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Category Archives: Books

Ralegh and his Queen

05 Thursday Nov 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Books, History

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Elizabeth I, Mathew Lyons, The Favourite, Walter Ralegh

favourite-the-paperbackMathew Lyon‘s The Favouritetraces the rise of Walter Ralegh from Devon small gentry to royal favour and power – and does it by paying attention to the psychological intricacies of Ralegh’s relationship with the Queen.

Lyons reads between the lines of extant documents and explores the motives of words and actions. What emerges is the rather unusual portrait of”the man who threw his cloak at Elizabeth’s feet.”

The Favourite begins there too, with the famous anecdote that may or may not be a later fiction – but, the author says, even if it is, it fits Ralegh to perfection, in its mix of bold impulse and shameless display. If he didn’t do it, whoever made it up caught well the man’s projected image… Continue reading →

Speaking of writers

22 Thursday Oct 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Books, Scribbling

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Albert Camus, Joanne Harris, The Plague, The Stranger, the Writer's Manifesto

This is a mixed post, but there’s a method to my madness – so bear with me.

JoanneHarrisFirst things first, after my rant about the portrayal of historical novelists in fiction, my friend Davide Mana pointed me to the Writer’s Manifesto, by Joanne Harris. Harris may not be my favourite author, but I share many of her views on writing, writers, writerly life, readers, readerly expectations, and the many myths, misconceptions and downright bizarre ideas floating on this particular water.

Whether you are a writer or a reader, it makes for interesting, thought-provoking read.

And then there is Camus. AlbertCamus

I rather thought I loathed Albert Camus, you know. I read The Stranger and The Plague in French as a girl, and disliked both book intensely – after which it never crossed my mind to try Camus again. If asked, I’d say that Camus is not my kind of author – and that’s that.

Until last night, when we had our sea-themed Ad Alta Voce meeting, and my friend Milla read a descriptive piece about the sea – apparently some kind of highly stylized travel memoir. It was a short, thick thing, rich in images and heady in language – and wonderfully translated too… “What did you say is that?” I asked – and the entirely unexpected answer was: “Camus.” So now I’ll have to seek out the memoir, read it and, in all likelihood, revise my opinion of  Camus.

It’s one of the reasons why I love Ad Alta Voce: the findings, the discoveries, the surprises. After all, with writers, you never know.

Anna Castle’s Kit Marlowe

27 Thursday Aug 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Books

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Anna Castle, Cambridge, christopher marlowe, Corpus Christi College, francis bacon, historical mystery, historical novel, mysteries

DbDAnd so, as I said I would, I read the second volume of Anna Castle’s Francis wonderful Francis Bacon series.* In Death by Disputation the action moves from London to Cambridge, with Tom Clarady installed at Corpus Christi college – ostensibly to get his degree. But of course, there is more to it: Tom is there as Bacon and Lord Burleigh’s intelligencer, to uncover a Puritan conspiracy against Queen, State, and Church. Who is smuggling incendiary Puritan tracts from the Low Countries, rallying religious malcontents and generally raising mischief? And then Tom’s tutor** – the man who informed Lord Burleigh in the first place – is found murdered, and Tom’s commission suddenly becomes a good deal riskier…
Continue reading →

A Reading Meme

23 Thursday Jul 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Books

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Ben Jonson, Books, Dino Buzzati, Jack Shalom, Johannes Brahms, Patrick Rambaud, Ralph Vaughan Williams, reading habits, reading meme, Umberto Eco, Victor Hugo

reader1There’s a reading meme abroad – and Jack Shalom, over at Jack Shalom – Music, Memories, and Magic, nominated me to answer ten questions about… well, basically about reading habits. And since there are very few reading-related things I can resist,  thank you, Jack – and let us begin.

1) Do you have a certain place at home for reading? Continue reading →

A tale of Turks, and chess, and hussars

14 Tuesday Jul 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Books, History, Stories

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Catherine the Great, chess, Conrad Veidt, Henri Mazuel-Dupuy, the Turk, Wolfgang von Kempelen

Turk2Each year I make a point of reading at least a book in French and one in Spanish, so I don’t lose touch with either language. This year my French choice* fell on a 1926 novel by Henri Mazuel-Dupuy, Le Joueur D’Échecs – that is to say, The Chess Player.

I had never heard of Mazuel-Dupuy until I read this review on Movies, Silently. The story of hussars and automata seemed quite intriguing in its absurdity, and I have a thing for Polish history… But alas, because of region coding, there is no way I can watch the movie, so I contented myself by doing a very small amount of research. Continue reading →

Ink and Paper Waterloo

11 Saturday Jul 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Books, History

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Battle of Waterloo, historical novels, Napoleonic era

wellington-waterlooTwo-hundred years… er, well: two-hundred years and three weeks ago. So it escaped my mind – but that’s not to say it wasn’t one of those battle that marked the end, and/or the beginning, of an era.

One of those battles that have a Before and an After… Continue reading →

Seers and Storytellers

09 Thursday Jul 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Books, Scribbling

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Kipling Year, Many Inventions, Poetry, Rudyard Kipling, storytelling, writing

inkwellThe Finest Story in the World has to be one of my favourite Kipling stories. It certainly was one of the first I read, many years ago, in a more than decent Italian translation, back when I still believed Kipling was just the man of the Jungle Books and Kim. Let us say that this particular short story, taken from Many Inventions, was a relevant step towards discovery. Continue reading →

All the way there

04 Saturday Jul 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Books, Scribbling

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Charles Dickens, Death and Mr. Pickwick, Farrar, Robert Seymour (illustrator), Stephen Jarvis, Straus and Giroux, The Pickwick Papers, writing

Death-and-Mr.-Pickwick-by-Stephen-JarvisHow do we come to write what we write? It’s a different question from “why”. It’s not so much a matter of reasons and motives, as of the road that lead to a particular book (or play, or story…) meant as a set of thematic, narrative and stylistic choices.

Each piece of work has its own How – long or short, a more or less disparate collection of influences, memories, circumstances, findings, likes, dislikes, long-chewed ideas and sudden epiphanies… Continue reading →

Enter a Kite – snoring

30 Tuesday Jun 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Books, Things

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librarian, Life's Handicap, not a book club, Reading aloud, Rudyard Kipling, The City of Dreadful Night

sleeping-raven-vector-isolated-white-48588759A couple of weeks ago we had the last meeting of Ad Alta Voce, our not-quite-book-club, before parting company for the summer. There were some ten of us, including The Librarian.

Now, you see, The Librarian is a rather rotund, more than middle-aged, yellow-haired lady who Is There Because She Is There. Don’t ask – it’s all very Italian.

The Librarian is also a rather peculiar character and used to dislike Ad Alta Voce quite a bit. For the first year and a half or so, she would grumpily let us in and then sit at her desk or prowl the (very tiny) library, making us jump at intervals by muttering to herself behind the shelves. And it was clear all along that what she muttered about was why, oh why couldn’t we read in our sitting rooms instead of forcing her to work night hours… Continue reading →

Perchance to read…

25 Thursday Jun 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Books

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Edward Rutherford, Georgette Heyer, Josephine Tey, Muriel Bradbrook, p. f. chisholm, Patricia Finney, Rafael Sabatini, Reading vacation

readerbooksHere we go again. Summer is back, and I am thinking about a Reading Week. As usual, I still don’t know whether I’ll manage it: work is rather intense, the revision is only a week away, and I have a short play to write… There is no question of going anywhere – but that’s all right if only I can get myself a week of blissful, uninterrupted reading. Why, at a pinch, even half a week would do very well.

When? No idea. We’ll see. Meanwhile, I’m hoarding books like there is no tomorrow. Let us see… Continue reading →

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