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Michael
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Aug 29, 2019 04:29AM

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I'm also halfway through The Bookseller of Kabul by Åsne Seierstad, but I find it best to read that one in small portions because the lives of the women of the family make me feel rather depressed (the parts about the booktrade in Afghanistan are fascinating, though).
And I'm stuck a 100 pages before the end of Ladivine by Marie NDiaye, which I find a very intriguing book, but I'm not sure I quite like it...
What are you reading Michael?


Looking forward to The Slynx. Tolstaya has become a favorite of mine :)




I highly recommend Hen and hope you enjoy it. I doubt it will take you more than ninety minutes but odds are you’ll think about Scout for some time. I look forward to hearing your thoughts on it.



I’m also reading How the Soldier Repairs the Gramophone by Saša Stanišić.

I've got that one on my shelves as well. I loved his Before the Feast, so I'm curious to read this one. I'm interested to hear what you think of it!


I've been hoping to come across that Rodoreda for ages, and its showing up on the 100WIT makes my need even more urgent. I'll have to check out my library stock and see whether it'll be worth nominating for a read.
Agnese wrote: "I started View With a Grain of Sand: Selected Poems by Wisława Szymborska (trans. Stanisław Barańczak, Clare Cavanagh). I’m not a big poetry reader in general (I’m just not sure what t..."
I liked that Szymborska collection enough to be open to picking up other works of hers should I come across them. I will admit, though, that the Nobel is a great motivator.




The occasion for the interview is that she edited The Penguin Book of Italian Short Stories, which contains 40 short stories by 20th century authors. Unfortunately, even though the interview made a lot of her focus on women writers, the ratio of women is rather low (I only count 11 out of 40). I wonder why that is... (Though my experience in Italian (Roman) bookshop is, that the shelf containing Italian literature in English translation holds either 1 book by Elena Ferrante or 0 female authors...)

ooh I'm hoping it's going to make it as the book for November. I'd love to reread and discuss it with this group! And if you're interested in language, can I recommend Babel: Around the World in Twenty Languages, which contains 20 interesting essays on all different aspects of language told through the 20 most spoken languages in the world.

Territory of Light - Yūko Tsushima (I believe this is a 100 WiT to boot)
You Are Not Like Other Mothers - Angelika Schrobsdorff
I Sweep the Sun Off Rooftops - Hanan Al-Shaykh (I've been looking for this one for a while, so very excited about it)
My Heart Hemmed In - Marie NDiaye (All My Friends refuses to show up, so I'm making do with another)
Valentine - Amantine Aurore Lucile Dupin (I liked Indiana enough that I might as well take a chance on one of her other works with a slightly higher, if still dismal, average rating)
Anyone familiar with any of these?


Reading her wikipedia page, Cardoso seems to be a high profile writer in Portugal and has won a lot of prizes. Anybody read other books by her? Which ones do you recommend?

I have her book THE RETURN on my shelf, but have no read it yet. I actually picked it up in Lisbon.

Further to my comment under the April 2020 selection where I proposed #19 The Mussel Feast. Regardless of when Best100WIT reads it, I thought perhaps other members might be interested in a current Translated Fiction Online Book Club (TFOBC) where "The Mussel Feast" will be discussed this Thurs. March 26, 2020 at 8:00pm GMT.
The instructions to sign up for the TFOBC are at https://mailchi.mp/peirenepress/annou... (i.e. You need Zoom to view the club online)
Given the short time frame before Thurs. March 26. eBooks of "The Mussel Feast" are likely the best option if you do not already have a copy. You can obtain via Peirene (offers a 30% discount using code "bookclub"), Kobo or Amazon Kindle.
Only "The Mussel Feast" from Best100WIT is currently in the TFOBC schedule, but there are 3 other WIT scheduled that may be of interest, these are:
Week 2 (April 2nd): Tilted Axis Press present Where The Wild Ladies Are by Matsuda Aoko, translated from the Japanese by Polly Barton https://www.tiltedaxispress.com/books...
Week 5 (April 23rd): Comma Press present Thirteen Months of Sunrise by Rania Mamoun, translated from the Arabic by Elisabeth Jaquette (session led by translator) https://commapress.co.uk/books/thirte...
Week 6 (April 30th): Istros Books present Singer in the Night by Olja Savičević, translated from the Croatian by Celia Hawkesworth http://istrosbooks.com/products/books...
Books mentioned in this topic
Where the Wild Ladies Are (other topics)The Mussel Feast (other topics)
Singer in the Night (other topics)
Thirteen Months of Sunrise (other topics)
O Chão dos Pardais (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Dulce Maria Cardoso (other topics)Dulce Maria Cardoso (other topics)
Marie NDiaye (other topics)
Yūko Tsushima (other topics)
Angelika Schrobsdorff (other topics)
More...