The narrator’s grandmother “could never resign herself to buying anything from which one could not derive an intellectual profit”:
Marcel Proust, Swann’s Way, trans. Lydia Davis (New York: Viking, 2002).
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Friday, December 11, 2020
“Old” ones
By Michael Leddy at 8:28 AM comments: 0
Thursday, December 10, 2020
“Now who can that be?”
Marcel Proust, Swann’s Way, trans. Lydia Davis (New York: Viking, 2002).
Proust’s similes are epic.
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By Michael Leddy at 8:22 AM comments: 0
“A nice cool dinner”
From The Naked City (dir. Jules Dassin, 1948). It’s a hot day. Mrs. Halloran (Anne Sargent) greets her husband Jimmy (Don Taylor):
“Got you a nice cool dinner — jellied tongue.”As Daniel Tiger reminds us, we gotta try new foods ’cause they might taste good. So here’s a recipe for jellied tongue. Oh, swell.
“Oh, swell — I’m starved.”
The Criterion Channel has The Naked City and a new documentary, Uncovering “The Naked City” (dir. Bruce Goldstein, 2020), a detailed look at the movie’s locations and production.
By Michael Leddy at 8:22 AM comments: 4
Wednesday, December 9, 2020
Proust–Sebald synchronicity
Today I posted a passage from W.G. Sebald that mentions linguistic “regionalisms, redolent of things long fallen into disuse.”
Then, reading Swann’s Way, I found the narrator describing novels “full of expressions that had fallen into disuse and turned figurative again, the sort you no longer find anywhere but in the country.”
Sebald: regionalisms, disuse. Proust: disuse, regionalisms.
Tomorrow I’ll begin posting Proust sentences, one a day.
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[Swann’s Way, trans. Lydia Davis (New York: Viking, 2002).]
By Michael Leddy at 2:48 PM comments: 0
“Word-eddies and turbulence”
These sentences know exactly what they’re doing. W.G. Sebald on Robert Walser:
“Le Promeneur Solitaire,” in A Place in the Country, trans. Jo Catling (New York: Modern Library, 2015).
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By Michael Leddy at 9:15 AM comments: 0
Obama pens
In The New York Times, Michiko Kakutani interviews Barack Obama about reading and writing. We know from an excerpt from his first volume of memoir that Obama writes his drafts in longhand on legal pads. In this Times piece, he opens up about pens:
He says he is “very particular” about his pens, always using black Uni-ball Vision Elite rollerball pens with a micro-point, and adds that he tends to do his best writing between 10 p.m. and 2 a.m.: “I find that the world narrows, and that is good for my imagination. It’s almost as if there is a darkness all around and there’s a metaphorical beam of light down on the desk, onto the page.”“With a micro-point”: the anti-Sharpie.
Related reading
All OCA Barack Obama posts (Pinboard) : Obama revisions
By Michael Leddy at 9:02 AM comments: 0
Steam heat
“Turn-of-the-century faith in ventilation to combat disease pushed engineers to design steam heating systems that still overheat apartments today”: “Your Old Radiator Is a Pandemic-Fighting Weapon” (Bloomberg).
Open windows in winter? A feature, not a bug. With an explanation of why radiators are painted silver.
By Michael Leddy at 9:00 AM comments: 0
Naked City at YouTube
Holy cow: the complete run of Naked City is available at YouTube. Here is a taste, twenty (of 138) episodes that I highly recommend. Keep in mind: I set out to make a list of five, then ten. There are too many good ones.
“Sidewalk Fisherman” Based on a New Yorker article by Meyer Berger.
“Bullets Cost Too Much” Detective Adam Flint: villain or hero?
“A Hole in the City” Sylvia Sidney, Robert Duvall, and Yankee Stadium.
“Show Me the Way to Go Home” Lois Nettleton and other wanderers.
“The Face of the Enemy” PTSD.
“One of the Most Important Men in the World” Faustian and Trumpian.
“A Case Study of Two Savages” Charles Starkweather and Caril Ann Fugate take Manhattan.
“Today the Man Who Kills Ants Is Coming” A police officer’s breakdown.
“The One Marked Hot Gives Cold” Verges on matters that could never be made explicit in 1962.
“The Multiplicity of Herbert Konish” Crazy, man. And Detective Flint recites Emily Dickinson.
“The Rydecker Case” He said, she said.
“Hold for Gloria Christmas” Poetry and the Village. With Burgess Meredith and Alan Alda as poets.
“Idylls of a Running Back” Who is Sandy Dennis after all?
“A Horse Has a Big Head — Let Him Worry!” A nearly blind boy makes his way through the city.
Beyond This Place There Be Dragons Frank Gorshin on the run. The final scene is heartbreaking.
“Prime of Life” Capital punishment. They were pushing all envelopes as this series moved to its end.
“Bringing Far Places Together” Immigrants in the city.
“Carrier” Sandy Dennis again. Strange viewing in the time of COVID-19.
“Golden Lads and Girls” The class system and alcohol.
“Barefoot on a Bed of Coals” A meta ending to the series. With tossed soup.
If you get hooked, it still makes sense to buy the 29-DVD set — it’s a bargain.
Related reading
All OCA Naked City posts (Pinboard)
By Michael Leddy at 8:52 AM comments: 2
On Money Jungle
In The Paris Review, Matt Levin writes about Money Jungle, the (killer) 1962 album by Duke Ellington, Charles Mingus, and Max Roach: “A Masterpiece of Disharmony.”
Masterpiece? Yes. Disharmony? I’m not convinced. Tumult, certainly, and the shift from the tumultuous “Money Jungle” to the serene “Fleurette Africaine” is one of the oddest choices in sequencing I know. But guess what? Those two tracks are both twelve-bar blues. One form, many possibilities.
Thanks, Chris.
[Track three, “Very Special,” is a twelve-bar blues as well, as are other tracks from the session.]
By Michael Leddy at 8:21 AM comments: 0
Tuesday, December 8, 2020
Proust for two
If I were CNN, this post would begin, “We are now less than ten minutes away from the start of.”
And if I were Rocky and Bullwinkle, this post would continue, “In Search of Lost Time, or That’s the Way the Cookie Crumbles.”
The ascent of Mount Proust is the Four Seasons Reading Club’s greatest challenge to date. Wish us well.
Related reading
All OCA Proust posts (Pinboard)
By Michael Leddy at 9:48 AM comments: 7