Language & Grammar discussion
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What I'm Reading Now
That's what GR is for--people like you to let people like us know that a book is a MUST read. We also need to wrest the word "existential" back from politicians, who use it as a fancy word for "existing," as in "an existential threat."



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Thanks.
I'm about half way through Charlotte Bronte's Villette, which I'm enjoying listening to so far. However, I will have to go back and read it. I hear great sentences or paragraphs, but can't easily skim back to them when listening.
I never got the hang of audio books. In a car they just distracted me. And at home, my thoughts bud in and take the stage, making me lose narrative threads...


Safer that way. Maybe you've seen, but I'm reading a philosophy book. I'm in good hands, even though I go where angels fear to tread. The author, Sarah Bakewell, wrote a tour de force with that book about Montaigne (who would've thunk?), so I knew I'd like this one, esp. given that I'm partial to Existentialism.

The American Psychiatric Assoc. needs to examine voters.
Reading about Heidegger in the late 20s and early 30s, I'm getting some description of the rise of Hitler and how otherwise intelligent Germans dismissed him as someone who would go away. Whoops. Wrong.
In any event, it reminded me of smart people who said a certain demagogue today was just a blip on the primary screen. Now it's
"No way he could win the general election."
In any event, it reminded me of smart people who said a certain demagogue today was just a blip on the primary screen. Now it's
"No way he could win the general election."


One commonality, though, is the rise of the right in MANY countries. Power-hungry bastards (their numbers are legion) have always been there, but it seems to ebb and flow of history favors them more in certain times than others. Fascism is a fact of life fed by ignorance, of which their is no shortage. Ever.
If Winston Churchill didn't have a full-time job as a writer, he coulda been a pretty good wartime leader.
I'm listening to volume one, The Birth of Britain of his History of the English Speaking Peoples. English history has been described as a compendium of long lists of dates, names and battles. Churchill has put a good story, well told, into his history ... as far as I've gotten, which is about anno 750 AD.
I'm listening to volume one, The Birth of Britain of his History of the English Speaking Peoples. English history has been described as a compendium of long lists of dates, names and battles. Churchill has put a good story, well told, into his history ... as far as I've gotten, which is about anno 750 AD.

I have some histories by him but have never read any of it. They were inherited from some dead relative's library. Not sure what relative. People in the family just dump books on me. Bibliodump.

I think his role on the historical stage overshadows his writing. Think of Thomas Jefferson. He wrote a lot also, but most people are happy to think of him as president number three and author of the Declaration of Independence (yep. he's the guy forever pursuing happiness).

Haven't heard of that one. Is it about a diamond?
I keep straying from my BIG read to read poems. Not good.
I keep straying from my BIG read to read poems. Not good.

Philosophy is always good, given that most of it confuses me. At least as explained by "philosophers."


Kensley wrote: "Currently reading Revenge Wears Prada (sequel to Devil Wears Prada, which I just finished yesterday) and No Time For Goodbye by Linwood Barclay (a new favorite author of mine). Wish me luck on RWP,..."
Good luck on RWP, Kensley! ;-)
And Sharon, it's All the Light We Cannot See.
Good luck on RWP, Kensley! ;-)
And Sharon, it's All the Light We Cannot See.

The one I'm reading now, The Year Without a Purchase, has some great lessons in it, not all of them directly written about, but it's not a book I'd recommend to all heartily. It's humorous, though, and that helps a bunch.

Thanks! Currently 1st chapter tackled and I haven't regretted it so far! :)

We are all the same but different. One need only look as far as a fairy tale. And I'm sure the Cinderella tale gets treatment there because there seem to be a million versions.

Didn't a famous Englishman translate the 1,001 Nights? So famous that I cannot recall his name...?


Or 11th? Or 12th? (I'm her eighth old man, I'm Henry, Henry the 8th I am, I am!...)
There are also two literary Winston Churchills out there, the one who led Great Britain through WWII and an American one who wrote a number of historical novels. They were contemporaries and if they did not meet in person (I can't remember if they did or not), they did correspond with each other.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Last Eligible Billionaire (other topics)The Worst Best Man (other topics)
Fake Empire (other topics)
Tease (other topics)
The Favor (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Simon Mawer (other topics)E.E. Cummings (other topics)
Hannah Kent (other topics)
Virginia Woolf (other topics)
Evelyn Waugh (other topics)
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As I do. I just completed reading THE TUNNEL by Sabato, another gem in the existentialist roster. Unfortunately it has never gotten widespread acclaim. Only the most ardent existo fans have hoisted it on its proper pedestal, but you might check it out.
I can't but wonder how many literary gems have gone by the wayside because people read only the biggies, eg. THE STRANGER, THE PLAGUE, NO EXIT, etc. but don't get around the others, equally great but never popular.
I have repeatedly seen this throughout my life as I have discovered paintings in regional museums, hardly the biggies, that truly astounded me and I couldn't help but wonder why they had never appeared in the art history books. How many great novels have languished by the roadside, never to be exposed to the golden light of public popularity?