You will never stub your toe standing still. The faster you go, the more chance there is of stubbing your toe, but the more chance you have of getting somewhere. (Charles Kettering, from thinkexist.com) For over four months now, our daughter has been struggling with a toe-that-will-not-heal, her left big toe to be precise. It all started with a … Continue reading I do like a bit of nonsense
Jane Austen: Conservative or progressive?
I must admit that, fan as I am of Jane Austen (of her wit and clear-eyed observation of humanity), I have sometimes been conflicted about whether she is, as this post title asks, conservative or progressive. She was innovative in terms of the history of the novel - her sure use of the third person … Continue reading Jane Austen: Conservative or progressive?
Rudyard Kipling, An interview with Mark Twain
How could I resist reading this offering from the Library of America, featuring as it does two giants of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries? Both are writers I know well in a superficial way: I've really read only a little of their works. This essay, I thought, presented an interesting opportunity to get … Continue reading Rudyard Kipling, An interview with Mark Twain
Miles Franklin shortlist for 2010
It seems vaguely silly for all we bloggers to be announcing the same thing - except that perhaps each of us has a slightly different readership so maybe it's not completely redundant for me to announce here what has already been announced elsewhere - at Musings of a Literary Dilettante. The Dilettante has provided links … Continue reading Miles Franklin shortlist for 2010
Jeanette Winterson, Oranges are not the only fruit
As I was reading Jeanette Winterson's novella Oranges are not the only fruit, the question, rightly or wrongly, that was uppermost in my mind was "What is it with the oranges?" Is there something about oranges that I don't know? Something specific that they symbolise? I racked (wracked) my brain for something in my literary … Continue reading Jeanette Winterson, Oranges are not the only fruit
Jane Austen’s letters, 1811-1813
Early in my blogging career I wrote a post on the letters Jane Austen wrote (well, those remaining anyhow) between 1814 and 1816. This was to coincide with my local Jane Austen group's reading of Emma. This year we are reading Mansfield Park and so decided to read the letters she wrote during her writing … Continue reading Jane Austen’s letters, 1811-1813
P.T. Barnum, In France
When I saw that this week's Library of America story was by P.T. Barnum, I knew I had to read it. Like most people I've heard of Barnum and his travelling shows, but had never read anything by him. "In France" is not a short story, as most of the Library of America offerings are, but … Continue reading P.T. Barnum, In France
On the literary road, in north-east Victoria
Last year I wrote a couple of posts about places of literary interest that we passed through on a road trip. Here is another such post, again using The Oxford literary guide to Australia as my main source. Yarrawonga, Vic Yarrawonga was where, on this trip, we hit Victoria first. It is a twin town … Continue reading On the literary road, in north-east Victoria
So you have a book collection…
... but how well do you care for it? In a recent post, I reviewed (if you could call it a review) Leslie Geddes-Brown's book titled Books do furnish a room. That book focused on the aesthetics of having a book collection, but what about how best to ensure its longevity? The April 2010 edition … Continue reading So you have a book collection…
George Jean Nathan, Baiting the umpire
I haven't posted on the last few Library of America stories, mainly due to lack of time and the fact that they've been by well-known writers anyhow. However, the one that lobbed in this week, "Baiting the umpire" by George Jean Nathan, looked rather intriguing and so I read it. It is really an essay, but … Continue reading George Jean Nathan, Baiting the umpire