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Deryni Checkmate by Katherine Kurtz.
				
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I have been reading the complete works of Flanner O'Conner. O'Conner is a writer from the mid-20th century. Suffering from lupus, knowing her death loomed out in the, not too, distant future she told dark tales which explored self-aggrandizing, narcissism, racism, and false feelings of superiority. Characters were often headed for falls, even hard falls. Finding characters you'll like is difficult, and yet, I read on, pleased with each story. She's an excellent writer. Her style improves with every few stories. I am reading the last three short stories now. Then I guess I will tackle her two novels. Some of the stories are uncomfortable reads. Some violence, lots of wasted lives, heavy on religious elements, and almost a void of happy endings. Southern Gothic at its best.
I tried to watch Wise Blood one night. It was dreadful. I don't think the way she writes translates well to the screen. You can't have all the internal views she gives you of the characters. Most, if not all, of her stories, are 3rd person. I supposed a disembodied narrator might give you the clues you need. But shooting the way it was written without seeing what's going on inside their heads just didn't work for me. In all honesty, I haven't read the novel Wise Blood yet, and I don't think I have the three short stories it was expanded from!She's a great writer! One of my favorite short story writers. A Good Man Is Hard To Find is one of the most chilling stories ever written.
Somerset Maugham........I'm currently reading John Updike's novel Couples. It's about a bunch of people you don't like who are cheating on one another, and whining about it a lot. I'm trying to keep an open mind. Updike's a good stylist and a good observer and that partly offsets the fact that the people he writes about are unappealing, and often tawdry and petty. I felt much the same way about the Rabbit series.
I do love Murderbot.Just finished All Systems Red by Martha Wells
Moving onto Song for the Unraveling of the World by Brian Evenson
...and that's exactly what I got.I do love Murderbot.
Me: just started on Escape from Yokai Land. I'm expecting cosmic horror, bureaucracy, and Hello Kitty.
Let us know if you make it. Like you, I've started reading Ulysses half a dozen times, but have always stalled somewhere. It's impenetrable.Interpreting "at the moment" in the most liberal way possible, I'm finally taking a serious stab at Joyce's Ulysses. I've probably started it about half a dozen times over the last 38 years . . . but I'm serious this time! I just have to read something every day. I love Joyce's way with words, although his story-writing is incredibly dense and difficult. Similar to Nabokov that way, although I think Joyce is more poetic than Nabokov.