“In view of the fact that I was once again on my feet, instead of flat on my back, the concept of ‘later’ suddenly seemed less quixotic than realistic. If you don’t know the exact moment when the lights will go out, you might as well read until they do.”
Clive James. Latest Readings (New Haven: Yale University
Press, 2015)
**
ON READING THE WISH BOOK – THE SEARS AND ROEBUCK CATALOGUE IN THE LATE 1930s
“ The Sears and Roebuck catalogue was much better used
as a Wish Book, which it was called by the people out
in the country, who would never be able to order anything
out of it, but could spend hours dreaming over.
Willalee Bookatee and I used it for another reason. We
made stories out of it, used it to spin a web of fantasy
about us. Without that catalogue our childhood would
have been radically different. The federal government
ought to strike a medal for the Sears, Roebuck company
for bringing all that color and all that mystery and
all that beauty into the lives of country people.
I first became fascinated with the Sears catalogue
because all the people in its pages were perfect. Nearly everybody I knew had something missing, a finger cut off,
a toe split, an ear half-chewed away….
Harry Crews. A Childhood: The Biography of a Place
(New York: Harper & Row Publishers, 1978)
**
A FORGOTTEN BOOK
“The Destiny Man concerns a ham actor who seizes a
last chance for stage fame when he discovers a lost Shakespearean play left behind on a train. There
is a crime involved, but the novel’s impetus
derives from knowing that the hero – who has
wangled sole rights to the play’s performance –
is going to turn the event into a hilarious
fiasco when he tries to rise to the role’s
challenge. Van Greenaway even has the nerve
to create chunks of the bard’s missing play
from scratch, and pulls them off with enormous
dispatch. The ending is a surprise and too
delightful to be given away here.”
Christopher Fowler. The Book of Forgotten Authors
(London: Riverrun, 2017)
**
THE ORIGINAL MANUSCRIPT OF CASANOVA’S 12 VOLUMES OF HIS MEMOIR—“HISTOIRE DE MA VIE”— HELD BY A GERMAN PUBLISHER
The original handwritten manuscript, penned in
French, was “under lock and key, where it barely
survived the bombing of Leipzig, in 1943. Two
years later, Winston Churchill made a worried
inquiry and an Army vehicle was dispatched to
evacuate it from the rubble. The complete text
was first published in 1960 (the year that a
British jury found redeeming social value in
Lady Chatterley’s Lover”).
Judith Thurman. “In Flagrante” in The New Yorker
(June 27, 2022)
**
DESCARTES IN HIS DREAM READS A BOOK
“On the night of 10-11 November 1619 Descartes,
then aged twenty-three, had three dreams which
he considered came from high, and took the trouble
to write down and interpret in some detail.
Unfortunately his own account of them is not extant;
but the account given by Baillet, in his Vie de
Mr. Des-Cartes, from which I shall be quoting,
can be taken as fairly close to Descartes’s own.”
Alice Browne
…
“In this final dream, he found a book on his table,
without knowing who had put it there. He opened it,
and seeing it was a Dictionary, he was delighted,
hoping it could be very useful to him. At the same
moment, he found another book under his hand, with
which he was equally unfamiliar, not knowing from
where it had come to him. He found it was a collection
of poems by different authors, entitled Corpus Poetarum
Etc. He had the fancy to read something in it; opening
the book , he fell upon the verse Quod vitae sectabor
iter? (What path in life shall I follow?). At the
same moment, he noticed a man whom he did not , but who
showed him a piece of verse, beginning with Est & Non,
(Yes and No) and praised it to him as an excellent
piece. M. Descartes told him he knew what it was,
and this piece was one of the Idylls of Ausonius,
which were to be found in the big collection of
poets which was on the table…”
Alice Brown. “Descartes’s Dreams” in the Journal of the Warburg and Coutland Institute, vol 40 (1977)
**
FROM J.D. SALINGER’S THE CATCHER IN THE RYE
“You take that book Of Human Bondage, by Somerset
Maugham, , though I read it last summer. It’s a
pretty good book and all, but I wouldn’t want to
call Somerset Maugham. I don’t know. He just
isn’t the kind of guy I’d want to call up, that’s
all,”
**
ON PLAYBOY & BOCCACCIO
“Ah, yes, the sultan’s daughter. Haven’t I heard
that one before? Yes, in Playboy, perhaps, where
Boccaccio showed up in the “Ribald Classics” section
back there in the mid-fifties. Stealing the magazine
from beneath a counselor’s bed at camp (I was thirteen
or fourteen ), I may have read a Boccaccio tale or
two, finding the stories between a photo of Jayne
Mansfield lying heavily in the grass and was so serious
– yes, there amid Hef’s interminable ‘philosophy’ and
pages of redundant debonair balderdash (dating, food,
clothes, jazz), there would be Boccaccio, in
shortened form, accompanied by a cartoon.’
David Denby. Great Books(New York:
Simon & Schuster,1996)
**
LITERARY MATTERS ARE NOT ALEWAYS
WHAT THEY SEEM
This 400 page novel is a master of disguise.
*
MY POETICAL INDEBTEDNESS
TO A.E.HOUSMAN
A.E.
I.O.U.
**
ON READING ABOUT LITTLE ELSIE DINSMORE
As I pondered weak & weary,
My eyes grew moist & then quite teary.
I cried & cried. I cd not stop.
I am a sucker for sentimental slop.
LJP
Well-done! Suggestion for your next Joys of Reading: the poem William Carlos Williams wrote when he heard that The New Jersey Turnpike had named a rest stop after Joyce (“I think that I shall never see/A poem as lovely as a tree”) Kilmer:
Loved it all.
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Got my “personal bookmarks,” and love them. Thanks very much. Hope you’re feeling better. Jack
>
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LP!, you are simply, utterly and completely brilliant. Bravo! AEIOU is now in high repeat in my mind! Trendsetter. Thank you!
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I love the Elsie dinsmore piece!
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The Destiny Man is $167 on Amazon.
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Wonderful stuff, Louis. I love the Clive James especially, and your AE /IOU.
Bravo.
By the way, I’ll have a new book out at the end of August. I attach the cover and galleys for you in case they are of interest.
Cheers,
Dave
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I raise a toast to you and all suckers for sentimental slop!
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Well-done! Suggestion for your next Joys of Reading: the poem William Carlos Williams wrote when he heard that The New Jersey Turnpike had named a rest stop after Joyce (“I think that I shall never see/A poem as lovely as a tree”) Kilmer:
I think that I shall never see
A WCW WC
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