Smorley
location: Boston, Mass.
listening to: Mindy Smith, Allison Moorer, Randall Bramblett, Bach Cantatas
registered: 2004.05.11
posts: 262
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I loved the Holmes books too. The first exposure to that character was through the hokey Rathbone
movies but then I read the stories and so hokey paid off, I guess. I only like Curtains of the Christie.
We used to have a table just like the one that was so important at the end of that book. A lot of
times it was what can I get my hands on in the house which was full of books so I was reading
Dostoyevsky at 12. I didn't get most of it, of course, but I just loved the exotic--the places far away
from where I was--which was waist deep in snow a good chunk of the year. Good observation by Kim. It is true that a lot of that should not be called literature. It's not Ethan
Frome. It isn't As I Lay Dying--two books I got to read in a literature class when I was about Kim's
age. I remember being floored by As I Lay Dying as I got to decoding it. A strange and wonderful
thing. Novels can be like that too? A world of possibilities. It was exciting to be shown other ways
of seeing what art could be. Plus, the story of gallows humor rural horror was not too unfamiliar to
me. Both Catcher and To Kill came out at maybe just the right time. They were books of decent people
trying to make their way that came out when there was a lot of change afoot as we moved away
from WWII. Right book right time. Why books hold their appeal after 50+ years. Catcher is in many
ways about how confusing it is to be that age for young men. To Kill A Mockingbird is always a
book about standing up against morons--the confederacy of dunces. Well, time to wind up the day and go sit on the subway and continue to re-read Barry Hannah's odd
and funny as hell Yonder Stands Your Orphan. A beautiful day here in Bostontown. Going to a nice
partk in the city--former home of the hideous expressway-- to the birthday party of someone I've
never met.
S
Smorley
(view)
I loved the Holmes books too. The first exposure to that character was through the hokey Rathbone
movies but then I read the stories and so hokey paid off, I guess. I only like Curtains of the Christie.
We used to have a table just like the one that was so important at the end of that book. A lot of
times it was what can I get my hands on in the house which was full of books so I was reading
Dostoyevsky at 12. I didn't get most of it, of course, but I just loved the exotic--the places far away
from where I was--which was waist deep in snow a good chunk of the year. Good observation by Kim. It is true that a lot of that should not be called literature. It's not Ethan
Frome. It isn't As I Lay Dying--two books I got to read in a literature class when I was about Kim's
age. I remember being floored by As I Lay Dying as I got to decoding it. A strange and wonderful
thing. Novels can be like that too? A world of possibilities. It was exciting to be shown other ways
of seeing what art could be. Plus, the story of gallows humor rural horror was not too unfamiliar to
me. Both Catcher and To Kill came out at maybe just the right time. They were books of decent people
trying to make their way that came out when there was a lot of change afoot as we moved away
from WWII. Right book right time. Why books hold their appeal after 50+ years. Catcher is in many
ways about how confusing it is to be that age for young men. To Kill A Mockingbird is always a
book about standing up against morons--the confederacy of dunces. Well, time to wind up the day and go sit on the subway and continue to re-read Barry Hannah's odd
and funny as hell Yonder Stands Your Orphan. A beautiful day here in Bostontown. Going to a nice
partk in the city--former home of the hideous expressway-- to the birthday party of someone I've
never met.
