The Pensive Reader — Mary Cassatt

Cormac McCarthy Shooting Pool in Texas, Like Fifteen Years Ago

(Source).

Companions of Fear — Rene Magritte

Jim O’Rourke at Work on the Grizzly Man Soundtrack; Special Appearance by Werner Herzog

“Against Remorse” — Nietzsche

From The Gay Science, Friedrich Nietzche.

Adolescence — Milton Avery

Put More Blood into the Music (1987 Documentary on Sonic Youth)

“I reason, Earth is short–” — Emily Dickinson

“I reason, Earth is short–” by Emily Dickinson:

I reason, Earth is short —
And Anguish — absolute —
And many hurt,
But, what of that?

I reason, we could die —
The best Vitality
Cannot excel Decay,
But, what of that?

I reason, that in Heaven —
Somehow, it will be even —
Some new Equation, given —
But, what of that?

 

Francis Bacon on Immediacy and Violence

Portrait of the Author Fyodor Dostoevsky — Vasily Perov

List with No Name #12

  1. McNulty & Bunk
  2. Carver & Herc
  3. Poot & Bodie
  4. Avon & Stringer
  5. Freamon & Bunk
  6. Kima & McNulty
  7. Freamon & Prez
  8. Rhonda & Daniels
  9. McNulty & Freamon
  10. Snoop & Chris
  11. Omar & Brother Mouzone

The Disciple of Las Vegas (Book Acquired, 9.27.2012)

20121009-161129.jpg

I guess these books are already big in the UK, or maybe they will be big, or something. This one’s an ARC and it doesn’t come out until early next year. Here’s the UK pub copy:

Hired by Tommy Ordonez, the richest man in the Philippines, to recover $50 million in a land swindle, Ava has her work cut out. Tommy’s brother has messed up and the Filipino billionaire’s reputation is on the line.

Tracking the money, Ava uncovers an illegal online gambling ring, and follows the trail to Las Vegas. Once there, she turns her gaze to David Douglas, one of the greatest poker players in the world – and someone who knows more about the missing money than he’s letting on.

Meanwhile, Jackie Leung, an old target of Ava’s, has made it rich. He wants revenge, and he’s going after Ava.

Read a William Gaddis Profile (New York Magazine 1994)

 

Read the New York Magazine profile via Google Books.

Karin Reading — Carl Larsson

Hilary Mantel Wins the 2012 Booker Prize

The Guardian and other sources report that Hilary Mantel has won the 2012 Man Booker Prize for her novel Bring Up The Bodies.

Bring Up the Bodies continues Mantel’s reappraisal of the Tudor saga through the eyes of Thomas Cromwell, a story she began in Wolf Hall, which won the Booker Prize in 2009.

Biblioklept was a fan of both books; check out our reviews of Wolf Hall, and our reviews of Bring Up The Bodies.

The Man Booker site reports that

Hers is a story unique in Man Booker history. She becomes only the third author, after Peter Carey and J.M. Coetzee, to win the prize twice, which puts her in the empyrean. But she is also the first to win with a sequel (Wolf Hall won in 2009) and the first to win with such a brief interlude between books. Her resuscitation of Thomas Crowell – and with him the historical novel – is one of the great achievements of modern literature. There is the last volume of her trilogy still to come so her Man Booker tale may yet have a further chapter.

 

Portrait of Oscar Wilde — Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec

God’s Angry Man — Werner Herzog (Full Documentary)