Despite all
the pandemic song and dance, it felt good to be buying books again and to be
talking with a book person. Of the three volumes I bought, one I’ve never read
before: Alessandro Manzoni’s The Betrothed (1827; trans. Bruce Penman,
1972). I resolved to read it based on Nige’s recommendation. I’m particularly pleased
with a one-volume American edition of Charles Doughty’s Travels in Arabia
Deserta (1888), published in 1923 by Boni & Liveright, a book first recommended
to me by Guy Davenport. It even comes with all the fold-out maps intact.
Finally, a
sturdy hardcover omnibus volume, Jean Stafford’s The Interior Castle
(1953), which includes the novels Boston Adventure (1944) and The
Mountain Lion (1947), and the new story collection, Children Are Bored
on Sunday. The collective title come from Stafford’s best-known story, “The
Interior Castle.” Obeying an old and pointless habit, I read the final sentence in
each book. Here is Manzoni’s:
“But if on
the other hand we have only succeeded in boring you, please believe that we did
not do so on purpose.”
1 comment:
For ten years I hosted a community reading group dedicated to classic literature. The Betrothed was our fourth book, after (1) The Brothers Karamazov, (2) The Divine Comedy, and (3) Emma by Jane Austen.
This was in a very small town in eastern North Dakota.
Manzoni's novel is excellent.
Dale Nelson
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