• The Tom Walsingham Mysteries
  • Clara who?
  • Stories
  • Contact

Scribblings

~ Clara Giuliani, storyteller

Scribblings

Category Archives: Books

The Fun of the Game

16 Tuesday Aug 2016

Posted by la Clarina in Books, History

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Bryher, Historical fiction, History, research

BryherHerselfI told you about Bryher’s The Player’s Boy, didn’t I?

Well, to this lovely, melancholy novel my Paris Press edition adds a wonderful afterword, consisting of a letter that Bryher wrote to a friend to explain her fascination with Elizabethan literature and history. It’s a charming little piece about growing up, reading, cultivating one’s imagination, finding strength in literature and history, and being slightly eccentric… It’s well worth reading in its entirety.

My favourite part, though, has to be the final musing on the historian’s perspective: Continue reading →

Marlowe according to Albert Decaris

30 Saturday Jul 2016

Posted by la Clarina in Books, Theatre

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Albert Decaris, christopher marlowe, Heritage Press, illustration, Limited Edition Club, Saint Lucia, Tamburlaine the Great

Untitled 13Dear Saint Lucia,

I’m not sure I’ve been  good enough so far for this – but, were you by any chance wondering about what  I might wish for December, here is an idea: I’ve discovered the existence of this lovely edition of four plays of Christopher Marlowe, published in the mid Sixties by Limited Edition Club and then Heritage Press, and illustrated by French artist Albert Decaris.

As you can see from the Tamburlaine here left, the illustrations are a wonder, and the whole book seems to have been conceived with much flair, design-wise… Continue reading →

Bryher – The Player’s Boy

28 Thursday Jul 2016

Posted by la Clarina in Books, History, Stories, Theatre

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Austin Phillips, Bryher, Elizabethan theatre, Jacobean Era, James Sands, The Player's Boy, Walter Raleigh

BryherMy acquaintance with Bryher‘s work is, I must say, limited to one book – but what a book!

The Player’s Boy tells the story of an apprentice who doesn’t become an actor in the early reign of James VI and I. Bryher had both a researcher’s interest and a passionate fondness for the golden era of Elizabethan theatre, and this novel tells it decline with a kind of haunting intenseness.  Continue reading →

The Re-Reading Itch

21 Thursday Jul 2016

Posted by la Clarina in Books

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Books, re-reading, Reading

RereadingLast night, over dinner, we discussed reading and re-reading. At one point I said that re-reading is the proof of how Knowing What Comes Next is not the key to the pleasure of reading. It sounded nice, and it worked well in the discussion, but the matter is less straightforward, I think – so here are a few thoughts.

First of all, we don’t all re-read. My father was one compulsive re-reader, and the books that were his show it with much wear and broken spines. My friend Clementina, on the other hand, never re-read a book in her life, because “once read, it’s read. What’s worth remembering I’ll remember, what I won’t remember isn’t worth it.” And they say that in his (admittedly brief) life, Vendean general Henri de la Rochejaquelein only read again and again the memoirs of I don’t remember what 17th century strategist. Perhaps he didn’t know Thomas Aquinas, who found the Man of One Book so unnerving…

Then, not all books are of the re-reading sort. This, again, varies hugely from person to person, but some books become members of the family, to which one returns again and again for comfort or guidance. Of the beauty of some other books, one never tires – each re-reading like that visit at the National Gallery whenever one is in London. Other books are tied to a moment, a memory, an atmosphere – and that’s what one seeks re-reading. Then there are those plots, or characters so perfect, one goes back to study how on earth the writer did it, and there are seasonal books that grow into yearly rituals, and favourite chapters, scenes and descriptions, and those books one read too early to truly appreciate them…

On the other hand, there are all the ugly, annoying, disappointing books, the ones we had to read or study, the ones that gave us nightmares, the ones too intense for comfort, the ones that came to highly recommended – or just the forgettable ones. The ones we’ll never want to re-read. ReRead1

Whatever the reason, though, my theory is that reading and re-reading are to hugely different activities. A first reading is an exploration, a matter of thrills and surprises – a combination of the wish to know What Comes Next and the enjoyment of the way there. It’s a matter of discoveries, very much like meeting a person or visiting a place for the first time. It’s the kind of experience that, at its best, keeps on up at all hours of the night. It’s like a first love – and, once gone, it’s gone.

Re-reading, now… Ah, re-reading is another kettle of fish. One re-reads more analytically. One goes deeper. One savours, sifts, observes, peels layers and enjoys nuances and complexities. One knows the general lay of the land, and revisits leisurely, enjoying the familiarity and digging for new beauties. Much like renewing an acquaintance, or returning to a place. It has joys of its own – its own set of pleasures.

The snag is, of course, that reading-time is finite, and one either reads or re-reads… Which is, in the end, why I don’t re-read as much as I’d like. Still, my Reading Week is approaching (perhaps), and I have half a mind to make it a Re-Reading Week instead. Just this year…

We’ll see. But what about you, O Readers? Are you Re-Readers?

Salva

Searching Shakespeare – and Marlowe

16 Saturday Jul 2016

Posted by la Clarina in Books, Poetry, Things

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

christopher marlowe, Open Source Shakespeare, searchable works, the Literature Network, William Shakespeare

Untitled 10You know when you know there is that perfect bit in Shakespeare, that line about this or that? You know the speech you need is there, somewhere – but can’t exactly place it, let alone find it…  Continue reading →

Kathe Koja, Kit Marlowe and modern patronage

28 Tuesday Jun 2016

Posted by la Clarina in Books

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

christopher marlowe, Kathe Koja, patronage, Roadswell Editions

Lieder

Rick Lieder’s KM

My friend Davide, he of the Karavansara blog, alerted me to Kathe Koja’s project, Christopher Wild.

She’s writing a novel about Kit Marlowe, and there will be a very limited “bespoke edition”. Twenty-nine (or nine-and-twenty, as Elizabethans would have spelt Kit’s age when he died) patrons will receive not only a personalised hardback copy, but also monthly reports on the novel’s progress, author’s notes, research bits and so on – Continue reading →

Borges, the Moon and Shakespeare

07 Tuesday Jun 2016

Posted by la Clarina in Books

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

José Luis Borges, Shakespeare's Memory, William Shakespeare

ShakespeareBorgesBW2In a slightly roundabout way I’ve come across a short story of José Luis Borges called La Memoria de Shakespeare, that is, Shakespeare’s Memory.

It’s a beautiful story – and by now I should know that, whenever I cross paths with Borges, I come away with wonders and discoveries. It starts, in a way that put me in mind of Kipling, with a rather dull Shakespearian scholar who, over dinner, gets offered the gift of Shakespeare’s memory. There are warnings – it will be hard, it will be dangerous… but frankly, would you refuse such an offer?

Hermann Soergel doesn’t, and in the following weeks find himself gradually flooded by Shakespeare’s memories, knowledge, likes and dislikes… I won’t tell you how it ends. It’s a pretty eerie ending, though not unexpected, but that’s not the point. The point is that, Borges being Borges, the story becomes a chance to illustrate the author’s… I was going to write “the author’s theories on Shakespeare”, but it’s not quite it. Borges is no Wilbur G. Zeigler or Gene Ayres, trying to smuggle some bizarre theory in fiction’s form. On the contrary, he adds layers and depth to a fictional story with a handful of unprovable but beautiful intuitions.

Here is my favourite:

I know that for Shakespeare the moon was less the moon than it was Diana, and less Diana than that dark drawn-out word – moon.*

I love it. This is Shakespeare in twenty-five words. Not Shakespeare’s works, but ShakespeareBorgesBW1who Shakespeare was – or may have been. The Grammar Schoolboy with enough Latin and rhethoric to identify the moon with its mythological counterpart – but, more than that, the man with the exquisite ear, the poet who sees sounds, and uses each word as a brush-stroke. Borges is a genius.

Moreover, this gem of characterization doesn’t come just like that. It’s one of the tidal waves of Shakespeare’s mind flooding the narrator’s. You can almost see him – Hermann Soergel, absentmindedly watching the moon, one summer night, and suddenly he catches his breath as the alien awareness invades him. Diana first, and then the silvery light, the half-gloom containted in the “dark drawn-out word”.

I’ll say it again: it’s beautiful. Shakespeare imagined – seen – by moonlight. I do love Borges.

___________________________________

* Translation by Andrew Hurley.

George Garrett’s Ghosts

04 Saturday Jun 2016

Posted by la Clarina in Books, Things

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Entered from the Sun, George Garrett, historical novelist, The Murder of Marlowe, translator

EnteredI think I’ve mentioned this before – but, as a Saturday thought, I’ll post a bit of the Author’s Greeting from George Garrett’s Entered from the Sun – the Murder of Marlowe.

It’s an irritatingly wonderful book, by the way, and one of these days I’ll have to write about it at some length. For now, let’s content ourselves with this… Continue reading →

The Assassin

02 Thursday Jun 2016

Posted by la Clarina in Books, History, Stories

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Alexandre Dumas Père, Buckingham assassination, historical novel, John Felton, Ronald Blythe, The Assassin

AssassinI had never read anything of Ronald Blythe’s before, and The Assassin was one of those serendipitous finds. I’m glad it happened, because it is a wonderful book.

The eponymous assassin is John Felton, the officer who stabbed George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, in a Portsmouth inn, in 1628. In Twenty Years Later, Dumas Père paints Felton as a mad-eyed fanatic manipulated by the wicked Milady – but the story was quite different. A greedy royal favourite and an incompetent military leader, Buckingham was so extremely unpopular that his death was met with much rejoicing, and Felton was celebrated as a hero… Continue reading →

Tales of the Mermaid Tavern

26 Thursday May 2016

Posted by la Clarina in Books, History, Poetry, Stories

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Alfred Noyes, Ben Jonson, christopher marlowe, Leslie Hotson, narrative poem, Tales of the Mermaid Tavern, Thomas Nashe, William Shakespeare

Alfred_noyesAlfred Noyes wrote a good deal, and in many genres. A poet, novelist, sci-fictioneer, essayist and pamphleteer, he was especially famous for his narrative poems – first of all the highly melodramatic The Highwayman.

Whether these poems have aged all that well is… er, open to debate – but I must confess a partiality for Noyes’s Tales of the Mermaid Tavern. Continue reading →

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Seek and Find

♠ THE TOM WALSINGHAM MYSTERIES

Available on Amazon
Available on Amazon

The Copperfield Review’s first anthology – containing Gentleman in Velvet

Recent Posts

  • For Queen and Country: Tom Walsingham at the HNR
  • A Snare of Deceit is out!
  • A Deadly Complot
  • Merry Christmas!
  • Death in Rheims – Publication day!

Popular Scribblings

  • Had I Not Been Awake
  • The Organist and the Sailor
  • The Future of Storytelling: Let's begin with Stories
  • Ugo and the Sausage King
  • And no lemon, please...
  • Dante's Ulysses

Categories

  • Books
  • Eccentricities
  • History
  • Lostintranslation
  • Poetry
  • Scribbling
  • Silents
  • Stories
  • Theatre
  • Things
  • Uncategorized

Enter your email address to get a messenger on horseback... er, an email will reach you by email when a new Scribbling is out.

Join 311 other subscribers

RSS Feeds

  • RSS - Posts
  • RSS - Comments

No Blog’s an Island

Sapere Books

 

IBA

International Bloggers' Association

I tweet on Twitter

And I pin on Pinterest

Senza Errori di Stumpa – my Italian blog

Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com.

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Scribblings
    • Join 311 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Scribblings
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...