Saturday, May 15, 2010

Faber Books – Part 1 – Paul Auster

Faber & Faber are an interesting imprint, and they were adventurous in the authors they chose to publish. Always, you could rely on a Faber & Faber book to be out of the ordinary.

I suppose I discovered the writings of Paul Auster when a friend, who happened to be the Faber rep for Australia gave me the proof copy of The New York Trilogy in 1987 and I was subsequently blown away by it.

auster_nytrilogy

I sporadically collected his novels thereafter, and though they failed to thrill me after a time, I did enjoy In the Country of Last Things and Moon Palace.

auster_lastthings auster_moonpalace

An author you don’t hear much about these days is Djuna Barnes. Her most famous novel, Nightwood, was a must have novel if you in any way embraced the counter culture of the 1960/1970s. The cover is typical of Faber books of the 1960s...

barnes_nightwood

…as is the case of the paperback editions of Lawrence Durrell’s Alexandria Quartet , a series that was immensely popular in the 1960s. I reread them about five years ago, and found them to be surprisingly well worth the effort.

durrell_justine durrell_balthaser
durrell_mountolive durrell_clea

Durrell’s other great sequence of novels was the Avignon Quintet which also has references to the Alexandrian series.

Monsieur, Livia & Constance are all paperback editions, but Sebastian and Quinx are first edition hard covers. The delicate cover art is by David Gentleman.

durrell_monsieur durrell_livia
durrell_constance durrell_sebastian

durrell_quinx

That’s it for tonight, but I will continue with more Lawrence Durrell next time.

Monday, May 10, 2010

Picador Books – Part 12 – Authors “T” to “Z”

The final post on Picadors will cover various authors of diverse nationalities, the first being Japanese author Junichiro Tanizaki whose novel The Makioka Sisters was published in Picador in 1983.

tanazaki_makiokasisters

Next two novels are by British writer Emma Tennant - The Bad Sister and Wild Nights.

tennant_badsister tennant_wildnights

D M Thomas’ The Flute Player is next. The author describes this novel as emerging out of a fascination with Russian poets and particularly Anna Akhmatova. The Picador edition has a rather splendid cover.

thomas_fluteplayer

Silver Light by David Thomson “is perhaps the first Western novel inspired by Western movies. Or perhaps obsessed is a more accurate word. The old West of Silver Light is populated by ''real'' characters (Wyatt Earp, Bat Masterson, Billy the Kid) and ''reel'' characters (Montgomery Clift's Matthew Garth from Red River, John Wayne's Ethan Edwards from The Searchers).” ~ Entertainment Weekly

I have been reading this book over the past few weekends, and though it is not great literature with a capital L, it’s an unusual kind of novel, and it did keep me interested from start to finish.

The cover photo is marvellously apt.

thomas_silverlight

From the Wild West to Africa in the form of anthropological studies of the the Mbuti pygmies of the Belgian Congo (Forest People) and the Ik from the mountains of north eastern Uganda near the border with Kenya (Mountain People) by Colin Turnbull the famous British anthropologist.

turnbull_forestpeople turnbull_mountainpeople

Norwegian author Sigrid Undset won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1928. Her best known novel is Kristin Lavransdatter a trilogy tracing the life of the eponymous heroine in 14th Century Norway. The Picador edition is an omnibus of the entire trilogy. It is a large tome, but a very enjoyable and engaging saga. I’ve read it several times, though not for many years.

undset_kristin

The next book sounds extremely politically incorrect…

It is Memoirs of An Anti Semite by Gregor Von Rezzori and is in fact a satire on post war Europe. Elie Wiesel is quoted as saying about this book, and Von Rezzori: “Rezzori addresses the major problems of our time, and his voice echoes with the disturbing and wonderful magic of a true storyteller."

vonrezzori_antisemite

Next Fay Weldon’s early novel Female Friends, which indeed was my first introduction to her novels, and Deirdre Wilson’s Slave of the Passions, an interesting coming of age novel.

weldon_femalefriends wilson_passions

Followed by French feminist Monique Wittig’s surreal Lesbian fantasy The Guerilleres with a stunning cover by John Holmes. It was one of the first books issued in Picador in 1972.

wittig_guerilleres

And the final Picador is Mars, by Fritz Zorn.

zorn_mars

It has been quite interesting displaying these old books, and it has encouraged me to reread a few of them whilst I’ve been putting up these posts.

Next - Faber books