Books read recently by J. Zimmerman.
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Our current web log of Books. The Mental Health of George W. Bush. | ||
Reader's Bill of Rights - after Daniel Pennac in Better than Life
as quoted in the November 2003 Utne Magazine - includes the rights to:
Skip pages Reread Not read Not finish Not defend your tastes | ||
Dorothy L. Sayers:
"The best remedy for a bruised heart is not ... repose upon a manly bosom. Much more efficacious are honest work, physical activity, and the sudden acquisition of wealth." | ||
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{ March (marzo) 2004 }
(03.27.2004)
See also Høeg's The Woman and the Ape another of our favorites.
My favorites include:
It was supposed to be Art & Crafts for a week,
but when she came home with the "Jesus Saves" button, we knew what art was up, what ancient craft. ... You can't say to your child
exciting happens for centuries. I didn't have
occasionally standing up for Jesus.
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The streetlights were invisible, though their light
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The rest of the day was bright yellows,
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(03.16.2004)
American and European writers and intellectuals wrote about the Spanish Civil War and often fought in it. The War began when the Fascist Franco attempted to overthrow the elected Socialist government and to enhance the power of the military, the Catholic Church, and feudalism.
The book shows how the initial enthusiasm and excitement by Hemingway, Orwell, Auden, Spender, Koestler, Dos Passos, and so many others (including nearly 4000 American volunteers, half of whom did not return home) became disillusioned.
"When a man hath no freedom to fight for at home,
Let him combat for that of his neighbor; Let him think of the glories of Greece and of Rome, And get knocked on his head for his labors." George Gordon, Lord Byron |
Written in 4 different voices, by 4 men each with different social rank, political allegiance, and personal agenda, and each with his own link to the mystic Sarah.
{ February (febrero) 2004 }
(02.27.2004)OK, but not as special as reviews had led me to believe. The writing reminds me more of the opinionated Ayn Rand than the opinionated Virginia Woolf, because Cunningham puts North American expressions into the mind and mouth of Mrs. Woolf (who would not, for example, plan to "walk for a block").
"The average US household spends nearly $8300 each year on food, clothing, and home goods. This year challenge yourself to shift 5% of that money - just $415 - to fair trade products and pay small-scale producers a fair price for their goods." [Oxfam Exchange, Winter 2004.] The Fair Trade Federation lists retailers specializing in fair-trade items.
Oxfam scored the world's 4 largest coffee roasters in 2003 on the basis of price paid to farmers and support for social programs:
Heaney rejoices in the cut and thrust of his version of this ancient (composed in 10th century Britain to record stories from 7th century) European text on how a hero saved a European kingdom from the rampaging Grendel, from Grendel's Mum, and from a gold-hoarding dragon. In Heaney's poetics, the self-sacrifice, blood-feuds, and insane beserker courage make a little more sense.
See Heaney's book for the side-by-side presence of the original Old English (Anglo-Saxon) with Heaney's version of the poem.
{ January (enero) 2004 }
Bought almost 30 books & magazines in Mexico during my
trip.
See also:
El Herido (1946) de Alfredo Zalce. Los Aztecas: sus números, sus días y sus dioses. |
My "to read" list now includes these specific authors:
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Related pages:
Poetry - Learn How to Write Your Own. Books on Learning Spanish. Forests of California and Trees of the World. |
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