We've talked before about our mailbag, about the stunning number of books that show up, get sorted into piles, get re-sorted and then moved around until we finally get to look at them. But every now and then, a title shows up that goes straight to the precarious top of the pile.
We got two such titles this week. The Paris Review Interviews, I (Picador) is one of those drop everything titles. Everything pretty much went to hell around us as we went straight for the Bellow interview. After that, we checked out the Borges interview and the Elizabeth Bishop interview, and on it went until half the day was gone. Expect to read more about this title on this site in the weeks ahead - it's likely to become a bookshelf essential for years to come.
The other noteworthy title is John Fowles' The Journals, Volume Two: 1966-1990. (Knopf) We've been compulsive journal-keepers since college but we're put to shame but the unvarnished honesty that animates Fowles' entries. From his reactions to the 1981 film version of The French Lieutenant's Woman to his ambivalent relationship with his own fame to the heartbreaking death of his wife (which closes the collection), it's the kind of look inside the working writer's life and mind that we find irresistible.
I'll have to take your word about the otherwise good/moving parts of the John Fowles journals. I've read some extracts from his journal entries somewhere (about the filming of TFL's Woman)and found them amazingly, blindingly dull. I was actually relieved I could cross the full volumes off my must-read lists!
Posted by: Jody Tresidder | August 10, 2006 at 12:26 PM