fredag 29 december 2017

It`s Your Day



...  




I)   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=whbjmTqR_GQ    Yiruma   It`s Your Day


II)  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1p_ebSseEq8    Yiruma    River Flows In You




‘Funny, outrageous, touching, intimate, gorgeous’ ...


           



 
Best books of 2017       according The Guardian


 


John Banville    The Once and Future Liberal; There Your Heart Lies; Angel Hill


Facebook Twitter Pinterest Mark Lilla’s The Once and Future Liberal: After Identity Politics (Harper) has annoyed a great many people in the US, though its message is nothing but common sense: in the age of Trumpery, nothing can be done for vulnerable minorities unless liberals get themselves elected to positions of influence. An urgent and important book by one of the clearest and most inspired political thinkers of the day. There Your Heart Lies by Mary Gordon (Pantheon) takes us back to an earlier time of crisis, the 1930s and the Spanish civil war, and an American woman’s experiences in it. A thoughtful, provocative and beautifully written novel. Michael Longley’s Angel Hill (Cape) is at once elegiac and celebratory, and achingly beautiful. Longley has honed his poetry to the bone, but how the bone does shine.


Nicola Barker   Becoming Myself; All Things Remembered; Wonder Beyond Belief


Facebook Twitter Pinterest Becoming Myself: A Psychiatrist’s Memoir (Piatkus) by Irvin D Yalom. When Yalom publishes something – anything – I buy it, and he never disappoints. He’s an amazing storyteller, a gorgeous writer, a great, generous, compassionate thinker, and – quite rightly – one of the world’s most influential mental healthcare practitioners. All Things Remembered (Faber) by Goldie. A fabulous, whirling kaleidoscope of music, memory and trauma. Top highlights: when Goldie’s boa constrictor decides to try to eat him after he staggers home from the pub smelling like a kebab; and when his favourite piece of custom-made jewellery is stolen – right from under his nose – by dodgy Russian airport officials. Magical and cautionary. Navid Kermani’s Wonder Beyond Belief: On Christianity (Polity). Iranian-born, German-bred, Muslim novelist/intellectual Kermani travels the globe looking at significant (and not so significant) Christian artworks. This truly is one of the best books I’ve read in years: funny, outrageous, touching, intimate, glorious.


William Boyd     Insomniac Diaries; David Bowie: A Life; Fasting and Feasting


Facebook Twitter Pinterest As a Vladimir Nabokov completist, I could not resist Insomniac Diaries: Experiments with Time (ed. Gennady Barabtarlo, Princeton). Over a period of a few weeks in 1964 Nabokov wrote down his dreams, nightly. Here they are – not random narcoleptic scribblings but direct pellucid access to the great man’s unconscious. Utterly fascinating. Dylan Jones made absolutely the right decision to frame his superb life of David Bowie as a multi-voiced oral biography. David Bowie: A Life (Preface) suits the shape-shifting, beguiling, enigmatic complexities of its subject perfectly. It’s hard to imagine anything that will do Bowie better justice. Patience Gray (1917-2005) is the great original British cook and food writer. Her rackety, reclusive life is brilliantly realised in Fasting and Feasting by Adam Federman


(Chelsea Green). This book will establish Gray as a wonderfully eccentric and visionary one-off. She is the British MFK Fisher – there can be no higher praise in literary/culinary circles.


Bernardine Evaristo  When We Speak of Nothing; Kingdom of Gravity; Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People About Race


Facebook Twitter Pinterest When We Speak of Nothing by Olumide Popoola (Cassava Republic) is a linguistically inventive and deliciously original debut novel about a young, transgender protagonist who travels to Nigeria to find his father. Kingdom of Gravity by Nick Makoha (Peepal Tree) is an electrifying debut poetry collection that skilfully resurrects the terror of Idi Amin’s dictatorship from this British writer who fled Uganda as a child. Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People About Race by Reni Eddo-Lodge (Bloomsbury Circus). This political, accessible and uncompromising book has got people talking about race and racism in Britain.


 


Charlotte Riddell’s              ‘A Struggle For Fame’


Like many other female Victorian writers, she used a pseudonym to help protect her own name, and to allow readers to believe that she was male. Her protagonist, Glen Westley, does the same, and succeeds like Riddell in becoming a sought-after, prolific, best-selling author. Riddell was also the first to receive a pension from the Society of Authors.


However, Riddell’s three-volume novels fell out of fashion when the industry retired the practice of serialising long works, and after her death in 1906 her notoriety faded. Her caustic, funny semi-autobiographical masterpiece, A Struggle for Fame, went out of print.


It is worth asking ourselves why some books are canon and others vanish. Sometimes it’s simply because no one puts forward the money for a reprint while copyright is held; by the time the work is in the public domain, often many decades later, the work may be all but forgotten. This is understandable, but it has in this case led to the neglect of an important Irish writer.


Riddell’s absence from our cultural and literary history has meant there has been less work with valuable contemporary insight about class, gender and the complexity of Irish identity in Victorian times. Riddell is certainly not the only writer that has been put aside and forgotten. New contexts can revive old plays; why can’t we do the same with books?


Domenico Starnone      Ties

Ties is the story of a marriage. Like many marriages, this one has been subject to strain, to attrition, to the burden of routine. Yet it has survived intact. Or so things appear. The rupture in Vanda and Aldo's marriage lies years in the past, but if one looks closely enough, the fissures and fault lines are evident. Their marriage is a cracked vase that may shatter at the slightest touch. Or perhaps it has already shattered, and nobody is willing to acknowledge the fact.


Domenico Starnone's thirteenth work of fiction is a powerful short novel about relationships, family, love, and the ineluctable consequences of one's actions. Known as a consummate stylist and beloved as a talented storyteller, Domenico Starnone is the winner of Italy's most prestigious literary award The Strega.


 
... because i'm just a soul whose intentions are good

                                                                                                       ... På återseende




 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IVeD9b8cgow     Yiruma   When The Love Falls


 Med aldrig sinande vänlighet



Ðeno

   
 


 

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