osprey_archer: (books)
What I’ve Just Finished Reading

Raymond Chandler’s The Long Goodbye, which might also be called “the book where Philip Marlowe never gets paid.” People keep offering him money, practically shoving it in his hands to make him take it, and he refuses and refuses and refuses, because… Well, it’s not quite clear why he does, which is part of what makes him so interesting to me. The books are in the first person, but nonetheless Marlowe is an incredibly opaque character. It’s not clear why he refuses the money or why he goes to such lengths to help out Terry Lennox.

It’s not even clear why he’s a detective. He doesn’t seem to get much joy out of it. Is it just inertia? This is the job he knows so he keeps doing it? There’s a nub of nobility left in his character, but given his absolute cynicism about the rest of the world, it’s hard to see how he hangs onto there. Maybe he knows he would collapse into existential despair if he couldn’t even believe in himself.

Or maybe it’s just sheer ornery cussedness. There’s a definite pattern where Marlowe makes his life harder because he’s decided he doesn’t like somebody’s face and refuses to cooperate.

I also finished Enid Bagnold’s A Diary without Dates, about her work in a hospital during World War I - well, sort of; there is at least as much nature description as there is description of hospital work. It all feels very dreamlike, and in the end that made it feel rather insubstantial to me, although very poetic.

What I’m Reading Now

I’ve started A. S. Byatt’s Possession! I’ve actually been getting through it at a fairly decent clip so far, probably because I read the first few chapters before, months ago. I think Roland and his girlfriend Val are both quite tired of each other, without either one wanting to be the one who initiates the break-up. They go on living together out of a painful combination of poverty and inertia and exhaustion. What’s the point of breaking up if there’s nothing better out there?

...I am placing my bets on Roland falling for Maud, his new clandestine research partner. But Roland won’t be the one to initiate the break-up; Val will leave him for one of the men she does typing for, a small apologetic angry smile on her lips as she tells him that she’s going and implies it’s all his fault.

What I Plan to Read Next

I am still waiting for the library to get the new American Girl book, No Ordinary Sound. It’s been out for like four months now! Why doesn’t the library have it?

Maybe the library is waiting for the second book to be released in order to buy them together. Never Stop Singing is coming out in late June, so hopefully that means the library will have both books soon?
osprey_archer: (books)
What I’ve Just Finished Reading

Raymond Chandler’s The Big Sleep, which I - enjoyed doesn’t seem like quite the right word; but it’s different than anything else I’ve ever read, with a very distinct style (Chandler looooves his metaphors), and I want to read more of it.

I’m not sure I exactly like the way he writes women, but his women characters are more vibrant than most of the men. I kept getting his men characters confused. Which one is this? The police officer or the dirty crook? Although possibly that confusion is part of Chandler’s point.

What I’m Reading Now

I’m almost done with Maud Hart Lovelace’s Betsy and the Great World, the tale of Betsy’s months traveling around Europe in early 1914. Except for a few dramatically ironic comments about how there will never be another war in Europe - oh Betsy! - there’s almost no attention paid to the fact that World War I is going to start happening any moment now: it’s all about Betsy’s wonderful adventures making friends with her fellow pensioners in Munich, and having a brief beautiful almost love affair in Venice, and visiting the town of Sonneberg to see the place where so many dolls are made.

And actually, that makes the impending war more poignant, because I can absolutely see why Betsy thinks there will never be another European war. The societies she’s visiting seem so stable and cosmopolitan - oh, not without their problems of course (Betsy notes the prevalence of child labor), but not teetering on the brink of disaster. Of course she and her Bavarian friend Tilda feel perfectly comfortable making plans to meet up again in 1917. Why should they believe that this peaceful, stable world is about to come crashing down?

I’m also reading Timothy Zahn’s Heir to the Empire, on the recommendation of a friend. I need to stop taking recommendations from this particular friend, because we clearly have very different tastes in books; none of the others she’s recommended to me have clicked either. And she only gave Code Name Verity three out of five stars. Three out of five! How is that even possible?

But because it is a recommendation, I probably will finish this one even though it hasn’t clicked for me so far.

What I Plan to Read Next

It’s almost April! Which means it’s time for the next challenge in the 2016 Reading Challenge: “a book you previously abandoned.”

I’m spoiled for choice on this one, but I think I’ll probably go with Career of Evil. Although I’m not sure I should count it, given that I’m planning to skip most of the serial killer POV? Maybe I should just make this the month of reading Books I Have Previously Abandoned. I could read Elizabeth Wein’s Black Dove, White Raven too.

And of course I’ll be moving on to the final Betsy-Tacy book: Betsy’s Wedding. It will be the end of an era! (Only not really, because Maud Hart Lovelace wrote three other books set in Deep Valley, so of course I must read those too…)

Profile

osprey_archer: (Default)
osprey_archer

June 2025

S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4 5 67
8 910 11 121314
15 1617 18 192021
222324 25 262728
2930     

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 26th, 2025 01:06 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios
OSZAR »