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text 2016-05-22 19:25
Ten Bookish Questions (meme)
The Complete C. S. Lewis Signature Classics - C.S. Lewis
Gone, Baby, Gone - Dennis Lehane
The Oxford Shakespeare: The Complete Works - William Shakespeare,Gary Taylor,Stanley Wells
The Complete Vampire Chronicles (Vampire Chronicles, #1-#4) - Anne Rice
The Other Boleyn Girl - Philippa Gregory
A Game of Thrones - George R.R. Martin
The Complete Novels of Jane Austen - Jane Austen
Fahrenheit 451 - Ray Bradbury
Hitler and Stalin: Parallel Lives - Alan Bullock
Joseph Anton: A Memoir - Salman Rushdie

Once more, thanks to Bookloving Writer for finding and starting this.

 

1. What book is on your nightstand now?

C.S. Lewis: Signature Classics (Mere Christianity / The Screwtape Letters / The Great Divorce / The Problem of Pain / Miracles / A Grief Observed / The Abolition of Man) -- the book that I currently dip in in between my other reads.

 

2. What was the last truly great book that you read?

Dennis Lehane: Gone, Baby, Gone.  No. 4 of the Kenzie & Gennaro series, and boy had he reached his full stride by that point.  No book in the series is bad (in fact, even the very first one, A Drink Before the War, is amazingly good for a first novel and deserved every award that it won), but Gone, Baby, Gone absolutely knocked me off my socks. 

 

3. If you could meet any writer – dead or alive – who would it be? And what would you want to know?

Dead: William Shakespeare (obviously, if you know anything about me at all) – the greatest literary genius that ever walked the earth. I think I'd just want to hang out with him and shoot the breeze, though.  I have a feeling he'd be part annoyed, part supremely amused with all the cult surrounding him and his works these days, and the last thing I'd want to do would be to feed into that.  Once we'd hung out together for a while, I suspect the conversation would shift towards literature and the theatre quite naturally anyway, and I'd be happy to then take it wherever would seem most natural.


Living: Salman Rushdie – one of, if not the most important contemporary literary voices, particularly (though for reasons I wouldn't wish on my very worst own enemy) on the great scouges of the post-Cold War world: fundamentalism (religious and otherwise), racism, and the encroachment of freedom of thought and freedom of expression.

 

                https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/1d/Salman_Rushdie_2012_Shankbone-2.jpg

 

4. What books might we be surprised to find on your shelves?

Cry to Heaven - Anne RiceHmm.  Again, depending how well you know me, possibly the first volumes of Anne Rice's Vampire Chronicles.  I'm absolutely disgusted with the way she's been behaving towards anyone who doesn't bow down before her in abject admiration in recent years, but I did actually like her early Lestat novels and also, in particular, Cry to Heaven.  I just think she's a clear case of success having completely screwed up a writer's mind.  In terms of her books, the Vampire Chronicles jumped the shark for me once and for all with Memnoch, the Devil.  I haven't touched any of her books since then, and I sure as hell won't anymore now that she's turned full-fledged bully.

 

5. How do you organize your personal library?

By genre and country of origin / language, and within those categories, essentially alphabetically; also including, however, a few subcategory shelves for authors or series that I particularly treasure.

 

    

 

6. What book have you always meant to read and haven’t gotten around to yet? Anything you feel embarrased never to have read?

With a TBR consisting of almost 3,000 books, are you kidding me?  There are plenty of books I'd still love to read -- and plenty, too, that I've always wanted to get around to but just haven't yet.  And no, I'm not embarrassed about a single one of them, either ...

 

 

7. Disappointing, overrated, just not good: what book did you feel you were supposed to like but didnt? Do you remember the last book you put down without finishing?

Disappointing and overrated: Philippa Gregory: The Other Boleyn Girl.  It was the first book by Gregory that I read, and given my interest in everything Tudor, and in Anne Boleyn in particular, it should have been a dead-on match.  Instead, I've found it badly researched, clichéd, sensationalist, and just plain sickening.  I've steered clear of Gregory's writing ever since.

 

DNF: My last major DNFs were (not as individual books, but as series), A Song of Ice and Fire (annoingly wordy, derivative world-building, clichéd, loads of characters too stupid to live, and just generally seriously underwhelming), Fifty Shades of Grey (awful writing and sick beyond belief) and Twilight (equally awfully written and, again, there's something truly sick to telling teenage / YA readers that it's not merely OK but even desirable to have to fear the guy you love).

 

 

 

8. What kinds of stories are you drawn to? Any you stay clear of?

I'm drawn to the literary classics (novels, plays, poetry, you name it), historical fiction and nonfiction (including biographies and memoirs), any- and everything international, mysteries and crime fiction, adventure stories (again, both fiction and nonfiction), art, archeology, nature, cooking, music, and politics.

 

I read very little horror, absolutely no slasher stories and, at the other end of the spectrum, also virtually no chick-lit and romance novels (or indeed anything arguably qualifying as cute and fluffy).

 

9. If you could require the president to read one particular book, what would it be?

The book that'll probably be found lying next to me when I die will be William Shakespeare's Hamlet, though as a matter of principle, I'm an advocate of people's reading as widely and variedly as possible -- hominem unius libri timeo and all that.

 

 

However, what with the turn world politics have been taking in the recent couple of months, I have a growing feeling that our precious world is in danger of going to hell in a handbasket really fast, so right about now, the books that I'd like to shove in just about all our dear leaders' respective faces are George Orwell's 1984, Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451, a hefty dose of books about Stalin, Hitler, and the "Third Reich" (both fiction and nonfiction) -- as well as a copy of the Qu'ran.

 

10. What do you plan to read next?

Hmmm.  I just whipped through the first couple of books in Dennis Lehane's Kenzie & Gennaro series in (for me) practically no time at all, but I think I'll leave the last one for later, take a small break from Lehane's writing (great though it is), go for a  change of pace and start Salman Rushdie's Joseph Anton.  Kind of also feels also like the right book to start on the day when Germany's Austrian neighbors look all poised to elect yet another right-wing, nationalist and populist head of state ... however hard I personally may be praying that this isn't actually going to happen.

 

 

 

Merken

Merken

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review 2013-10-09 14:28
Hitler and Stalin
Hitler and Stalin: Parallel Lives - Alan Bullock

bookshelves: spring-2013, hardback, history, nonfiction, e-book, one-penny-wonder, published-1991, tbr-busting-2013, lifestyles-deathstyles, nazi-related, philosophy, politics, slavic, true-grime, wwii, war, under-500-ratings, biography, bullies, holocaust-genocide, anti-semitic, epic-proportions, reference-book

Read from November 16, 2012 to April 06, 2013




This baby weighs just over 2kg - or, in real money, just a soupçon under 4½ lbs. Also have a digi version to highlight and copy

Group read starting on The Ides of March 2013.

To watch: http://youtu.be/zZaPlrwwKAU

 

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review 2013-04-20 00:00
Hitler and Stalin: Parallel Lives - Alan Bullock A monster of book about two very bad men doing horrible things to people. However, the book is also about what lead to their rise of power as well the effects the men had on the world around them. Fascinating as well as disturbing
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review 2013-04-06 00:00
Hitler and Stalin: Parallel Lives - Alan Bullock This baby weighs just over 2kg - or, in real money, just a soupçon under 4½ lbs. Also have a digi version to highlight and copy Group read starting on The Ides of March 2013. Join Bird Brian here: http://www.goodreads.com/group/show/84205-hitler-and-stalin-by-alan-bullock--group-readTo watch: http://youtu.be/zZaPlrwwKAUDedication:For my wife Nibbyand our children and grandchildrenOpening: Stalin: 1879-1899 Hitler: 1889-1908 (birth to age 19 years) Who, then, were these two men who were to leave such an indelible imprint on European history in the twentieth century? They were born more than ten years apart, Stalin at Gori, a small country town in Georgia on the River Kura within sight of the Caucasus Mountains, Hitler at Braunau on the River Inn, on the Austrian side of the frontier with Bavaria. According to his birth certificate, registering the birth of Joseph Dzhugashvili at the Cathedral of the Assumption in Gori, Stalin (as he later became known) was born on 6 December 1878 (New Style 18 December). It was only in December 1922 that his secretary Tovstukha, making out a new CV for him, gave his day of birth as 21 December (NS) 1879, a year and three days later.’That was the date on which the peoples of the USSR celebrated his fiftieth birthday in 1929, and the whole Communist world his 70th birthday in 1949. The discrepancy was only discovered when the Central Party Archive was opened in the 19905 and no explanation of it has so far been given. I have continued to use the official date of 21 December 1879. There is no question about the date of Hitler’s birth, 20 April 1889, under ten years later. The gap in age is a fact never to be forgotten in any comparison of the different stages of their careers; it grew even wider at the end, Hitler dying in 1945 at the age of fifty—six, Stalin outliving him to die in 195 3, just short of his seventy-fifth birthday. Page 156: No personal experience has come to light which could help to explain the intensity of Hitler’s hatred of the Jews, although some biographers have pointed to the obscene language in which he habitually wrote and spoke of this as pointing to a sexual origin. It is a disturbing question to consider when was the last occasion on which this ‘man, who was responsible for the death of six million Jews, actually spoke to or met a Jew in person. But ‘the Jew’ as one encounters him in the pages of Mein Kampf and Hitler’s ravings bears no resemblance to flesh-and-blood human beings of Jewish descent: he is an invention of Hitler's obsessional fantasy, a Satanic creation, expressing his need to create an object on which he could concentrate his feelings. Well folks ´we 've had the GRamazon thingie and no one wants to play ball. Methinks they didn't want to play ball in the first place... it was leass than tepid.OTOH I have enjoyed, not much that wasn't apparent from other sources; not much that I didn't know, so HEY a cool book.#61 TBR Busting 2013
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review 2008-10-26 00:00
Hitler and Stalin: Parallel Lives - Alan Bullock Must Read -- One of the truly great works of historical synthesis in the 20th century.
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