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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 5877
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Friday, July 05, 2013 - 09:03 am:   

David Sedaris - Me Talk Pretty One Day
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Andrew Kerr
Member
Username: Andrew_k

Post Number: 820
Registered: 04-2005
Posted on Friday, July 05, 2013 - 10:27 am:   

Stasiland by Anne Funder.

Fascinating and chilling accounts of life in East Germany, under the constant observation of the secret police. Beautifully written and extremely accessible.

At one point she mentions how, when the communist state was created, it became necessary to completely rewrite history. Thus the 17 million inhabitants had never been Nazis, were all good communists and had been liberated by their Russian bretheren !
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Randy Adams
Member
Username: Randy_adams

Post Number: 3234
Registered: 03-2005
Posted on Friday, July 05, 2013 - 04:21 pm:   

You'll all recall what Robert Forster says about people like me. I am currently reading Fyodor Dostoevsky's "The Idiot."

Wow Andrew. So who were those 17 million Germans liberated from?
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 5885
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Saturday, July 06, 2013 - 05:10 am:   

Belated happy Independence Day to Randy, Rob and all our other American cousins. I long for the day when Australia grows up and becomes a republic.
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 5886
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Saturday, July 06, 2013 - 05:48 am:   

A fascinating story about what happened when Bruce Springsteen played in East Berlin in 1988. http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2013/jul /05/bruce-springsteen-east-germany-berli n-wall
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 5890
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Sunday, July 07, 2013 - 10:45 am:   

You've probably never really wondered whatever became of Jason Everman, who was famously kicked out of both Nirvana and Soundgarden before each became huge, but you should read this story about him anyway. http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/02/magazi ne/evermans-war.html?nl=todaysheadlines& emc=edit_th_20130707
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Rob Brookman
Member
Username: Rob_b

Post Number: 1736
Registered: 08-2006
Posted on Sunday, July 07, 2013 - 02:03 pm:   

Hey, belated thanks, Padraig! In keeping with the long weekend I've kind of avoided the Internets. Thanks for the tip on the Everman story. I get the Times at home but I haven't gotten to it yet. Will do now.
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C Gull
Member
Username: C_gull

Post Number: 211
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Thursday, July 11, 2013 - 10:00 pm:   

Oops did n't realise there was a fresh thread....

Sense of an Ending - Julian Barnes - excellent!
Stonemouth - Iain Banks - excellent!
Chemistry of Tears - Peter Carey - excellent (and odd)!
A Possible Life - Sebastian Faulks - excellent so far half way through!
Sweet Tooth - Ian McEwan - excellent so far but only just started!

Yes - I got given book tokens for my birthday!
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 5904
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Friday, July 12, 2013 - 02:42 am:   

Happy birthday! Is The Wasp Factory a good place for someone who's never read any Iain Banks to start? I'm asking because there's a new edition of it going for $15 at the moment.
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 5909
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Friday, July 12, 2013 - 06:08 am:   

The great news that Microdisney's The Clock Comes Down The Stairs has been re-released. http://www.irishtimes.com/culture/music/ microdisney-the-clock-comes-down-the-sta irs-1.1459370
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cosmo vitelli
Member
Username: Cosmo

Post Number: 799
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Friday, July 12, 2013 - 07:46 am:   

Padraig, The Wasp Factory is a brilliant and stunning debut novel, it was a sensation at the time for my friends and I and none of his other books (many of them good) would have the same effect. It's a cult book and a great one, his Catcher in the Rye, a bildungsroman for a new generation.
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cosmo vitelli
Member
Username: Cosmo

Post Number: 800
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Friday, July 12, 2013 - 07:49 am:   

just read Angel Baby by Richard Lange, excellent Lehane like thriller which I devoured during a trip to Iceland last week
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 5911
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Friday, July 12, 2013 - 01:24 pm:   

Thanks Cosmo.
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 5919
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Saturday, July 13, 2013 - 08:57 am:   

Peter Holsapple (The DBs) writing in the New York Times about how he now works in an office. http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/201 3/07/12/theres-a-rock-star-in-my-office/
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 5923
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Sunday, July 14, 2013 - 03:59 am:   

I just bought The Wasp Factory. It has a new introduction by Iain Banks. Presumably one of the last things he wrote.
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C Gull
Member
Username: C_gull

Post Number: 214
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Monday, July 15, 2013 - 09:35 pm:   

Funnily enough The Wasp Factory is about the only one I have not read. Must do so.
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 5960
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Sunday, August 04, 2013 - 05:36 am:   

Andrew Mueller - It's Too Late To Die Young Now
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Randy Adams
Member
Username: Randy_adams

Post Number: 3268
Registered: 03-2005
Posted on Tuesday, August 27, 2013 - 03:09 am:   

I never enter anything here because sadly I so seldom read, first since law school converted the act of reading into torture and then second, since the internet gave me unlimited scope for hours of skimming superficial commentary. But when I was a kid growing up in culturally arid Fresno, California I read voraciously, usually the classics.

Back in those pre-law school days I read Dostoevsky's "Crime and Punishment" and "Brothers Karamazov" and loved them for their (to me) mysterious density. I've re-read both books probably twice since, noticing that they seem to bring out my own depressive qualities which doesn't really seem like a good thing to bring out.

This summer I re-read "The Idiot" which was so lithe by Dostoevsky standards that it almost seemed a Russian "Pride and Prejudice."

So I decided to read "Notes from the Underground," a slim volume I'd never tried before. For the first 50 pages or so I kept thinking "god, no wonder people say such things about Dostoevsky! The Lit professors all made their students read this out of sheer sadism!" But then it moved from interminable comical sophistry to a scary fun house mirror. I found myself reading a handful of pages and going "I can't continue! It's too familiar." Ancient ugly memories of childhood tantrums and adolescent obsessions and pathetic reactions to failing romances bubbled up with my name all over them like ghosts of Christmas past. It's never taken me so long to read such a slim volume. My sentence is almost over; there are only a dozen pages left.

I suppose the book is brilliant. But I've too fragile an ego to endure it. It's like a very grueling acid trip. Is this normal? Has anybody else on the board read this book in adulthood, after the resilience of youth has passed?

At least I now know where Magazine's "Song From Under the Floorboards" comes from.
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Stuart Wilson
Member
Username: Stuart

Post Number: 874
Registered: 10-2006
Posted on Tuesday, August 27, 2013 - 09:17 am:   

Starman – Paul Trynka

Between accusations of outrageous poofterism from my dad, puffing pipesmoke furiously at TOTP, and scorn from my LedZep entranced schoolmate peers, it was hard for me to orientate myself with relation to Bowie – I suppose at bottom I felt it wasn’t necessary to dress up like a clown to sing songs, that some of his lyrics, even by a 14-year old’s pretty gullible standards, were just too pretentious, and that his vowelly London voice could verge on the irritating. On the other hand, the girls went absolutely loopy, and the class crazy guy, obviously not so crazy after all, immediately went out and got himself a red-tint Bowie cut, so obviously something was going on. But in the end, while appreciating many of his tunes, I was never able to warm to the artist, despite Rebel Rebel providing the happily grinding backdrop for my first proper kiss. Holiday reading of Paul Trynka’s biog has been interesting though – spotlighting how the drive to fame predated any obvious talent, how the bisexuality seemed to come into play mainly to grease his way into a new business move, how it was a sequence of wild, instinctive accidents rather than cold calculation which rocketed him to international success (which helps explain how everything would go rather awry careerwise later on) and how he fed off his musicians and influences in order to create, at least for a period, some fascinating music. Other amusing titbits include the fact that he managed to ease just ahead of Liam Gallagher in one music mag’s Artist of the Century survey, and that the studio’s first choice for The Man Who Fell to Earth was Robert Redford.
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 5992
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Wednesday, August 28, 2013 - 04:48 am:   

Craig McGregor - Left Hand Drive. It's an autobiography by a 79-year-old Australian journalist and author. On the bus I got to work this morning the bus driver was listening to a Radio National podcast interview with McGregor. It was fascinating, so I bought the book. I did not hear the start of the interview, so I didn't know who it was, but thankfully the bus driver did. Most of the drivers, if they have the radio on, listen to right wing shock jock stuff. The best you can usually hope for is that they are listening to WSFM (classic hits), so it was a very pleasant surprise to hear this.
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 5993
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Wednesday, August 28, 2013 - 04:53 am:   

Randy, though I have several books by Dostoevsky and other Russian writers, which I bought while living in America, I have never got very far trying to read them. Maybe I'll try again one day, but I probably won't.
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Andrew Kerr
Member
Username: Andrew_k

Post Number: 829
Registered: 04-2005
Posted on Wednesday, August 28, 2013 - 11:22 am:   

Randy,

A huge debate in its own right; is there a "right" time in your life to read a book ? I have seen several comments recently suggesting never to (re)read the likes of "On The Road" or "The Catcher in the Rye", (as these are "supposed" to be read in adolescence/early adulthood)...

I suppose that the argument goes that you are more receptive to certain ideas and emotions at certain ages, according to your life experiences ? There was an article today in the Guardian about the film "Don't Look Now" and the writer said how it hit him much harder reviewing the film as an adult and as a parent.

Have only read "Crime and Punishment", but will maybe give "Notes From the Underground" a go! I don't know if it is the effect of superficial reading on the internet, but I certainly find it harder to stick with a "difficult" book than I did 20 years ago...

Currently reading Eric Newby's "Love and War in the Appeninnes"...

And before that was 2 novels by Nigerian writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie ("Half of a Yellow Sun" and "Purple Hibiscus"). I never knew much about the history of Nigeria and the creation of Biafra, but the first of those titles in a harrowing account of that time. One of the book's characters states that the genocide between tribes was a colonial invention ! He points out that there would have been skimishes before (over land mainly), but that this particular form of organised killing was unknown before the white man arrived in that part of Africa.
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Stuart Wilson
Member
Username: Stuart

Post Number: 876
Registered: 10-2006
Posted on Wednesday, August 28, 2013 - 02:09 pm:   

I was thinking something similar the other day about Eliot's 4 Quartets which as a young university student I found intractable and fiendishly difficult. Rereading them recently, more or less at the same age as Eliot was when he wrote them, they seemed beautiful and lucid and direct.

Padraig, don't give up on your Russian novels, whatever they may be, and especially if they include Tolstoy! No-one should cheat themself of the chance to get gloriously lost in War & Peace or Anna K.
I've only read D's the Brothers Karamazov, which was hugely enjoyable, so looking forward to the others. Much easier to read than late Henry James, say,I feel like I'm fighting through a waterfall of spaghetti with that stuff.

Reading early Hardy, at the moment, before the Cosmic Gloom descended - funny, even, and with breathtakingly lyrical descriptions of the English countryside.
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Randy Adams
Member
Username: Randy_adams

Post Number: 3269
Registered: 03-2005
Posted on Wednesday, August 28, 2013 - 04:21 pm:   

Andrew, I've often joked that I could just re-read the same wall of books that I already have and never buy another. I was thinking of my own tendency to deeply immerse myself in a book, adopting its affect, and then comprehensively purge it from my memory in a remarkably short time afterwards. But the extent to which a revisit at another time of life can transform the experience is striking. I remember enjoying "Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man" in my late teens. When I re-read it in my late 30s I just thought "ugh, dull Catholic tosh."

I have "Brideshead Revisited" waiting to be read for the first time. I adore the dramatization that made Jeremy Irons a star and I've read nearly every other fictional book Waugh wrote but strangely never this. I'm looking forward to it, but will a romance that captured me in my early 20s have something to say to me in my 50s and if so what will that be?

I also have "The Possessed" waiting to be read. I've never read it but clearly Dostoevsky needs to be given a rest for a bit.
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 5998
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Friday, August 30, 2013 - 06:26 am:   

I think I have something by Tolstoy, Stuart. I also have a collection of Russian short stories. In 1989 I worked for a charity called Goodwill in Boston and we used to get discounts on their already very cheap prices. So I bought a lot of books very cheaply. The great American canon (Mailer, Roth etc) as well as the great Russian canon.
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Stuart Wilson
Member
Username: Stuart

Post Number: 878
Registered: 10-2006
Posted on Friday, August 30, 2013 - 01:50 pm:   

You don't seem to do too badly for a guy who doesn't read, Randy. I believe Brideshead is the novel where his snobbishness and Catholicism are given bountifully free reign to indulge themselves, but, like you,haven't read it yet. Handful of dust was a stunner, I remember. I also recall a scene in Sword of Honour regarding a portable military toilet which must be one of the funniest bits in English lit.
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Randy Adams
Member
Username: Randy_adams

Post Number: 3271
Registered: 03-2005
Posted on Friday, August 30, 2013 - 04:42 pm:   

Stuart, the problem is that the overwhelming bulk of my reading is in the distant past, indeed so far past that I cannot even remember if I've read "Sword of Honour." At the beginning of this summer I decided to rectify that a bit. With "Brideshead" I'm hoping that Waugh's quality as a writer will force him to depict the pathologies of Catholicism and religion in general and also the ancient marginalization of homosexuals, all in spite of himself. The TV dramatization gives the impression that this is precisely what he does. If accurately depicted, what Waugh might think of as moral beauty is likely to show itself to me as needless and tragic waste of human potential. The very best books can be freighted with messages entirely different than the writer envisioned.
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 6004
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Saturday, August 31, 2013 - 05:10 am:   

The Guts, Roddy Doyle's follow up to The Commitments, a quarter century or so, on.
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 6040
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Thursday, September 05, 2013 - 10:24 pm:   

The greatest drunken moose story ever. http://www.alaskadispatch.com/article/20 130831/drunken-moose-gang-menaces-stockh olm-resident
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 6067
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Friday, September 13, 2013 - 11:30 am:   

Christos Tsiolkas on why Australia hates asylum seekers. Thought provoking stuff. http://www.themonthly.com.au/issue/2013/ september/1377957600/christos-tsiolkas/w hy-australia-hates-asylum-seekers
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Andrew Kerr
Member
Username: Andrew_k

Post Number: 835
Registered: 04-2005
Posted on Friday, September 13, 2013 - 04:33 pm:   

Much as I disliked his novel 'The Slap', this is a well written piece Pádraig. Throws up as many questions as answers, but then it is a complex issue. And as he points out it takes a great lack of common sense to be against immigration in a modern country built on it !

Even in my sleepy French village, there are numerous families with Portuguese, Italian, Spanish and Moroccan origins. The story of people all over the world has been one of either economic or political movement. The Front National's belief in a pure French race would be a bad joke, if not for the fact that so many people vote for these fascists.

Sometimes just seeing a young mixed-race couple with kids in the street or feeling the energy that comes from some crazy clash of ethnic musical styles is enough to make you feel that those who argue against immigration have already lost. It is a natural phenomenon of human-kind.
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 6070
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Friday, September 13, 2013 - 09:25 pm:   

Well said, Andrew. I've not read The Slap (the premise didn't appeal to me), nor anything else he has previously written.
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Stuart Wilson
Member
Username: Stuart

Post Number: 890
Registered: 10-2006
Posted on Saturday, September 14, 2013 - 09:01 am:   

The premise appealed to me a lot, I remember, I liked the idea of a single sudden act of anger having a series of radiating repercussions, but in the end the book seemed to lose interest in its own idea,and left me cold. I think the main thing I took away from the story is that basically everyone in Melbourne is on drugs of some kind, which seemed a bit far-fetched, but you never know.
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Stuart Wilson
Member
Username: Stuart

Post Number: 897
Registered: 10-2006
Posted on Friday, September 20, 2013 - 02:15 pm:   

A newspaper article discussing the apparent possibility of this year's literature Nobel going to a singer-songwriter - the names being Dylan, Cohen and, to everyone's surprise here, Roberto Vecchioni. I know very little of Vecchioni's work, so I'd better get a move on and investigate - a highly intelligent & likeable chap though, also a novelist and teacher. In terms of overall cultural impact, the other Bob must be way-out front runner, and the most deserving: but I have a deep affection for Leonard and his carefully wrought odes to women and despair; and of the three he might be the only one who could actually do with the cash.
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cosmo vitelli
Member
Username: Cosmo

Post Number: 836
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Friday, September 20, 2013 - 02:19 pm:   

John Niven - Straight White Male
just started this new novel from the author of Kill Your Friends which was hilarious. This one is also brilliant and hysterically funny
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C Gull
Member
Username: C_gull

Post Number: 219
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Friday, September 20, 2013 - 08:07 pm:   

The house of the spirits by Isabelle' allende, took a bit of getting into but really enjoying it now.

Padraig - did you read Wasp Factory, I finally did, felt a bit crude but good fun. I can see why it was such a sensation at the time.
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 6094
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Friday, September 20, 2013 - 09:43 pm:   

I haven't read it yet, though I was thinking of it just last night as I spotted it on the table. Soon, hopefully.
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Andrew Kerr
Member
Username: Andrew_k

Post Number: 838
Registered: 04-2005
Posted on Saturday, September 21, 2013 - 11:03 am:   

Or just go and see the opera Pádraig !?

Frankly, what a bizarre idea

http://www.theguardian.com/music/2013/se p/21/mission-impossible-wasp-factory-ope ra
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Jerry Clark
Member
Username: Jerry

Post Number: 1132
Registered: 08-2004
Posted on Sunday, September 22, 2013 - 06:48 pm:   

The Shock-Doctrine by Naomi Klein.
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 6102
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Tuesday, September 24, 2013 - 12:33 pm:   

Gorilla named Patrick evicted from Dallas Zoo and sent to therapy for sexist attitude http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-09-24/pa trick-the-male-gorilla-to-have-therapy-f or-sexist-attitude/4976936
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 6157
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Saturday, October 12, 2013 - 05:16 am:   

David Byrne: 'The internet will suck all creative content out of the world' http://www.theguardian.com/music/2013/oc t/11/david-byrne-internet-content-world A lengthy, but very worthwhile, read.
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 6158
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Saturday, October 12, 2013 - 05:29 am:   

And while you're in the vicinity, you might as well read this brilliant Guardian article too: http://www.theguardian.com/media/1999/au g/16/pressandpublishing.mondaymediasecti on
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Stuart Wilson
Member
Username: Stuart

Post Number: 912
Registered: 10-2006
Posted on Wednesday, October 23, 2013 - 09:59 am:   

If the wife is paying attention to my dinner table conversation, then the Moz (Penguin Classics! Brilliant!) & Graham Nash biogs should find their way into my Christmas stocking... anyone cast an eye over either?
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cosmo vitelli
Member
Username: Cosmo

Post Number: 852
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Thursday, October 24, 2013 - 05:41 am:   

I have been reading the Moz, some brilliant writing contained within and very funny in places, far too much time spent on trial (I wonder if this is why he fell out with the publishers?) though and he is strangely obsessed with chart placings and consequently we get a lot of unnecessary bitching about which day his album went on sale compared to Keane's and if it had gone on sale one day before it would have been number 1 variety. Am ploughing through it though and enjoying it immensely
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 6202
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Sunday, October 27, 2013 - 07:47 am:   

A great NYT article on the insidious (and seemingly ever increasing) practise of asking writers to work for free. http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/27/opinio n/sunday/slaves-of-the-internet-unite.ht ml?nl=todaysheadlines&emc=edit_th_201310 27&_r=0
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Stuart Wilson
Member
Username: Stuart

Post Number: 926
Registered: 10-2006
Posted on Wednesday, December 04, 2013 - 11:11 am:   

Mike Scott - Adventures of a Waterboy

Half way through this fine book. I reckon I could just about sing a badly misremembered version of the chorus to Whole of the Moon, and that's my sum knowledge of Scott's work, which in no way detracts from my huge enjoyment of his story here. He should certainly have been partially subsidised by the Irish tourist board, writing so rapturously of his experiences there, and the West coast in particular, that you just want to throw a pair of walking boots into a backpack and book a plane ticket. Anecdotal, but never slight, sharing with the Keef biog the sense that, whatever may be going on around him, it’s the vital, all-embracing surge of music-making that carries his life forwards. Very good on the painful task of negotiating with companies, with many neat portraits of the “legends, sharks, conmen, sharpshooters, cynics, eccentrics and a few spectacular hot-air balloonists in love with the sound of their own voices”, as well as the glories and glitches of the musician’s life, how one moment you’re dominating an important London stage with the world at your feet, and the next playing a leaky, freezing marquee in a car park outside Aberdeen. A great read.
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 6279
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Thursday, December 05, 2013 - 10:35 am:   

I think it's a brilliant book too Stuart. I loved it. I'm a huge Waterboys fan. I wish they were bringing their Fisherman's Blues tour to Australia.
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Stuart Wilson
Member
Username: Stuart

Post Number: 928
Registered: 10-2006
Posted on Friday, December 06, 2013 - 03:22 pm:   

They've just passed through Italy, but I didn't read the book in time! Would have certainly gone. However, a nice pack of Cds has just arrived, so it will be a very Waterboysie Christmas...
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Andrew Kerr
Member
Username: Andrew_k

Post Number: 857
Registered: 04-2005
Posted on Thursday, December 19, 2013 - 02:16 pm:   

The leaked J.D. Salinger short story...

"The Ocean Full of Bowling Balls"

Much as I believe that artists' wishes should be upheld, Salinger's obligation that this story is not to be published until 2060 is a wee bit bizarre. Especially as I'll be probably dead by then.

Anyway, this is certainly essential reading for fans of Holden Caulfield, with Kenneth in this story becoming Allie in 'The Catcher in the Rye' and his older brother Vincent renamed as D.B. And we get to meet Phoebe as a baby...
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Stuart Wilson
Member
Username: Stuart

Post Number: 948
Registered: 10-2006
Posted on Wednesday, December 25, 2013 - 02:18 pm:   

Carl Wilson - Let's talk about love

Just started this strangely well-chosen Christmas present from the wife, an investigation of taste that takes as its lead-off point Celine Dion, her biggest hit, and why all right-thinking music lovers detest them; but asking the question - as yet unanswered at where I am in the book - whether we are right to do so... highly enjoyable, and part of an interesting series of books about famous albums, which includes Joe Pernice on Meat is Murder, Warren Zanes on Dusty in Memphis etc.
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Pádraig Collins
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Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 6390
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Saturday, January 04, 2014 - 07:25 am:   

Peter Bagge's Other Lives.
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Stuart Wilson
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Username: Stuart

Post Number: 955
Registered: 10-2006
Posted on Monday, January 13, 2014 - 11:47 am:   

The Moz autobiog.

He’s the only pop star who my heart still beats a little bit strangely for, so a read of this was inevitable, but I do wish he’d been guided to elaborating the first third, an absorbing impressionistic swipe around his childhood and Manchester full of tantalising anecdotal nuggets. Then the Smiths as the great leap free, and that would have done very nicely, and perhaps been something of a masterpiece: instead the group is tied up and abandoned in about thirty pages. After that, a little solo life, and then we’re into the Court Case, where the writing slumps and it’s a bit like peering through the blinds of a Dickensian studio where a gibbering old man fling documents in the air and says, Look, I was right, look, I was right, over and over again. Then a final 100 or so pages about wild audience love on endless tours, with a rather odd need to provide the exact number of tickets sold at each venue. You can see why the court thing obsesses him – fleeing uniformed comprehensive inferno, suddenly, there he is, back in the schoolmasterish world of British justice, being smacked down by Authority yet again. But it’s hard to understand why a wealthy and intelligent man couldn’t get decent legal representation and appears to be left floundering with an elusive bunch of half-wits. The big gap is a glimpse of the engine room where the Morrissey/Marr chemistry took fire and blazed down the building: the creative process is hard to describe, but if that’s what makes certain lives worth living, then for god’s sake, at least have a go. It could really have been worthy of its publishing house; but, as it is, not quite.
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Pádraig Collins
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Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 6430
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Tuesday, January 21, 2014 - 10:01 am:   

Rob Jovanovic's book on Big Star. Just started it today.
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Andrew Kerr
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Username: Andrew_k

Post Number: 868
Registered: 04-2005
Posted on Tuesday, February 11, 2014 - 03:13 pm:   

A piece about Paris by Peter Milton Walsh

http://cacaoeuropa.com/2014/02/01/man-wi th-a-blue-cornflower/
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 6453
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Tuesday, February 11, 2014 - 04:41 pm:   

Thanks for that link Andrew. What an inspiring piece of writing.
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Lewisdhead
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Username: Lewisdhead

Post Number: 110
Registered: 01-2007
Posted on Thursday, February 13, 2014 - 08:30 pm:   

Just finished Morrissey's autobiography. About to start The Free-Willy Vlautin
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Jerry Clark
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Username: Jerry

Post Number: 1134
Registered: 08-2004
Posted on Saturday, March 08, 2014 - 08:06 pm:   

Recently read the Alan Mcgee atobiography. All good until he started going Chelsea games in a limo.
Also the Morrissey book mentioned above. It actually reads a lot like Alan Partridge. Luckily Morrissey had the last laugh.
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 6559
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Monday, March 31, 2014 - 07:19 am:   

The Cold Cold Ground. A thriller by Adrian McKinty, set in Northern Ireland in 1981. He now lives in Melbourne. In fact, I think he was living in Melbourne when he wrote this.
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peter ward
Member
Username: Peter_ward

Post Number: 253
Registered: 06-2005
Posted on Wednesday, April 02, 2014 - 12:38 am:   

Philomena - last weekend, excellent performance by Judi Dench and Coogan has his moments too, especially the final sequences.

For anyone who enjoyed Coogan & Brydon's hilarious "The Trip" from a few year's back there is a follow up trip to Italy for more eh, restaurant reviews coming soon on BBC.... 8.30 for 9.00 is the start time!
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peter ward
Member
Username: Peter_ward

Post Number: 254
Registered: 06-2005
Posted on Wednesday, April 02, 2014 - 12:41 am:   

I'm not watchin' what I'm readin"
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 6619
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Saturday, April 19, 2014 - 09:20 am:   

Granta 76 - Music

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