you (I guess) :(
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 12:47 pm (EST) on Sep 14, 2008
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 8:22 pm (EST) on Sep 5, 2008
I visited your blog and enjoyed the Slits video. I actually still have the group's LP Cut somewhere in my basement. I do have a basement. They were about 30 years ahead of their time. see also http://jp.youtube.com/watch?v=ZyXGblps64...
I saw Kiss in Tuscon in August of 1977...the week after Elvis died. It was like a mini Normandy...people were setting off fireworks and flinging either frisbees or tin tambourines or both through the air. I aged about 30 years that night, twitching at the explosions, ducking the missiles, puffing and huffing.
What did you think of Laura Warholic? I use it sometimes for strength training. Twenty reps each arm.
Later,
G
posted by Ganeshaka at 7:48 pm (EST) on Sep 2, 2008
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 3:23 pm (EST) on Sep 1, 2008
posted by chickensheets at 9:33 pm (EST) on Aug 28, 2008
posted by eine at 3:09 pm (EST) on Aug 25, 2008
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 1:48 pm (EST) on Aug 22, 2008
posted by eswnr at 11:06 am (EST) on Aug 9, 2008
Adventures in Arabia and Jungle Ways I'm sure you'll enjoy, though!
posted by marc_beherec at 12:00 am (EST) on Jul 30, 2008
I've beefed up my Seabrookiana tag if you'd like to see other works that touch on the man. He's had a couple of novels based on him (one in his lifetime), for example. I know a fellow who's working on a biography; hopefully it'll come out soonishly.
posted by marc_beherec at 2:07 pm (EST) on Jul 26, 2008
See you at the Oulipo Headquarters, I guess? Til then, a good night from Stockholm (it really is sleepy time here).
posted by pierrot at 7:13 pm (EST) on Jul 22, 2008
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 6:44 pm (EST) on Jul 21, 2008
I'm also interested to see you're reading The Magic Island. Seabrook was a fascinating character -- and a minor obsession of mine. I'd be interested to hear what you think of what was even at the time an extremely controversial book!
posted by marc_beherec at 2:15 pm (EST) on Jul 13, 2008
posted by book_up at 7:07 pm (EST) on Jul 10, 2008
Cheers, and I hope your summer has been going good as well.
posted by coffeezombie at 1:06 am (EST) on Jul 9, 2008
Our little dude will be starting tt-ing very soon too. My wife went over today to B&N to pick up the latest Wickham re-release, and found "Where' the Poop?" by Julie Markes. Besides being a funny title for a book, it looks like a good one to read to your child to help them see that tt-ing can be fun (which the funny animal pop-out pictures attest). The book ends with a pop out picture of a toilet and, you guessed it, flip up the flap and...voila..."there's the poop!"
For parents, try out the overly optimistically titled "Toilet Training In Less Than A Day" by Nathan Azrin. Helped us a great deal with our daughter several years ago, though it took longer than a day I can assure you.
I tell you, RSH is a blast! His enthusiasm for good writing is infectious. I think at times we're competing to see who can write the longest, most bombastic post. He's winning hands down -- and that's a compliment in my book!
Great hearing from you! We've obviously got a lot in common. I'm envious at how you've fixed up your profile page. Say, while I've got you, can you help enlighten my tech-savvy-ignoramusness by informing me how you managed to edit your text with bold & italics & whatnot, and how you inserted your covers & links in your page? I've been trying to figure that out for months to no avail.
Talk to you soon,
"Lola"
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 12:05 am (EST) on Jul 9, 2008
I know that I may be overexcited by Mutis, but I've never met anyone else who has read him. I was lucky enough to speak to Edith Grossman about him and she, too, was enthralled. It's a pity that so little of his work has been translated. I also spoke to Francisco Goldman about him a few years ago, who told me that Mutis was very ill and had not been writing for some time. (I don't travel in literary circles, I met both at different book fairs.) Lastly, I saw Carlos Fuentes speak about contemporary authors writing in Spanish and he included Mutis.
That's my Adventures & Misadventures regarding Maqroll.
Let me know what you think.
Thanks in Advance. M. E. Katz (Stronghart)
posted by Stronghart at 10:37 pm (EST) on Jul 6, 2008
posted by dcozy at 4:01 pm (EST) on Jun 26, 2008
As for my job--I try to do it as best I can--keeping in mind the intrusions of a rather large bureaucracy constantly trying to tweak thinks that it very often doesn't understand. I tend to leave work though at work. The end all is it's a job that has paid the bills and at least in upstate New York it is a very good one and I feel fortunate to have it despite everything. I didn't really see much connection between it and Hrabal's book but if you ever chance to read Charles Bukowski's Post Office--I would see a big connection there.
posted by lriley at 6:51 pm (EST) on Jun 25, 2008
posted by Makifat at 12:55 am (EST) on Jun 22, 2008
posted by urania1 at 7:37 pm (EST) on Jun 20, 2008
posted by wilsonknut at 5:57 pm (EST) on Jun 9, 2008
posted by JackFrost at 6:11 am (EST) on May 25, 2008
posted by book_up at 10:58 am (EST) on May 19, 2008
I've been sidtracked from Carco by Paul Leppin, "Blaugast", etc. Right now I'm
getting back to Charles Williams, "River Girl". One of the best of the hardboiled writers.
I have an old Signet pb of "The Snow was Black" by GS. Love those old fifties pb's.
posted by tros at 6:32 pm (EST) on May 15, 2008
posted by JackFrost at 10:18 am (EST) on May 15, 2008
posted by eine at 8:26 am (EST) on May 12, 2008
posted by benwaugh at 1:28 pm (EST) on May 11, 2008
I'm going to try Ryu Murakami. I'm working on your canon list, though I don't always pick the same title.
posted by book_up at 2:21 pm (EST) on May 10, 2008
Cheers,
-CZ
posted by coffeezombie at 2:04 pm (EST) on May 3, 2008
posted by book_up at 10:48 am (EST) on May 3, 2008
is an all-time favorite. I think I have a pretty complete Simenon in
trans. Hard to do with all the various editions/translations.
posted by tros at 10:22 pm (EST) on May 2, 2008
Oh yes - READ!
posted by Makifat at 12:25 am (EST) on May 2, 2008
posted by book_up at 12:56 pm (EST) on Apr 24, 2008
I've only recently joined and decided to put up just what I've read since the start of this year. But looking at your library, I see several matches to my previously read list from your favorite authors list: Especially Auster, Barthelme, Bukowski, Camus, DeLillo. As well as others I have enjoyed reading: Abe, Amis, Sorrentino, Borges, Calvino, Whitehead. And more! Europe Central was great. Riding Towards Everywhere, not so much.
posted by ChazzW at 8:10 am (EST) on Apr 19, 2008
Cheers & all that, Jeremy
posted by abductee at 2:35 am (EST) on Apr 12, 2008
So, what poison is sloshing in your trough lately? ;-)
Just finished "Depravity" (Les Innocents) by Carco. Definitely
a must read. A wild ending!
posted by tros at 2:06 am (EST) on Apr 7, 2008
posted by ian_curtin at 8:49 am (EST) on Apr 1, 2008
posted by benwaugh at 1:06 pm (EST) on Mar 19, 2008
posted by benwaugh at 1:48 pm (EST) on Mar 18, 2008
posted by coffeezombie at 1:30 pm (EST) on Mar 13, 2008
posted by kinoeyevertov at 6:55 pm (EST) on Mar 10, 2008
posted by coffeezombie at 2:33 pm (EST) on Mar 10, 2008
posted by papalaz at 11:27 am (EST) on Mar 4, 2008
I just noticed looking through your library that your reviews convinced me to buy Parasites Like Us and add Cool Hand Luke to my colossal master "to read" list a while back. It was a prophecy, I swear. Or something.
posted by eswnr at 6:12 pm (EST) on Feb 29, 2008
posted by wordtron at 12:02 am (EST) on Feb 29, 2008
posted by abirdman at 5:23 pm (EST) on Feb 28, 2008
posted by wordtron at 10:24 am (EST) on Feb 25, 2008
j
posted by wordtron at 4:59 pm (EST) on Feb 24, 2008
posted by abductee at 2:01 am (EST) on Feb 22, 2008
posted by tomcatMurr at 10:44 am (EST) on Feb 15, 2008
posted by coffeezombie at 12:54 am (EST) on Feb 15, 2008
posted by NativeRoses at 9:35 am (EST) on Feb 13, 2008
to re-read it one of these days. I'm having fun with several new-to-me
Carco stuff.
Also love the John Carter/Burroughs stuff. Just re-read those a few years ago.
Try "Hyperion" by Dan Simmons. Warning: highly addicting 4 vols!
posted by tros at 1:18 am (EST) on Feb 9, 2008
I notice that you have Vollman's Riding toward Everywhere in your on deck category (that's like a TBR pile, right?). I'm currently reading Europe Central by him and it's incredibly good. My first Vollman. i will be interested to hear your reaction to RTE, and your recommendation for his other work.
Best wishes, Murr
posted by tomcatMurr at 9:59 pm (EST) on Feb 6, 2008
If it exists somewhere, it must be something to see.
posted by timacor at 5:24 pm (EST) on Feb 1, 2008
First off, I'm impressed by the size of your library.
For your question, if you mean an english bible translation, I personnaly use (even if I usually read it in french) the New International Version, and also the New King James.
I hope it helps.
By the way (since you are the first one to write to me, you'll get my questions too), have you ever managed to (or tried to) get an early reviewer book? I have tried since I'm with LT (only 5 months or so) but never got one so far. I'm just wondering the odds of success...
posted by timacor at 9:09 pm (EST) on Jan 31, 2008
posted by margad at 8:15 pm (EST) on Jan 26, 2008
posted by jasonpettus at 12:26 pm (EST) on Jan 25, 2008
posted by ryangattis at 10:08 am (EST) on Jan 8, 2008
Su Tong's next is coming out in hardback sometime in the middle of February. It's apparently based on an old Chinese myth and thus set in the pre-modern era. Howard Goldblatt is on board again as translator, and it promises to be excellent all around!
posted by Trismegistus at 12:52 pm (EST) on Jan 6, 2008
I'm still holding off on rereading the Taran books, because I want to have somewhat forgotten them before I pick them up again (I pretty much knew every word as a child)...it's the next best thing to reading them for the first time again!
posted by Trismegistus at 9:41 pm (EST) on Jan 5, 2008
posted by coffeezombie at 2:26 pm (EST) on Jan 5, 2008
posted by eine at 6:16 pm (EST) on Jan 3, 2008
posted by erkie2007 at 1:54 am (EST) on Jan 1, 2008
Thanks for finding my virtual collection and for your note. Any comment from a Committed Electic like you is much appreciated. I see you dig Murakami--it's hard to top The Wind-Up Bird, isn't it? Makes you feel like hanging out in a well... Anyway, I add books to my LT library only after I "review" them, which as you saw entails much cud-chewing. So, it will take me a while to drag in all 100 works from the list--the centathlon is a long slog...
Mike
posted by MichaelMenche at 12:33 pm (EST) on Dec 30, 2007
posted by erkie2007 at 1:24 am (EST) on Dec 30, 2007
Thanks for connecting. I've enjoyed going through your library. So far, I've just been cataloging books as I read them, kind of to keep score. I'll eventually put everything in that I actually have. Mostly it's classic lit, although during the past couple of years I've started to get interested in the Japanese novel.
posted by erkie2007 at 1:19 am (EST) on Dec 30, 2007
Yeah, I bookmarked 'Entropy' for you as it is my fav short-story. To a certain degree it's like ripping out 20 or so random odd pages from one of Joyce's longer works, but the mechanics beneath it are a bit more complex; also, whereas Borges can be overtly-technical, I find this to be a far more realistic, nay, flowing immersion. My 2 cents.
You Bright and Risen Angels by Vollmann was such an eye-opening experience for me when I first read it. I think that book, along w/Gravity's Rainbow, really opened me up to moving beyond first-person human-based narratives to that of inanimate (and lesser-animate?) POVs. Or somethin' like that - (oh I sooo need to go to bed now).
Maybe some of this made sense...hee. I'm off to make some New Year resolutions; some to keep, some to break. - J.
posted by abductee at 1:15 am (EST) on Dec 29, 2007
posted by ihavereadthat at 10:52 am (EST) on Dec 26, 2007
Boyle´s East is East did I already have at home, but no time to read it. I really loved the Water Music and surely want to try another Boyle.
Bad Monkeys is the only book by Matt Ruff I have not read, but the others were fantastic. Crazy, but funny and exciting. My favourite book by him is Fool on the hill, which is, in my opinion, very well-written and related to shakespeare, lord of the rings, stephen king (allthoug I don´t like him) and many tales.
There are many German authors, which are very good, you might know Thomas Mann and Günter Grass, who has even won the literature-nobelpreis. But one of my favourite is Daniel Kehlmann, his book, "Die Vermessung der Welt" is pretty new and really great. I don´t now, wether it has been translated in English, but I hope, if it is, that nothing of the beautiful and humerous language is lost.
I hope this was helpfully and please forgive my bad English :)
Cheers
posted by mondschaf at 8:40 am (EST) on Dec 15, 2007
posted by coffeezombie at 10:35 pm (EST) on Dec 12, 2007
posted by benwaugh at 8:18 am (EST) on Dec 11, 2007
posted by benwaugh at 9:53 am (EST) on Dec 10, 2007
posted by benwaugh at 5:15 pm (EST) on Dec 1, 2007
Kiymali Ispanak (spinach with minced meat; Turkey)
Super easy and tasty.
1 pound frozen spinach (because I'm lazy like this)
2 onions, peeled and chopped
some oil
1/2 pound minced meat
1/2 cup rice, washed
16 fl ounces broth
salt and pepper
1 tsp red pepper
1 1/2 cups yogurt (the thick, creamy kind)
Heat the oil and fry onions and meat until the meat is dry...make sure to crush the meat properly. Add rice, spinach and broth, red pepper and salt/pepper to taste, bring to cook and let it simmer for 30 minutes. If it gets too dry, add a little more water. This isn't a soup, but should be juicy. Add spices if necessary and serve with yogurt. Serves 4.
Mubattan (stuffed potatoes; Libya)
This is from Kulinarisches Arabien (although I already made some improvements, or at least I think so ;)), and while it's a little laborious, the results are SO worth it.
1 pound minced meat
1 onion, peeled and chopped
3 cloves of garlic, peeled and crushed
2 tblsp parsley, chopped
2 bread rolls, soaked and squeezed
salt and pepper
1 tsp cumin
Mix everything well to create the stuffing for the potatoes. Cover and put aside.
6 big potatoes, peeled
oil for deep-frying
flour
Slice the potatoes into 1 cm thick slices (a little less than 1/2 inch). Lengthwise cut some kind of a pocket into them, making sure you don't hurt the second long side. Salt the potatoes generously inside and outside and let them rest for 20 minutes (in the meanwhile, you can prepare the tomatoe sauce). Dry them with some kitchen towels and fill them with the prepared stuffing; the stuffing should be around a good 1" thick. Turn the stuffed potatoes thoroughly in flour, brush off the excessive and deep-fry until golden brown. De-fat a little by putting them on a kitchen towel for some time, and enjoy :)
4 big tomatoes, peeled, without kernels and chopped
2 onions, peeled, halved and thinly sliced
4 tblsp tomato paste
2 tsp parsley, chopped
salt
1 tsp harissa
oil
Heat oil and fry the onions a little; add everything but the parsley and make a tomatoe sauce. Add spices to taste and when done, the parsley. Serve potatoes with the sauce (serves 4).
posted by benwaugh at 9:31 am (EST) on Nov 30, 2007
posted by benwaugh at 2:21 pm (EST) on Nov 29, 2007
I love buying library discards. They've been read by so many people and they're so full of personality.
posted by lilbrattyteen at 1:03 am (EST) on Nov 18, 2007
posted by plaugher at 6:16 pm (EST) on Nov 16, 2007
Yes, I have a sickness; but it is such a good one...
posted by abductee at 3:48 am (EST) on Nov 12, 2007
posted by lucienspringer at 6:11 pm (EST) on Nov 6, 2007
posted by wfzimmerman at 8:05 am (EST) on Oct 30, 2007
posted by jellyroll at 1:01 am (EST) on Oct 29, 2007
posted by gregtmills at 3:39 pm (EST) on Oct 25, 2007
PS anytime you see a post, it's the Mistress ('rissa) since I'm the one with the fabulous desk job.
posted by prophetandmistress at 4:03 pm (EST) on Oct 18, 2007
posted by coffeezombie at 11:27 am (EST) on Sep 21, 2007
Happy cataloging to you.
posted by coffeezombie at 11:26 am (EST) on Sep 21, 2007
I gave the book to a friend, who thought it old hat, just more whining by college people about their rather silly lives. Since that is, in a sense, the take-off point of the book -- the vacuity of collegiate success, the vacuity of our civilization's alleged high-water mark -- I was a bit surprised that he couldn't read further.
But one thing I've noticed: people have different tastes and different tolerances!
(Now there's an almost vacuous response! It's certainly laboring the obvious.)
posted by wirkman at 1:57 pm (EST) on Sep 20, 2007
-zombiereligion.
posted by coffeezombie at 9:11 am (EST) on Sep 20, 2007
Yes, I collect yo-yos (and yo-yo books). Am I a champion yo-yoist? Uh-h-h no, no just so-so.
posted by LordNigelKnickKnack at 8:12 pm (EST) on Sep 19, 2007
posted by benwaugh at 12:34 pm (EST) on Sep 12, 2007
posted by benwaugh at 10:34 am (EST) on Sep 6, 2007
U R nice.
Greg (Bastard of Art and Commerce)
posted by gregtmills at 12:35 am (EST) on Aug 28, 2007
posted by ryangattis at 12:34 pm (EST) on Aug 21, 2007
posted by ryangattis at 1:46 pm (EST) on Aug 14, 2007
posted by LordNigelKnickKnack at 12:36 am (EST) on Jul 25, 2007
posted by benwaugh at 3:10 pm (EST) on Jul 24, 2007
posted by pepektheassassin at 10:04 pm (EST) on Jul 12, 2007
posted by SidWainwright at 6:49 am (EST) on Jul 1, 2007
posted by princemuchao at 11:38 pm (EST) on Jun 11, 2007
posted by MarquesadeFlambe at 10:22 pm (EST) on Jun 4, 2007
I really like your library! I saw you recommended Gilbert Sorrentino as a good po-mo writer. Is there any specific book you would recommend?
-The Mistress
posted by prophetandmistress at 12:42 pm (EST) on May 15, 2007
posted by orbis_quintus at 9:16 pm (EST) on May 10, 2007