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“All the Leaves are brown……” ‘Autumn’ – Ali Smith

Sarah's avatarHard Book Habit

Autumn is the first of a series of four Seasonal books that Ali Smith has written in response to our post-Brexit world. I don’t know about you, but I find Autumn the most difficult season of the year to face. Nature might be putting on a dazzling show in reds and gold, but all the beauty signals the dying of the year and the unavoidable approach of Wintry bleakness. I don’t fear Winter – I actually enjoy it when it arrives, but it’s the transition that feels so destabilising. It is this state of flux which Smith explores in Autumn, the uncertainty of our future now we’ve shifted direction and are heading who knows where?

At the beginning of the novel, centenarian Daniel dreams of the seashore from his hospital bed. He finds himself covered in leaves, transported to an Eden-like forest, an in-between place. This is a novel…

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schreibfreude

Lyrix's avatarKlapperhorn

kein reimen kein dichten

kein poetischer vers

ich greif einfach in die seiten


lass klappern und läuten

was klangfarben malt

wird es etwas bedeuten?


es schert mich nicht

und hoffentlich

suchst auch du keine tiefen


in dem was hier herausgeschossen

steht nur eines geschrieben:

freude das worte nun fließen


© J.F. Wolf 2018

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Baudelaire fait du mal-être un élément grandiose, le Spleen

Julien-James Vachon's avatarDirect-Actu.fr le blogzine de la culture pop et alternative

Selon l’article sur “L’autopsie du mal-être: Du Spleen de Baudelaire à la nausée de Jean Paul Sartre.

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Road; shadows

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‘The Garden of the Finzi-Continis’ by Giorgio Bassani (Italian Lit Month)

A really great book and a film by Vittorio de Seca gathered much attention when it first came out. Particularly important and pertinant after the Italian election results!

Jonathan's avatarIntermittencies of the Mind

For many years I have wanted to write about the Finzi-Continis — about Micòl and Alberto, Professor Ermanno and Signora Olga — and about the many others who lived at, or like me frequented, the house in Corso Ercole I d’Este, Ferrara, just before the last war broke out. But the impulse, the prompt, really to do so only occurred for me a year ago, one April Sunday in 1957.

So begins the prologue of The Garden of the Finzi-Continis. The event that prompted the narrator was a visit to some Etruscan tombs and an innocent remark from a little girl about why the old tombs are considered less sad than modern tombs. This makes the narrator think about the Finzi-Continis’ tomb, built about a hundred years before but now nearly completely overgrown with weeds. A tomb that does not hold the more recent Finzi-Continis as most of them…

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‘Afternoon Men’ by Anthony Powell

I enjoyed this review which I think covers the book, which I have just read, very well. The boxing scene I found rather interesting. There seems to be a fair amount of prejudice looking back on this writing-not at all funny by today’s standards. A minor character, Susan’s father is well drawn and prefigures in an amusing way, figures in “A Dance to the Music of Time”.

Jonathan's avatarIntermittencies of the Mind

Afternoon Men was Anthony Powell’s first novel and was published in 1931 when Powell was only 26 years old. I found this copy in a secondhand bookshop when I was reading his twelve-volume series of novels, A Dance to the Music of Time. It’s a fun book and will certainly be of interest to anyone that has read Dance as the style and structure of the book is so similar to his later work. The book has little plot and instead concentrates on characters and the dialogue between the many characters, who are all from the same jaded semi-aristocratic, intellectual milieu as in Dance.

The main character is William Atwater who has an unsatisfying job at a museum. The book opens with Atwater in a bar discussing with his friend, Pringle, Pringle’s current medication regime. We are then introduced to several other characters who enter the bar and…

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Bike

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Fascinating muscular realism -even naturalism portraying the rapid growth of New York.

beautybellezzabeaute's avatarBeauty Bellezza Beauté

More about George Bellows HERE.

george bellows1george bellows2george bellows3

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UMBERTO BOCCIONI

Like the work but don’t agree with the underlying politics-yesterday’s vote distinctly worrying in Italy!

beautybellezzabeaute's avatarBeauty Bellezza Beauté

Umberto Boccioni (1882-1916).

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Below: Sculpture destroyed.

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Below: Sculpture destroyed.

umbertocumberto91

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KALININGRAD

Perhaps best known for its being the home of Immanuel Kant, the great Enlightenment philosopher whose walks around the city were so regular that it was said citizens could set their watches by the regularity of his perambulations!

beautybellezzabeaute's avatarBeauty Bellezza Beauté

Kaliningrad Oblast is a federal state of the Russian Federation that is located on the coast of the Baltic Sea and has the city of Kaliningrad as its administrative center.

Until 1945, Kaliningrad was known as Königsberg, the former capital of East Prussia,  but after its World War II victory over Nazi Germany, the Soviet Union annexed the city and the surrounding area.

Kaliningrad’s ultimate strategic value to Russia is that it functions as a warm-water port as well as a staging area for military exercises. Russia has held frequent exercises in the region and Moscow has often threatened to place nuclear weapons in Kaliningrad, which borders multiple NATO states.

Strange, isn’t it?

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