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whattoreadnext · 3 years ago
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I, Cladius
Robert Graves, I, Claudius
(the fourth Roman Emperor's 'memoirs' of his bloodthirsty forebears)
Ancient Rome
Peter Vansittart, Three Six Seven  (twilight of Roman Britain, late 4th century)
John Arden, Silence Among the Weapons  ("memoirs" of actor"s agent mixed up with Roman dictator Sulla in 1st century BC)
Thornton Wilder, The Ides of March
Anthony Burgess, The Kingdom of the Wicked  (Luke, Paul,and other early Christian missionaries)
"Memoirs"
Joseph Heller, God Knows  ("memoirs" of Old Testament King David)
Mary Renault, The King Must Die  ("memoirs" of King Theseus of Athens)
Gore Vidal, Creation  ("memoirs" of Persian diplomat who knew Socrates, Buddha and Confucius)
Stephen Marlowe, The Memoirs of Christopher Columbus  (early disappointments and ironic triumph of unscrupulous adventurer-explorer)
Marguerite Yourcenar, Memoirs of Hadrian  (reflections of 14th Roman Emperor and philosopher)
Carlos Fuentes, Terra Nostra  ("memoirs" of Philip II of Spain, in deranged old age)
Augusto Roa Bastos, I, The Supreme  ("memoirs" of Francia, 19th-century dictator of Paraguay)
Gabriel Garcia Marquez, The Autumn of the Patriarch  (deathbed monologue of fanatical, deranged South American dictator)
People of the Past (powerful historical novels)
Mario Vargas Llosa, The War of the End of the World  (19th-century South American religious community, communist, waiting for the Apocalypse)
William Golding, The Spire
Helen Waddell, Peter Abelard  (12-th century Paris: a monk falls in love with beautiful pupil)
Barry Unsworth, Sacred Hunger
Nicholas Monsarrat, Running Proud  (one of Columbus" sailors shipwrecked in New World, is taken for a God)
The Ancient World
Mary Renault, The Mask of Apollo  ("memoirs" of actor-spy in 4th-century BC Greece)
Peter Green, Alcibiades His Armour  (Alcibiades, the Oscar Wilde of ancient Athens)
Norman Mailer, Ancient Evenings  (memories of chief minister of warrior-pharaih Rameses II)
Joan Grant, Winged Pharaoh  (Grant describes her own previous existence in ancient Egypt)
Henry Treece, Medea  (powerful evocation of myth-witch, scorned wife who murdered her children)
Hilda Doolittle (H.D.), Hedylus  (Samos, 3rd century BC: ex-courtesan, lover and poet-son meditate delicately on life, love, the arts and politics)
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whattoreadnext · 3 years ago
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GOLDING, William
British novelist (1911-1993)
Golding worked in the theatre and served in the Royal Navy in World War II. He worked as a schoolmaster until Lord of the Flies brought him international fame in 1954. The story of that book (about choirboys reverting to savagery after being marooned on a desert island) is typical of all his work: an exploration of the dark side of human nature. He believed that homo sapiens is corrupt, that we destroy more than we create, that we are devilish without redemption. But instead of baldly stating this philosophy, he dressed it in allegories of the most unusual and fantastical kind. He pictured the devil engulfing not only choirboys on an island, but also (in other novels) a drowning sailor, a tribe of neanderthal people, the dean of a medieval cathedral, a boy growing up in 1960s Britain, and a group of 18th-century people sailing towards Australia. He evoked each of these situations with absolute conviction: few writers were better at suggesting the feel, taste, smell and sound of things, the texture of experience.
THE SPIRE  (1964) Inspired by a vision, medieval Dean Jocelin commissions for his cathedral a 400-foot spire. He intends it as proof of human aspirations towards God; his enemies see it as a symbol of vanity, the devil's work; the master-builder points out that as the cathedral's foundations are inadequate, the tower will bring the whole building crashing down. Jocelin overrides all objections, the work proceeds -- Golding gives fascinating, vertigo-inducing detail of medieval building techniques -- and the higher the spire rises the more people are destroyed. In the end the struggle between God and the devil takes over Jocelin's own self. In truly medieval manner, his brain and body become a battleground, and the issue moves from the tower to questions of his own moral integrity and saintliness.
Golding's novels are Lord of the Flies, Pincher Martin, Free Fall, The Spire, The Pyramid, Darkness Visible, the trilogy (about an ill-assorted cargo of passengers on a voyage to 18th-century Australia) Rites of Passage, Close Quarters and Fire Down Below, and The Paper Men. The Scorpion God is a collection of three long stories, one based on his stage-comedy The Brass Butterfly, about a crazy inventor trying to interest a decadent Roman ruler of Egypt in steam power.
READ ON
Lord of the Flies (choirboys lost on desert island revert to satanic evil, humanity's dark side)
The Inheritors (a brilliantly imagined story of the coming of Homo sapiens, seen from the standpoint of the gentle ape-people they exterminate)
To The Spire : John Barth, Giles Goat-boy (a fantasy, partly satirical, about a professor who brings a child up with no company but goats, trying to avoid contamintating him with human original sin) Peter Benson, Odo's Hanging (brilliant novel about the clash between Bishop Odo, commissioning a wall-hanging to commemorate the accession of William the Conqueror, and Tuvold, the genius-craftsman who wants to do things his way) Anthony Burgess, Earthly Powers Umberto Eco, The Name of the Rose Hermann Hesse, Narziss and Goldsmund (which parallels both the good/evil theme and the medieval craft-background of The Spire)
To Lord of the Flies : Marianne Wiggins, John Dollar Richard Hughes, A High Wind in Jamaica
To the Australian trilogy : Thomas Keneally, The Playmaker Barry Unsworth, Sacred Hunger
 more :Tags  Pathways  Themes & Places
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whattoreadnext · 3 years ago
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All the World's a Stage
(books about theatre)
John Arden, Books of Bale
Beryl Bainbridge, An Awfully Big Adventure
Richard Bissell, Say, Darling
Caryl Brahms and S.J. Simon, A Bullet in the Ballet
Angela Carter, Wise Children
Robertson Davies, Tempest-Tost
Charles Dickens, Nicholas Nickleby
Bamber Gascoigne, The Heyday
H.R.F. Keating, Death of a Fat God
Thomas Keneally, The Playmaker
Noel Langley, There's a Porpoise Close Behind Us
J.B. Priestley, The Good Companions
Mary Renault, The Mask of Apollo
Barry Unsworth, Morality Play
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