What Are You Reading Now?

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  • mariab
    replied
    Yeah, that's precisely how I see it too, David. Racine's Phèdre is super hot as a plot, but the text is a bit boring. And Corneille is much worse.
    Hardly anything in Shakespeare is ever boring. The plays' structure has been described as cinematic, the characters are amazing, the themes totally relatable to us today, there are tons of clever jokes and ironic situations (even in the tragedies), and so on. Plus his plays are sooo versatile, while Molière just wrote the same thing a dozen times (albeit incredibly well).
    OK, so the language is a bit idiomatic, but still easy to understand. Calling Shakes boring comes straight out of laziness or sheer stupidity. ;-)

    By the by, I happen to think that one of the few boring parts in Shakespeare is Hamlet's monologue, yet ironically it's his most well-known text.

    Faut que j'aille au taff, moi. (Which consists of starting making phone calls.)

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  • DVV
    replied
    Hi Maria, my point is that, even if boring (as some seem to consider, and this I can understand), he is far less so than other playwriters of his age - except Molière, of course, but I'm talking of tragedy, as it's supposed to be most boring and pompous, and had mainly Racine and Corneille in mind although I like some parts of their works.
    Last edited by DVV; 12-22-2011, 12:07 PM.

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  • mariab
    replied
    NOTHING compares to Shakespeare.
    I also adore Molière, though it's a limited “environment“ compared to Shakes.
    Marivaux, Musset, Hugo are fine but can't be compared.
    My other favorite playwriters are Tchekhov, Tennessee Williams, and Oscar Wilde. The ancient Greek plays are cool too. Racine is intense, but personally gets me bored. Voltaire is a catastrophy as a playwriter, the guy was great in essays and as a journalist. It's fascinating that Tchekhov could do both plays and short stories so good, this is a rare gift.

    Highjacking again now, but the only Shakespeare-based opera worthy of the original is Verdi's Otello (for which I hope to do the critical edition, if I live for another 10 years.) ;-)
    Last edited by mariab; 12-22-2011, 10:46 AM.

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  • DVV
    replied
    I'm not pretentious but have never found Shakespeare boring. Especially when I compare him to his continental colleagues.

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  • robert newell
    replied
    JFK and the unspeakable by James Douglass. It is one of the best books on the assassination. Puts alot into perspective. Also rereading 'Garage Sale' by Ken Kesey for kicks.

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  • mariab
    replied
    Shakespeare was my favorite as a kid, besides Jules Verne.
    My favorite Shakes play at age 9 was As you like it and Richard III. I used to read them again and again while having lunch after school on the living room couch, while my mom nagged me about doing my homework (and about staining said couch).
    At age 9 I attempted deploying Richard III's techniques on my school mates. The teacher called my mom.
    Even at age 9 I was aware of the nuances in the infamous scene between Richard III and Lady Anne (Neville), and I totally thought it was a clever, sexy scene. (Though “sexy“ definitely didn't belong to my vocabulary at age 9, which I guess is a healthy thing.) I also used to read Othello a lot as a kid, but for that one I didn't get all the nuances. (Big surprise.) ;-)
    Last edited by mariab; 12-22-2011, 03:15 AM.

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  • Adam Went
    replied
    Tom:

    Agree with you about the high school reads, especially if it happens to be Shakespeare. Although some aren't too bad - way back in primary school we read the "Deltora Quest" series by Emily Rodda, great stuff.

    Similar story with Samuel Pepys. Have no particular interest in trawling through his diaries but am fascinated by the lives of people around that medieval period.

    Cheers,
    Adam.

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  • Scott Nelson
    replied
    Anything by the late Zecharia Stich-me-up.

    with apologies to all New Agers

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  • Robert
    replied
    Call in Biggles.

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  • lynn cates
    replied
    stern stuff

    Hello Phil. Hmm, he seems made of sterner stuff.

    Cheers.
    LC

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  • Phil Carter
    replied
    Our main weapon is surprise, just surprise....oh, and a fanatical devotion to..
    our two weapons are..
    We have three weapons..
    Amongst our weapons..

    From the comfy chair, with the soft cushions,

    Phil

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  • lynn cates
    replied
    cardinal point

    Hello Robert, Simon. That was for Tom. I'm trying to torquemada not reading Shakespeare.

    Cheers.
    LC (AKA, Cardinal Fang)

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  • Tom_Wescott
    replied
    Originally posted by Wolf Vanderlinden
    I’m also reading Richard Palmisano’s Ghosts, An Investigation Into a True Canadian Haunting (anything by Palmisano, a Toronto based paranormal investigator, is worth checking out. This one is fairly disturbing).
    Talk about illogic and deception, the 'paranormal' world is full of virtually nothing but cranks. From Hans Holzer to Slemen to the 20 fake shows currently on TV. Still they do make for some fascinating reading.

    Originally posted by jason_c
    Im the very same. I almost never read him but the authorship question interests me. Im reading a biography of Shakespeare at the moment. As I'd imagined, its basically an account of his times rather than a detailed(how much life detail can you obtain from a Will and a couple of court cases?) account of the man.
    There's not enough known about the 'Stratford Man' to really warrant a biography, I would say. But learning about his times is interesting. I'm reading James Shapiro's 'Contested Will' and highly recommend it. I haven't gotten to the final chapter, but it seems he might be a Stratfordian.

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott

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  • Simon Wood
    replied
    Hi All,

    "Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition."

    Oh really?

    Best wishes,

    Torquemada

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  • Robert
    replied
    Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition!

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