New books this week:
- The Twenty-Seventh City by Jonathan Franzen
- Harold Pinter: Plays Volume 1 by Harold Pinter
The Pinter volume, sadly, arrived slightly damaged from the Book Depository. Enough to make me contact them and politely complain. The good folk at BD were kind enough to offer me a partial refund, which I thought was a good option. And then I used that refund to buy more books. Control, restraint, these concepts are foreign to me when it comes to book buying.
Posted on Start Narrative Here this week:
- The Shallows: What the Internet is Doing to Our Brains by Nicholas Carr – an eye-opening look at how digital technologies are changing the way the brain reads, organizes and comprehends information.
- Killing Yourself to Live: 85% of a True Story by Chuck Klosterman – a road trip to visit places musicians have died ends up being a tale of romantic introspection: 85% self-indulgent.
- An Eye on Carson McCullers: September 2010 – a round up of news and discussions about Carson McCullers.
E-reader reviews:
I haven’t made a decision yet, but I have been thinking about it. Here’s what some of my favourite book blogging ladies are saying about their e-readers:
- Steph from My Girl Friday shares her thoughts on her new Sony Reader pocket edition.
- Amanda from Desert Book Chick gives a considered review of Amazon’s Kindle after two months of using it.
Anyone else care to share more thoughts, feelings, persuasive arguments for or against e-readers? Is it the way of the future for reading and for publishing or just a temporary response to a larger problem of obsolescence of traditional forms of literacy in the technological age? Start Narrative Here: asking the easy questions on your Sunday night.
Image credit: Vase de fleurs à la fenêtre by Paul Gauguin, 1881.
This week