A surprisingly large parcel - incredibly closely wrapped - arrived today. I suspected what it was, (as I had corresponded with the sender only a few days earlier) but I still had to use a Swiss Army Knife to actually open the package.
Anyway, it turned out to be an overdue (it had taken over a fortnight to arrive), but very welcome batch of books by the late, great, Sir Terry Prachett.
Three fat hard-backs, each comprising a trilogy. The 'Witches' trilogy,(which contains 'Equal Rites', 'Wyrd Sisters', and 'Witches Abroad'), along with and the 'Gods' trilogy, (which comprises of 'Pyramids', 'Small Gods' and 'Hogfather'), and the 'Death' trilogy (which comprises 'Mort', 'Reaper Man' and 'Soul Music').
Terrific stuff.
Well, I re-read 'Witches Abroad' (by the late, great Sir Terry Prachett) yesterday. This is a rollicking, hilarious read, laugh out loud funny in parts, and sharp as a stiletto in others. Brilliant.
this one i haven't read.
currently reading
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non-fiction. an account the ongoing (and from the relatively recent past) mass extinctions in some ways associated to our tasking over the planet
moe for a lay audience, but a so far it's very good
If you liked 'Wyrd Sisters' (and I loved it), this is more of the same but with a canvas that goes far beyond Lancre; in fact, - eventually - they end up in a place called 'Genua' which seems to be the Discworld's take on New Orleans during the Mardi Gras.
There are hysterically funny grace notes offering brief (but hilarious) homage to a wide variety of cinematic and literary references, (great fun to spot) and some wonderful set pieces. Well worth reading. The character development of the three witches are fleshed out a bit more, too.
wyrd sisters is the Shakespeare one, right?
i mix them up
i need to re-read the early books, since i read them so long ago
Today's post brought two books, firstly, "Can Intervention Work?" by Rory Stewart and Gerald Knause, and secondly, a book recommended here, on this forum, "The Impending Crisis: America Before The Civil War 1848-1861" by David M. Porter.
I have that in my Amazon basket for £11.88. Did you find it anywhere cheaper?
http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/...sfl_title_9?ie=UTF8&psc=1&smid=A3P5ROKL5A1OLE
A sharp - and somewhat piercing but poignant reminder from a friend - bade me return to take a fresh look at a poem I have not read in decades, though I loved it fiercely in my late teens just before I left school and used to read it with a ferocious hunger.
Well, it amply repays another read, and requests equal absorption.
The poem - an astonishingly powerful one - was written by T. S. Eliot, and it is called 'The Love Song Of J Alfred Prufrock'.
I read with surprised interest that it was first published almost exactly 100 years ago, in June 1915.
It does not read as though it is one hundred years of age, about to celebrate the centenary of its initial publication. Instead, this astounding portrait of anguished but resigned and rueful recognition reads as though it could have been written anytime in the past century.
Do yourself a favour and take a few minutes to read slowly - and richly savour - a true classic of modern art, expressed through the medium of poetry.
I'd just like to say that I really enjoy your posts and look up everything you read and recommend.
Tis the night that I partake of a "little" "Scottish" water and have just deleted a whole paragraph of ramblings. (It included my reading of "Cancer Ward" by Alexander Solzhenitsyn (just before my dear wife was diagnosed (and subsequently died)) and my love if Dickens. Anyway, thanks and carry on fella. I'll stop now. (Hic!).
I just started Alexandre Dumas' "The Count of Monte Cristo." I am also using the unabridged audible book narrated by Bill Homewood as an added treat. I highly recommend Bill's narration.
In addition to "The Count of Monte Cristo," I have also started "War and Peace" (also with excellent audible narration by Neville Jason).
I agree, Scribe.There is a reason the literary classics are viewed as literary classics; they tell great stories, and they have aged well and still read very well almost two centuries after they each were written and published.
Two terrific books - and each, in their own way, an outstanding example of what the 19th century novel had to offer the world.