Showing posts with label romans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label romans. Show all posts

Monday, 17 January 2011

Going book hunting soon?

Potential good news for the avid crime reader I am, especially when everyday life is desperately beige: Waterstone's is selling its crime fiction 40% off. It beats their vampire romance (sic) offer hands down, but I am not overtly enthusiastic: not that many titles excite me. I am getting a bit blasé about Waterstone's franchises around here: they have best sellers, but I can rarely find my favourite writers or the not too mainstream titles I want to find. Shopping there often gets frustrating, although I do get pleasantly surprised sometimes. And it is true that I rarely leave a bookstore empty handed.

I look at the bookshelves here and the books are piling up dangerously. Still, I love to have the luxury of choice for the upcoming year.

Sunday, 15 August 2010

The reading list for the weeks ahead

August so far has been rainy and a little bit gloomy. During daytime it is warm enough to feel like summertime still, but it does not look like summer. Not much anyway. It might change before the end of the month.

Now, the far from perfect weather made me spend more time inside reading and I got into my the crime novel I am reading much faster than expected. Reading makes me fight Sunday boredom and melancholia, and August melancholia too, so it makes me a faster reader. This means that I have to quickly plan the reading list for the weeks ahead.

As people might know, the books I read are often chosen according to the seasons and the time of the year. We are already at the middle of August, so I will allow myself to read some more crime fiction for the next two weeks or so. Then, as September starts I will gradually switch to horror fiction, most likely M.R. James. There are a couple of short fiction books I have that I want to get back into, maybe between two novels. Horror stories will be on my reading list until Halloween of course, then it will be back to crime fiction and hopefully more serious reading. I say this and I will most likely read Shining City before the end of summertime. If I plan correctly, I might be able to stay busy until Christmas. Of course, I do not adhere strictly to the list, but it gives me a nice frame if I cannot decide which the books I am going to read.

Wednesday, 11 August 2010

The thrill of the first pages

I finished reading The Talented Mr Ripley today, on the train to work. I might be spouting clichés here, but there we go anyway: I always have difficulties finishing a book, whether it is a fun read or a boring read. The boring ones I cannot bring myself to read them quick enough, the ones I love I finish them with regret. Highsmith's novel was an enjoyable read, even though I still think I preferred the movie.

But that means that on the way back, I could read another book. I decided to read Trois Carrés Rouges sur Fond Noir by Tonino Benacquista. (Sorry for the French links, but I cannot find info on him or his novels in english right now). Benacquista has always been a great read, making quality crime fiction with loveable human characters, a fair deal of violence but just enough of literary quality to make the book a smart read. I only read the first few pages, but it already appears like it is quality stuff.

I will spout another cliché: I love the first few pages of a good book. I don't think anything can beat the thrill of the first few pages, when you know you made the right choice and that the plot will be great. Nothing might have happened yet, but the stage is set. That is partially why I come back to Benacquista, Pelecanos and of course Burgess: they all make great start.

Thursday, 1 July 2010

Romans de voyage

Je ne sais pas si c'est parce que je serai en vacances bientôt, mais je lis des romans de voyage ces temps-ci. Je viens de terminer L'Énigme du retour de Dany Laferrière (cadeau de Noël de ma mère) et j'ai commencé à lire Treasure Island, le classique de Robert Louis Stevenson. deux grands livres, de manières bien différentes. J'espère parler des deux bouquins prochainement, au moins par citations.

Il y a deux romans de voyage: celui qu'on lit en voyage et celui qui parle de voyage (ce que les Anglais appellent parfois un road novel, comme il y a des road movies). Le déplacement géographique illustre le voyage intérieur des héros, leur cheminement. En littérature, les exemples sont légions.

Je ne lis pas assez Stevenson, on oublie parfois que même s'il faisait dans la littérature à genre, il était un écrivain remarquable, avec non seulement du style, mais un style, capable de rendre une époque révolue avec authenticité. J'ai découvert Treasure Island d'abord dans une courte adaptation en livre 3-D, ce genre de bouquins avec les personnages et le décor en papier qui sortent des pages. Le roman était résumé en une dizaines de pages avec peu de texte. Puis il y a eu la série animée japonaise, qui m'a vraiment fait aimer accrocher. J'ai retrouvé le générique sur youtube et ça me donne toujours les mêmes frissons. Étrange que je lise l'original aussi tard dans ma vie.

Sunday, 20 June 2010

A Dead Man in Deptford... in 2011?

I didn't see that one coming. I discovered on imdb that there is a project of adaptation of another novel of Anthony Burgess. I can barely believe it. I have read A Dead Man in Deptford, I have to confess that it was not my favourite of his novels. I have to re-read it, see if I can appreciate more now, as it was considered one of his greatest. I don't know how serious the project is, if the 2011 is a realistic release date and if it is promising to be any good. In any case, it is nice to know that something else is being done to remind the public of a great writer. I need to ask the Foundation what they know about it.

Wednesday, 26 May 2010

Quoting Oscar Wilde

Just because I haven't quoted him in a while and because he is one of my favourite writers who wrote one of my favourite novels, I thought I would quote the Preface again:

"No artist is ever morbid. The artist can express anything."

I strongly believed it when I first read it when I was sixteen, I still strongly believe it now.

Wednesday, 10 February 2010

Lire mièvre

Sur ce blogue, je suis parfois en retard pour commenter les nouvelles, même en ce qui concerne des sujets qui m'intéressent beaucoup. Comme par exemple la nouvelle sur ce que lisent les enfants au secondaire, suivant les suggestions du MEQ. Que l'on privilégie les oeuvres populaires au détriment de la littérature plus difficile m'agace au plus haut point. Je comprends que choisir quoi lire soit difficile, je comprends aussi que certaines grandes oeuvres aient peu d'attraits pour des jeunes désintéressés au départ par la lecture (ou même des spécialistes de la littérature comme moi, on n'aime pas tout également après tout). Cela dit, je suis d'accord avec Rima Elkouri et Nathalie Collard quand elles défendent la nécessité pour l'école de transmettre la culture à travers l'enseignement de la littérature. Je crois également que si l'on veut faire développer aux jeunes Québécois des capacités d'analyse, il est essentiel qu'ils s'attaquent à des oeuvres plus exigeantes. Ils auront bien le temps de lire mièvre hors de l'école.

Wednesday, 6 January 2010

Blood on snow


Don't worry, nobody is dead yet (touch wood). It has been snowing a lot today, and it reminded me of a promise I made here. So I will blog about crime fiction and winter (presuming it interests anyone), as I think they go well together. So as I was saying, we have a really nice heavy snow today, the kind of sticky snow that does "sqweek" when you step on it and which is perfect for snowballs and snowmen. And perfect for walking on, of course.

I once participated for a few hours in a creative writing workshop, back in cégep. One of the teachers hosting the event had an activity where he explained how to make associations of words and themes. He kind of freely associated snow, cold, ice, blizzard and so on, with words that sounded the same (for instance neige (snow)/en nage (sweaty)) and elements that looked the same (snow/cocaine for instance). The words and their associations would be the starting point for our short stories, or our poems, or whatever the students chose to write. There was a price for the best story. I never went as far as a few paragraphs. My friend who writes the serial/blogged novel L'Étrange cas du baron luisant made a great atmospheric short story which won the price. I am glad I did not go further, as I couldn't have competed with what he had written.

My few paragraphs, however, made some kind of impact in my creative writing. I had written about a man who snores cocaine on a snowy day, then goes out on a walk. Under the effect of the drug some vein in his nose bursts and blood drops on the snow, quickly erased by the heavy falls. That was it, I had no idea who this man was, why he was a drug user, what prompted him to go on a walk and what to do with him. In a writer's block that got unresolved, I presented this to the teacher, who said something like this: "An interesting piece. You focus a lot on the action, the setting and the atmosphere. This is a good beginning for a crime story." It stayed in the back of my mind. Years later, another teacher, this time at university level, told me my style would work better for crime fiction than "serious" literature. I found a use for the drug user, first as the antihero of a short story set during Christmastime where he was a sort of prodigal son (I think I lost the piece), then, years later, as a Messianic figure in another setting. But I think there is still potential for him in the crime fiction genre.

The genre is often associated with summertime, but for me it is just as much a "winter genre". Because of this haunting image of blood in the snow. Dripping blood, the sound of a gun, loneliness in an open environment that is made oppressive, claustrophobic even, because of it immaculate whiteness, the footsteps of the antagonists getting erased by the falling snow, it is such a perfect season for murder. Yes, it has been done before (gotta read this graphic novel one day). But still, it can be reused again. It does not have to be Antarctica. Any snowy place could work.

Sunday, 27 April 2008

Summer reading

It is still very hot today, so I am in a Summery mood. I think I might drive my wife crazy with Underneath the Mango Tree. I am about to finish Officer Down so I guess I am enjoying it, but that means I have to read a book soon after. I don,t know if I told it here, but I like to read stories according to the time of the year: stories set in winter/Christmas during Christmastime (On Her Majesty's Secret Service for example), horror stories for Autumn (because of Halloween) and for Springtime and Summer, novels set during a warmer period of the year, or simply adventure/crime novels (what in French is called "lectures d'été", because it's easier to read, "lighter"). I don't know if it's bizarre, but that's how I read, anyway most of the time (I am not maniacal about it, obviously). I don't think Ed McBain's Heat would have been as enjoyable read in the middle of winter. I read it in the heatwave of 2006. It makes it easier to choose a book among the ones on your bookshelf, when you have a wide choice. (which is often my case). Anyway, I put in this entry another image from the Detective Tales magazine (April 1936 edition). I love the guy's eyepatch and where he shoots from. I don't know the story, but it seems a good one.

Wednesday, 23 April 2008

Je suis un écrivain japonais

Le titre n'est pas de moi, mais de Dany Laferrière. Je ne l'ai jamais lu, mais j'ai reçu par la poste ce roman, cadeau de mes parents. Alors je vais me mettre à le lire. J'ai déjà rencontré l'homme deux fois, il est d'une intelligence remarquable. Dommage qu'il ait déconné autant quand Michaëlle Jean est devenue gouverneure générale, il m'avait alors franchement déçu.