Thursday, May 2, 2024

DDR: El laberinto de los esp铆ritus ( The Labyrinth of the Spirits) by Carlos Ruiz Zaf贸n

 


This is a big one: 805 pages. I'm going to try to restrain myself a bit on this, as (1) I don't want the series to end and (2) I want to have a clearer view of the novel. When I gulp books down --as I have been doing with the previous three novels in this tetralogy, though more by compulsion than by will--I get a little blurry on details. 


Day 1 (DDRD 2,375) May 2, 2024

Read to page 54. Actually having a little trouble getting into this, but hopefully that's just a temporary thing.

Oh, also, this:


I sure hope Carlos got a cut of that Limited Edition pie.



Day 2 (DDRD 2,376) May 3, 2024

Read to page

Monday, April 29, 2024

DDR: El prisionero del cielo (The Prisoner of Heaven) by Carlos Ruiz Zaf贸n

 



Had to drive down to the Main Library to pick this up. It was listed as being at the Northeast Branch, but after waiting for three days I decided they didn't have it after all, no matter what the online catalog said, and went after it.

This one is a mere 278 pages, so, you know, it'll take a day or two. And since I only read 68 pages of The Angel's Game this morning, I might have to start in on it today.

And lookee here--there's a limited edition of this one, too:



And can you believe that it sold out at those prices? Somebody sure does love Carlos RZ.

I held out for about ten minutes, then started reading. So...



Day 1 (DDRD 2,373 2,372) April 30 29, 2024

Read to page 58. Actually wanted to read more, too. But I managed to restrain myself.

I think. (Time will tell.)

"People with a meagre soul always try to make others feel small, too...." (11)

On page 29, there's a reference to "the Santa Lucia market." There were references to two other Santa Lucia things in The Angel's Game...though I can't remember what those things were now. But clearly there's St. Lucy fascination going in here.

P.S. I Googled Barcelona and St. Lucy and look what (amongst other things) came up:



I can't tell Jacqueline about this, or she'll want to go to Barcelona.



Day 2 (DDRD 2,373) April 30, 2024

Read to page 154. 

Speaking about schizophrenia, a doctor in the prison says, "The mind slowly deteriorates and the patient can no longer distinguish between reality and fiction." Fermin replies, "Like seventy percent of Spaniards...." (79)

"Let's shake hands and be friends, but, please, I beg you, stop farting like that, because I'm beginning to hallucinate and in my dreams I see Comrade Joseph Stalin doing the charleston. (89)

BTW, the library came through this time:


So unless I poop out, I now have a straight shot at the rest of this series. Very exciting. (馃憟Nerd!)

Later...
Read to page 140 and had to stop to catch my breath. This is a very brutal story, but it's also so compelling that I don't want to stop reading yet...even though I've already read over 80 pages today, and it hasn't been a day with a lot if down time. 

So I'm going to catch that breath...and then read some more. I didn't really want go cut the grass today anyway. 



Day 3 (DDRD 2,374) May 1, 2024

Read to page 278 = The End. So that was a nice little canter. The chronology of the series is growing faint to me now. I wish that I'd been able to read all 3 of these books at a slower pace. If I'd stuck to my 30 pages a day goal, it would gave taken me 487 + 521 + 278 = 1,286 ÷ 30 = 42.87 days to read this far. It took me 19 days...for an average of 67.68 pages per day.

馃毈

So...on to book 4. But first:

"...I think flags are nothing but painted rags that represent rancid emotions. Just seeing someone wrapped up in one of them, spewing out hymns, badges and speeches, gives me the runs. I've always thought that anyone who needs to join a herd so badly must be a bit of a sheep himself." (159)

Saturday, April 27, 2024

Daily Devotional Readings

Keeping this list at the bottom of each Daily Devotional Reading has become a bit unwieldy, so I'm going to put it here on its own from now on. Now in Larger Font Size!


DDR Day 1 to 1,000: 13,449 pages read, 13.45 Average Pages Per Day

(1-11)  History of Philosophy Volumes I - XI
(12-14) History of Civilization in England Volumes I - III
(15-17) Miscellaneous and Posthumous Works of Henry Thomas
Buckle Volumes I - III
(18-20) Civilization and Capitalism, 16th - 18th Century Volumes I - III
(21-23) The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age Philip IIl Volumes I - III
(24) This Happened In My Presence: Moriscos, Old Christians, and the Spanish Inquisition in the Town of Deza, 1569-1611
(25)The Stolen Village: Baltimore and the Barbary Pirates
(26) Peat and Peat Cutting
+

DDR Day 1,001 to Day 2,000: 29,801pages, 29.8 Average Pages Per Day

(1) Leviathan 63 days, 729 pages
(2) Stalingrad 27 days, 982 pages
(3) Life and Fate 26 days, 880 pages
(4) The Second World War 34 + 32 + 40 + 43 + 31 + 32 days = 212 
days, 4,379 pages
(5) Baron Wenckheim's Homecoming 10 days, 572 pages
(6) The Great Bridge 25 days, 636 pages
(7) The Path Between the Seas 29 days, 698 pages
(8) Blake: Prophet Against Empire, 23 days, 523 pages
(9) Jerusalem 61 days, 1,266 pages
(10) Voice of the Fire 9 days, 320 pages
(11) The Fountainhead 15 days, 720 pages
(12) The Pacific Trilogy: Pacific Crucible 23 days, 640 pages
(13) The Pacific Trilogy: The Conquering Tide 28 days, 656 pages
(14) The Pacific Trilogy: Twilight of the Gods 31 days, 944 pages
(15) Jazz: Its Evolution and Essence 13 days, 304 pages
(16) Toward Jazz 18 days, 224 pages
(17) The Worlds of Jazz 13 days, 279 pages
(18) To Be or Not...to Bop 14 days, 571 pages
(19) Kind of Blue 4 days, 224 pages
(20) Kind of Blue: Miles Davis and his Masterpiece: 5 days, 256 
pages
(21) Miles: The Autobiography 16 days, 445 pages
(21) A Love Supreme: The Story of John Coltrane's Signature 
Album: 8 days, 287 pages
(22) Ascension: John Coltrane and His Quest 8 days, 304 pages
(23) Living With Music: Ralph Ellison's Jazz Writings 11 days 325 pages
(24) The Pickwick Papers 28 days, 983 pages
(25) Oliver Twist 16 days, 542 pages
(26) Nicholas Nickleby 27 days, 1,045 pages
(27) The Old Curiosity Shop 22 days, 753 pages
(28) Barnaby Rudge 24 days, 866 pages
(29) Master Humprhey's Clock 4 days, 145 pages
(30) Martin Chuzzlewit 32 days, 1,045 pages
(31) American Notes 10 days, 324 pages
(32) Pictures From Italy 7 days, 211 pages
(33) Christmas Stories Volume I 10 days, 456 pages
(34) Christmas Stories Volume II 15 days, 472 pages
(35) Christmas Books 17 days, 525 pages
(36) The Annotated Christmas Carol 7 days, 380 pages
(37) Dombey and Son 30 days, 1,089 pages
(38) Sketches by Boz 22 days, 834 pages

2nd 1K Total: 26,834 pages (to SBBII) = 28.76 Average Pages Per Day
Grand Total: 40,273 pages, 20.83 Average Pages Per Day

(39) David Copperfield 21 days, 1,092 pages
(40) The Uncommercial Traveller 12 days, 440 pages
(41) A Child's History of England 10 days, 491 pages
(42) Reprinted Pieces 14 days, 368 pages
(43) Miscellaneous Papers Volume I 18 days, 542 pages

+ 25 pages Bleak House and 9 pages Miscellaneous Papers II = 2,000 days' worth.

2nd 1K Total: 29,801pages = 29.8 Average Pages Per Day
Grand Total: 43,250 pages, 21.625 Average Pages Per Day

DDR Day 2,001 to Day 3,000:

(1) Miscellaneous Papers Volume II 28 days (don't count, while 
reading BH), 494 pages
(2) Bleak House 37 days, 1,098 pages

494 - 9 = 485 + 1098 - 25 = 1073 = 1,558 pages towards 3K...in 37 days, for a daily rate of 42+ pages (!).

(3) Hard Times 11 days, 459 pages
(4) Little Dorrit 29 days, 1,606 pages
(5) A Tale of Two Cities 9 days, 460 pages
(6) Great Expectations 16 days, 580 pages
(7) Our Mutual Friend 29 days, 1,057 pages
(8) The Mystery of Edwin Drood 6 days, 314 pages

FTR vis-a-vis Dickens: 18,671 pages in 468 days = 39.9 pages per day!

(9) Dickens and Kafka, 7 days, 315 pages
(10) Franz Kafka: A Biography 8 days, 267 pages
(11) The Frozen Sea: A Study of Franz Kafka 5 days, 198 pages
(12) Franz Kafka, A Writer's Life 12 days, 385 pages
(13) The Lost Writings 2 days, 138 pages
(14) Amerika: The Missing Person 11 days, 333 pages
(15) The Brothers Karamazov 24 days, 816 pages
(16) The Eternal Husband & Other Stories 8 days, 375 pages
(17) Poor Folk 5 days, 164 pages
(18) The Double 4 days, 190 pages
(19) The Landlady 3 days, 90 pages
(20) Netochka Nezvanova 6 days, 196 pages
(21) The Village of Stepanchikovo 8 days, 265 pages
(22) Uncle's Dream 4 days, 162 pages
(23) The Insulted and the Injured 14 days, 451 pages
(24) Notes From a Dead House 8 days, 327 pages
(25) Notes From Underground 4 days, 171 pages
(26) Crime and Punishment 13 days, 555 pages
(27) The Gambler 10 days, 405 pages
(28) The Idiot 21 days, 682 pages 
    
    4,849 total Dostoyevsky pages as of now

(29) A Poetics of Handel's Operas 12 days, 386 pages
(30) Blue Lard 8 days, 360 pages
(31) Opera as Hypermedium 0 days (overlap), 198 pages
(32) Why Do the Heathen Rage? 4 days, 191 pages
(33) Wellness 7 days, 608 pages
(34) The Shadow of the Wind 10 days, 487 pages
(35) The Angel's Game 6 days, 531 pages
(36) The Prisoner of Heaven 3 days, 278 pages

() The Labyrinth of Spirits __ days, 805 pages
() The City of Mist __ days, 162 pages

() The Nix __ days, 737 pages
() Demons
() The Adolescent

Wednesday, April 24, 2024

DDR: El juego del 谩ngel (The Angel's Game) by Carlos Ruiz Zaf贸n

Check out this bit of loveliness:


It can be yours for a mere $420.00 (plus $6.00 Shipping). There is at least one other limited edition of this novel at an equally outrageous price. I hope Carlos RZ is getting a slice if that pie.


Day 1 (DDRD 2,367) April 24, 2024

Read to page 65. Off to a good start, reviving my interest in The Story.

I think that a lot of the time good writing comes down to word choice. For instance, "A skyline stabbed by hundreds of chimneys...." (3) That "stabbed" is just a beautiful thing. Without it, the phrase is mundane and passes by unnoticed. 

And then there's this: "[He] subscribed to the theory that the liberal use of adverbs and adjectives was the mark of a pervert or someone with a vitamin deficiency." (4)

There's a reference to a Spanish writer, Benito P茅rez Gald贸s, of whom I'd not previously heard, so I went to our good friends at Wikipedia for some informationand got this: "Benito P茅rez Gald贸s (10 May 1843 – 4 January 1920) was a Spanish realist novelist. He was a leading literary figure in 19th-century Spain, and some scholars consider him second only to Miguel de Cervantes in stature as a Spanish novelist."

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benito_P%C3%A9rez_Gald%C3%B3s

¡Caray!

So I went over to the LFPL to see what I could see. There were 7 items listed. 2 were books about Gald贸s' writing. 1 was an anthology of Plays by Spanish writers. 1 was a novel in Spanish. Of the other three, all novels, two were book books--one in Remote Shelving (of course) and the other buried in an International Collection--and one, Dona Perfecta, was an e-book. I went for the latter because of the blurb which read, in part, "one of the towering masterpieces of nineteenth-century...." 

So there's another path to follow through the literary forest. 

And then there's this:






Day 2 (DDRD 2,368) April 25, 2024

Read to page 165. Yep, I spent some serious time on the couch reading. Pretty absorbing book. Might read some more later, but for now, duty calls, I cannot linger....



Day 3 (DDRD 2,369) April 26, 2024

Read to page 266.

Next time I hear someone say that Black people are just naturally better athletes, before I tell them that they're being racist, I'm going to recite this:

"Natural talent is like an athlete's strength. You can be born with more or less ability, but nobody can become an athlete just because he or she was born tall, or strong, or fast. What makes the athlete, or the artist, os the work, the vocation, and the technique." (182)

And how about this:

"It is impossible to survive in a prolonged state of reality, at least for a human being. We spend a good part of our lives dreaming, especiallywhen we'reawake." (202 - 203)

"The incompetent always present themselves as experts, the cruel as pious, sinners as devout, usurers as benefactors, the small-minded as patriots, the arrogant as humble, the vulgar as elegant, and the feeble-minded as intellectual." (203)

First thought after reading 50 pages today: "How on 馃寧 could I have already read 50 pages?????"

"The main pillar of organized religion, with few exceptions, is the subjugation, repression, even the annulment of women in the group. Woman must accept the role of an ethereal, passive, and maternal presence, never of authority or independence, or she will have to suffer the consequences. She might have a place of honor in the symbolism, but not in the hierarchy. Religion and war are male pursuits. And anyhow, woman sometimes ends up becoming the accomplice in her own subjugation." (251)

Holes shit, Batman. That's a spicey ah-meat-a-ball!

You know, if I had $426 sitting around, I think I'd buy that red motherfucker. (馃憜)

Later....

Oops, I read it again. To page 295. And I STILL might read more, because I'm mos dev caught in its gravity. Let's see, 531 pages, which means 236 pages to go. And at the rate I'm going (65, 100, 130), that is probably not going to take me long to polish off--like 2 days, 3 at the most. So I put in a request for the next book, El prisionero del cielo (The Prisoner of Heaven). 

And the beat goes on.

Y' know...if I'm going to read this whole The Cemetery of Forgotten Books series...which it appears I am, indeed, going to do...then I might as well go ahead and do the whole Carlos Ruiz Zaf贸n oeuvre, right? I mean...

El pr铆ncipe de la niebla (1993), translated as The Prince of Mist (2010)

El palacio de la medianoche (1994), translated as The Midnight Palace (2011)

Las luces de septiembre (1995), translated as The Watcher in the Shadows (2013)[12]

Marina (1999), translated as Marina (2013)

El cementerio de los libros olvidados series (The Cemetery of Forgotten Books)

La sombra del viento, 2001 (The Shadow of the Wind)

El juego del 谩ngel, 2008 (The Angel's Game)

El prisionero del cielo, 2011 (The Prisoner of Heaven)

El laberinto de los esp铆ritus, 2016 (The Labyrinth of Spirits)

La ciudad de vapor, 2021 (The City of Mist)


The first four are classified as Young Adult, so that should be quick. 



Day 4 (DDRD 2,370) April 27, 2024

Read to page 375. So that's another 80 pages down. And probably more later on, but as of now a mere 156 pages to go.

How's this for an apt summary of the MAGA movement?

"Nothing makes us believe more than fear, the certainty of being threatened. When we feel like victims, all our actions and beliefs are legitimized, however questionable they may be. Our opponents, or simply our neighbors, stop sharing common ground with us and become our enemies. We stop being aggressors and become defenders. The envy, greed, or resentment that motivates us becomes sanctified, because we tell ourselves we're acting in self-defense. Evil, menace — those are always the preserve of the other. The first step for believing passionately is fear. Fear of losing our identity, our life, our status, or our beliefs. Fear is the gunpowder and hatred is the fuse. Dogma, the final ingredient, is only a lighted match." (297)



Day 5 (DDRD 2,371) April 28, 2024

Read to page 463. Busy day. Thought I was going to finish this book today...and still might, I suppose...but with only 63 pages remaining, I'm sure that tomorrow will do it.


Day 6 (DDRD 2,372) April 29, 2024

Read to page 531 = The End. A very good--and a very quick--read. An average of 88.5 pages per day, which us almost 3 times my goal. And I did it because the story pulled me along so hard that I really couldn't help it. Maybe this is the kind if book kids should be reading in high school; books that are serious and even "literary," but which are also exciting and compelling.

And yes, I am going to read the next book: El prisionero del cielo (The Prisoner of Heaven). Unfortunately, it looks like the Northeast Branch of the library has lost their copy, so I think I'm going to drive downtown and pick one up. 

Onward.


Friday, April 19, 2024

Beneath the Trees Where Nobody Sees

I just read the 5th issue of this series (which, alas, ends with issue #6). It is one fascinating comic book. Without delving into detail, let's just say that it combines the Funny Animal genre with Horror...specifically of the Serial Killer subset.

Yep.

I picked up my first issue (#3) from the stands because I was in the mood for an all ages anthropomorphic tale. 


Little did I know. After finishing that issue, I immediately wanted to buy issues #1 and #2. Before I got to that, however, I discovered that Hoopla (that blessed library app) had them...and later added #3 as well.


I'm not much of a betting man, but in this case I'd wager that if you read these first three issues, you'd gladly plunk down your $3.99 apiece for #s 4, 5, and 6.