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Freewheeling Andy

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Posts posted by Freewheeling Andy

  1. Right. Victor Pelevin, on the basis of one book, is a very, very exciting author. I doubt he'd be to everyone's tastes but this is high quality literature with more ideas in most sentences than many authors use to fill entire books. I'm now excited about reading his other novels, and his short stories. What is it? Very cynical, very satirical, quite funny, slightly buddhist, vaguely druggy, Russian, intense and engrossing. My brain is full now.

  2. I finished Babylon on the plane yesterday. It's completely and utterly bonkers. More bonkers than I could have conceivably imagined even though it was pretty bonkers all the way through. Um... don't know what to say about it, really, because any book where you discover the entire Russian government is computer generated as a method of marketing, and they all got erased, is just start raving bonkers.

     

    I think the phrase "The hell of the eternal football championship" is the one that will live with me longest.

     

    I'm starting on some cosmology now, instead - How The Universe Got Its Spots by Janna Levin.

  3. The more I read, the more brilliant it is. Currently in the middle of an essay written by Che Guevara through the medium of a Ouija board on the subject of a zen understanding of how the viewer of a television stops really being a subject in the subject-object dualism and instead becomes a virtual subject who is being zapped by the television itself.

     

    Utterly deranged and utterly brilliant. The world is going to have to work hard to come up with better stuff for me this year.

  4. I'm still loving Babylon, but I'm more convinced than ever that it wouldn't be for everyone. Quite a lot of the weirdness seems to be drugs fuelled with a fantastic mad trip on agaric mushrooms described as a way of triggering creative processes; and so on.

     

    The book is an excellent satire on advertising, and in particular advertising in post-Soviet Russia where there are no products to advertise against. It's generally very marvellous, to my tastes.

  5. I've just started a Victor Pelevin book on the back of a couple of recommendations of weirdish acquaintances (one on an internet forum thing). It seems brilliant and deranged and very modern. Does anyone else know anything, or have any pointers? I'm reading Babylon. The most famous of his is, I think, The Clay Machine Gun. It's cynical and funny, but probably not everyone's cup of tea (although it probably should be).

  6. Ah. I've just started Babylon by Victor Pelevin. So far, about 20 or 25 pages in, I'm utterly beguiled by it. It's brilliant. Utterly brilliant. If it continues to be as good then I'll be all over every part of the internet telling the world how astonishingly brilliant Victor Pelevin is.

     

    Huge big-ups to whoever recommended it. I'm happy as happy can be.

     

    It's so fun, so cynical, so entertaining. The various bits of blurb are really unhelpful "A psychedelic Nabokov..."; "A Zen Buddhist Will Self..."; "The 21st Century's Bulgakov relishing the chaos and absurdity of modern russia..."; "often compared to Philip K Dick..."

     

    So there you go. He's like 4 completely different authors, only different and more modern. Helpful, eh?

     

    What do I care. So far it's just wonderful.

  7. The rillettes are excellent, by the way, but not quite right. I think there's not enough fat in them, peculiarly. Cooking was very simple. Just render down cubed pork belly with a bit of garlic and seasoning in a pot for a very long time on a long temperature, then shred the pork and allow it to set in its own fat. Mmmmmm!

  8. Gnocchi are great. I have a bit of a problem with polenta because it becomes so unappetising when it's cold. As long as I don't have to deal with cold cooked polenta I'm fine.

     

    One of my favourite grains to cook with is cracked wheat (sometimes called Burghul or Bulgur wheat). Cooking it slowly, with onion and maybe some cinnamon and cumin, it makes great substitute for rice. Or with a bit more spice, and with cubes of cheese in, Bulgur Pilaf becomes a proper meal.

  9. I finally got to the end of "Travels". It really is an excellent book, but as with so many non-fiction books the lack of narrative flow means what I end up taking much longer over reading it. There's a load of insight about travelling in it, though. Insight about Africa, and about Soviet Russia, too. But the views at the end of how some travel journeys seem utterly tedious to her (I'm very sympathetic to her views on cuise ships and Vienna and Venice), and that the real horror trips have boredom at their heart.

     

    Now I need to decide what's next from the pile. It all looks a bit serious.

  10. I've had a slack few days (too much work and booze), but what I've read of the Gellhorn remains excellent. She's utterly eviscerating the chaos in Cameroon, and now she's arrived in Fort Lamy in Chad where her hatred for the place is almost comical. It sounds grim.

  11. OK. Properly this time

     

    1. Favourite main meal ~ pizza (probably)

    2. Favourite starter ~ chinese style dumplings

    3. Favourite dessert ~ these days it's probably something like tarte tatin (with a good dessert wine)

    4. Favourite pizza topping ~ olives

    5. Favourite bread ~ sourdough (probably, although this changes daily - my home made granary/pumpkin seed is a winner when it works)

    6. Favourite vegetable ~ sugarsnap peas

    7. Favourite fruit ~ tomato

    8. Favourite cheese ~ parmesan (or unpasteurised cheddars)

    9. Favourite takeaway ~ Almost never have takeaway. Probably curry

    10. Favourite chocolate bar ~ Star Bar

    11. Favourite sandwich ~ Roast beef, parmesan and rocket. (with creamy black pepper sauce).

  12. 1. Favourite main meal ~ pizza

    2. Favourite starter ~ pizza

    3. Favourite dessert ~ pizza

    4. Favourite pizza topping ~ another pizza

    5. Favourite bread ~ pizza base

    6. Favourite vegetable ~ whatever's on my pizza

    7. Favourite fruit ~ tomato

    8. Favourite cheese ~ mozarella

    9. Favourite takeaway ~ pizza

    10. Favourite chocolate bar ~ um... I don't know

    11. Favourite sandwich ~ one pizza inverted on top of another

  13. Well, another day when I've read nothing. But then, I've been doing stuff, so I have an excuse. Had a hangover and tidied the flat in the morning. Went to watch a miserable defeat (how often does that happen?) in the afternoon, and I've just rolled home from eating couscous and then watching King Kong (which is a particularly silly film).

  14. Just in case I haven't mentioned Ivo Andric's The Bridge Over The Drina enough on this site, I'll mention that it's a fantastic historical fiction covering the entire Balkan history from the Ottoman invasion to the first world war. Wonderful, wonderful, wonderful. And probably only for me. But I'll keep going on about it.

  15. I wouldn't recommend it to anyone else, mind. It's an utterly bonkers walk. But it was right for me at the time. I suppose it's a bit like doing a marathon in walking boots...

  16. I got myself fairly fit over the summer, doing lots of walking and cycling (although my build, and my instinct to eat and drink, naturally counteract any exerciseyness). But I was just in the mood for wiping myself out, and Hoo was a fascinating place on the map and there were no roads, no towns, and no footpaths meeting the sea wall so you had to walk and walk and walk. And I got into the swing of it, and there was nobody around and it just felt great. So I kept going.

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