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Thread: So what did we read in April then?

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    Tu le connais, lecteur... Kafka's Crow's Avatar
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    Question So what did we read in April then?

    So what did we read in April, then?

    April is over, having done its 'breeding lilacs out of dead land' etc. It wasn't a very fruitful month for me as far as reading is concerned. I finished reading The Sun Also Rises. Wasn't impressed by it. For most of the book nothing happens. There are some memorable passages but it can't be Hemingway's best. Will move on to For Whom the Bell Tolls very soon.

    Read Nabokov's Lolita. Mind-blowingly beautiful, witty, gross, obnoxious, in short a masterpiece. I loved the breathless style.

    Back to non-fiction now, I am reading The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable by Nassim Nicholas Taleb and I love it. My kind of book indeed. All you Malcolm Gladwell and Levitt & Dubber fans, please have a look at this one. You will love it.

    So what did we read in April then?
    "The farther he goes the more good it does me. I don’t want philosophies, tracts, dogmas, creeds, ways out, truths, answers, nothing from the bargain basement. He is the most courageous, remorseless writer going and the more he grinds my nose in the sh1t the more I am grateful to him..."
    -- Harold Pinter on Samuel Beckett

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    Registered User thelastmelon's Avatar
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    This is what I read in April:

    Miss Smilla's Feeling for Snow - Peter Høeg
    Butterfly Burning - Yvonne Vera
    100 ways to save the world - Johan Tell
    Ten Little Niggers - Agatha Christie
    Candide - Francois Voltaire

  3. #3
    La joie de vivre naomi moon's Avatar
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    I have really enjoyed this month because I have read a lot of novels, I barely speak to anyone, I was really happy and absorbed in my reading. I wonder how people can live without reading.
    Well I have read:
    Veronika decides ti die by Paulo Coelho
    Eleven minutes
    By The Piedra River I sit and cry. All for the same writer too above.
    Carmen by Prosper Mérimée
    IL VICOLO DI MADAMA LUCREZIA
    Lokis
    Arséne Guillot
    FEDERIGO
    The Blue Chamber. All for the same writer
    "La dignité n'est qu'un paravent placé par l'orgueil et derrière lequel nous enrageons à notre aise." Honoré de balzac.
    "La réalité implacable me conduirait au suicide si le rêve ne me permettait d'attendre". Guy de Maupassant.

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    Ditsy Pixie Niamh's Avatar
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    North and south by Gaskell
    The foundling and other stories by Alexander
    The Miracle at Speedy Motors, by MaCall Smith
    one Manuscript for Publishing house (remain nameless)
    Candide by Voltaire
    Daddy Long Legs by Wesbter
    Ruth by Gaskell
    And started That they may face the rising Sun by Gahern
    "Come away O human child!To the waters of the wild, With a faery hand in hand, For the worlds more full of weeping than you can understand."
    W.B.Yeats

    "If it looks like a Dwarf and smells like a Dwarf, then it's probably a Dwarf (or a latrine wearing dungarees)"
    Artemins Fowl and the Lost Colony by Eoin Colfer


    my poems-please comment Forum Rules

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    Kafkaesque johann cruyff's Avatar
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    To be honest,I didn't read much in April.I did read Wisdom of the West by Bertrand Russell,but that's about it.I'll have even less free time in the following couple of months,but after that,I'll be back to my usual ways.
    Noću, u intimnom, poluglasnom razgovoru sa samim sobom, nikako ne mogu zapravo logički opravdati zašto se u posljednje vrijeme toliko uzrujavam zbog ljudske gluposti.

    Miroslav Krleža

  6. #6
    I fit in

    Republic
    Symposium
    Gorgias
    Apology and
    Crime and Punishment

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    Bibliophile JBI's Avatar
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    Mostly Contemporary verse. A few novels, and a lot of literary criticism. Read also a couple Anthologies from Alice Munro which are of note, as is the novel Fifth Business, which was mind blowing.

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    Alea iacta est. mortalterror's Avatar
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    Swann's Way and the first half of The Red and the Black. I read some books of criticism but nothing really worth noting. That's not true. C.S. Lewis' Preface to Paradise Lost was excellent, but I couldn't get a hold of the whole book. Very frustrating. I think Kafka's Crow was the one who recommended it, on the Epic thread. I've managed to find a few of the essays scattered here and there, but the libraries and bookstores I've checked don't carry it. I miss my university library.

  9. #9
    In Search Of... novelsryou's Avatar
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    I finished Meeting the Fox-The Allied Envasion of North Africa. The next book in my stack was Ths Sun Also Rises so I have started that one.

  10. #10
    [...] Erichtho's Avatar
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    I spent my April without internet, TV and other distractions in the middle of nowhere, so I had lots of time to read. This is the result:

    El alcalde de Zalamea by P. Calderon de la Barca
    Morenga by U. Timm (a novel about the war 1904 - 07 in German-Southwestafrica (today's Namibia), quite interesting)
    Нос by N. Gogol (I really wonder why I haven't read this little story earlier...)
    La locandiera by C. Goldoni (great comedy, I intend to read much more Goldoni)
    Обломов by I. Gontscharow (re-read)
    Leopardens öga by H. Mankell (my first Mankell, I'm not interested in his crime novels, but I might pick up another of his African novels)
    Germinal by E. Zola (re-read)
    El hablador by M. Vargas Llosa (great novel!)
    Die Spoorsnyer by P. van Rooyen (ugh, that was bad)
    Le scaphandre et le papillon by J.-D. Bauby (they filmed it lately, so I wanted to know the book before I watch the film)
    Haru no Yuki by Y. Mishima (the first Japanese novel I've ever read, I quite liked it)
    Die Hermannsschlacht by H. von Kleist (so far I only knew the version by Klopstock, but I liked this one even more)
    Diamantenfieber by G. W. Hoffmann (bad historical novel)
    Бедная Лиза by N. Karamsin (somehow I never read Karamsin before)
    Матрёнин двор by A. I. Solschenyzin


    A great reading month for me!
    Čłowjek je dwójny, tež sam sebi. Tysacy słowow sym kaž paćerki stykał na swoje lĕta a na kóncu spóznał, zo ani jednoho słowa njeje, kotrež by jeho w ćĕle a duši we wšej wĕrnosći wĕrnje pomjenowało.

  11. #11
    tea-timing book queen bouquin's Avatar
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    I was away on a voyage so was able to read a couple of books only:
    Une canne à pèche pour mon grand-père by Gao Xingjian
    Billy Bathgate by E.L. Doctorow
    "He lives most gaily who knows best how to deceive himself. Ha-ha!"
    - CRIME AND PUNISHMENT
    (Fyodor Dostoyevsky)

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    Registered User
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    I read the Cirque Du Freak series by Darren Shan, which consists of about 12 books.

  13. #13
    I read The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini and one short novel by Ivo Andrić (Bosnian Nobel prize winner) I believe the translation would be The Cursed Yard.

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    Kafkaesque johann cruyff's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Castalian Girl View Post
    I read The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini and one short novel by Ivo Andrić (Bosnian Nobel prize winner) I believe the translation would be The Cursed Yard.
    The translation is actually The Damned Yard,but it's pretty much the same A great book by a great author,how come you know about him(I mean,how come you've read this),Castalian Girl?Are you from the Balkans perhaps?
    Noću, u intimnom, poluglasnom razgovoru sa samim sobom, nikako ne mogu zapravo logički opravdati zašto se u posljednje vrijeme toliko uzrujavam zbog ljudske gluposti.

    Miroslav Krleža

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    Registered User DapperDrake's Avatar
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    I read:

    Candide - Voltaire
    Sense and sensibility - Austen
    Pride and Prejudice - Austen
    Bacchae - Euripides

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