What I am able to do tonight is list the books I've read recently.
In March I read A Disaffection by James Kelman, which is a brilliant novel about a disaffected philosophy teacher. It is marvellous. Undoubtedly a 'hard' book, it is worth the effort and trouble. The comparisons with Beckett and Zola are justified. I have since given my copy to a friend of mine, himself a disaffected philosophy teacher. I also read about 80% of The Moving Toyshop by Edmund Crispin. It's not worth it - very smug, very Oxford. I don't mind a decent Oxford novel, but I do mind the inane trotting out of naff cliches with no intelligent alteration. You'd never guess that EC was a good friend of Larkin (or you might, depending on what you think about Larkin). I also read The Elephant's Journey by Saramago, which is a beautiful, playful, warm and wise novel: if your favourite character doesn't end up being the elephant, you are dead inside. I wholeheartedly recommend this book. It is a perfect blend of seriousness, coyness, intelligence and insight. Saramago's use of punctuation can be a little alienating at first (in short, he doesn't actually use much at all) but do persevere - like Trainspotting that little bit of effort in the opening pages will make all the difference. On the basis that it is a good colleague's favourite novel, I also read Auntie Mame by Patrick Dennis. It is a cheap and silly and delightful novel about a New York socialite. Read it on Hampstead Heath in the unseasonably clement weather. I'm currently trying to finish The Ladies' Paradise by Zola - he says such interesting things about shopping, women, consumption, clothes - but he does so in such a laborious and long-winded way. Paid by the page - no surprises! In an attempt at rehabilitation (see first paragraph) I am also reading Cold Comfort Farm and trying to channel my inner Flora Poste. With reasonable success, so far.
Hugs xx
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