Browsing Archive: April, 2009

Just Unpacked ! Memorandum : a story of painting by Marlene van Niekerk & Adriaan van Zyl

Posted by Andre Kruger on Thursday, April 23, 2009, In : South African Literature 
Just Unpacked ! Memorandum : a story of painting by Marlene van Niekerk & Adriaan van Zyl

We have just unpacked copies of Memorandum : a story with paintings by Marlene van Niekerk & Adriaan van Zyl.
In this unique book, the text and visual images offer parallel narratives that resonate poignantly with each other. Adriaan van Zyl's series of more than 20 paintings portrays a patient's experience from waiting room to ward giving a quietly disturbing view of the soullessness of hospitals ...

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Christopher’s Ghosts, by Charles McCarry

Posted by Andre Kruger on Thursday, April 23, 2009, In : Spy Stories 
Christopher’s Ghosts, by Charles McCarry

This fascination with spy novels may pass soon, or it may not. I’m not making any apologies or taking any bets. Not really. I seem to be more powerfully attracted to good spy fiction as time goes by, as I age. (Or decay, depending on your level of compassion or charity). It’s like one of those exercises you would find in a magazine, edited by someone who took one undergraduate course of psychology, where you are asked to share with someone yo...

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Devil May Care, a James Bond novel by Sebastian Faulks, writing as Ian Fleming, read by me.

Posted by Andre Kruger on Thursday, April 23, 2009, In : Spy Stories 
Devil May Care, a James Bond novel by Sebastian Faulks, writing as Ian Fleming, read by me.

As a general rule one wants a book title to be pithy and to the point, the front wrapper to be clean and clear. In this the above book fails. In fact, the cover is, well, covered in writing. However, it needs every word, except of course the bit about me being the reader. That’s just me being facetious, but I think you gathered that already.
It does need all of the title though. If you have seen b...

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Louis de Bernières – Explaining to Humans What They Did

Posted by Andre Kruger on Thursday, April 23, 2009, In : Literature 

Louis de Bernières – Explaining to Humans What They Did
It’s probably true that readers come to expect a certain product from an author, though this may be more true of specific genres like crime fiction and historical romances, built, to a more or lesser extent, on working, known models. Good authors, however, surprise. They are to be identified, as often as not, by the breadth and range of their writing, the diversity of the situations they tackle and the spread of characters they inven...


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Twilight of the feet of the Idols

Posted by meredith kempthorne on Thursday, April 23, 2009, In : Literature 

Twilight of the feet of the Idols
No hero is ever safe from being felled by his/her past. I discovered this when the story broke that Gunther Grass had served in the Waffen-SS. I, and others, had believed him when he claimed that he did not fight in the war, and subsequently found his anti-nazi stance strenghtened by the courage of his convictions. In his old age he admitted that he had lied about it. What a quandry for his supporters. He was, and I suppose still is, despite the evidence of hi...


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Nick Hornby's Slam, Easily Excellent

Posted by Andre Kruger on Thursday, April 23, 2009, In : Literature 

Nick Hornby’s Slam, Easily Excellent.
Nick Hornby is a remarkable writer, not because he writes well (he does), but because he is easy to read. It is one of the most difficult illusions for an author to master: making the reader believe that writing is easy. In this Nick Hornby is simply inspired. The eye flies over the page, the pages turn quickly and the voices of the characters chatter away in your head like an overheard conversation in a quiet room.
His latest offering, Slam, is ostensibl...


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Amelie Nothomb : The Perpetual Introspective Outsider

Posted by Andre Kruger on Thursday, April 23, 2009, In : Literature 

Amelie Nothomb: The Perpetual Introspective Outsider 

Under the most excellent title Le Clézio, le backlash, Adrian Tahourdin writes an article in the Times Literary Supplement on the most recent recipient of the Nobel Prize for Literature. In it he refers to the dissenting voices being heard in France regarding this year’s winner. He refers to an article Frédéric-Yves Jeannet wrote in Le Monde, where the latter states that Le Clezio writes about fine sentiments and noble causes, but that...


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Life as Remarkable Failure : Tim Winton - An Open Swimmer

Posted by Andre Kruger on Thursday, April 23, 2009, In : Literature 

Life as Remarkable Failure: Tim Winton – An Open Swimmer.

An Open Swimmer, published in 1982, is Tim Winton’s first short novel, and won the Australian /Vogel Award for Best First Novel. To anyone who has read any of his books, this honour will come as no surprise. He is an exceptionally talented writer, with deep insight into the human soul. Since then he has received more accolades; the Miles Franklin Award, twice (Shallows, in 1984 and Cloudstreet, in 1992), the Commonwealth Writers Pr...


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Bulwer-Lytton

Posted by Andre Kruger on Thursday, April 23, 2009, In : Literary History 

Bulwer-Lytton

Bulwer-Lytton rules.




When Snoopy wrote: it was a dark and stormy night, the crafty Beagle was, of course, plagiarising the late Edward George Bulwer-Lytton. The cainine theft is a copy of the first line of Bulwer-Lytton’s novel titled Paul Clifford.

I have known about him because of Snoopy and the competition, and so was quite excited when a copy of The Last Days Of Pompeii by Sir Edward Bulwer-Lytton, Bart. (Bart.???) recently arrived in our shop. Complete edition with notes...

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Will the real Bond, James Bond, please stand up ?

Posted by Andre Kruger on Thursday, April 23, 2009, In : Spy Stories 

Will the real Bond, James Bond, please stand up?
I grew up with James Bond. I remember watching Goldfinger at the Drive-In, (at the Dakota I think it was, but may be wrong), and Moonraker at the Kine Flora. I was an instant convert. When Sean Connery introduced himself as Bond, (flick the lighter open, light the cigarette, flick the lighter closed), James Bond, I knew that he was going to become a fixture in my life. And that he did. Not Sean Connery so much, but Mr. Bond. I saw all the movies...


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