The Mookse and the Gripes discussion
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I have seen and enjoyed a few NYRB Classics titles here in the UK, but their availability seems to be hit and miss (perhaps due to copyright issues).

http://mookseandgripes.com/reviews/20...



I pick up extra copies of books that I know I am likely to “lend” at used book stores, so I don’t have to worry about getting them back.
I am a re-reader so I can’t give away books, which is a growing problem again. I purged books last summer and am back to stacks of books around my chair. It’s a welcome problem though. I consider myself the family librarian: my adult children get books from me and my granddaughters are just becoming teenagers so they can get books from me as well.
I will never be an eReader. I see the sense of tablets for traveling, but keeping all of one’s book in the cloud is to me like storing all of one’s travel photos in a box in the basement. Noticing a beloved book brings up a small rush of pleasant memories, and as practical matter, seeing an unread book reminds me that I have it to read yet.

On the plus side, library books tend to be hardbacks which are much nicer books to read - bigger print, nicer paper and wider margins.

I did not renew my subscription. I don’t think they need the support from subscriptions and I’d rather choose my own titles.

I did not renew my subscription. I don’t think they need the support from subscriptions and I’d..."
I somehow missed the sale on that one, unless everything is marked down, which I'm just not noticing, but I came here to let everyone who hasn't already bought Anniversaries: From a Year in the Life of Gesine Cresspahl that it's currently on sale for only $19.95 - which is 50% off the actual price.
Also at 50% off is Vasily Grossman's Stalingrad and Daniel Mendelsohn's essay book: Ecstasy and Terror: From the Greeks to Game of Thrones which was at least longlisted for the PEN essay award. (Not sure if they've released the shortlist yet.) And a bunch of other "Best of" books - only for this weekend: Józef Czapski: Lost Time: Lectures on Proust in a Soviet Prison Camp; Last Letters: The Prison Correspondence, 1944–1945 by Freya & Helmuth James von Moltke; The Corner That Held Them by Sylvia Townsend Warner; John Aubrey, My Own Life by Ruth Scurr (One of The Telegraph's best books of the decade), All of Us: A Young People's History of the World by Yvan Pommaux & Christophe Ylla-Somers (a children's book, translated from French by Anna Lehmann) and a few comics (If you'd like them listed, let me know.)
All are 50% off for the rest of today only.

Nothing like the prevailing view I've heard. And statistically the average rating on here is 4.15 (and for me, average friend rating 4.6).
This was an egregious example of how bad the GR search is. I couldn't remember the author without a general search engine, and the right book wasn't in the first two whole pages of search results for just Stalingrad.
This was an egregious example of how bad the GR search is. I couldn't remember the author without a general search engine, and the right book wasn't in the first two whole pages of search results for just Stalingrad.

This was an egregious example of how bad the GR search is..."
Yeah, I've got to say that I've only ever heard very positive things about Stalingrad. Also, the GR search seems to get worse by the minute. Lately even w/ an ISBN I've had a couple books it couldn't find. Amazon ruins everything they touch, including my weekend, actually...
WndyJW wrote: "A group of people in the nyrb book group just read Stalingrad and it doesn’t sound like many of them thought it was worth the time it took to read the whole thing, don’t take my word for that though."
I thought it was very impressive!
I thought it was very impressive!


What I have seen in the Stalingrad discussion is that a lot of people seem to be unable to get beyond their idea that the Soviet Union was evil and that any book that doesn't scream this from the rooftop is deeply flawed. And while the current version of Stalingrad does have critical things to say, it's also largely a book about the doomed heroism of everyday Soviet soldiers.
Emily wrote: "I thought Stalingrad was excellent. It is, however, a Very Long Book (short book lover here). Of the two Very Long Books I've been reading this year (the other is Anniversaries), I far prefer Stali..."
I agree - there are chapters that read like Soviet propaganda, but the book as a whole is nuanced and by no means uncritical, and the picture it paints is very comprehensive. Admittedly Grossman pushed his political boundaries a lot further with Life and Fate, but he did actually manage to get Stalingrad published before Stalin died, and the new Chandler edition has comprehensive notes on what was changed and when.
I agree - there are chapters that read like Soviet propaganda, but the book as a whole is nuanced and by no means uncritical, and the picture it paints is very comprehensive. Admittedly Grossman pushed his political boundaries a lot further with Life and Fate, but he did actually manage to get Stalingrad published before Stalin died, and the new Chandler edition has comprehensive notes on what was changed and when.

You both bring up good points. I've witnessed how dissonant it is for some people to imagine the USSR as anything beyond an evil empire. But there are people there, and as far as I'm aware, there have been for quite some time. Anyway, I bought it from the sale, and a few others, so once I finally finish the many long books I seem to keep jumping headfirst into, I shall read it myself. I do recall being nearly shocked in grade school to learn that the soviets fought alongside us in WWII. It seemed impossible to me that this "horrible place" (which was basically what a US kid heard about the USSR in my childhood) would have given so much. It swiveled my head in those days, but it also cleared a path for a less nationalistic fever against the country as a whole, I suppose.

NYRB is having yet another sale: 50 of their books at 50% off
less interesting or great deal-ish is: SPEND $50 OR MORE AND GET FREE US SHIPPING


What's up w/ all the sales at NYRB. They have a different one every week it feels like.
If anyone not in the US wants to take advantage of this or any future NYRB sale, PM me, and we can figure something out. I'm good at mailing things. :-)
If you figure out how to ship from the US to the UK for some reasonable price, let me know! It’s ridiculously expensive every time I do it!

I do have to give Bezos props for giving 10 billion to an organization to fight climate change.

https://www.ethicalconsumer.org/retai...
A lot of the ratings is based on unknowns which is why they have a middling score - but the upshot is that there are several worse places.
They also run bricks & mortar shops, unlike the other competitive online booksellers.
A lot of the ratings is based on unknowns which is why they have a middling score - but the upshot is that there are several worse places.
They also run bricks & mortar shops, unlike the other competitive online booksellers.

I hate seeing publishers send me to Amazon to buy their books.
As for mailing from the US, I honestly don't know any "cheap" way to do it. Media mail would be best, and it's typically not THAT much longer inside the US, but that would change for outside of the US, I'd bet. No, probably just as well to purchase from NYRB themselves and pay them to ship, unless for some reason you can't.
I'm a bit shocked at how expensive it is to order from the US. I was shocked at the prices quoted in another thread too. As someone who orders from the UK fairly often, we do seem to be getting the better deal.
Of course, as the currency changes, that changes too. I'm always excited when I shop in the UK until I do the math. Things "seem" cheaper there when, in fact, they are not.

My local Waterstones in Nottingham has a number (20 or so titles) of NYRB books on sale for £5 each at the moment - I couldn't resist buying 5 of them this morning even though none were really on my long term to read list.
All older books:
Sybille Bedford - A Favourite of the Gods and A Compass Error
Russell Hoban - Turtle Diary
Anna Seghers - Transit
Tom Kristensen - Havoc
Leopoldo Alas - His Only Son, with Dona Berta
There were a few more that tempted me including a couple of Henry Greens, but 5 was enough for me.
Sybille Bedford - A Favourite of the Gods and A Compass Error
Russell Hoban - Turtle Diary
Anna Seghers - Transit
Tom Kristensen - Havoc
Leopoldo Alas - His Only Son, with Dona Berta
There were a few more that tempted me including a couple of Henry Greens, but 5 was enough for me.




Great choice. I found it very powerful.



https://www.nyrb.com/pages/the-nyrb-c...
Books mentioned in this topic
The Book of Blam (other topics)The Book of Blam (other topics)
Last Letters: The Prison Correspondence, 1944–1945 (other topics)
Lost Time: Lectures on Proust in a Soviet Prison Camp (other topics)
The Corner That Held Them (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Magda Szabó (other topics)Magda Szabó (other topics)
I have even been a part of moderating the NYRB Classics group (though it's been dormant until a recent surge of interest, that I still need to help direct). You can go there for loads of information about the books, but I'm very happy to have something here too that allows for more general discussion.
Please feel free to comment below.