Reading

Currently reading: This Is the Story of a Happy Marriage by Ann Patchett πŸ“š

Forgiveness. The ability to forgive oneself. Stop here for a few breaths and think about this because it is the key to making art, and very possibly the key to finding any semblance of happiness in life.

Finished reading: Spook Street by Mick Herron πŸ“š

The fourth Slow Horses book was fun. These books follow a formula, yet are so well written. Now I can watch the Apple TV version … β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜†

Finished reading: The Age of Louis XIV by Will Durant

Finished reading: The Age of Louis XIV by Will Durant πŸ“š My straight-through reading of this mammoth 11-volume history continues. Volume VIII shares a detailed view of Europe in the 17th Century. So much war and bloodshed and atrocity, and yet brilliance too. From Durant: Let us agree that in every generation of man’s history, and almost everywhere, we find superstition, hypocrisy, corruption, cruelty, crime, and war: in the balance against them we place the long roster of poets, composers, artists, scientists, philosophers, and saints.

Continue reading β†’

Finished reading: Somehow by Anne Lamott πŸ“š

I loved Lamott’s Bird by Bird memoir on the writing craft. The writing here was good, but forced. Too many similes, too many quotes from others. Great life advice: be kind to yourself & others, all we need is love, etc., but too much hand-wringing. β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜†β˜†

Book-wrapt β€” that beneficent feeling of being wholly imbooked, beshelved, inlibriated, circumvolumed, peribibliated …

β€” The Private Library by Reid Byers πŸ“š

Home library with reading chair and sleeping dog

Finished reading: Table for Two by Amor Towles πŸ“š

I’ll read anything that Amor Towles writes. He’s one of my favorite living writers. This collection of six short stories and a novella hit the mark, though each left me wanting more, to know happens next. A master storyteller. β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…

I was getting tension headaches from too many hours of looking down at a book at night, so I bought this Levo book stand. It holds the book securely and rotates into any position I need, even fully reclined. Expensive, but worth it. Headaches are gone!

Library with recliner and Levo hands-free book stand

For fun, I asked ChatGPT to create a cover image for an essay I wrote. The essay mentions old books and a Kindle: note the hybrid book/eReader lit by candlelight, and how the leather wing chair barricades the door. “Don’t bother me, I’m reading,” it seems to suggest. ❀️❀️❀️

ChatGPT-created home library

Currently reading: Somehow by Anne Lamott πŸ“š

Finished reading: The Public Library by Robert Dawson πŸ“š

Currently reading: The Public Library by Robert Dawson πŸ“š

Currently reading: Table for Two by Amor Towles πŸ“š

Finished reading: The Queen’s Gambit by Walter Tevis πŸ“š

Who knew a book about Chess could be so intense! This was a great, great book. β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…

Currently reading: The Queen’s Gambit by Walter Tevis πŸ“š

Finished reading: City of Glass by Paul Auster πŸ“š

A strange meta-detective novel with an unreliable narrator who slowly dissolves into insanity.Β I followed maybe half of the literary and Biblical allusions. Not at all what I expected, but oddly satisfying.

Currently reading: The Age of Louis XIV by Will Durant πŸ“š

Finished reading: The Age of Reason Begins by Will Durant πŸ“š

My quest to read all eleven volumes of Durant’s Story of Civilization continues. Volume VII has returned to the shelf with hundreds of scribbles and notes and many, many exclamation marks. If you think the world is crazy now, you ought to revisit these darker times of wholesale human butchery, religious wars and inquisitions. This has been an eye-opening and hair-raising experience.

Finished reading: Here is New York by E. B. White

Finished reading: Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver πŸ“š

Finished reading: Move on Down to Mexico by πŸ“š

Finished reading: Real Tigers by Mick Herron πŸ“š

Currently reading: Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver πŸ“š

Currently reading: Real Tigers by Mick Herron πŸ“š

Finished reading: You Like It Darker by Stephen King πŸ“š

This is a wonderful collection of short stories and novellas by our generation’s master storyteller. I enjoyed every piece, but particularly liked Rattlesnakes, a sequel of sorts to Cujo. It’s meditation on the persistent grief of losing a child masquerading as ghost story. I’ve read most of Stephen King’s shorter works. This newest one tops them all.

Finished reading: Dead Lions by Mick Herron πŸ“š

My second Slow Horses book and just as good as the first. There were a few more departures in this book frm the TV version, which kept me guessing. Herron is a talented writer.

Currently listening: The Fellowship of the Ring: Being the First Part of The Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien πŸ“š

How could it be that my wife of 27 years, a bookworm like me, has never read The Lord of the Rings? We’re heading out on an extended roadtrip in our little RV, and we were struggling to agree on an audiobook for the journey. When I learned she hadn’t read these books, it was easily decided. I can’t think of a better story to complement a cross-country adventure!

Book and bookmark of Tolkien’s Fellowship of the Ring

Currently reading: Dead Lions by Mick Herron πŸ“š

Finished reading: Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt πŸ“š

I enjoyed the setting of the fictional small town on Puget Sound. I liked the premise of the story. I loved the octopus. But, in the end, the author was too young/naive to be inside the head of a grief-stricken 70-year-old woman. It would have been better had she let us imagine what she felt by her actions and words alone. Some big themes were drawn in magic marker when they deserved an artist’s paintbrush. β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜†β˜†

Finished reading: Consolations by David Whyte πŸ“š

Ah, what a treasure. Two to three page poetic essays on 52 commonplace words or themes like Curiousity, Heartbreak, and Forgivness. I’ve been ruminating on this definition of Beauty for the past month:

Beauty is the harvest of presence.

Whyte often shared a take that surprised me, and sometimes changed my very paradigm of a long-fixed, but one-sided belief. I can see spending a year with this book, one theme per week, and digging deep, deep, deep into the purpose of life. This one is a permanent addition to my bedside table. β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…

Currently reading: Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt πŸ“š