Books on Monday: The Great Man

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Kate Christensen’s fourth novel is, in my opinion, her best to date. It’s good to have gotten round to writing one up! In the Drink came out before I had a Web site, and Jeremy Thrane before I had a Web log. I don’t know what happened with The Epicure’s Complaint, but I remember finding it puzzling, as though something were going on beneath the straightforward-seeming surface. No such confusion clouded my reading of The Great Man. I was reminded, for what it’s worth, of Diane Johnson, Brian Morton, and even, a bit, Alice Adams. A great New York read.

Open Thread Sunday: Landing

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412 Eighth Avenue, Park Slope

Nano Notes: Opera Without End


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No sooner do the happy chords of I Puritani‘s happy ending die out than the mysterious opening mood of Macbeth insinuates itself into the apartment (music that foreshadows the Sleepwalking Scene). And we’re off! Read the rest of this entry »

Friday Movies: Ne le dis à personne

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Kathleen doesn’t remember reading Harlen Coben’s book, Tell No One, but it was in the house at one point, and I tried to read it. But I had to quit at the fourth page. The prose was just awful. So I can’t compare the adaptation to the original, which is disappointing, as that’s one of my favorite things to do.

Daily Office: Friday

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Morning

¶ Beady: Is there any language quite so jaundiced as the English in which the British discuss the French Revolution? In the Telegraph, Anthony Peregrine conducts readers on tour of Parisian Revolutionary sites, from Tobias Schmidt’s harpsichord shop (home of the guillotine) to La Fayette’s tomb.

Americans in contrast, might be less informative on the subject, but much more interesting, as, for example, La Maîtresse.

Bon week-end a tous!

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Daily Office: Thursday

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Mars attacks!

Morning

¶ AntErnauts: It looks fussy, with the capital ‘E’ and all, but it’s easy to say: anternauts. It’s my coinage to describe people who don’t know enough about the Internet to be able deal with it intelligently. Combine such ignorance with police power and watch out!

Librarian William Hallowell, sadly for him, knows a thing or two about the type. He was held for thirty hours, among other affronts, because police officers lacked the basic Internet competence to know that they had picked up the wrong man. Benjamin Weiser reports.

 Noon

¶ Cool: I just bought one of these. Now I wonder if I needed it.  

Night

¶ Patience: How did flounder evolve, with both eyes on one side of their head? Slowly but surely, that’s how.

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Daily Office: Wednesday

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Morning

¶ Yet More Mad Max: I may have spoken too soon yesterday. Now I’ll seem obsessive. But I really have to had it to Britain’s most interesting plaintiff.

Unlike many high-profile figures caught in embarrassing sexual adventures, Mr. Mosley has chosen to make a fight of it.

Noon 

¶ Bizarre Attack: Unidentified assailants attacked the police detachment outside the US consulate in Istanbul, leaving three dead on each side.

Night

¶ Temps Perdu: Good grief! I’ve spent the past half hour trying to locate a swimming hole in New Hampshire! It was a favorite spot — twenty-nine years ago.

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In the Book Review: Livin' La Vida Local

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Detail from Conrado Massaguer’s poster: I could look at this design all day. It’s both gorgeous and very, very clever.

A tolerable issue, at least by Book Review standards; no Noes. Walter Kirn’s piece on the new James Frey novel may not be his best review ever, but it’s extraordinarily amusing — in a non-LOL way.

Daily Office: Tuesday

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Morning

¶ Posh: My good friend Yvonne just tipped me off to a fantastic send-up of cooking shows, starring Richard E Grant at his twitissime, “Posh Nosh.” The show is a hundred years old, so you’ve probably see it already…

Noon

¶ Mad Max: Poor Max Mosley — so to speak. For my part, I can’t imagine anything more in keeping with Formula 1 racing than recreational sado-masochism. One does wonder, though, what Lady Redesdale would have said. “Every time I see “Peer’s Daughter” in the newspaper…”

Night

¶ Cartographic: Is it or isn’t it? An optical illusion, that is. How big is England?

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Tuesday Morning Read

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This really is the end. With the last two stories in Nam Le’s collection, The Boat, I close this season’s Morning Read. We’ll see when I begin the next one. I have already pulled out the Library of America volume that contains Moby-Dick, as well as Edith Grossman’s translation of Don Quixote. Also in the pile is David Remnick’s selection of the writing of A J Liebling — another book that I’d never get through outside the Morning Read format. Read the rest of this entry »

Daily Office: Monday

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This week’s rather shaky images were taken on the Fourth of July from the rooftop of a building in Chelsea where a good friend of ours lives. The weather was awful, and it didn’t take long for the fireworks to disappear into the clouds of their own smoke. My photographs, therefore, are to be viewed as studies in impressionist color.  

Morning

¶ Lift: Now that Kathleen has her very own personal computer (her first, amazingly; until now, her laptops have always been the property of a law firm), and now that we have conquered the Wi-Fi problem (I didn’t say that!), my dear wife has been discovering all sorts of things online, among them a whimsical New Yorker cover that might have been, by Bob Staake.

Noon

¶ Clock: I’m a sucker for gizmos like the World Clock, which whir along fantastically if somewhat meaninglessly. What kind of triumph will it be if the number of items of email spam exceeds the number of dollars of US debt?

Night

¶ Mad ! Following a link from kottke.org, I came across a blog devoted to Mad Men. It’s called A Basket of Kisses, and it comes from “the highly creative, occasionally obsessive computers of Roberta and Deborah Lipp.” Read the rest of this entry »

Reading Notes: Temptation and Commitment


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One of the last things that I read during yesterday’s marathon of magazines was a piece by Edward Mendelson in The New York Review of Books (LV 10, p 54). A review of Richard Cook’s biography of Alfred Kazin, it began with a passage that felt like a glance in an unexpected mirror: Read the rest of this entry »

Open Thread Sunday: Lilies

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Saturday Note: Trumbo

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Although I went to the movies yesterday, and saw most of Trumbo, I’m not counting it as a Friday Movie; at any rate, I’m not writing it up. I wanted to see Tell No One (Ne le dis à personne), but was shut out both times, not factoring in the (by me unguessed-at) popularity of this recently-opened film, which happens to be showing only in two rather smallish New York theatres.

Trumbo is a good picture, and anyone unfamiliar with the blacklisted screenwriter’s story ought to see it. I did not much care for the extreme close-ups of very shaggy faces belonging to a few of the famous actors who gave dramatic readings of Trumbo’s letters — but Joan Allen quivering at the edge of tears broke me down as well, and Nathan Lane did a predictably dandy job with what’s got to be the best father-to-son letter on the subject of masturbation ever. Perhaps it’s just that I’m not crazy about seeing documentaries in theatres.

What I did in between attempts to see Tell No One can be seen here.

Daily Office: Friday

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Morning

¶ Sixth: Why not ask about Sixth on the Fourth? Sixth Avenue, that is, known only to Idiocrats as the Avenue of the Americas, its streetlamps bedecked with dinky tinpot medallions honoring, if that’s the word, the nations of the Western Hemisphere (not to  be confused with “the West”). Few medallions remain, and David Gonzalez asks why.

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Daily Office: Thursday

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Morning

¶ Tower of Eiffel: Now, here’s something I didn’t know: Gustave Eiffel worked on the construction of the Statue of Liberty, thus, according to Edward Berenson’s Op-Ed piece in today’s Times, “allowing him to test certain techniques he would use for his great tower in 1889.

Noon

¶ Attention! Yikes! “Google told to hand over millions of YouTube user details to Viacom in $1 billion case.” From the Telegraph.

Night

¶ Oops! When everyone but you is looking at your screen. Because you’ve already left for the holiday weekend.

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Thursday Morning Read

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And so I come to the end of the first round of Morning Reads, or almost: I’m done with Aubrey. There are still two stories to read in Nam Le’s The Boat, so perhaps we’ll have one or two more entries headed by the image above, which I decided not to update when I tossed in The Boat a few days ago.

Then what? I know what I’ll be reading in the next round, but not when I’ll begin. I’m inclined to take a break, or to do something different for July and August. I’m also inclined not to think about it, because it is July and will soon be August. Read the rest of this entry »

Daily Office: Wednesday

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Morning

¶ Mean Money: Leona’s money is going to the dogs — and so is Dicky Grasso’s.

Noon

¶ DIRL: What with following one link to another, I came across a nice, long comment thread (at Marginal Revolution) proposing books to take to Africa on a research project that will take a year, with only visit home. Somebody asked for advice.

Night

¶ Pectavensis: How’s your Latin? It doesn’t have to be very good, to read Gregory of Tours, a Sixth-Century bishop who wrote pretty good history, considering it was the Dark Ages and all. Plus, he writes about a scandal at a convent in Poitou (in monasterio Pectavense). Nudge, nudge!

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In the Book Review: Urban Poet

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Now, here’s an idea. Reviewing the new collection of Frank O’Hara’s poetry, William Logan writes,

He was always looking for some vivid stimulus, preferably one a little outlandish — not a bad thing for a curator of modern painting, perhaps, but not necessarily a good one for a poet (O’Hara treated contemporary art with far more deliberation than he treated poetry). He began to make poetry from whatever happened around him — today, he might have written a blog.

Thought for today!

Daily Office: Tuesday

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Morning

¶ Marble: What I’d really like is a cast-marble copy (whatever “cast marble” is) of Houdon’s Louvre bust of Voltaire — the one with the perruque. The new Scully bookshelf, with its rows of Library of America spines, seems to demand a completing cliché. But the one Web site that seems aware of a decent copy no longer offers it.

Meanwhile, I came across this site. which I would rename Glad I Don’t.

Noon

¶ A Little Learning: Hand-wringing in the UK about making school easy for kids.

Night

¶ Harris Pat: Spooky! Fossil Darling, on the phone with me but talking to LXIV as he often does, said to his companion, “I’ve always been true to you in my fashion.” About two beats later, I heard LXIV reciting the same Cole Porter lyrics that were coming out of my mouth:

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