Showing posts with label Plus Catalog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Plus Catalog. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 20, 2021

Queens Full

by Ellery Queen (read by Traber Burns)
Audible Plus Catalog
 
 
Queens Full  By  cover art



Necessary roughage

As always another solidly three star read from the pen of the Ellery Queen writing duo. The books contains three novelettes and two short stories, thus the pun of the title -- and the lingering question: when does a 'short story' become a 'novelet'.

 

Monday, February 22, 2021

How to Talk about Books You Haven't Read

 

Pierre Bayard (translated by Jeffrey Mehlman, read by Grover Gardner)
Suggested by a fellow BookLikes member
 
 How to Talk about Books You Haven't Read  By  cover art


I just don't know what to say about this book. Is this guy serious or is he tongue-in-cheek?

I have never felt guilty about the classics I have never read (most of them) and still have no intention of reading any book just because it is considered a classic; there is more to choosing a book than its academic status.  This is not to say that I don't read classics. In fact, I have read a number of them. Some of them as part of my education and college studies and others over the years simply because I wanted to read them.  In other words, I am reading them not because I should read them but because something about them has attracted my attention.

Pierre Bayard is a Professor of Literature in Paris, France  -- and an iconoclast. In other words, it seems he is not your run of the mill literature professor. In his book, he sets about to to turn the world of reading and literary criticism on end and to divest it of its pomposity -- and, hopefully, in the process,  readers of any guilt brought on the avoidance of the high-brow. It does seem a bit like he is biting the hand that feeds but he does it in such a nice way.  And who knows, maybe we do need some teachers who are willing to upset the apple cart and to help us learn to look for new approaches to literature and culture.

Written in the style and structure of an academic treatise, Bayard examines five different styles of  not reading-- each one of which is roll on the floor amusing since he uses examples from the real world, including The Third Man and Groundhogs Day.  The book is short and an easy listen in spite of its academic overtones. At the very, very end, he finally reveals why he thinks his approach has merit -- and I am not going to reveal it here so that you can have the pleasure of discovering it yourself.

Three and half stars.


The Adventures of Sally

 

By P.G. Wodehouse (read by Frederick Davidson)
 
The Adventures of Sally  By  cover art
 
 

Published in 1922, set in 1918. A delightfully Wodehousian romp where the bad guys get what is coming to them and they all live happily ever after. Best scene in the book is the Italian waiters at the supper-club.

Three stars