“The art of writing is the attempt to contain the teeming black scrawl which everywhere threatens to gain the upper hand, in the interest of maintaining a halfway functional personality.”-W.G. Sebald, A Place in the Country (translation by Jo Catling)
Tag Archives: Books
Writers in Art: Marguerite, Countess of Blessington
Marguerite Gardiner, Countess of Blessington was born on 1 September 1789:

Marguerite, Countess of Blessington by Thomas Lawrence, 1822
Ray Bradbury on Surprise

Ray Bradbury Quote
Re-Reading Books
“If one cannot enjoy reading a book over and over again, there is no use in reading it at all.”-Oscar Wilde
How do you feel about re-reading books? I firmly agree with Mr. Wilde. I’ve read most of the volumes in my large collection at least twice. There are a handful that are on a more-or-less yearly rotation.
Here are three that I cannot get enough of, no matter how much time I spend with them.
THE RAZOR’S EDGE BY W. SOMERSET MAUGHAM (1944)
My favourite Maugham book, and definitely the novel that I’ve read more than any other. It’s a part of my literary psyche.
“The fact that a great many people believe something it no guarantee of its truth.”-The Razor’s Edge

W. Somerset Maugham. Bain Collection.
Read it if: You’re always chasing after the meaning of life. You won’t find it here, of course, but you’ll likely feel less alone on your Herculean quest.
A GLASTONBURY ROMANCE BY JOHN COWPER POWYS (1932)
A brilliant, magical masterwork that always has more to give to the dedicated reader.
“It is strange how few people make more than a casual cult of enjoying Nature. And yet the earth is actually and literally the mother of us all. One needs no strange spiritual faith to worship the earth.”-A Glastonbury Romance

John Cowper Powys, circa 1930.
Read it if: You like looong books about the nature of the world and our place in it; mysticism; politics; and human relationships.
The Outermost House by Henry Beston (1928)
Anyone who reads this blog knows how I feel about The Outermost House. If you’re new, just type the title into the search bar. You’ll figure it out soon enough.
No other book is closer to my heart.
“Nature is a part of our humanity, and without some awareness and experience of that divine mystery man ceases to be man.”-The Outermost House

My copy of The Outermost House
Read it if: You are enamored with the small mysteries of nature, and of humankind’s wee place in the universe.
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Now it’s your turn! Please head to the comments to share your top books to re-read!
[Book Nerd Links] Mann, Rhys, Joyce, Proust, and Plath
- The Spoil of Destruction [THE PARIS REVIEW]
- Jean Rhys Speaks [THE PARIS REVIEW]
- When James Joyce & Marcel Proust Met in 1922, and Totally Bored Each Other [OPEN CULTURE]
- Typescript second draft of The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath [BRITISH LIBRARY]
Daily Diversion #344: A Glastonbury Romance
I’m re-reading one of my fave novels: the flawed but magical A Glastonbury Romance by John Cowper Powys.

A Glastonbury Romance
Daily Diversion #342: Still Life with Dot
Dorothy Parker was born on 22 August 1893:

The Portable Dorothy Parker
Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach on Truths in a Good Book
“There are more truths in a good book than its author meant to put in it.”-Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach
Writers in Art: Anna Akhmatova by Savely Sorin
It has been too long since I last posted an image of that great Russian poet, Anna Akhmatova. This is for me as much as it is for you…

Anna Akhmatova by Savely Sorin, 1913-1914
Shopping for the Bookworm: I is for Irving, Washington
I is for Irving, Washington:

Washington Irving Print by Creative Daffodil. $12.00+