What are you reading at the moment?

Heads up - the BBC this weekend have done a two part adaption of Vasily Grossman's 'Stalingrad' - you can get it via the app - I'm a big fan of Grossman - his 'A Writer at War' is one of the most affecting things I have ever read. I think 'Stalingrad' was only translated into English last year - he wrote it in 1950. The battle for Stalingrad exerts a gruesome fascination - unspeakable depravity - fighting room to room - house to house - brick by brick - Stalin's final stand - no matter the cost - their back to the river - no retreat - a favoured weapon of the Russian troops - was a sharpened spade. Grim. Bizarre stories - the Germans to a large degree - initially anyway - had air superiority - when the Stukas started bombing - both sides took shelter in the same trenches - a temporary truce - then they got back out and started trying to kill each other again. Civilians continued to survive there - holed up in cellars - boiling up wallpaper for the nutritional content - stories of cannibalism are many. The Germans lost - the Russians just had more bodies to throw at it - literally - failing to learn from the example of Napoleon - you can't defeat Russia - its too big and there are too many Russians - the weather. Ultimately - Operation Uranus - encircling Von Paulus troops - a fatal wound the Nazis couldn't recover from. Not many of the 250,000 odd troops taken prisoner saw home again. See what you think yourself - cheers - I.

@Barry Giddens @Scotshave @Ferry-shave @Missoni @Blademonkey@patw
Thanks for the heads up, sounds a worthy watch. P.
 
Thanks for the heads up, sounds a worthy watch. P.
Sorry P. - I didn't make it clear - it was on the radio. I don't own a television - not that I can explain that to the wankers that do the TV license thing - Capita - out-sourcing c**ts - f**k you and the horse you rode into town on. Come ahead - you want to come into my flat? - get a warrant from a f**king Sheriff - which you won't be able to - you need to show probable cause I am breaking the law - which you can't. F**k you - you c**ts. I.
 
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Sorry P. - I didn't make it clear - it was on the radio. I don't own a television - not that I can explain that to the wankers that do the TV license thing - Capita - out-sourcing c**ts - f**k you and the horse you rode into town on. Come ahead - you want to come into my flat? - get a warrant from a f**king Sheriff - which you won't be able to - you need to show probable cause I am breaking the law - which you can't. F**k you - you c**ts. I.
:rolleyes: Yea bunch of Tommy tankers, no worries it was good to get that off your chest I expect. Have a good day and don't let the c£&@ts out there grind you down :) P.
 
Anna Karenina. After reading reviews that often asserted, that Anna Karenina is the greatest fiction written and that many re-read the book regularly, I decided, having never read this classic, to take the plunge, opting for the RICHARD PEVEAR and LARISSA VOLOKHONSKY translation. Deciding on which translation to go for was fraught but so far so good...

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The last book I read - quite something - the author's story of living rough in London - with a chronic drink problem - for 15 odd years. His writing style is beautifully laconic, terse - there is not a spare word in the whole thing. 'Sober and precise, grotesque, violent, sad, charming and hilarious all at once' - Literary Review - pretty much sums it up. I read the whole thing in two or three sittings - it was so engrossing. The end is a bit odd - it just kind of stops. Healy's escape route from alcoholism and the streets - well - I didn't see that coming. I shan't spoil the surprise. It was recommended and gifted to me by @Blademonkey - thank you P. - even at this late juncture - this is one of the best books I have read this year. I - in turn - couldn't recommend it too highly. Astonishing. Cheers - I.

@Scotshave @Missoni
 
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The last book I read - quite something - the author's story of living rough in London - with a chronic drink problem - for 15 odd years. His writing style is beautifully laconic, terse - there is not a spare word in the whole thing. 'Sober and precise, grotesque, violent, sad, charming and hilarious all at once' - Literary Review - pretty much sums it up. I read the whole thing in two or three sittings - it was so engrossing. The end is a bit odd - it just kind of stops. Healy's escape route from alcoholism and the streets - well - I didn't see that coming. I shan't spoil the surprise. It was recommended and gifted to me by @Blademonkey - thank you P. - even at this late juncture - this is one of the best books I have read this year. I - in turn - couldn't recommend it too highly. Astonishing. Cheers - I.

@Scotshave @Missoni
I'm so pleased you enjoyed the book as much as I have done Iain, I'm re- reading Orwells Down and out in Paris and London at the moment and although a vey interesting read it's not a patch on The Grass Arena and once I'm done with Orwell I shall read The Grass Arena once more, it's been a few years! :) P.
 
If ever you wanted to know how the U.S.A. (and possibly the rest of us) got to where we are, this is a must. Things have happened quickly since its 2017 publication (withdrawal from the Paris Climate Accord; top-tier changes in personnel (Tillerson, Paul Ryan, e.g)). Nonetheless, it's a vital one. Not the most optimistic book (thus far, I'm halfway through); but for anyone who sees Trump as an aberration, straight out of a vacuum, this should challenge such a thought.

Congruence of factors such as corporate branding, advent and salience of reality TV and the divisions brought about by neoliberalism and its concomitant greed and individualism have led us to this point over the last half century; economically and ecologically.

It is, of course, written from a left realist perspective and will undoubtedly jar with those with different standpoints. It still demands to be read.
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J.G. Ballard: The Atrocity Exhibition

Going into free association with this one. I've always been intrigued by the early Ballardian-inspired lyrics of artists like John Foxx and it's another one that has a title that begs to be read (and have songs based on it: Joy Division, q.v.).

I wouldn't call it a novel in the linear sense; more a loosely connected series of vignettes. There are common touchstones, though: Elizabeth Taylor, JFK, Marilyn Monroe, James Dean, Albert Camus et al. Surrealist artists are represented by Max Ernst; with reference to works including Europe After the Rain and The Eye of Silence and Dali with The Persistence of Memory.

It is quite disturbing; sex, death, car crashes, underpasses, overpassses, and architecture, amongst more. I'm not sure whether it's the innermost workings of a protagonist under mental breakdown or a critique of mass media and associated voyeurism (to add to the confusion, the main protagonist changes surname in each chapter). I'm only part-way through, however.

Ballard himself suggested that one way to approach it is to choose pages at random and read paragraphs that picque the interest. Very post-structuralist (death of the author, and all that); but that, allegedly, is the way he compiled the book. This edition has annotations by Ballard at the end of each chapter; to offer background and context.

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My recent reading. All highly recommended. Depending on what you like to read of course. Cheers - I.

@Scotshave @Ferry-shave @Blademonkey @Missoni @patw @donnie_arko

@Digimonkey Iain, random convestation in the pub on Thursday evening - the Desert Island Disc episode for Winkle Brown is rated as one of the best? Can't judge on that as have not listened yet - however, the guy who was chatting to me about it was enthused. Hope all is good,

Chris
 
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