Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Two More Reads Completed

1) Othello - the Classic Shakespeare Tragedy - good reading! Found it more to be romantic but had strong elements of a tragedy (since Rodrigo, Emily, Desdemon and Othello die in the end!) - due to a foulplay by a small person's "whispering" .

2) My Passion For Design - highly recommend it for anyone interested in building their house and collecting art - (also enhancing one's coffee table)

Monday, January 3, 2011

My Haiku Class

I'm taking a great Haiku class - and I highly recommend the following reading for anyone interested in Haiku:

1. The Classic Tradition of Haiku: An Anthology by Faubion Bowers
2. Essential Haiku: Versions of Basho, Buson, Issa by Robert Haas
3. Haiku: A Poet's Guide by Lee Gurga

These are not only great readings but introduce you to numerous techniques and concepts for understanding its art!

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Two Good Horror Books

Read these in paperback - will promise to give you chilling dreams!

1. Silence of the Lambs by Thomas Harris
- the movie pretty much follows the book word by word

2. The Exorcist by William Peter Blatty
- it's like reading the screenplay but this lets you imagine your own head-turnings!

Finished Kafka's Short Stories

1. The Judgement
- about an interlude between Georg Bendemann, a young businessman, and his father - with a sudden twist of an ending (Goerg kills himself).

2. The Stoker: A Fragment
- a characterization of a stoker aboard a ship as he interacts with Karl Rossmann. The stoker feels he is disliked by the captain, who, it is hinted, has him "done away with" at the end.

3. In The Penal Colony
- an interesting description of a contraption used for death sentencing. The conflict takes a turn halfway through the story, and the ending resolves the conflict, brings a denouement, in an interesting fashion - the contraption turns on the executioner, killing him instead!

4. A Country Doctor
- a brief account of a doctor "trapped" at a patient's village, unable to make an escape

5. An Old Leaf
- first person account of being taken over by nomads in a country whose defense and well-being are being neglected

6. A Hunger Artist
- depiction of a man who depicts hunger as art. "In the end, ...hunger can be described as an existential art...death as the abrupt and absurd end of life."

7. Josephine the Singer, or The Mouse People
- examines the power play between a singer and the public

8. Before the Law
- another Kafkaesque look at Law. Here a man tries to enter the halls of Justice, dies trying, and is told that they were built for him only!

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Some Of My Favorite Poems (and Poets)

This list is nowhere near complete...but here are some of their works

1) Elyse Fenton : "infidelity"

2) Allen Ginsberg: "howl"


4) Emily Dickinson: Complete

5) Elizabeth Barret Browning: "How Do I Love Thee?"

6) William Shakespeare: Sonnets

7) Fireside poets: Holmes, Lowell, Longfellow

8) Shelly, Byron, Teasdale, Wordsworth, Keats...and more

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Godot Finished

Just finished reading "Waiting For Godot" - it was very deep . Elements of absurdist philosophy and existentialism occur throughout the play lending to comedy and pathos at the same time. About half way, you start to wonder if Vladimir and Estragon are not really sane at all! Very brilliant writing!