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General > What NYRB Classic are you reading now?

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message 1: by Louise (new)

Louise | 491 comments While we wait for our book club discussion to start in January, tell us what NYRB Classic you are reading now.

I'm reading Compulsory Games. Some stories are wowing me, and others just leave me confused. I also find it difficult to read any particular story in bits. Each story is better read if I can do it in one sitting. I suppose that is true of most short story collections but even moreso with Robert Aickman's. He demands your full attention.

What are you reading?


Mirko (Reading Literature) | 78 comments At the moment I'm not reading a NYRB. The last one I read was a couple of weeks ago, Agostino by Alberto Moravia. I like to switch things up a bit in between. The next NYRB is going to be likely one that hasn't been chosen for the January read, but is on my list. :)


message 3: by Louise (new)

Louise | 491 comments I will most likely finish Compulsory Games tonight so I'm looking for a short read to squeeze in before our January pick. Looking at my shelves, shorter novels that I have include No Tomorrow, Late Fame and Niki: The Story of a Dog. Which to choose, that is the question.


Mirko (Reading Literature) | 78 comments Louise wrote: "....I'm looking for a short read to squeeze in before our January pick. Looking at my shelves, shorter novels that I have include No Tomorrow, Late Fame and Niki: The Story of a Dog. Which to choose, that is the question"

Late Fame by Arthur Schnitzler

.... was a great read. Would definitely recommend it. :)


message 5: by WndyJW (new)

WndyJW | 303 comments My most recent was the outstanding The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne.


message 6: by Jason (last edited Dec 09, 2018 12:44PM) (new)

Jason (uberzensch) | 85 comments I'm currently reading The World as I Found It, by Bruce Duffy. I believe he categorizes the novel as "non-fiction fiction". It follows the life of philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein, along with Bertrand Russell and G.E. Moore. It's very well done, but I wonder if someone without a background in philosophy would get as much enjoyment out of it.

Edit to add that the novel is not overly focused on the philosophy of these gentlemen (in fact, the philosophy is somewhat in the background).


message 7: by Janet (last edited Dec 10, 2018 02:21PM) (new)

Janet (janetevans) | 63 comments In November, my book group read Barbara Comyns The Juniper Tree This novel was a retelling of one of the darkest of Grimms fairy tales. Highly discussable, and Comyns is such an original, quirky writer. I have her The Vet's Daughter and Our Spoons Came from Woolworths on my TBR pile


message 8: by WndyJW (last edited Dec 10, 2018 05:10PM) (new)

WndyJW | 303 comments I have wanted Our Spoons Came from Woolworths for awhile. I liked The Vet's Daughter a lot!


message 9: by Antonomasia (new)

Antonomasia | 44 comments WndyJW wrote: "I have wanted Our Spoons Came from Woolworths for awhile!"

I'd also really like to read this (had it shelved on GR for over 5 years). Comyns' other books don't appeal to me so much but this sort of kitchen-sink realism from that era does.


message 10: by Toni (new)

Toni | 1 comments WndyJW wrote: "My most recent was the outstanding The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne."

Exceptional book!


message 11: by WndyJW (new)

WndyJW | 303 comments Wasn’t it, Toni? I loved it, my mother, who being born in 1938 still felt the influence of her Victorian era grandmother in the expectations for women of the middle, merchants class really loved it.

I like those sort of book as well, Anto.


message 12: by sisilia (new)

sisilia (sisilia9) | 53 comments I recently read My Dog Tulip for IRL bookclub's meeting a week ago, and am getting ready to start The Kremlin Ball.


message 13: by Teresa (new)

Teresa (teresaaustin) | 3 comments I’m reading Family Lexicon by Natalia Ginzburg.


message 14: by Louise (new)

Louise | 491 comments sisilia wrote: "I recently read My Dog Tulip for IRL bookclub's meeting a week ago, and am getting ready to start The Kremlin Ball."

I just read this. What did you book club think of it?


message 15: by sisilia (new)

sisilia (sisilia9) | 53 comments Louise wrote: "sisilia wrote: "I recently read My Dog Tulip for IRL bookclub's meeting a week ago, and am getting ready to start The Kremlin Ball."

I just read this. What did you book club think of it?"


We love JR. Ackerley and plan to read his memoir My Father and Myself some time this year. My Dog Tulip is a must-read for dog lovers, and we all agreed that this book makes an excellent Christmas present.


message 16: by Pillsonista (last edited Dec 19, 2018 05:35PM) (new)

Pillsonista | 17 comments Inhuman Land by Józef Czapski Corrigan by Caroline Blackwood

Currently taking a break from Inhuman Land with Caroline Blackwood's Corrigan, which has been terrific so far.


message 17: by Bryan--The Bee’s Knees (last edited Feb 27, 2019 09:18PM) (new)

Bryan--The Bee’s Knees (theindefatigablebertmcguinn) | 52 comments Just finished J. L. Carr's A Month in the Country. What an excellent short novel. Very reflective and bittersweet, but not in a cloying, obvious way. This may actually be my favorite book of the year so far.


message 18: by Hugh (new)

Hugh (bodachliath) | 24 comments Bryan wrote: "Just finished J. L. Carr's A Month in the Country. What an excellent short novel. Very reflective and bittersweet, but not in a cloying, obvious way. This may actually be my favorite b..."
I loved that one. Also read The Battle Of Pollocks Crossing which was very interesting and often funny (it is set in rural South Dakota, and it caricatures Carr's own experiences teaching there for a year in the late 30s), if not quite as good as A Month in the Country.


Bryan--The Bee’s Knees (theindefatigablebertmcguinn) | 52 comments Hugh wrote: "I loved that one. Also read The Battle Of Pollocks Crossing which was very interesting and often funny (it is set in rural South Dakota, and it caricatures Carr's own experiences teaching there for a year in the late 30s), if not quite as good as A Month in the Country. ..."

I'll be looking for all of Carr's work from now on. Good to hear that he had other successes too.


message 20: by Louise (new)

Louise | 491 comments I would love to read A Month in the Country as a group read here. It will be one of my nominations for our May book (nominations start tomorrow!)


Bryan--The Bee’s Knees (theindefatigablebertmcguinn) | 52 comments I think it would be a great choice.


message 22: by Janet (new)

Janet (janetevans) | 63 comments Agree. My IRL book group read it years ago and we had a terrific discussion.


message 23: by Mirko (Reading Literature) (last edited Mar 02, 2019 03:39PM) (new)

Mirko (Reading Literature) | 78 comments I am about to start reading My Father and Myself
My Father and Myself by J.R. Ackerley

It will be the first book I am reading by J. R. Ackerley.


message 24: by Kyle (new)

Kyle | 4 comments Resurrecting this thread to say that Janos Szekely's Temptation is a stunner. Great coming-of-age novel set in Hungary between the World Wars.


message 25: by Sam (new)

Sam | 111 comments I have just finished Our Philosopher by Gert Hofmann translated by Eric Mace-Tessler and introduction by Michael Hofmann. The novel relates a story of Nazi Jewish persecution from the interesting point of view of a German doctor's young son and is told in carefully rendered prose that captures the horror, irony, and indifference the boy observes. Five stars for me.


message 26: by Cynthia (new)

Cynthia Dunn | 73 comments I have just ordered Our Philosopher because of Sam's review.


message 27: by Sam (new)

Sam | 111 comments Cynthia wrote: "I have just ordered Our Philosopher because of Sam's review."

I do hope you like it! My taste is eclectic and often is brought into question by other readers, but with this I have some support. The book is longlisted for the 2024 National Book Critic's Circle Barrios award for works in translation. I will be rooting for this book!


message 28: by Cynthia (new)

Cynthia Dunn | 73 comments I'm sure I will.


message 29: by Sam (new)

Sam | 111 comments I have been shadow reading and enjoying the #NYRBWomen24 reading list compiled by Kim McNeill for her reading group this year and mentioned earlier by Wendy in a different post.

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...

The selection for March 1st is Rahel Varnhagen: The Life of a Jewish Woman by Hannah Arendt and I invite any that are interested to join along. The variety in the texts Kim chose is vast and not everything will be to everyone's taste, but I enjoyed my first three selections and look forward to this as well. Here is a link to Kim's website once again.

https://www.joiedevivre9.com/nyrbwome...


message 30: by WndyJW (new)

WndyJW | 303 comments That sounds like an interesting book, but I am over committed as it is!


message 31: by Sam (new)

Sam | 111 comments I have finished Rahel Varnhagen: The Life of a Jewish Woman and found it much better than the three stars I planned on awarding it so I upped it to four, but want to advise that I think this book fits more of a niche audience and may leave others bored. This is a nonstandard biography, more experimental, philosophical, and analytical than in a traditional approach. Arendt spends much of the time on the Jewish question and the limited role of a Jewish woman of Varnhagen's talents in the period she lived. It is well written and worth reading but unless interested in the specifics I mentioned, I suggest a later Arendt for enjoyment.


message 32: by Iamjudgedredd (new)

Iamjudgedredd | 1 comments I recently finished The People Immortal by Vassily Grossman, and now am on to Troubles by J G Farrell.

Only 30 pages into Troubles and it's already packed in a lot of different elements, from great humour to tragic reflections. Loving it so far.


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