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books - The Seventh Sphinx - Page 9

weekend distraction: recordings of Woolf and Nabokov

Came across these recordings and found them both, each in their own way, so intelligent and funny. Both writers I admire tremendously.

The Nabokov interview I find fantastically eloquent, almost unbelievably eloquent. His pronunciation is resonant, with a peculiar cadence that gives the sense of savoring his own words.

“When about to fall asleep after a good deal of writing or reading, I often enjoy, if that is the right word, what some drug addicts experience — a continuous series of extraordinary bright, fluidly changing pictures. Their type is different nightly, but on a given night it remains the same: one night it may be a banal kaleidoscope of endlessly recombined and reshaped stained-window designs; next time comes a subhuman or superhuman face with a formidably growing blue eye; or — and this is the most striking type — I see in realistic detail a long-dead friend turning toward me and melting into another remembered figure against the black velvet of my eyelids’ inner side. As to voices, I have described in Speak, Memory the snatches of telephone talk which now and then vibrate in my pillowed ear. Reports on those enigmatic phenomena can be found in the case histories collected by psychiatrists but no satisfying interpretation has come my way. Freudians, keep out, please!”

And Virginia Woolf’s voice, her deep, sonorous vowels, I love.

“It is not a word indeed until it is part of a sentence. Words belong to each other, although, of course, only a great writer knows that the word “incarnadine” belongs to “multitudinous seas.”

reading: Messud, Saunders, Amis, Coetzee…

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Tenth of December, George Saunders – If you are not reading George Saunders, I suggest you start. Then remember what a story is capable of being, and capable of doing to you.

Boyhood: A Memoir, J.M. Coetzee – I so admire his style, regardless of the topic at hand.

Lucky Jim, Kingsley Amis  – The action builds to a hilarious crescendo of distress. You hardly go two sentences together without some piece of humor (reminded me of Three Men in a Boat in this way). I can’t believe it has taken me so long to read this, given that I must have bought it ten years ago or something. Liked so much.

The Emperor’s Children, Claire Messud – An eminently successful book in that it made me decide to read more of the author. Many of those ‘yes, life is just like that’ moments. She’s wonderful in person, too. I always admire authors who, when taking questions from the audience, can give a great answer to even the most vague and nonsensical of questions. Also recommend this Vulture article. Pronounced ‘Messooood’.

A Little History of the World, E. Gombrich – A fantastic overview of world history, translated from the German not so long ago, intended for perhaps 7-12 year-olds (and written with great charm) but I would recommend it to anyone.