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Unlike William Golding’s far more simplistic  The Lord  of the Flies  , to which it is sometimes compared, Richard Hughes’s novel resists any attempts to extract from it a moral or sociological lesson, a bit of received wisdom or home truth. It’s hard, in fact, to think of another fiction so blithe in its refusal to throw us the tiniest crumb of solace or consolation, to present a single character who functions as a lodestar of rectitude or beneficence. In the end, everything in this luminous, extraordinary novel is so much the reverse of what we think it should be, or what we would expect, that we are left entirely disoriented—unsure of what anything is, or should be. The effect is disturbing and yet beautiful, fantastic but also frighteningly true to life. Published in 1929, just as history was preparing events that would forever revise the terms in which one could talk about innocence and evil,  A High Wind in Jamaica  is one of those prescient works of art that seems somehow to have caught (on the breeze, as it were) a warning scent of danger and blood—that is to say, of the future. 
—FRANCINE PROSE

Screenshot of text. It says: Unlike William Golding’s far more simplistic The Lord of the Flies , to which it is sometimes compared, Richard Hughes’s novel resists any attempts to extract from it a moral or sociological lesson, a bit of received wisdom or home truth. It’s hard, in fact, to think of another fiction so blithe in its refusal to throw us the tiniest crumb of solace or consolation, to present a single character who functions as a lodestar of rectitude or beneficence. In the end, everything in this luminous, extraordinary novel is so much the reverse of what we think it should be, or what we would expect, that we are left entirely disoriented—unsure of what anything is, or should be. The effect is disturbing and yet beautiful, fantastic but also frighteningly true to life. Published in 1929, just as history was preparing events that would forever revise the terms in which one could talk about innocence and evil, A High Wind in Jamaica is one of those prescient works of art that seems somehow to have caught (on the breeze, as it were) a warning scent of danger and blood—that is to say, of the future. —FRANCINE PROSE

I read Richard Hughes's novel A High Wind in Jamaica every few years, and just finished reading it again. Many novelists have inimitable voices, Austen, Dickens, Trollope, G. Eliot, etc. but they're consistent from book to book. This novel, though, is […]

[Original post on kolektiva.social]

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Chess Story by Stefan Zweig

Chess Story by Stefan Zweig

I read this today

#Zweig #Zweigposting #nyrbclassics

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Short of having a time machine, if you want to attend dinners, parties and hear all the literary gossip of 1870s Paris, the journals of the Goncourt brothers are the next best thing.

#Goncourt #Journals #Literary #Paris #GeorgeSand #Flaubert
#GeoffDyer #NYRBClassics

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A pile of NYRB Classics on a windowsill: Last Words From Montmartre by Qiu Miaojin, The Memoirs of Two Young Wives by Balzac, The Woman Who Borrowed Memories and Sun City by Tove Jansson, Jigsaw by Sybille Bedford, Machines in the Head by Anna Kavan and Abigal by Magda Szabó

A pile of NYRB Classics on a windowsill: Last Words From Montmartre by Qiu Miaojin, The Memoirs of Two Young Wives by Balzac, The Woman Who Borrowed Memories and Sun City by Tove Jansson, Jigsaw by Sybille Bedford, Machines in the Head by Anna Kavan and Abigal by Magda Szabó

Four books by Canadian authors piled on a windowsill: The Little Girl Who Was Too Fond of Matches by Gaétan Soucy, Floating City by Kerri Sakamoto, Love Enough by Dionne Brand, and In the Skin of A Lion by Michael Ondaatje

Four books by Canadian authors piled on a windowsill: The Little Girl Who Was Too Fond of Matches by Gaétan Soucy, Floating City by Kerri Sakamoto, Love Enough by Dionne Brand, and In the Skin of A Lion by Michael Ondaatje

Hit a bunch of Toronto bookshops this week to stock up on Canlit and NYRB Classics.
#NYRBClassics #CanLit #ShopIndies

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Currently reading.
#nyrb #nyrbclassics #currentlyreading

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Abigail Abigail, the story of a headstrong teenager growing up during World War II, is the most beloved of Magda Szabó’s books in her native Hungary. Gina is the only child of a general, a widower who has lon...

Where are my book peeps? What are your favorite New York Review of Books Classics favorites? Here’s one I just finished and enjoyed. #NYRBClassics #Books #Reading

www.nyrb.com/products/abi...

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#BookSky (especially in the US/Canada)! The good people at @nyrb-imprints.bsky.social
are having a sale on their noir (and nearly noir) books this weekend - up to 40% off!

Here are some titles I highly recommend. #noir #books #nyrbclassics 💙📚

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