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Sunday, July 30, 2017

My Haphazard Summer Reading List



In a Lonely Place by Dorothy B. Hughes


The Fire Engine that Disappeared by Maj Sjowall and Per Wahloo


Scandinavians: In search of the soul of the North by Robert Ferguson



Grand Hotel by Vicki Baum


The Go-Between by L.P Hartley


Death in Florence: The Medici, Savanarola and the Battle for the Soul of the Renaissance City by Paul Stathern

The Borgias: the Hidden History by G.J. Meyer



An Unlikely Prince: The Life and Times of Machiavelli by Niccolo Capponi



The Artist, the Philosopher and the Warrior by Paul Strathern


The Jurguthine War and the Catiline Conspiracy by Sallust


Saturday, October 3, 2015

Under Western Eyes by Joseph Conrad



"In life, you see, there is not much choice. You have either to rot or to burn. And there is not one of us, painted or unpainted, that would not rather burn than rot.” 
― Joseph ConradUnder Western Eyes


Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Selected Short Stories for 9th Graders

 "The Monkey's Paw" by W.W. Jacobs - "The Beginning of Grief" by Larry Woiwode -
"Masque of the Red Death" by Edgar Allan Poe - "Harrison Bergeron" by Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. - "The Bet" by Anton Chekhov - "The Egg" by Sherwood Anderson - "In Another Country" by Ernest Hemingway - "Gryphon" by Charles Baxter - "The Doll's House" by Katherine Mansfield - "Old Mother Savage" by Guy de Maupassant -  "The Black Sheep" by Italo Calvino - "The Secret Lion" by Alberto Alvaro Rios - "Day of the Butterfly" by Alice Munro "The Child by Tiger" by Thomas Wolfe - "The Prisoner Wore Glasses" by Bessie Head - "Once Upon a Time" by Nadine Gordimer - "Barn Burning" by William Faulkner - "The Three Strangers"by Thomas Hardy - "The Possibility of Evil" by Shirley Jackson - "The Destructors" by Graham Greene


Thursday, August 20, 2015

Barbara Pym, et. al

Barbara Pym and Cat

Stella Gibbons

Philip Larkin
Elizabeth Taylor

Muriel Spark



Sunday, August 2, 2015

The Wisdom of Anita Brookner

"And what is the most potent myth of all?' she went on, in the slightly ringing tones that caused him to make a discreet sign to the waiter for the bill. 'The tortoise and the hare,' she pronounced. 'People love this one, especially women. Now you will notice, Harold that in my books it is the mouse-like un-assuming girl who gets the hero, while the scornful temptress with whom he has had a stormy affair retreats baffled from the fray, never to return. The tortoise wins every time. This is a lie, of course,' she said, pleasantly, but with authority, the kiwi fruit slipping back unnoticed onto her plate. 'In real life, of course, it is the hare who wins. Every time...Hares have no time to read. They are too busy winning the game. The propaganda goes all the other way, but only because it is the tortoise who is in need of consolation. Like the meek who are going to inherit the earth,' she added with a brief smile...." - from Hotel du Lac by Anita Brookner