My latest post in Talk about books is about two novels from the early 2010s dealing with rural Ireland in the wake of the economic crash a few years earlier: Donal Ryan’s The Spinning Heart and Belinda McKeon’s Solace 📖
My latest post in Talk about books is about two novels from the early 2010s dealing with rural Ireland in the wake of the economic crash a few years earlier: Donal Ryan’s The Spinning Heart and Belinda McKeon’s Solace 📖
Down the country: Donal Ryan, The Spinning Heart; and Belinda McKeon, Solace
On a third reading of Caoilinn Hughes’s second novel 📖, I’m still confused as to what’s going on in the court case at the end. So is the first-person narrator: Further remarks about Caoilinn Hughes’s The Wild Laughter
I’m watching a YouTube video of an interview with automatically generated subtitles. In the space of a minute, it has rendered “dreaming” as “streaming” and “themes” as “teams”. So offputting and distracting. If people are going to bother with this crap, couldn’t they at least correct it?
My resistance to the idea that I’m going to have to read (and buy, though not necessarily in that order) Bridget Hourican’s bio of James Clarence Mangan 📖 has now almost completely crumbled.
Here’s an unusually informative story on Severely Deficient Autobiographical Memory (SDAM). Nice to have confirmation that others have similar experiences to mine, and that I’m not just imagining it. Sadie Dingfelder in The Guardian
Claire Kilroy published her fifth novel, Soldier Sailor, last year and it caused a stir. The three previous novels look like an unusually varied bunch but what they have in common (Faustian bargains, for a start) may come as a surprise. Deal with the devil 📖
Deal with the devil: Three novels by Claire Kilroy
The latest post from Talk about books is about Melissa Bank’s two books 📖. They look like collections of “linked short stories”, but the links are deeper and the stories or episodes more tightly integrated into an artistic wholeness than that might imply.
Multiple endings: The linked short story collections of Melissa Bank
If it’s anything, journalism is the war of facts against narrative. Conspiracists swallow the narrative and ignore the facts.
Helen Lewis, commenting on the New Yorker piece about RFK Jr
The Corporation’s durability is remarkable. Already half a millennium old when Shakespeare arrived in London, its supporters see the survival of its rights and institutions as crucial to its modern success.
They can’t be literally the same supporters, can they? The Goose and the Golden Egg
Hi @manton, I thought I’d have another go at crossposting to BlueSky, having given it a miss for a few months. It still doesn’t seem to work. Any idea why? It’s not a big deal for me, so no urgency, but it’s nice to be able to post proper links there occasionally. Thanks.
When I started my newsletter, I used to write my posts every second Wednesday. As they got longer and I got older and tireder, I’d start my posts every second Wednesday. Today, I’ve taken advantage of the Irish bank holiday to get 950 words ahead of myself, so I might finish on Wednesday 😎
I forgot that I’d switched to Hex keyboard input so as to type a “thin space”, and thought that my Option key had stopped working! Panic over.
The Stand describes a world laid waste by a weaponised super-flu virus nicknamed “Captain Trips” that has escaped from a biolab.
Donal Ryan on Stephen King. So that’s why so many people believe that Covid originated in a lab leak.
Katie Herzog recently learned that she has aphantasia. It sounds to me as if she has SDAM too. She’s refreshingly sceptical of the consensus view that it’s not a disorder or disability. Aphantasia is very analogous to dyslexia, which is treated as a disability for some purposes; via Helen Lewis
Here’s another post from Talk about books. This time, I’m discussing Scott Turow’s third and fourth novels, 📖 Pleading Guilty (1993) and The Laws of Our Fathers (1996). Impeaching his own witness.
Impeaching his own witness: Scott Turow, Pleading Guilty and The Laws of Our Fathers
I’m going to have to stop buying secondhand books from the UK. I recently ordered a book via Alibris; it was posted on 2 July and it still hasn’t arrived. This is the third time this has happened: the first book never came at all, the second took two months! An ordinary letter took 3 weeks 😡
Gosh, Stuart Jeffries didn’t like Paul Foot very much, did he? Review of Margaret Renn’s Foot biography 📚
Via John Naughton’s Memex 1.1 blog
I just noticed that because of an error on the index page of my personal site my post “Did William Empson have ADHD?” has till now been inaccessible from the index page. I thought it might be worthwhile to reup it anyway.
Here’s a list of “5 great underrated film performances by Nicolas Cage” that doesn’t include either of my two favourites, Brian de Palma’s Snake Eyes (1998) or John Dahl’s Red Rock West (1993) 🍿