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tagi

tagi

recent musings:

2009 the very, very end of july: i am breaking new records in procrastination... just wanted to say, if you haven't yet found an independent bookstore (or several) in your neighborhood to love and court frequently, please do (www.indiebound.org). buy local--it's better for the soul, and books from your favorite... more »
  • oakland, ca
  • member since November 7 2007

Books I'm reading

     
 
 
 

Public Notes

  • Jason R.

    Jason R. says

    I have an old textbook specifically on the British Romantic poets and it is very in depth on all of the major poets ex:Keats, Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Shelley, etc... Norton's puts out some good anthologies, also- which you should know if you've ever taken any sophomore level English Lit. survey courses. I am rereading ATLAS SHRUGGED, which I read in high school many years ago. I have read THE FOUNTAINHEAD 3 times. Have you ever read Henry Miller- he's very gritty like Bukowski? I've read a lot of his stuff, but there is much more to read. Speaking of Campion I have a DVD copy of "The Piano" on my coffee table right now. I see you were up late, and I am up very early- it's 5:45 here- so enjoy your morning and/or get some sleep. Jason

    posted 10 days ago. ( send a note )
  • Jason R.

    Jason R. says

    I've never seen the Campion film, but I will check it out if I come across it- is it old or new? Two more writers that I am fond of come to mind- William Blake and Milan Kundera- have you read either of those? I have read several of Kundera's books and I hope to score a couple of more around Christmas. I always ask for Amazon gift certificates at Christmas and on birthdays. I love independent bookstores, but there is a dearth of them in my town. We only have one large chain bookstore- Books-A-Million, which is similar to Barnes and Noble and Border's. I live in a town of 30,000 and unfortunately it is simply not large enough to support many bookstores. We do have a pretty decent public library, though.

    posted 2 weeks ago. ( send a note )
  • Jason R.

    Jason R. says

    Have you read John Fante? I am sure you would like him since you like Buk. Have you ever read Neal Cassady?- I haven't, but I'd like to. When i used the term "soul mate" in my last message, I meant in a literary sense for sure- I didn't want to scare you off- I hope I didn't. Jason

    posted 2 weeks ago. ( send a note )
  • Jason R.

    Jason R. says

    Tagi- wow somehow i supect my soul mate is walking the boards of a used bookstore in Oakland...where are women like you in my day to day life? I am reading Les Mis in translation- my French is pretty rough. right now I have Baudelaire in my hand-- an amazing , passionate poet-- do you like Keats perchance? The Outlaw Bible of American Literature is sublime--it takes you down to the nitty-gritty of life. In my own life I feel passion, I feel a magnetic steel pulling me to write words...please keep in touch- like i said you strike me as a soul mate...Jason

    posted 2 weeks ago. ( send a note )
  • Jason R.

    Jason R. says

    I love the avatar-the bibliophile's nirvana-the bookstore (or the library if you prefer). How have you been lately? Is the weather good in CA? It has been raining here in SC for the past two days- not cold, though. I have been thinking a lot of poetry lately and am trying to construct a couple of hours in the mornings to write. I would like to submit to POETRY magazine, but I am not sure my work is quite up to snuff yet. I see that you have been reading Bukowski- he is my all time favorite along with Jack Kerouac. I am reading THE OUTLAW BIBLE OF AMERICAN LITERATURE, which has some great underground and subversive writing. I am also trying to muddle through LES MISERABLES, but I am getting bogged down. I had a much easier time with WAR AND PEACE, which I read earlier in the summer. Well, it is your turn, please write and tell me what's new. Jason

    posted 2 weeks ago. ( send a note )
  • Jason R.

    Jason R. says

    Good luck with your exam!

    posted 4 months ago. ( send a note )
  • Jason R.

    Jason R. says

    I recently picked up a copy at a thrift store- it is on my short list of books I want to read. I watched the movie recently- a BBC produced version with Keira Knightley as Lara. Presently I am reading a bio of Henry VIII while I wait on a library reserve copy of Nikolai Gogol's "Dead Souls". What have you been up to?

    posted 4 months ago. ( send a note )
  • Jassafari

    Jassafari says

    Thanx for the friendship

    JASS!

    What are you reading?

    posted 4 months ago. ( send a note )
  • Joe M

    Joe M says

    Another part of the review: "Part of the problem was that I didn’t have the time to immerse myself in it completely. I was working madly on a chapter of my own new book manuscript, and completely preoccupied with that. So I was not allowing myself to enter fully into the book’s world."
    Apart from the conceit that leaks through here, while I can appreciate the honest admission, perhaps one should refrain from writing a (rather lengthy) review of a book when acknowledging up front that you weren't focusing on it that much? :)

    posted 5 months ago. ( send a note )
  • Joe M

    Joe M says

    Cool re: September. Yes, read the review... :) Sure, let's still shoot for September.
    I totally agree with you about following one's own nose. It's nice to see what are considered by some informed consensus what some great books are to consider checking out, but I dislike it when people receive a list like that and resolve to then start going down the list book-by-book so as to 'check them off' and complete it...such total conforming-to-critical-appraisal would just suck the fun, adventure, self-exploration out of reading to me.

    posted 5 months ago. ( send a note )
  • Joe M

    Joe M says

    Also, thanks so very much for the 1001 Excel spreadsheet! Whew! I have read only a mere 70 or so of what is listed (and 35 that I would characterize as "To Be Read"), but it's a great reference list of books. Critic-lists can always be maddening of course, in a love-hate kind of way. :)

    posted 5 months ago. ( send a note )
  • Joe M

    Joe M says

    I like "Written" so far, probably not as passionately as you, though there are a lot of wicked lines in it. By the way, there's a lengthy review of it that I read, I think it's here on Shelfari, but it seems to me to miss the point (e.g., the reviewer takes issue with the lack of clear identification of the narrator's gender...I think it's kind of funny how this type of ambiguity in a story can drive some people crazy, but to me that ambiguity adds to the charm and makes it more open to the reader's imagination--or perhaps, desire :) ).

    Glad to hear you liked the Mirabai--I will have to read the poems you mentioned again.

    Yes, I do want to get together, and it seems that September is creeping up but fast (though perhaps we could also do October if there's a holiday in there somewhere and you are available; but let's shoot for September)...will send you a PM. Whew! Things just get so busy for me over here...

    Lolomas, Joseph

    posted 5 months ago. ( send a note )
  • Joe M

    Joe M says

    Also, glad to hear you are reading Duras' "North China Lover"--interesting, it's the same story, but told in a different way, with some additions, etc. I actually saw her book "Emily L" in the Strand, but deferred for now, since I was spending already a lot of money, and also I want to look at some other authors, but maybe I'll get it at a later point.

    posted 5 months ago. ( send a note )
  • Joe M

    Joe M says

    Hey there Tagi!
    I am enjoying Written on the Body so far; I've had it for quite a while, and thought I really have to start reading some of the books that are long-standing on my queue.
    I read the first half of it on the ferry back from Nova Scotia.

    I went sort of crazy again and bought a whole ton of books recently down at the Strand (massive bookstore on Union Square in NYC), where I spent 4th of July with Mom, all at roughly 50% off. I recently finished reading Kawabata's "House of the Sleeping Beauties", which I feel is probably the best story I've yet read from him...I find it very disturbing, actually.

    Will write more soon...have been thinking about you. And of course, we must get together! Let me know when your best times might be...

    Lolomas, Joseph

    posted 5 months ago. ( send a note )
  • Solyaris

    Solyaris says

    question: your interest in observing masculinity reduces only to mishima's works or are you rather interested to see how this 'topic' spreads and appears in literature in general? because reading your description I remembered some interesting ideas on the subject and I could share them with you. (as the author is romanian and I can't simply point you to the particular essay, I would have to give you some translated excerpts)

    posted 5 months ago. ( send a note )
  • Joe M

    Joe M says

    Also, have you ever seen "Heat", the movie with Al Pacino and Robert DeNiro? I love that movie--something about the existentialism, the dialogue (a pleasure), the combination of realism and stylization (using the word 'detritus' in a couples argument!), the offbeat humor of certain scenes (usually with Pacino), and the way Michael Mann captures Los Angeles. I am drawn to films that capture L.A. in a certain way--I think of Mulholland Drive and Repo Man. Anyway, I read the British Film Institute book on "Heat"--not really great, it was more just a summary of scenes from an obvious fan, it didn't seem as scholarly as some of the other BFI books I've read. I was wondering what you think of it, given our recent gender discussions. I love a whole bunch of those hyper-masculinized types of movies (other examples I think of "Glengarry Glen Ross", "Reservoir Dogs", "Mean Streets", Sam Peckinpah's films, etc.).

    posted 7 months ago. ( send a note )
  • Joe M

    Joe M says

    Hi Tagi! Thanks for your well-wishes. Sorry I have been out of contact recently (will send you an email soon). Recent reading: well, I raided the Romanian section of the Brown library for my own edification, which accounts for the poetry and Lucian Blaga. I have been reading Mircea Eliade, but it's been mostly his fiction up until recently. I agree with Solyaris that his non-fiction work crushes his fiction work generally (though I still loved Bengal Nights a.k.a. Maitreyi and would recommend that, a story of forbidden love a la "The Lover"). My favorite so far has been "Myth and Reality"; "Myth of the Eternal Return" (which is the one he himself touted as the one he would have people read) covers similar ground. Also, I am reading his "Patanjali and Yoga", which is excellent-- he really delves into the theory, history and background, terminology, etc. of yoga in a substantive way (I feel yoga, like ethnic cuisine, arrives in American society in a popularized and diluted form). I find it a very stimulating and educational read, proof being that I find that I am internally debating and arguing with myself about the philosophy behind it (on the one hand, I agree with the observation of this world as suffering and find the notion of achieving a bliss 'beyond' this world enticing, but there's another strong Nietzchean, anti-asceticm side of me that wants to reject this proposition--why not make the most of *this* world, of life-as-we-know-it? why sacrifice the senses, suffering, etc. of this world--don't these have an inherent appeal--to pursue a theoretical 'bliss' that might exist beyond this world? and is adopting a life of asceticism--viewed by yoga as integral to achieve this--the best use of the time we have...or is it a forsaking of life?) Anyway, I like a book that can get me to wrestle with myself and think of these questions, and I have a much deeper respect of yoga as a result.
    Lolomas, Joseph

    posted 7 months ago. ( send a note )