Friday, May 02, 2014
The Cotton-Pickers by B. Traven (Allison & Busby 1926)
Saturday, March 01, 2014
Bollocks to bookfinder
Friday, August 24, 2012
The Man Who Lost His Wife by Julian Symons (Penguin Crime 1970)
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Death By Analysis by Gillian Slovo (The Women's Press Crime 1986)
Sam gave a long sigh. He put his face in his hands and groaned.
'Nothing happened. Absolutely nothing. Unless you count the fact that one of my students asked me a penetrating question about the foliation of space which took me all of thirteen minutes to answer. I got five circulars, two of them identical and I had an argument in the canteen with a Spartacist while eating a soya-bean casserole.'
'You're in a bad way,' I said. 'Arguing with a Spart.'
'Yeah, well he tried to tell me that soya was a sop thrown at the working class to divert it from the struggle.'
'So how was it?'
The soya? Terrible. If that's a sop, then I think we're saved. Anyway, what time are we leaving?'
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Bogue's Fortune by Julian Symons (Perennial Library 1956)
Maureen got up off the floor and eyed him with undisguised interest. “l’m Maureen Gardner.I'm at the school, was rather, until it finished.”
“What are you going to do now?"
‘I'm leaving at the end of the week to join the Anarchist Country Community at Shovels End in Essex.”
“Are you now?" Bogue had a gaudy tie in his hand, and he talked to her while he knotted it. “I used to be very interested in Anarchism when I was a young man. In fact, l'll tell you a secret, I spoke on Anarchist platforms in Glasgow just after the war, that was the First War, you know. I was a red-hot revolutionary then, hot as you are now, I expect. Trouble with Anarchism, I found, was it’s against human nature. In a small group, yes, providing you’re all idealists, Anarchism's fine, answers all the problems. In a feudal society-well, yes, it’s still got some kind of answer. But once you get labor-saving machines, motor-cars, airplanes, not to mention all the bombs we’re inventing to save civilization, what can Anarchists do but settle down in country communities at Shovels End?" Bogue turned round and appealed to her, his arms spread wide, his face serious.
Maureen goggled at him. She had been won over, Applegate saw, won over as only a girl could be who had perhaps never been taken seriously before. “You think I shouldn’t go?”
“Not at all,” Bogue picked up a jacket that lay on the stairs behind him, thrust his arms into the sleeves. “We learn from our mistakes, if we ever learn. But the important thing is to have the capacity for making mistakes. To anyone of your age, faced with a choice, I’d say just this. Do the daring thing, the unusual thing, don’t do the commonplace thing.”
“Yes.” Maureen expelled what Applegate unhappily felt to be an almost reverent sigh.
Thursday, November 04, 2010
Monday, November 01, 2010
The Man Who Killed Himself by Julian Symons (Penguin Crime 1967)
In the end Arthur Brownjohn killed himself, but in the beginning he made up his mind to murder his wife. He did so on the day that Major Easonby Mellon met Patricia Parker. Others might have come to such a decision earlier, but Arthur Brownjohn was a patient and, as all those who knew him agreed, a timid and long-suffering man. When people say that a man is long-suffering they mean that they see no reason why he should not suffer for ever.