4.11.2004

What I'm reading right now is Darin Strauss's The Real McCoy. Terrific so far, and full of narrative verve. The author is a masterful, assured storyteller.

My reading of Darconville's Cat has been interrupted, alas, because it had to be returned to Interlibrary Loan. Will return to it as soon as I can secure a copy. I'm enjoying it throroughly--Theroux's phrasing is exquisite and worked over to a point where one is either exasperated or delighted (most readers, I hope, will fall under the latter camp), as is his diction. I'm in the middle of a chapter entitled "The Deipnosophists."

So yes: many words and names have been noted, to be looked up when time allows:
pushwailing, sippets, crake, conventicle, Domenichino, Spellvexit, Lords of Pleroma, pannikins, jabot, noil, burgraves, orbilius plagosus, wopsical, baldric, chantepleure, anablept, skipjacks, groutnolls, agraphia, autoscopic, alcibiadean, boffa, thimbleriggers, opsimath, kaleidogyns, batrachian, acumination, gynotikolobomassophile, Simonetta Vespucci, menhir, nainsook, intervenient, cedilla, diaresis, pyrite, Van Der Weyden's lady, pyroballogy, grice, apodictic, dorp, leaves of Vallombrosa, drazels, desuete, pilcrows, terricrepant, bombinate, ikonodule, pteriopes, procinian, Parmigianino (paintings), massebah, suffites, volutes, thalweg, slonks, ignavia, hypocaust, fatamorgana, fucus
There are also two near-Nabokovilian bits: a long bit interjected by a parenthesis: "(knockwurst, picnic)"; and a character called Mona Lisa Drake who reminded me, briefly, of Mona Dahl.

4.03.2004

What I'm reading right now, with much delight and just as much annotation of unfamiliar words, is Alexander Theroux's Darconville's Cat.

Wyatt Wyatt's Catching Fire was funny and full of odd grotesque characters, but it didn't seem to go anywhere, nor did its portrait of Orlando and Winter Park add up to much. Slight. Worth your while but not likely to impress itself upon your memory.