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review 2016-03-13 06:58
Battle of the Books
The Battle of the Books and other short pieces - Jonathan Swift,Henry Morley

I'm going to claim "read" on this one even though I haven't strictly read everything inside the covers.  I got through most of it, but after a rather arduous 30+ page rhyming poem, I couldn't make it much further though the rest (which was largely more poetry).

 

The book is cute, if anything over 140 years old can be said to be cute.  I bought it because I was charmed by the cover and the title and the old advertisements in the front and back cover ("To Mothers! Woodward's "Gripe Water' or Infants Preservative...") and really no bibliophile worth their salt could pass a story called "Battle of the Books".

 

Battle of the Books was, once I got past the archaic writing, clever and pretty epic for a short story.  It was written to be satiric, as a representation of the critical movement against the "Ancient Books" by literary critics of the age.  The battle is pitched at St. James' Library (I'm assuming once the library has closed for a good long weekend), with various deities finding it too irresistible not to choose sides, get involved, and make a mess.  

 

I won't tell you who won; that would be a spoiler.  I'd imagine that had I been a contemporary of Swift's (or just much better educated in literary criticism) the ending would have a deeper meaning that as it is, I can only guess at.  Still I enjoyed it - it was epic and fun even without all the insider's knowledge.

 

The next couple of stories are aimed squarely at almanac editors.  These were so acidly satiric they ceased to be 'funny' although the audacious claims remained amusing.  From there on, it's almost all poetry and most of it written as odes to the love of Swift's life, Stella.  Of them, the poem Baucis and Philemon firmly my favourite.

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text 2015-07-02 04:09
Back home, or, TBR Thursday: the mega edition
Forensics: The Anatomy of Crime - Val McDermid
The Alchemist - Paulo Coelho
The Graveyard Book - Neil Gaiman
Plato and a Platypus Walk into a Bar... Understanding Philosophy Through Jokes - Thomas Cathcart
The Fine Art of Fucking Up - Cate Dicharry
Battle of the Books - Henry Morley,Jonathan Swift

I got home last night, leaving behind sunny, 31C weather to return home to rain and 8C.  Ah well, at least the cats still recognised me and my husband was very happy to have me home.

 

Along with an astounding amount of new clothes (mid-season sales!!) I brought back a pile of books (of course) and returned home to find another pile waiting for me as my internet buys continued to pile up in my absence.  The tally:

 

New books in June:  19

Books read in June: 1

 

One book read this month.  I don't think I have ever before only read one book in a month so that probably says more about how much fun I had than all of the pictures I took (and there were many!).

 

The books in the bar above are the purchases I made in Amsterdam at the American Book Center (Highly recommend!) and at the used/antiquarian book fair taking place in the street out front.  The covers below represent my normal haul of internet buys.

                          

 

The Alchemist - Paulo Coelho was recommended to me by my best friend and he also found The Fine Art of Fucking Up - Cate Dicharry  and I read the summary over his shoulder and thought it sounded good.  Battle of the Books - Jonathan Swift  was a find at the book market and how could I not pick up a gem with that title?

 

The other 3 at the top are recommendations from my fellow BookLikers, so I know they're going to be good!

 

The American Book Center... I could have spent days and days here....

 

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