adelaidesean (
adelaidesean) wrote2009-09-16 02:46 pm
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well wuthered
I've also been reading in recent weeks. Here's what. Thanks to everyone who suggested titles or sent them as trades. All of them so far have been terrific!
- Necropolis: London and its Dead, by Catharine Arnold
- A Book of Endings, Deborah Biancotti
- Wuthering Heights, Charlotte Bronte
- Into the Silence, S H Courtier
- The Mystery of Rosa Portland, Diane Fahey
- The Nimrod Flip-Out, Etgar Keret
- Laughing Buddha, Daniel G Lanoue
- Einstein's Dreams, Alan Lightman
- Deaf Sentence, David Lodge
- Wild Surmise, Dorothy Porter
- The Shrieking Pit, Arthur J Rees
- Writers of the Future XXV, ed. K D Wentworth
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I'm currently trying to go down with another cold (again), and test-reading a friend's novel (very good), and The Colony also very good (about the early days of the Sydney Settlement).
I seem to be on a history kick.
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History is fun!
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Have you read _Northanger Abbey_? Actually is a satire, and a hoot.
I agree with the _Oryx and Crake_ rec. There's always _Pride and Prejudice and Zombies_ ...
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Any of Katherine Mansfield's short stories....
Steve
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Northanger Abbey is up there. Good pick!
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I've only just started it, but I'm quite enjoying The Rest is Noise, a big book about 20th century (mostly) classical music by Alex Ross.
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Is The Rest Is Noise the same book you blogged about recently?
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I'm also wishing I hadn't missed a lot of our annual new music festival here, including a chance to see a Stockhausen piece performed.
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I'm really interested in music that's found or contains chaotic elements, partly because it means they can be performed many times without repetition. It's doubly a shame, then, when they're hardly ever performed. :-(
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Which are:
The creation of musical notation
The creation of opera,
The creation of equal temperment (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equal_temperament)
The creation of the piano
and
The creation of recorded music.
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John, Paul, George, Ringo.... and, um... Jimi?
;)