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What Are You Reading?


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That's an interesting selection, Rosa. The only du Maurier books I really liked were Rebecca, natch, and The Scapegoat. I did read Eric Ives' biography of Anne Boleyn, an excellent book and I'd like to try the Jane Grey (always liked Lady Jane). It's been years since I picked up a book by Georgette Heyer but I used to enjoy them.

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http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2...olution/?page=1

This is what i just read, but not the books I've been reading. I wouldn't, obviously, put an article here that I'd been reading had it not so much pertinence to book reading. This is a stunning piece, and catches you up on iPads, eBooks and iBooks, Americans' reading habits, different kinds of bookreaders like Kindle, Nook and iPad, and most here are probably not ready to take that plunge (i'm not). Interesting things like a statistic about Americans reading no more than a book a year, I forget exactly whether that was perfectly accurate, but Steve Jobs had gotten Americans' reading habits all wrong, they're much more avid, and now, as of early 2010, there are all these eBook readers with various apps, and they're working to make them more attractive and salable. Some are even helping net-surfers getting some of their concentration back, and I believe I saw something about how there might even be a paradoxical result in print sales.

Unless you're really into this (I'm not, but like to know about it), there are a few big nerdy chunks comparing the different readers, but these are relatively few. Some of the eBooks and iBooks are free, some are for pay, this includes Amazon's reader. There's discussion of magazines making their way into subscriptions, although in some form this is already around. The article is more about the huge surge in eBook reading. I would have said as recently as a few years ago that I wouldn't ever go for it, and I did start reading a lot of novels again recently (all traditional book format, no screen) and doing more longhand writing (I never keep a journal on the computer, and not because of privacy issues, I just don't like it), but I did stop picking up the Village Voice, even though it's free, but I think that may be just because the paper has really declined in quality, so I really don't read it online either. The Times and other big newspapers I haven't bought print copies of for years, though, and I don't mind it at all, in fact, like the absence of papers to throw out, and certainly like that it's free. Books are still different to me, though.

Hope some others will have time to read this, as the book-reading habits of many are being radically revolutioonized--including readers of 'Pride and Prejudice' and Shakespears Sonnets.

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http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2...olution/?page=1

This is a stunning piece, and catches you up on iPads, eBooks and iBooks, Americans' reading habits, different kinds of bookreaders like Kindle, Nook and iPad, and most here are probably not ready to take that plunge (i'm not).

The article is more about the huge surge in eBook reading. I would have said as recently as a few years ago that I wouldn't ever go for it, and I did start reading a lot of novels again recently (all traditional book format, no screen) and doing more longhand writing (I never keep a journal on the computer, and not because of privacy issues, I just don't like it), but I did stop picking up the Village Voice, even though it's free, but I think that may be just because the paper has really declined in quality, so I really don't read it online either. The Times and other big newspapers I haven't bought print copies of for years, though, and I don't mind it at all, in fact, like the absence of papers to throw out, and certainly like that it's free.

I have the latest-generation Kindle (the $139 one) and I love it for what it's good at: reading plain text--particularly fiction and narrative non-fiction--straight through from start to finish. Its smallish screen and e-ink technology are not well-suited to graphics-heavy documents; navigating around a reference work would likely be punishing; and format-dependent text (e.g., certain kinds of poetry) don't play well with its scalable fonts. If you're into exquisite typography, this is not the device for you. If you want to surf the web, update your Facebook page, or watch videos, this is most definitely not the device for you. But if you principally want to read novels, short stories, and narrative non-fiction on an easy-on-the-eyes and battery-life friendly e-ink screen, it's got a lot to offer.

You can get just about any classic text that's in the public domain for free, or for a very modest charge if you'd like a few bells and whistles -- e.g., an "active" table of contents or some ebook-friendly formatting.(If you want a scholarly edition of a classic text, however, or the latest translation, you'll have to pay more.) I ponied up $0.99 for the complete works of Jane Austen, including the old (b&w) illustrations by Hugh Thomson and Charles Brock. Since the Project Gutenberg version of Harold Frederic's The Damnation of Theron Ware seemed reasonably well-formatted, however, I simply loaded that one on for free. I confess: I mostly got the Kindle to read the classics on the cheap. Yes, I know, the NYPL lends books for free, but I'm still enough of grad-school geek to want to drag the entire canon from Beowulf to Virginia Wolff along with me wherever I go.

You can download free samples (usually the first chapter and sometimes more) of just about any book available in Kindle format to get a sense of whether you'd like it or not.

You can also email your own text or PDF files to Amazon for free conversion into the Kindle mobi format and then load them up onto your device. (The turn-around time is nearly instantaneous.) Now, instead of printing out hard copies of articles or whatever from the web and lugging them around in a big sheaf, I simply copy and paste them into a Word document, ship them off to Amazon, and read them on my Kindle.

The Kindle comes with two built-in dictionaries; if you float the cursor over a word, its definition automatically pops up at the bottom of the page. You can search for a word in the text, in the dictionary, or, if you have the wifi on, in Wikipedia (reasonably formatted for the device).

I haven't downloaded any newspapers or periodicals on to it yet, though I suspect I'll try that soon enough. Like you, Patrick, I'm more than happy to abandon paper in certain circumstances. I find broadsheet newspapers like the NYT or the WSJ a real pain to read even when I'm just sitting at the breakfast table. Once we're a couple of generations along in tablet devices, I suspect that's how I'll read the newspaper.

One thing I really don't like is the fact that you can't read books published in ePub format directly on the Kindle. Non-DRM protected ePub files can easily be converted to the Amazon-owned Mobi format, but DRM protected files can't be. Since most libraries only lend out ebooks in ePub format, this is a real drawback.

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*Lady Susan by Phyllis Ann Karr

*The Kingdom on the Waves by M. T. Anderson

*Farewell to Manzanar by Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston

*Errol & Olivia: Ego & Obsession in Golden Era Hollywood by Robert Matzen

*Howl's Moving Castle by Diana Wynne Jones

*Book of a Thousand Days by Shannon Hale

*Sad Cypress by Agatha Christie

*From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler by E. L. Konigsburg

*Briar Rose by Jane Yolen

*The Door in the Hedge by Robin McKinley

*Castle in the Air by Diana Wynne Jones

*Why Shoot a Butler? by Georgette Heyer

*They Found Him Dead by Georgette Heyer

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Got a Nook as a gift. I had my doubts at first, but am loving it. My husband preloaded the nook with 2 books that he knew that I wanted to read. Reading in this device is very easy on the eyes, because you can adjust background light and font as well as font size. My favorite feature is that you can borrow ebooks from the NYPL. You go to the very extensive ebooks selection on the nypl web site and using your library card, you can borrow books for 7, 14 or 21 days. They download to your Nook.

Right now I am reading (on the nook) Louise Erdrich's book The Master Butcher's Singing Club. I love her writing.

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Just finished Harry Mulisch's 'The Procedure'. Irritating for a good long 100 pages or so, then you get the rhythm and it's one of the best novelists of modern times you've got. I only heard of him upon his death a couple of months ago. One of the most prestigious Dutch novelists (if not THE most), and certainly better IMO than Rushdie and as skilled as DeLillo. Really just a brilliant work, and I'm going to read 'Siegfried' now. As I was getting close to the end, I looked at some of the blurbs on the back of the dust jacket, and Updike had called it 'an old-fashioned magnum opus', which I found quite astute (one would expect that, of course); he also said the novel it most resembles is 'The Magic Mountain', which I've never gotten to, and always been told to. There's a lot of Kafka in there, though. The first Dutch fiction I've ever read, and since one of my best friends is Dutch, I think there is something recognizably 'Dutch' in the intricacy of the style, its execution--very sturdy.

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I'm juggling a couple of books at the same time and have just finished Jane Pritchard (ed.), Diaghilev and the Golden Age of the Ballets Russes 1909-1929. There's another thread about this, which prompted me to buy it.

The book was published to coincide with the Victoria and Albert Diaghilev exhibition of the same name (Sept. 2010 - Jan. 2011). It's wonderful, with multiple essays by different authors, covering Diaghilev and his circle, the Company's path over the years, and the contribution of composers, designers, costumiers, patrons, collectors, production workers, etc. Jane Pritchard's own contributions are especially good. Sjeng Scheijen's chapter on "Diaghilev the Man" is actually better written and more interesting than his own full-length biography, published in 2009. The illustrations, especially of costumes (as sketches and in finished form) are beautiful.

The Cleopatra book is on order from the library In the meantime: Eric Hazan's The Invention of Paris. The concept is great, but the maps and illustrations leave much to be desired. His publisher -- Verso -- obviously spent a lot less time and money on that than did the V&A.

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*Climbing the Stairs by Padma Venkatraman

*Rawhide Down: The Near Assassination of Ronald Reagan by Del Quentin Wilber

*We Wish to Inform You That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed with Our Families: Stories from Rwanda by Philip Gourevitch

*Sarah's Key by Tatiana de Rosnay

*The Heroine's Bookshelf: Life Lessons, from Jane Austen to Laura Ingalls Wilder by Erin Blakemore

*One Crazy Summer by Rita Williams-Garcia

*Bellfield Hall by Anna Dean

*The Robber Bridegroom by Eudora Welty

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which leads perhaps, through Auden, to Elizabeth Bishop's Letter to N.Y.:

"and coming out of the brownstone house

to the gray sidewalk, the watered street,

one side of the buildings rises with the sun

like a glistening field of wheat.

"Wheat, not oats, dear I'm afraid

if it's wheat it's none of your sowing..."

Pretty good, and probably doesn't lead to Georgia O'Keeffe's

'I just think New York's wonderful

It makes all the European cities look like villages'.

My sentiments exactly, and I consider it a poem even if she didn't.

Which then reminds me, though may not lead elegantly, as with Quiggin's, to Joan Didion's 'New York was no mere city. It was instead an infinitely romantic notion, the mysterious nexus of all love and money and power, the shining and perishable dream itself.'

Didion wrote a marvelous essay in 'The White Album' on o'Keeffe's evening star that she used for a number of water colours. They are two of a kind, but I don't know if they lead to each other. With the 'don't tread on me' attitude firmly entrenched in either, they might not like the idea. I don't even know if they met. I've memorized parts of 'The White Album', especially the page about the party that Janis Joplin came to 'at the big house on Franklin Avenue', so I'm reading these again in my mind right now. The opening long essay says that the 'big house' would be demolished (this was written in the late 60s or 70s), but it wasn't, because I've been to it. I asked her about it at a reading and she told me it was still there and gave me the number afterward. It still had panel trucks that scared her to the point of writing down their license plate numbers and storing them in a drawer, but I didn't think the house was that big.

What WAS the number (address) on Franklin Avenue Didion gave you for the old house she rented?

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