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Category Archives: Books

Francis Bacon, sleuth

21 Thursday May 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Books

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Anna Castle, francis bacon, Gray's Inn, historical mystery, historical novel, mysteries

cover-murder-by-misruleHow exactly I came across Anna Castle‘s Francis Bacon mysteries I don’t remember – but, for once and for a wonder, it wasn’t because of Kit Marlowe.

Well, Marlowe will appear in the second book, yes – but I didn’t know that until after reading Book 1, so there. Continue reading →

He Was Born with a Gift of Laughter…

30 Thursday Apr 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Books

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Captain Blood, Rafael Sabatini, Scaramouche

SabatiniI have to wonder: are Sabatini fans divided between, say, Captain Blood persons and Scaramouche persons? Just one of those entirely irrelevant questions – and after all, I am a Sabatini fan, without feeling the least compulsion to be either sort of person… Continue reading →

The Playmate and the Eiderdown

28 Tuesday Apr 2015

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Limits and Renewals, poems, Rudyard Kipling, Short Stories

A poem of Kipling’s. It goes with the story “Aunt Ellen”, from the 1932 collection quiltLimits and Renewals.

SHE is not Folly — that I know.
Her steadfast eyelids tell me so
When, at the hour the lights divide.
She steals as summonsed to my side.

When, finger on the pursèd lip;
In secret, mirthful fellowship
She, heralding new framed delights.
Breathes, ‘This shall be a Night of Nights!’

Then out of Time and out of Space.
Is built an Hour and a Place
Where all an earnest, baffled Earth
Blunders and trips to make us mirth;

Where, from the trivial flux of Things.
Rise unconceived miscarryings
Outrageous but immortal, shown.
Of Her great love, to me alone . . .

She is not Wisdom but, may be.
Wiser than all the Norms is She
And more than Wisdom I prefer
To wait on Her — to wait on Her!

Quite who “she” is, is open to debate. I have always liked to see in this charming lady either an imaginary companion or a child’s quirky and playful imagination…

Anyway, here you can find the story – and it is of the laugh-out-loud variety. One has to wonder at the sharp contrast with another, similarly named aunt, Helen Turrell, in The Gardener…

Ah well, we’ll come to that one too, sooner or later. For now, have fun with Aunt Ellen, and the eiderdown quilt, and cars that bound marsupially with a noise of ironmongery in revolt.

Seven books I wish I had written

16 Thursday Apr 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Books, Scribbling

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Emily Dickinson, joseph conrad, Josephine Tey, Robert Bolt, Rodney Bolt, Ros Barber, Steven Runciman, Writer's Envy

BooNot necessarily my favourite books… well, some of them, yes – but for the rest… Let’s say, seven books that, for one reason or another, I can dream of having written myself.

1. Joseph Conrad’s Lord Jim. Yes, yes, I know. But it’s a matter of power, depth, beauty and intensity… Continue reading →

The Power of the Dog

31 Tuesday Mar 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Books

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Actions and Reactions, Dogs, Kipling Year, Poetry, Rudyard Kipling

stanleyFor Kipling Day, a poem from the 1909 collection Actions and Reactions. It goes with the story Garm – a Hostage.

If you ever had and loved a dog – or a cat, for that matter – then you know what this is all about… Continue reading →

Family Man, ot the Theological Werewolf

21 Saturday Mar 2015

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Dylan Meconis, Family Man, Graphic novel, Luther Levy

LutherLevyI wouldn’t call myself a fan of comics or graphic novels. I’m just not fond of the medium, so I’m sure there are some great ones out there – but I don’t feel an urge to read them.

And I’m not wild about werewolf stories, either. Or vampire stories, for that matter. Again, there may be some very good ones, I’m sure – but they are not my cup of tea.

All of which is why I’m still a little surprised at how much I am enjoying Dylan Meconis’ web-graphic novel Family Man. It all began when I stumbled across an article I can’t find anymore, praising FM for its clever and unusual premise, well researched historical setting, and interesting portrayal of intellectuals. My curiosity was aroused – and if there was any mention of werewolves, I must have missed it. By the time I realised the werewolves were coming at all, I was entirely sold on the story of young theologian Luther Levy, his uncomfortable heritage, his lost faith, his many questions, and his second chance at a mysterious (and more than slightly sinister) new university.

I was going to say that Family Man is a damn good story, no matter in what medium it is told, wonderfully written, filled with ideas, suspence and atmosphere, and populated with interesting characters who talk in clever, witty dialogue. But the fact is that, besides being all of these things, it is also lovely to look at – even to my untrained eye: I’m loving the sepia-toned, atmospheric drawings, the page composition, and the way it all combines with the excellent writing to tell the story.

Goes to prove that one never can tell. I’m not saying I’ll become an avid reader of comics – but I’m very glad I gave this graphic novel a try, instead of just raising an eyebrow at the “graphic” and missing the “novel.”

 

 

Unexpected Alices

14 Saturday Mar 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Books, Eccentricities

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Alice in Wonderland, Harry Ransom Center, Lewis Carroll, Salvador Dalì, University of Texas at Austin, Vladimir Nabokov

lewis.carroll.nabokov.lo_-1373x19402

Image courtesy of the Harry Ransom Center, the University of Texas at Austin.

The original 1923 cover by Zalshupin for Anya in Wonderland, young Nabokov’s Russian not-quite-translation from Lewis Carroll, with changed names and Russian nursery-rhymes…

Who knew? Or that Salvador Dalì once made illustrations for Alice? All of this and much more can be seen in this fascinating exhibition at the Ransom Center of the University of Texas.

Captain Salgari

26 Thursday Feb 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Books

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emilio salgari, Rajah Brooke, Sandokan

n4_art2_corsaroneroYou can blame this one on Davide Mana, and his Salgari post over at Karavansara, for reminding me of how I too was subjected to Salgari as a child: in Italy there used to be this curious notion that no childhood could be considered complete without a hefty dose of Malay Pirates and Multi-coloured Corsairs. That went especially for boys, but girls weren’t always allowed to go immune…

I, for one, wasn’t. One summer day, when I was about ten, a distant cousin of my mother’s descended on me with a whole box of vintage Salgari – his own childhood reading choice, some fifteen or twenty hardbacks, with tiger-coloured* covers. He had loved them, he said, and I was going to love them too. Continue reading →

The Way of Henry James

14 Saturday Feb 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Books

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Henry James, notebooks, The Spoils of Poynton, writing process

We were speaking of notebooks, remember?

Portrait of Henry JamesWell, Henry James was one compulsive notebooker. He always had one with him, where he noted ideas and interesting conversations, he brainstormed plot and characters and recorded engagements and addresses. Among other things, in one of them is found his solemn decision of giving up playwriting after Guy Domville flopped.

Poor Mr. James… Continue reading →

Treasure Hunt

05 Thursday Feb 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Books

≈ 4 Comments

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Amazon, Books, bookshops, Internet, Internet Archive, Project Gutenberg, second-hand books

bookshopDo you remember a time before the Internet, when looking for a book could entail a good deal of leg-work, physically visiting bookshops, bookstalls and suchlike places?

I am old enough to have spent my adolescence doing just that: always wanting something that was, hard to find at best, but more often not available or no longer in print – and forever scouring bookshops and bookstalls… Continue reading →

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