neadods: (i_think)
[personal profile] neadods
American iTunes has picked up a BBC Radio 4 podcast called "Shakespeare's Restless World." It's 13 episodes, each running slightly over 13 minutes, about political events in Shakespeare's time. Although the narrator has a slightly disconcerting habit of referring to things that we can't see ("This is an example of a silver whatsit" or "Where I am..."), I'm finding it an interesting listen.

I had an epiphany today - I'm suddenly buying a bunch of books because I'm actually trying to buy a lazy weekend with nothing to do but read a good book. Which is a bit much to ask Barnes and Noble to deliver.

That's not stopping me from reading books...

A Jane Austen Education was a great deal more charming and a lot less navel-gazing than I expected it to be throughout. In fact, it's given me new eyes for Persuasion (which needs a reread) and encouraged me to take another run at Mansfield Park, despite having failed 3 times to read it before.

And despite my absolute inability to wade through The Turn of the Screw again, (ye gods, that's turgid!), I have high hopes for Florence and Giles. It's a book that's going to demand to be taken on its own leisurely terms -- the second paragraph is a single sentence* -- but that sentence is built of gorgeously evocative words and phrases such as "a house uncomfortabled and shabbied by prudence, a neglect of a place... leaked and rotted and mothed and rusted."

I think the bedroom and library cleaning can go for a little while longer. I may have found me a book that takes precedence this weekend no matter the chores waiting.


*Nowhere near the run-on winner; I think I still have my copy of The Pyrates, in which the first sentence ends halfway down the second page.

Date: 2012-07-28 05:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neadods.livejournal.com
It's one of the more obscure ones, although not as obscure as Lady Susan, which is nigh onto impossible to get unless you buy an anthology the size of a sofa.

I read Turn once when I was younger and got through it. Not this time!

Date: 2012-07-28 05:41 pm (UTC)
ext_3965: (Books: Are a Form of Immortality)
From: [identity profile] persiflage-1.livejournal.com
Really? It's pretty readily available here - judging by the number of copies my local library holds!

Looked at Amazon - they've even got a Kindle version.

Date: 2012-07-28 07:56 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neadods.livejournal.com
Of Lady Susan alone? I'll have to see if ours does too.

Date: 2012-07-28 08:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tempestsarekind.livejournal.com
Also - for those who don't do e-books - Lady Susan is readily available in both the Penguin and Oxford editions (not just the big anthologies): it's usually bundled in with something else, like the juvenilia or Northanger Abbey, so you might have to read the back of a few copies in the bookstore or library, but they're the same price as the other novels.

Date: 2012-07-28 09:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neadods.livejournal.com
Hmmm... I was about to make an English book order too...

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