Book-a-Day Challenge Day 21

Die von mir sehr geliebte Interview Buch-Reihe "Kampa Salon" trifft nach  meiner Lieblingsschriftstellerin 1 Siri Hustvedt auf Lieblingsschriftstellerin 2 Margaret Atwood, da geht doch zumindest literarisch das Jahr überaus versöhnlich zu Ende. Der unter anderem für die "Zeit" arbeitende Journalist Caspar Shaller interviewte die Booker Gewinnerin 2019 zwei Tage lang in einem Café in Toronto... Continue Reading →

Book-a-Day Challenge Day 20

Andrei Tarkovsky is probably my all time favorite film director with a very specific cinematic athetic. Few directors I think have worked so consistently with the same symbols and motives, creating an atmospheric strange ambiguity, that has a mesmerizing effect. Bird uses an interesting approach to his peruse of Tarkovsky’s interesting techniques, his way of... Continue Reading →

Book-a-Day-Challenge Day 19

The Western Wind is a marvelous, fascinating, multilayered medieval mystery set in the 15th century in a tiny, poor little village in Somerset in danger of falling off the map. Thomas Newman sort of the intellectual thinker in the village disappears and is found dead in the river. It is unclear if it was murder,... Continue Reading →

Book-a-Day-Challenge Day 18

Especially in times of the pursuance and killing of people of a different faith or of different ideas by fanatic Islamists on the one side and equally fanatic fascists on the other side Voltaire’s text is more important than ever. No philosopher has fought for this ideal more than the French Enlightenment thinker Voltaire. His... Continue Reading →

Book-a-Day-Challenge Day 17

OK it looks to me as if Sorokin is the illegitimate brainchild of David Lynch, Dostojewski and Shirley Jackson. It all starts idyllic enough with a country doctor named Garin being stuck in a snowstorm in a little village without any horses for his vehicle. He is on his way to a remote village with... Continue Reading →

Book-a-Day-Challenge Day 16

  Today I would like to enthuse you for one of my favorite books "Orlando" - the longest love letter and the history of literature. It's difficult to imagine who forward thinking Virginia Woolf was to come up with this gender-society-time-bending story of the young Duke Orlando who is Vita Sackville-Wests alter ego. Orlando tells... Continue Reading →

Meine Woche

Gesehen: "The Hole in the Ground" (2019) von Lee Cronin mit Seána Kerslake. Irischer atmosphärischer Horror mit tollen Bildern um eine Mutter die ihren Sohn im Wald wiederfindet neben einem riesigen Loch und der nicht mehr der selbe zu sein scheint. "Marriage Story" (2019) von Noah Baumbach mit Scarlett Johansson, Adam Driver und Laura Dern.... Continue Reading →

Book-a-Day-Challenge Day 15

After the audiobook "The Case of Charles Dexter Ward" this was my first book I read by him and what a strange experience it is to encounter his nightmarish, eery universe. Lovecraft grouped his stories as follows: "There are my 'Poe' pieces and my Dunsay pieces' and my Lovecraft pieces." Macabre stories (c. 1905–1920); Dream Cycle stories (c. 1920–1927);... Continue Reading →

Book-a-day-Challenge Day 14

Another gem of the "Naturkunden" series by Matthes & Seitz Verlag. At some stage I think I really want them all. I was never particularly interested in snails but that certainly changed after reading this funny, insightful and beautiful little book. There is so much more to these fascinating creatures than their chalky little shells... Continue Reading →

Book-a-Day-Challenge Day 13

Diesen Roman hatte mir meine sehr belesene Chefin schon vor Ewigkeiten empfohlen und ich habe nicht die leiseste Ahnung, warum es derart lange gedauert hat, bis ich ihn endlich in Angriff nahm. Die Anthropologin Margaret Mead stand Patin für diesen Roman, der auf ihren Erlebnissen am Sepik Fluß in Neu Guinea basiert, wo sie mit... Continue Reading →

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