The Channel of a Disappointed Man
The Channel of a Disappointed Man
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August Wrap: Dante, Virgil, Livy, Apuleius, Shakespeare, Hamsun, Max Blecher and more...
I read eleven or so books in August, although some were read only in part, of which my Book of the Month was the tale, Cupid and Psyche from Apuleius's The Golden Ass.
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Support the channel! www.buymeacoffee.com/thedisappointedman
Join the discussion at the Server of a Disappointed Man discord.gg/tg95K346fZ
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August reads:
Virgil, The Aeneid (Book VI: Aeneas's journey to the underworld)
Apuleius, The Golden Ass
Plutarch, Lives Vol I
Livy, The History of Early Rome (Book I: Rome under the Kings)
Chretien de Troyes, Arthurian Romances ua-cam.com/video/ct1J769Szls/v-deo.html
Chretien de Troyes, Perceval (verse translation)
1328 Dante Alighieri, The Divine Comedy
1594 William Shakespeare, The Rape of Lucrece
1898 Knut Hamsun, Victoria ua-cam.com/video/RVmkw9nGscY/v-deo.html
1971 Max Blecher, The Illuminated Burrow
2010 Alexandra Harris, Romantic Moderns
Viewer nominated Books of the Month:
1947 Malcolm Lowry, Under the Volcano
1954 Wolfgang Koeppen, Death in Rome
Here's an excellent picture of Servius's head bursting into flames: www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/435705#:~:text=As%20told%20by%20Livy%20(Book,infant%20lies%20in%20his%20cradle.
Vittorio Gassman performing Dante's Inferno in the original: ua-cam.com/video/PwN8MP_O5S8/v-deo.html
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You can find the full list of my reading for 2024 on my website: www.bookarmor.com
Thanks to everyone who viewed my videos in August and to all those who liked, subscribed, shared or commented. Until the next time, nanu nanu.
Переглядів: 152

Відео

"Buy Me A Coffee" Book Haul! Anna Kavan, Oskar Kokoschka, Max Blecher, Thomas de Quincey and more...
Переглядів 16014 днів тому
The Buy Me a Coffee Book Haul featured books purchased with viewer donations. Anyone who wishes to support the channel can do so here: www.buymeacoffee.com/thedisappointedman Note: This video features a big surprise at the end, which I didn't exploit in the title or the video itself. Haul in full: Anna Kavan, A Charmed Circle / A Stranger Still Alexandra Harris, Romantic Moderns Lincoln Kirstei...
Victoria by Knut Hamsun
Переглядів 12321 день тому
In this video I talk about Knut Hamsun's 1898 novel, Victoria. Works referred to: Knut Hamsun, Hunger / Dreamers Samuel Beckett, Molloy Ivan Turgenev, First Love Support the channel! www.buymeacoffee.com/thedisappointedman Join the discussion at the Server of a Disappointed Man discord.gg/tg95K346fZ You can find the full list of my reading for 2024 on my website: www.bookarmor.com Until the nex...
Perceval, The Story of the Grail by Chrétien de Troyes (Arthurian Romance)
Переглядів 161Місяць тому
In this video I compare a prose and a verse translation of Perceval, the final (and incomplete) Arthurian romance by the 12th century poet, Chrétien de Troyes. Works referred to: Chrétien de Troyes, Arthurian Romances translated by William Kibler, Penguin Classics Chrétien de Troyes, Perceval translated by Barton Raffel, Yale UP Beroul, The Romance of Tristan translated by Alan Fedrick, Penguin...
Great Books: Reading Dante's The Divine Comedy
Переглядів 2,1 тис.Місяць тому
A brief discussion of the great books and how I'm approaching reading one of them, Dante's The Divine Comedy. Works referred to in this video: Dante, The Divine Comedy translated by John Chiadi Dante, The Divine Comedy translated by Dorothy L. Sayers Homer, The Iliad / The Odyssey translated by Robert Fitzgerald Virgil, The Aeneid translated by John Dryden Ovid, Metarmorphoses translated by A.D...
July Wrap: Jane Austen, Penelope Fitzgerald, Turgenev, Maupassant, Ovid and more...
Переглядів 148Місяць тому
I finished ten books in July, so my summer reading plans are very much on track: 8 AD Ovid, Metamorphoses 1817 Jane Austen, Persuasion 1860 Ivan Turgenev, First Love 1879 Robert Louis Stevenson, Travels with a Donkey in the Cevennes 1850-93 Guy de Maupassant, A Day in the Country and Other Stories 1850-93 Guy de Maupassant, Mademoiselle Fifi and Other Stories 1890 Guy de Maupassant, Alien Heart...
Typhoon Reading: Victorian Ghost Stories
Переглядів 95Місяць тому
With super-typhoon Gaemi bearing down upon Taiwan, I wish to assure all my viewers that I'm safe, and also share my typhoon reading - a selection of Victorian ghost stories - to which the storm provides a wonderful accompaniment. Note: I used 'casements' in the literary sense of 'any window,' we do not, mercifully, have these kinds of windows in our apartment. Support the channel! www.buymeacof...
Travels with a Donkey in the Cévennes by Robert Louis Stevenson
Переглядів 4352 місяці тому
This video focuses on Robert Louis Stevenson's 1879 book, Travels with a Donkey in the Cévennes, an account of a 12-day, 120-mile walking tour he undertook the previous autumn through this mountainous region of south-central France. There are many editions of this work available; mine, however, was published by Northwestern University and has a scholarly introduction but no notes (if anyone wis...
Cosmic Horror: Le Horla by Guy de Maupassant
Переглядів 2352 місяці тому
This video focuses on Guy de Maupassant's 1887 cosmic horror story, Le Horla, which was a direct influence on H. P. Lovecraft's The Call of Cthulhu. You can read the English translation I mention for free here: archive.org/details/dayincountryothe00maup This video is the first linked to my summer reading plans, which you can watch here: ua-cam.com/video/zf3MWNSMfdk/v-deo.html There's also a Sum...
Summer Reading Plans! Poetry, Adventure, Travel, Middles Ages, Ancient Greece and more...
Переглядів 2852 місяці тому
Here are my summer reading plans, all the books I hope to get through before the new semester begins in September. The full list: Alexander Pope, Heloisa to Abelard John Keats, Isabella or The Pot of Basil Geoffrey Chaucer, Troilus and Cressia Graham Greene, The Power and the Glory Erskine Childers, The Riddle of the Sands Edgar Allan Poe, The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket Robert ...
Special Delivery! Man Alone by Nick Petroulias (Masterthief Press)
Переглядів 1022 місяці тому
In this video I unbox and provide information on a novella, Man Alone, by the Australian author, Nick Petroulias, which was kindly sent to me by the people at Masterthief Press. Here's a link where anyone interested can find more details about this book: www.asterismbooks.com/product/man-alone There's also some reaction over at Good Reads: www.goodreads.com/book/show/195634358-man-alone Support...
May Wrap: Jean Rhys, Doctor Glas, The Decameron,, The Heptaméron and Book of the Month
Переглядів 2043 місяці тому
I finished five books in May and am still working my way through three more: 1353 Boccaccio, The Decameron 1380 Geoffrey Chaucer, Troilus and Cressida 1558 Marguerite de Navarre, The Heptaméron 1570-1592 Michel de Montaigne, The Complete Works 1847 Jan Potocki, The Manuscript found in Saragossa 1905 Hjalmar Söderberg, Doctor Glas 1931 Jean Rhys, After Leaving Mr. Mackenzie 1934 Jean Rhys, Voyag...
The Grand Bookshelf Tour Part IX: Penguin Classics and Modern Library
Переглядів 6123 місяці тому
Part IX of the tour and this video focuses on my bookcase where all the unfiled classic works reside. In this video, which will be the first of three or so, I go through all the Penguin Classics (black ones) and Modern Library editions contained thereon. I mention some of my other videos during this one: Reviews 6: Daisy Miller by Henry James ua-cam.com/video/w7YGVCpY96g/v-deo.html Reviews 11: ...
Recommendations 6: Edgar Allan Poe's Hidden Gems
Переглядів 1744 місяці тому
I thoroughly recommend reading all of Poe's short stories, but here are the five I picked out: The Mystery of Marie Roget www.eapoe.org/works/mabbott/tom3t001.htm King Pest www.eapoe.org/works/mabbott/tom2t026.htm The Unparalleled Adventure of Hans Pfaall www.eapoe.org/works/harrison/jah02t08.htm A Descent into the Maelstrom www.eapoe.org/works/mabbott/tom2t044.htm The Facts of the Case of M. V...
Huge May Day Book Haul! Jean Rhys, Penelope Fitzgerald, Classic Novels, Poetry, History and more...
Переглядів 2934 місяці тому
My May book haul featured classic novels, poetry, history, non-fiction, illness memoirs and more... In full: Charlotte Bronte, Shirley Hjalmar Soderberg, Doctor Glas D.H. Lawrence, Lady Chatterley's Lover John Cleland, Fanny Hill (or Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure) Alfred Lord Tennyson, Idylls of the King Geoffrey Chaucer, Troilus and Cressida Louisa M. Alcott, Little Women / Little Men / Jo's ...
April Wrap: Dracula, The Decameron, M.R. James, Keith Vaughan and Book of the Month
Переглядів 1784 місяці тому
April Wrap: Dracula, The Decameron, M.R. James, Keith Vaughan and Book of the Month
1K Q&A: Including Taiwanese Food Tasting!
Переглядів 3254 місяці тому
1K Q&A: Including Taiwanese Food Tasting!
Taiwan Earthquake! A Tale of a Broken Teapot and a Flying Jane Austen Novel
Переглядів 1475 місяців тому
Taiwan Earthquake! A Tale of a Broken Teapot and a Flying Jane Austen Novel
March Wrap: Poe, Vathek, Frankenstein, Frigyes Karinthy, Keats and Book of the Month
Переглядів 1625 місяців тому
March Wrap: Poe, Vathek, Frankenstein, Frigyes Karinthy, Keats and Book of the Month
February Wrap: Poe, H.G. Wells, Jeff Vandermeer, French dandies and more!
Переглядів 2646 місяців тому
February Wrap: Poe, H.G. Wells, Jeff Vandermeer, French dandies and more!
Back to School Haul: Gothic Novels, Illness Memoirs, Peter Weiss, Henry Fielding and more...
Переглядів 2836 місяців тому
Back to School Haul: Gothic Novels, Illness Memoirs, Peter Weiss, Henry Fielding and more...
Reviews 30: The Time Machine, The Invisible Man, and The War of the Worlds by H.G. Wells
Переглядів 3186 місяців тому
Reviews 30: The Time Machine, The Invisible Man, and The War of the Worlds by H.G. Wells
February preview and Happy Chinese New Year!
Переглядів 2477 місяців тому
February preview and Happy Chinese New Year!
January Wrap: Austen, Tolstoy, Conrad and more!
Переглядів 3627 місяців тому
January Wrap: Austen, Tolstoy, Conrad and more!
Letters! Recommendations 5: Janet Frame, Robert Walser, and Hugo Von Hofmannsthal
Переглядів 3427 місяців тому
Letters! Recommendations 5: Janet Frame, Robert Walser, and Hugo Von Hofmannsthal
Huge January Book Haul: Joyce, Tolstoy, Edith Wharton, Denton Welch, Non-Fiction and more...
Переглядів 6567 місяців тому
Huge January Book Haul: Joyce, Tolstoy, Edith Wharton, Denton Welch, Non-Fiction and more...
Reviews 29: The Shadow-Line by Joseph Conrad
Переглядів 3787 місяців тому
Reviews 29: The Shadow-Line by Joseph Conrad
January preview plus some exciting channel news!
Переглядів 3128 місяців тому
January preview plus some exciting channel news!
The 50 Novels I read in 2023
Переглядів 2,5 тис.8 місяців тому
The 50 Novels I read in 2023
I'm Back! December Book Haul: Bernhard, Duras, Art, Classics, Non-Fiction and more...
Переглядів 3818 місяців тому
I'm Back! December Book Haul: Bernhard, Duras, Art, Classics, Non-Fiction and more...

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @alfredhu9274
    @alfredhu9274 18 годин тому

    Boring information, why would i need to hear it?🙄

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan 18 годин тому

      How can you say that?! You left your worksheet on the floor, it's on my desk now.

    • @alfredhu9274
      @alfredhu9274 18 годин тому

      Its just boring, not gonna lie!

    • @alfredhu9274
      @alfredhu9274 18 годин тому

      and you never take things seriously and expecting me to make a creative answer for A WORK SHEET??? YOU ARE JUST CRAZY AND WEIRD ,I JUST CAN'T BELIVE IT

    • @alfredhu9274
      @alfredhu9274 18 годин тому

      and if you can take things more seriously, this wouldn't be a problem

  • @silverghost5752
    @silverghost5752 3 дні тому

    Chugging forward with Sayers, Binyon and Cary's translations. Dore's extraordinary illustrations to some of the episodes are surreal.

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan 3 дні тому

      Good to hear. Blake's illustrations are excellent, too. www.ngv.vic.gov.au/collection/international/print/b/blake/dante.html

    • @silverghost5752
      @silverghost5752 3 дні тому

      @@TheChannelofaDisappointedMan Oh yes, by the the most highly individualistic of geniuses.

  • @JosephPercente
    @JosephPercente 4 дні тому

    Dante ripped off Virgil he ripped off homer.

  • @Adam_First
    @Adam_First 5 днів тому

    Great video

  • @Adam_First
    @Adam_First 5 днів тому

    Great video

  • @CreativeKidsCorner-mi4rd
    @CreativeKidsCorner-mi4rd 7 днів тому

    Very nice and beautiful ❤❤❤❤Thank you ❤❤❤Subscribed ❤❤❤❤

  • @tannercoggins8793
    @tannercoggins8793 7 днів тому

    "The greatest book I've ever read" of Metamorphosis! Amazing praise, which other books held that title for you at some point?

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan 7 днів тому

      None. I am not someone who generally has a favorite book, but Metamorphoses towers above the rest of what I have read. When I reached the end, I was ready to immediately begin reading it again.

    • @tannercoggins8793
      @tannercoggins8793 7 днів тому

      @@TheChannelofaDisappointedMan Sitting down to start it now!

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan 7 днів тому

      Which translation?

    • @tannercoggins8793
      @tannercoggins8793 7 днів тому

      @@TheChannelofaDisappointedMan Melville!

  • @painbow6528
    @painbow6528 7 днів тому

    I read Under The Volcano in August and it was possibly the worst piece of bloated writing I've ever encountered. Sound and fury etc

  • @AnnaSaeba
    @AnnaSaeba 7 днів тому

    What an amazing reading month you had! You're diving more into ancient literature, and I'm glad to see you are enjoying these old texts. Thanks a lot for the video, as usual it's great to hear you talk about your readings. Wish you all the best for your last semester, hoping classes are interesting and useful! Have a wonderful September full of great readings!

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan 7 днів тому

      Thank you! A month like few others, that's for sure. As usual, I'm hoping for great things from the classes and that there's a chance to combine what we learn with writers and texts I'm already interested in. Wishing you some good reading this month, too.

  • @stercorarius
    @stercorarius 8 днів тому

    How much time do you spend reading per day, roughly?

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan 8 днів тому

      It varies, obviously, but the minimum most days is around two hours, while on days that are not so busy it can go up to four, five, six hours plus.

    • @iqiwq
      @iqiwq 7 днів тому

      @@TheChannelofaDisappointedMan it's not a surprise then you are so eloquent

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan 7 днів тому

      Thank you, that's very kind of you to say.

  • @ReadingIDEAS.-uz9xk
    @ReadingIDEAS.-uz9xk 8 днів тому

    Good luck with the project. Some great books you read. Best wishes with September reading.

  • @kitan94828
    @kitan94828 8 днів тому

    Good luck on your last semester of courses <3 What classes are you taking? Always love how intelligent you are! - Kita

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan 8 днів тому

      One at NTNU with Ioanna Luca (think that's right), Comparative Literature, New Materialism, and Multiple Modes of Existence in Contemporary Literature and Art. I'll drop one of these if I get a place on all four. Trust you're well!

  • @jimmyfaulkner5746
    @jimmyfaulkner5746 8 днів тому

    You have a brilliant bookcase , its obvioulsy well lived in . The best backdrop of any literature channel I've seen so far . I might be a little bit jealous

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan 8 днів тому

      Thank you! Yes, my shelves are in a state of perpetual flux due to reading their contents, making fresh purchases, and the occasional big earthquake that throws a random selection to the floor.

    • @jimmyfaulkner5746
      @jimmyfaulkner5746 8 днів тому

      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan I have a little understanding, it's why I'm so impressed . It's not poncy or pretentious, it's lived in and shows .

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan 8 днів тому

      Thanks for saying that, it would pain me for anyone to find the channel 'poncy and pretentious' when the aim is to be, like my bookshelves, natural and accessible.

  • @mrpalmer6443
    @mrpalmer6443 14 днів тому

    i appreciate you. <3

  • @Shanghai_Knife_Dude
    @Shanghai_Knife_Dude 14 днів тому

    Interesting. An Englishman in Taiwan doing English literature. Do You speak better English than your professor?

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan 14 днів тому

      This situation has indeed arisen on a couple of occasions. In each case, I said nothing and simply dropped the class when the add/drop window opened.

  • @nikita2018
    @nikita2018 14 днів тому

    Thx

  • @realsydney7327
    @realsydney7327 14 днів тому

    Should be 'The Channel Of An Accomplished Man'.

  • @wortleyclutterbuk7347
    @wortleyclutterbuk7347 16 днів тому

    Loooove Hamsun. (Maybe too much. Named my company after that word that appears to the narrator in Hunger...) Nice to see him included in your talks!

  • @wortleyclutterbuk7347
    @wortleyclutterbuk7347 17 днів тому

    Nice haul! Kokoschka brought to mind the Tom Lehrer song "Alma" -- worth searching out on youtube. The Ardens are terrific. Happy reading!

  • @AnnaSaeba
    @AnnaSaeba 17 днів тому

    Wonderful book haul! Thank you for this video, and thanks to the generous donators. You've acquired so many interesting and useful books. The amount of Arden Shakespeare's books is unbelievable!!! Wish you lots and lots of excellent reading times, and may the weather be nicer.

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan 17 днів тому

      Thank you! I didn't mention the Shakespeare surprise, so I would know who watched to the end. ;-) Much more variety is possible when able to pick and choose one's purchases, that's for sure, and I'm so excited about sitting down and exploring these books.

    • @AnnaSaeba
      @AnnaSaeba 17 днів тому

      @@TheChannelofaDisappointedMan That's cunning! For sure it's a huge surprise for your viewers. I'm very happy you've been able to do these purchases, and perfectly understand your excitement. Thanks again for sharing your great book haul, very much appreciated!

  • @gregh5061
    @gregh5061 19 днів тому

    Hey I'm a non-native speaker of English and I speak, write and read only at the middle school level, so I struggle a little with reading books like Sherlock Holmes or Dorian gray, primarily Victorian era literature where the vocabulary and sentence formation are a little more complex. What books would you recommend for practice, besides Dickens? Im currently reading Dorian gray. It's not that I don't understand it, I understand everything, it's just a matter of fluency.

    • @gregh5061
      @gregh5061 19 днів тому

      It took me years to get good at grammar, now my focus is sentence formation. My vocabulary needs some work too

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan 19 днів тому

      Hi, Greg. I just went and had a look on my shelves to come up with some suggestions. It seems to me that Dickens is well above what you describe as your 'middle school level,' so I will suggest a number of writers who each have different styles, so your reading would expose you to a wide range of sentence types. I'll list them in ascending order of complexity. First would be Knut Hamsun, novels like Dreamers and Victoria. These use simple vocabulary, but the words are very carefully chosen and so they give a good guide to using the language (and are also great stories). Second would be Christopher Isherwood, A Single Man and Prater Violet. These use a style that has a lot of interiority, the character's thoughts mixed with what they're doing, and following this style would test/develop your reading. Jean Rhys is around the same level, perhaps a little easier, Leaving Mr. Mackenzie and A Voyage in the Dark. Third would be Thomas Hardy, A Pair of Blue Eyes and Two on a Tower. These have a lot of description of nature, dialogues, letters, etc. and the style is often more poetic. Last would be reading something with plenty of complexity, where if you understand it fully you will feel the story come to life in an extraordinary way, and that would be Henry James's The Turn of the Screw. If you really wanted another challenge after that, it's a huge novel but extremely rich and written in an accessible manner, and that would be Tolstoy's Anna Karenina. It covers an enormous range of characters, types of life, types of relationships, emotional states, bringing together in one place the entire world of human affairs. Hope this helps, and best of luck with developing your English skills, which from your comments already seem quite well-developed. Feel free to come back at any time and report on your progress.

  • @alfredhu9274
    @alfredhu9274 21 день тому

    why is my computers account bit lagging?

  • @michaelbully3210
    @michaelbully3210 23 дні тому

    Also have to confess that I have not read Hamsun. Must juggle some time to read his work. Thank you for yet another interesting video

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan 23 дні тому

      I might have noted that many of his novels are short, some can be read at a single sitting. Easy writer to get into.

  • @ReadingIDEAS.-uz9xk
    @ReadingIDEAS.-uz9xk 24 дні тому

    Sounds an interesting author. Thanks for the shout out.

  • @shrelpshrelp
    @shrelpshrelp 24 дні тому

    Enjoyed watching this monsieur, haven't read any Hamsun. But I plan on starting maybe next year with him. Have you read his lesser known stuff that "Tough Poets Press" bring out?

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan 24 дні тому

      Good to hear from you again. No, I've not read any less well-known stuff, given there are twenty-three novels to explore first, but I'll go take a look at what Tough Poets are putting out. Update: I see they're publishing first English translations of his novels, so many thanks for making me aware of this.

  • @reverance_pavane
    @reverance_pavane 25 днів тому

    I do prefer the Dorothy L Sayers translation myself as it maintains the proper rhyming triplet (terza rima) structure of the original. That said, the third book was completed after her death and does not really compare in quality of language to the first two. Most of the other readily available translations at the time I started reading The Divine Comedy tended to be free verse (or blank tercets in the case of Longfellow). which just didn't have the same effect.

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan 25 днів тому

      I'll read the Sayers as well in due course, along with some other translations. There's value in the notes in Chiadi, at least, as he assumes less knowledge than Sayers, gives specific references to texts Dante cites, and is stronger on Dante's contemporary references to Florentine politics. But as a faithful rendering of the original, as you rightly point out, the Sayers is superior. Didn't know that fact re the third book, thanks for that.

  • @steveharrison-vj6th
    @steveharrison-vj6th 25 днів тому

    Idiotic

  • @lamb11764
    @lamb11764 26 днів тому

    Very helpful. Thank you

  • @tbwatch88
    @tbwatch88 28 днів тому

    PhD in English here and I must say I dig your channel and I love Denton Welch's stuff--though honestly I DO NOT KNOW WHY! haha. a good thing, I daresay, it is to like things without having to know, to know, to know. carry on.

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan 28 днів тому

      Thanks for commenting. I, too, have not discovered quite what it is that makes Welch such a favorite of mine, to the point where I've amassed and read pretty much all the scholarship on him, and amassed many editions of his writings. No matter. By the eay, have you read Jocelyn Brooke's Orchid Trilogy or J.L. Carr's A Month in the Country? They each provide Welch-like pleasures (well, not all of them, they're not as prolific at stumbling across men in various states of undress...)

  • @ipz-DonIgnacio
    @ipz-DonIgnacio 28 днів тому

    You did not disappoint. Subscribed. Cheers from Spain.

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan 28 днів тому

      Thank you! I wish I was in Spain, too, trying all the wonderful food... Hope to visit one day.

  • @thatguy9076
    @thatguy9076 28 днів тому

    As a first time viewer (and new subscriber) this is a great video format, very helpful and engaging all the way through, tremendous work

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan 28 днів тому

      Thank you so much, and welcome to the channel. Hopefully you will find plenty more viewing pleasure in the many videos I've already made.

  • @user-gu7wy3qj9x
    @user-gu7wy3qj9x 29 днів тому

    Chrétien de Troyes is arguably the first European ''novelist''. the myth of the quest for the holy grail is of course another quintessential western myth. if only we understood that is the quest that counts and that we will never find it...

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan 29 днів тому

      Indeed. Funny you should mention 'first European novelist' as I have just begun Apuleius' The Golden Ass, the only Latin work approximating a novel to survive in its entirety.

  • @nathalie4529
    @nathalie4529 Місяць тому

    Obviously I can't be interested in every book you review, but I'm ALWAYS interested in what you have to say about them. And if it's ok for me to give you a tip for the french promounciation, I find google traduction's pronunciation really reliable. I've not heard any inacurate pronounciation of french words/names yet... It might save you time. Oh, and I was curious to hear what you thought of Maupassant's Notre coeur. I found the theme of love-desire/ non desire really interesting. I also appreciated the complexity of the main character's emotion and the depiction of the bourgeois Paris Milieu. I found this last novel of his truly beautiful although cynical.

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan Місяць тому

      Thanks, I'll try using Google in future. I greatly enjoyed Notre Coeur, but it had a few flaws in my view. Firstly, the way it disclosed information in that Jane Austen type of way, where chapter one is just a lot of backstory and physical description of the characters. I'm not a great fan of this technique, peculiar to the novel, and prefer information to be disclosed organically from the characters' experiences as much as possible. Secondly, the moral universe of this novel was impure, and so it was hard not to, as you say, share in the cynicism on display. Perhaps I am being very English, but the idea that a person has a great passion, a great love for a woman, but is still having sexual relations with other women, that just seemed to be a case of having one's cake and eating it, too, and the happy ending was preposterously French and amounted to the fulfilment of a male fantasy. First Love by Turgenev, which Notre Coeur clearly borrows from, was much better in this respect, and if you've not read it, I highly recommend giving it a try. Bel-Ami next!

    • @nathalie4529
      @nathalie4529 29 днів тому

      @@TheChannelofaDisappointedMan Thanks for your answer. I'll just leave at...I'm speechless.🤔

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan 28 днів тому

      Oh, no!

  • @davidhall8656
    @davidhall8656 Місяць тому

    The only two translations I have are the Sayers and an older one by Lawrence Binyon. Of those, i prefer the Sayers.

  • @ReadingIDEAS.-uz9xk
    @ReadingIDEAS.-uz9xk Місяць тому

    Nice thumbnail and artwork. Occasionally find coins artefacts from early medieval metal detecting.

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan Місяць тому

      Thanks. I put the artwork together, dropped some PRB paintings into the video, too. I imagine metal detecting is fairly relaxing and throws up a fair few surprises, a hoard of Roman coins or an unexploded WWII bomb...

  • @billdambrough
    @billdambrough Місяць тому

    really enjoyed this video! loved hearing your thoughts on reading in general and how you read sections of other books in tandem. i have the same copy of the divine comedy that i'm excited to get to alongside the other classics.

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan Місяць тому

      Thank you! I'm certainly going to get hold of a few more translations, but the Ciadi one will do for a first read. He freely admits to having taken considerable liberties with the original, so I'm keen to try one that stays closer to Dante's text.

    • @billdambrough
      @billdambrough Місяць тому

      @@TheChannelofaDisappointedMan looking forward to hearing your thoughts on the other translations!

  • @nickp5093
    @nickp5093 Місяць тому

    terrific sentiments about reading, no one is excluded!

  • @tomlabooks3263
    @tomlabooks3263 Місяць тому

    Yes to reading more classics! No to “forced marches” through them 👍🏻

  • @user-gu7wy3qj9x
    @user-gu7wy3qj9x Місяць тому

    divine comedy is a work with many levels of symbolic interpretation. all these classic works are much more than literature. they are references to the collective unconscious.

  • @mikereadstheworld
    @mikereadstheworld Місяць тому

    Talk about whatever books you want, I enjoy listening to your videos. On translations - a couple years ago I was able to enjoy the Mark Musa translation from Penguin's "Portable Dante" which includes the whole Divine Comedy and a few other things, and I preferred it to the translation you read which I had compared in the bookstore before buying. Probably one of the cheapest ways to get a copy of all of them if you want an alternate translation.

  • @ReadingIDEAS.-uz9xk
    @ReadingIDEAS.-uz9xk Місяць тому

    Some great authors there. Will check out First Love by Turgenev. Brave taking on the Jane Austen mafia! Happy reading.

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan Місяць тому

      Thank you. Yes, I run the risk of being pelted with metaphorical stink bombs by the Austen fan club, but I cannot tell a lie.

    • @user-gu7wy3qj9x
      @user-gu7wy3qj9x Місяць тому

      @@TheChannelofaDisappointedMan i am afraid that there are authors that are just ...old fashioned, because of their theme selection and their closeness to their era. and Jane Austen is one of them. for example i just could not stand reading Archibald Cronin or Charlotte Bronte....even as a kid...too soppy, too slushy...in contrast with Stevenson or de Maupassant. of course, the Russians are always a safe literary bet.

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan Місяць тому

      ​@@user-gu7wy3qj9x This is truth.

  • @HistoryTalks-r3v
    @HistoryTalks-r3v Місяць тому

    I love the book and thanks for a nice review. What I do find odd is that he set out for Spain knowing no Spanish more than for asking for a glass of water, yet from his landing in Vigo he was able to record, remember then write about fairly detailed Spanish conversations. When I read someone like Paul Theroux I’m convinced about 90% of it happened how he describes it. With this book I’m not sure.

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan Місяць тому

      Thanks for commenting. You raise a good point, though I'm equally unconvinced by Theroux's methods. One of my favorite of his books is The Kingdom by the Sea and, being English, many of the supposed conversations with English people strike me as having been embellished or as highly improbable. I think there's something inherently unreliable in travel writing as a genre, but it's no less enjoyable for that.

  • @peterg1646
    @peterg1646 Місяць тому

    Batten down the hatches!

  • @saintonfire77
    @saintonfire77 Місяць тому

    Stay safe.

  • @AnnaSaeba
    @AnnaSaeba Місяць тому

    Thank you very much for your video. I'm so glad and relieved to hear you and your wife are safe. What a powerful experience it must be to read Wuthering Heights during a typhoon! The Oxford Anthology of Victorian Ghost Stories sounds great. Read Carmilla a long time ago, but can't remember it. Should re-read it. Anyways, thanks again for letting us know how you are, and please stay safe at home!

  • @michaelbully3210
    @michaelbully3210 Місяць тому

    Pleased to hear that you are safe. Sounds like the typhoon is at least providing you with a great soundtrack for 'Wuthering Heights' and the Victorian Ghost stories.

  • @ReadingIDEAS.-uz9xk
    @ReadingIDEAS.-uz9xk Місяць тому

    Yes stay safe. Great idea to read wuthering heights during stormy weather! Hope your books stay dry.

  • @kitan94828
    @kitan94828 Місяць тому

    You will have the best reading list and university class ever in the future!

  • @billdambrough
    @billdambrough Місяць тому

    Hi again! Found your channel earlier today and I've been enjoying your videos very much. Your summer to-read list seems very interesting, and I particularly like your Maupassant collection. I made a long to-read list for the summer as well (wanted to read as much as I could before starting my MA) but have not followed it strictly. I did read my first Zola ("Therese Raquin") and Dumas's "The Black Tulip", which I enjoyed very much. Have you read Dumas's "The Three Musketeers"? It is one of my favourites. I have read part of Maupassant's "Bel-Ami" years ago and would like to delve into more of his work, do you have any recommendations? Thanks for the content!

    • @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan
      @TheChannelofaDisappointedMan Місяць тому

      Glad you're enjoying the channel. As for your question, no, I haven't read much Dumas because he was greatly influenced by one of my favorite writers, Sir Walter Scott, whose works I am currently making my way through. I do have The Three Musketeers, though, and The Count of Monte Cristo, and will get to them at some point. Re Maupassant, I picked up Bel-Ami the other day (rather than the library copy I showed in this video), and will read it this month. I can recommend Alien Hearts, which appears to borrow and expand on Ivan Turgenev's novella, First Love (which is perhaps the superior work of art). Re Maupassant's short stories, I've read three collections, The Selected Short Stories (Reviews 20), A Day in the Country and Other Stories, and Mademoiselle Fifi and Other Stories. Of these, the first was the best collection. I've also read a bunch of them in the original, with the focus on the supernatural tales, and the best here was definitely Le Horla (which I made a short video about). This website is a great resource for Maupassant's short stories: www.prosperosisle.org/spip.php?article960 Best of luck with your MA. I would recommend you joining the channel's Discord server if you want to check out a lot more reading recommendations, there are approaching 100 on the reviews-and-reactions channel. It's free and you'll find me and a bunch of other good people there, constantly updating one another on our latest finds. (For the link, look in the description and scroll to the bottom.)

    • @billdambrough
      @billdambrough Місяць тому

      Wow, I did not know that Dumas was influenced by Sir Walter Scott! That is very interesting - I've only read his short story "The Two Drovers" for my Scottish literature module because our prof did not want to overwhelm us. I look forward to hearing your thoughts on Dumas when you get to his works eventually! Thanks for sharing your recommendations, I'm excited to start reading some of Maupassant's many tales, and will look through the website. Thank you for your well wishes, and I am keen to join the Discord server as soon as I am able. Keep well and happy reading!

  • @billdambrough
    @billdambrough Місяць тому

    Keep safe! We read a Le Fanu short story for our Gothic literature class, which was a fun read. Thanks for sharing and have a great time reading.