
Dienstag, Februar 26, 2008
Noch ein dünnes Buch

Montag, Februar 25, 2008
Weiterhin in Wien

Der Esterhazykeller in Wien
Samstag, Februar 23, 2008
Noch ein Roth

Josepf ROTH
Zipper and his Father
Synopsis: Set in Vienna in the early part of the twentieth century, Zipper and his Father is a compelling and wonderfully atmospheric portrayal of a childhood friend, Arnold Zipper, and his father, as seen through the eyes of a young boy.
The Zipper family welcome the arrival of their son's friend and the boy is fascinated by their cosy suburban life. Zipper Senior, a violin-maker and travelling salesman, is determined that they will attain the success that was denied to him. However, as the two friends mature their lives take different paths' - the army, university, early career choices and a disastrous marriage to an aspiring actress all take their toll - and each has a very different story to tell.
From the outskirts of Vienna to the Hollywood hills, Zipper and his Father charts the ambitions of a whole generation who, during period of erratic social change, found themselves dreaming of what might have been.
Dienstag, Februar 19, 2008
Japan

Sonntag, Februar 17, 2008
Geschafft!

Paul AUSTER
The Red Notebook
"The Red Notebook bears testimony to Auster's sense of the metaphysical elegance of life and art." Literary Review
In this acrobatic and virtuosic collection, Paul Auster traces the compulsion to make literature. In a selection of interviews, als well as in the collection's title essay, Auster reflects upon his own work, on the need to break down the boundary between living and writing, and on the use of certain genre conventions to penetrate matters of memory and identity.
The Red Notebook both undermines and illuminates our accepted notions about literature, and guides us towards a finer understanding of the dangerous stakes of writing. It also includes Auster's impassioned essay "A Prayer for Salman Rushdie", as well as a set of striking and bittersweet reminiscences collected under the apposite title, "Why Write?"
"An elegant collection of observations and autobiographical fragments." Observer
Mittwoch, Februar 13, 2008
Weiter geht's

Sonntag, Februar 10, 2008
Von der Karibik

A Long Way Down
Freitag, Februar 08, 2008
Neues Buch

Brian MOORE
Es gibt kein anderes Leben
Kurzbeschreibung: Können ungerechte, politische Verhältnisse, Elend und Korruption nur mit Gewalt beseitigt werden? Für den Armenpriester Jeannot, Präsident einer Karibikinsel, die in vielem an Haiti erinnert, ist dies angesichts der Not seines Landes keine Frage. Seinen geistigen Ziehvater, Père Paul Michel, stürzt diese Frage hingegen in eine Glaubenskrise. Brian Moore erzählt das Drama von Moral und Macht, dem sich jeder stellen muß, der seinen Glauben an eine bessere Welt nicht aufgeben will.
"Nicht nur Brian Moores bisher bestes Buch, sondern einer der besten politischen Romane, die in den letzten Jahren geschrieben wurde." Boston Sunday Globe
Mittwoch, Februar 06, 2008
Der Februar

Jeanette Winterson
Oranges Are Not The Only Fruit
Amazon.co.uk Review: Jeanette, the protagonist of Oranges Are Not The Only Fruit and the author's namesake, has issues--"unnatural" ones: her adopted mam thinks she's the Chosen one from God; she's beginning to fancy girls; and an orange demon keeps popping into her psyche. Already Jeanette Winterson's semi-autobiographical first novel is not your typical coming-of-age tale.
Brought up in a working-class Pentecostal family, up North, Jeanette follows the path her Mam has set for her. This involves Bible quizzes, a stint as a tambourine-playing Sally Army officer and a future as a missionary in Africa, or some other "heathen state". When Jeanette starts going to school ("The Breeding Ground") and confides in her mother about her feelings for another girl ("Unnatural Passions"), she's swept up in a feverish frenzy for her tainted soul. Confused, angry and alone, Jeanette strikes out on her own path, that involves a funeral parlour and an ice-cream van. Mixed in with the so-called reality of Jeanette's existence growing up are unconventional fairy tales that transcend the everyday world, subverting the traditional preconceptions of the damsel in distress.
In Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit, Winterson knits a complicated picture of teenage angst through a series of layered narratives, incorporating and subverting fairytales and myths, to present a coherent whole, within which her stories can stand independently. Imaginative and mischievous, she is a born storyteller, teasing and taunting the reader to reconsider their worldview.
Montag, Februar 04, 2008
Noch ein dünnes

Philip ROTH
Everyman
From The Washington Post's Book World/washingtonpost.comPhilip Roth's 27th novel is a marvel of brevity, admirable for its elegant style and composition (no surprise), but remarkable above all for its audacity and ambition. It seizes unflinchingly on one of the least agreeable subjects in the domain of the novel -- the natural deterioration of the body. But beyond that, Everyman can be seen as a bid to engage conclusively with the core anxieties that the literary novel exists to confront: How, absent the shadow of God, in new and confusing brightness, shall we decide what we are, how we human animals should judge ourselves and whether we can love our species despite everything?
Everyman begins with its hero's end, his interment. Only three of the graveside mourners speak -- the dead man's daughter, his second wife and his older brother. Ordinary puzzlement, sadness and resignation are expressed: "That was the end. No special point had been made." What follows is a summary retrospective of the protagonist's life. We see him as a dutiful good son who, yielding to his parents' wishes, sets aside his artistic aspirations and, after a tour of duty in the Navy, goes to work in advertising. He prospers, ultimately becoming creative director of a major New York-based firm. His infidelities figure in the breakups of at least two of his three marriages. Along the way, he fathers two sons (they reject him with bitterness for having left their mother) and a hapless daughter, who adores him.
His health abruptly worsens when he is in his early fifties and he has to live through 20 years of episodic but severe medical interventions: many surgeries, including a quintuple bypass. His medical miseries dominate his life. He retreats to an upscale retirement community on the Jersey shore and devotes himself to painting (until he concludes that he has nothing to say in that medium) and to teaching painting to his fellow residents. He hears of colleagues declining, beginning to die off. A last operation for a carotid blockage is fatal.
Roth has taken great pains to craft an archetypical American life for his readers to contemplate. The nameless protagonist "was reasonable and kindly, an amicable, moderate, industrious man," Roth writes. "He never thought of himself as anything more than an average human being." He is l'homme moyen sensuel to perfection, neither good nor bad -- or, rather, about as good as he is bad. He has served his country. He has no visible politics. He is unreligious (he gave up attending synagogue after his bar mitzvah). He has met his obligations -- his material obligations -- to his immediate families, but he has made no wider benefactions that we hear of. In his thought-life, there's nothing distinctive. He is reasonably stoical about his medical ordeals, which are brought to life in harrowing detail by the author, but toward the end he is less stoical.
There is, in truth, more on the negative side of his ledger than on the credit side. He is self-centered to a fault. In conscious envy of his beloved elder brother's robust health, he turns against this man who has been his sole steadfast friend. He deceives his wives. And he asserts a comfortably exculpatory determinism when he thinks over the many missteps in his life: "There was only our bodies, born to live and die on terms decided by the bodies that had lived and died before us. If he could be said to have located a philosophical niche for himself, that was it -- he'd come upon it early and intuitively, and however elemental, that was the whole of it. Should he ever write an autobiography, he'd call it The Life and Death of a Male Body." Finally, he is insular. He seems never to apprehend that he is suffering at a privileged level, that great medical coverage means everything when the bad luck begins.
Still, it is for some purpose that we are conducted through the salient parts of a life not interesting in itself. What do we say, as readers, waving farewell to this man? What assessment do we make of his life?
It's a feat, but through this clinically secular morality tale, Roth manages to extract love and pity for his created mortal. Bravura descriptions of his skirmishes with death skillfully penetrate the readers' normal, reflexive resistance to such images. Although our hero continues to fine-tune his rationalizations, his remorse -- powerfully depicted -- breaks through. And virtuoso lyrical passages capture the protagonist's yearning for the strength and joy of his youth: "Nothing could extinguish the vitality of that boy whose slender little torpedo of an unscathed body once rode the big Atlantic waves from a hundred yards out in the wild ocean all the way in to shore. Oh, the abandon of it, and the smell of the salt water and the scorching sun! Daylight, he thought, penetrating everywhere, day after summer day of that daylight blazing off a living sea, an optical treasure so vast and valuable that he could have been peering through the jeweler's loupe engraved with his father's initials at the perfect, priceless planet itself -- at his home, the billion-, the trillion-, the quadrillion-carat planet Earth!"
Through consummate art, Roth elevates the links that bind his protagonist to us, the readers who judge his life. From a distance, Everyman looks like a shaggy dog story -- a long, quotidian story whose meaning resides in its final pointlessness. Up close, though, it is a parable that captures, as few works of fiction have, the pathos of Being, as it's manifested even in the favored precincts of affluent America.
Reviewed by Norman Rush Copyright 2006, The Washington Post. All Rights Reserved.
Sonntag, Februar 03, 2008
Zur Abwechslung

With paw, whisker, tail, meow, and posture at their disposal, cats have a whole range of gestures and movements that allow them to communicate their feelings and needs. In Chats with Cats, Celia Haddon explains cat language in all its permutations, providing an insight into their fancies and foibles, their likes and dislikes. By tracing the cat’s ancestry, especially the reasons behind its predatory and territorial instincts, she reveals how to understand and solve many behavioural problems—and even gives pointers on how to train your cat.
Samstag, Februar 02, 2008
Heute Neu

Ismail KADARE
Der General der toten Armee
Samstag, Januar 26, 2008
NEU! NEU! NEU!
Vladimir NABOKOW
Sprich, Erinnerung
Wiedersehen mit einer Autobiographie
Anne WEST
Der Venus-Effekt
Spielregeln für Liebe, Sex und andere lustvolle Kleinigkeiten
Sonntag, Januar 20, 2008
Abendlektüre

Tom WOLFE:
I am Charlotte Simmons
Product Description: Dupont University - the Olympian halls of learning housing the cream of America's youth, the roseate Gothic spires and manicured lawns suffused with tradition... Or so it appears to beautiful, brilliant Charlotte Simmons, a sheltered freshman from North Carolina. But Charlotte soon learns, to her mounting dismay, that for the uppercrust coeds of Dupont, sex, Cool, and kegs trump academic achievement every time.
As Charlotte encounters Dupont's privileged elite - her roommate, Beverly, a Groton-educated Brahmin in lusty pursuit of lacrosse players; Jojo Johanssen, the only white starting player on Dupont's godlike basketball team, whose position is threatened by a hotshot black freshman from the projects; the Young Turk of Saint Ray fraternity, Hoyt Thorpe, whose heady sense of entitlement and social domination is clinched by his accidental brawl with a bodyguard for the governor of California; and Adam Geller, one of the Millennial Mutants who run the university's "independent" newspaper and who consider themselves the last bastion of intellectual endeavor on the sex-crazed, jock-obsessed campus - she gains a new, revelatory sense of her own power, that of her difference and of her very innocence, but little does she realize that she will act as a catalyst in all of their lives. With his signature eye for detail, Tom Wolfe draws on extensive observation of campuses across the country to immortalize college life in the '00s. I Am Charlotte Simmons is the much-anticipated triumph of America's master chronicler.
Mittwoch, Januar 16, 2008
Leserunde

Elizabeth Noble
The Reading Group
From Publishers Weekly: Perfect indulgence for the eponymous set—or pandering to an anticipated audience? Or maybe both? As the London Evening Standard put it, "The blurb has [the author] down as a simple Surrey housewife who knocked this out between the Hoovering and the hot sex, but further investigation reveals her to be a veteran of book marketing married to the head of Time Warner UK." Go figure! Well, either way, this U.K. bestseller is a frothy page-turner that dissects the relationships, desires and discoveries of five English women, all members of a book club. Over the course of a year, the women read 12 novels (including Atonement, Rebecca and The Alchemist) and, through their playful but intimate discussions (few of which revolve around the books), they bond closely while coping with such matters as a philandering husband, a mother with dementia, a pregnant but unmarried daughter, an infertility crisis, a wedding and a funeral. It's a testament to Noble's characterizations and plotting that the novel is not overwhelming, despite its numerous (perhaps too many) points of view, complicated backstories and interweaving contemporary crises. Light but never flip, this is funny, contemplative and touching reading, and the group's familiar book choices allow readers to feel as if they're part of the gang, too, as they race to the end, eager to find out what happens, why it does and what it all means.
Sonntag, Januar 13, 2008
Kulinarisches

Dienstag, Januar 08, 2008
Amerikanische Küche

Leslie Brenner
American Appetite
The Coming auf Age of a Cuisine
From Publishers WeeklyI: this intriguing, albeit somewhat haughty, culinary treatise, Brenner (1996 winner of the James Beard Award for journalism and the author of several books on wine and food) attempts to discern whether an American cuisine exists. Brenner observes that "Americans love big flavors. As a group, we tend not to have, shall we say, refined tastes," and from there she sets out to define what is American cuisineAmostly from a perspective of culinary sophisticationAas evidenced in what is offered by grocery stores, restaurants and cookbooks. She gives a brief history of the American culinary evolution, from the clever and imaginative cooking methods of the Native Americans and Dutch (which were altered to suit the bland Puritan taste) to Thomas Jefferson's introduction of French foods to the era of industrial canning, which Brenner believes led to the demise of American gastronomy. In a chapter entitled "Xenophobes No More: The Foreign Influence," she lists the contributions that have been made by people from other countries, especially since the Immigration Act of 1965. A chapter on "chic" food informs that celery ruled in the 1860s, oranges gained prominence in the 1870s and vichyssoise came of age in the 1920s. In the end, Brenner states that American cuisine is "alive, it's vibrant, it's hereAthough it's only just starting to come into its own." Although her tone may irk readers not from New England or California ("In many cities and towns across America, the gastronomic revolution has yet to arrive"), Brenner offers a fascinating look into the history of America's cuisine. Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Samstag, Januar 05, 2008
Erster Bucheinkauf 2008

Mittwoch, Januar 02, 2008
Statistik 2007
Das Autoren-Ranking:
Paul AUSTER - 4 Bücher
John UPDIKE - 3 Bücher
sowie in alphabetischer Reihenfolge mit jeweils 2 Büchern:
Harold BLOOM
Anna EHRLICH
W. Somerset MAUGHAM
Orhan PAMUK
Philip ROTH





Montag, Dezember 31, 2007
Zum Jahreswechsel

José SARAMAGO
Die portugiesische Reise
Kurzbeschreibung: Der Autor macht sich auf zu einer mehrmonatigen Fahrt durch seine Heimat Portugal: Von Nord nach Süd, von Ost nach West - und wo immer er hinkommt, spürt er in sich jenen Einklang, der ihn mit seinem Land und dessen Bewohnern verbindet - allerdings auch so manchen Missklang. Penibel beobachtet er und was immer er ansieht - er quillt über vor Wissen über Geschichte und Kultur. Als Portugal-Liebhaber kann man sich auf dieser ausgedehnten Reise keinen anregenderen und vergnüglicheren Begleiter als Jose Saramago wünschen: einen sachkundigen Führer und hochgebildeten Kenner, der uns die verborgenen Schätze seines Landes abseits der geläufigen Touristenrouten erschließt.
Samstag, Dezember 29, 2007
Die Bücher und das Paradies

Umberto ECO
Die Bücher und das Paradies
Donnerstag, Dezember 27, 2007
Erotisches zum Jahreswechsel

Yolanda Celbridge
Belle Submission
Book Description: What better location for a finishing school for southern belles than in the fetid heat of Louisiana? Given the errant behaviour of the daughters of the plantation owners and farmers of the Old South, and with an aristocratic French descendant of the Marquis de Sade in charge, flagellation is bound to be on the curriculum. As the canes swish amid the scent of magnolia, it’s a sure-fire bet that the men of the South will rise again and again.
Dienstag, Dezember 25, 2007
Weihnachtsgeschenk
Günter SCHUSTA
Das gekrönte Österreich
Ich habe ihn damit beglückt:

Mittwoch, Dezember 19, 2007
New York

Joseph BERGER
The World in a City
Traveling the Globe
through the Neighborhoods
of the New
New York
Book Description: “The whole world can be found in this city. . . .”–from the Preface
Fifty years ago, New York City had only a handful of ethnic groups. Today, the whole world can be found within the city’s five boroughs–and celebrated New York Times reporter Joseph Berger sets out to discover it, bringing alive the sights, smells, tastes, and people of the globe while taking readers on an intimate tour of the world’s most cosmopolitan city.
For urban enthusiasts and armchair explorers alike, The World in a City is a look at today’s polyglot and polychrome, cosmopolitan and culturally rich New York and the lessons it holds for the rest of the United States as immigration changes the face of the nation. With three out of five of the city’s residents either foreign-born or second-generation Americans, New York has become more than ever a collection of villages–virtually self-reliant hamlets, each exquisitely textured by its particular ethnicities, history, and politics. For the price of a subway ride, you can visit Ghana, the Philippines, Ecuador, Uzbekistan, and Bangladesh.
As Berger shows us in this absorbing and enlightening tour, New York is an endlessly fascinating crossroads. Naturally, tears exist in this colorful social fabric: the controversy over Korean-language shop signs in tony Douglaston, Queens; the uneasy proximity of traditional cottages and new McMansions built by recently arrived Russian residents of Manhattan Beach, Brooklyn. Yet in spite of the tensions among neighbors, what Berger has found most miraculous about New York is how the city and its more than eight million denizens can adapt to–and even embrace–change like no other place on earth, from the former pushcart knish vendor on the Lower East Side who now caters to his customers via the Internet, to the recent émigrés from former Soviet republics to Brooklyn’s Brighton Beach and Midwood whose arrival saved New York’s furrier trade from certain extinction.
Like the place it chronicles, The World in a City is an engaging hybrid. Blending elements of sociology, pop culture, and travel writing, this is the rare book that enlightens readers while imbuing them with the hope that even in this increasingly fractious and polarized world, we can indeed co-exist in harmony.
Montag, Dezember 17, 2007
Paul Auster

Paul AUSTER
The Invention of Solitude
Synopsis: Beginning with the deconstructed detective novels of the New York Trilogy, Paul Auster has proved himself to be one of the most adventurous writers in contemporary fiction. In book after book, he seems compelled to reinvent his style from scratch. Yet he always returns to certain preoccupations--most notably, solitude and coincidence--and these themes get a powerful workout in this early memoir. In the first half, "Portrait of an Invisible Man," Auster comes to terms with the death of his father, and as he investigates this elusive figure, he makes a rather shocking (and enlightening) discovery about his family's history. The second half, "The Book of Memory," finds the author on more abstract ground, toying with the entwined metaphors of coincidence, translation, solitude, and language. But here, too, the autobiographical element gives an extra kick to Auster's prose and keeps him from sliding off into armchair aesthetics. An eloquent, mesmerizing book.
Montag, Dezember 10, 2007
Jokers-Paket

Olaf IRLENKÄUSER (Hsrg.)
Rainer VOLLMAR (Hsrg.)
Das Buch der Bücher

John UPDIKE
Erinnerungen an die Zeit unter Ford

Peter JENNINGS
Todd BREWSTER
In Search of America
Abstecher nach Frankreich

Stephen CLARKE
Merde actually
Synopsis: A year after arriving in France, Englishman Paul West is still struggling with some fundamental questions: What is the best way to scare a gendarme? Why are there no health warnings on French nudist beaches? And is it really polite to sleep with your boss' mistress? Paul opens his English tea room, and mutates (temporarily) into a Parisian waiter; samples the pleasures of typically French hotel-room afternoons; and, on a return visit to the UK, sees the full horror of a British office party through Parisian eyes. Meanwhile, he continues his search for the perfect French mademoiselle. But will Paul find l'amour eternel, or will it all end in merde? In his second comedy of errors, Paul West continues to sabotage the entente cordiale. Author's apology: "I'd just like to say sorry to all the suppository fans out there, because in this book there are no suppositories. There are, however, lots of courgettes, and I see this as progress. Suppositories to courgettes - I think it proves that I'm developing as a writer." - Stephen Clarke.
Samstag, Dezember 08, 2007
Feiertagsausbeute
Eva ECKSTEIN (Hsrg.):
Eine Auster im Mieder von Donna Emilia
Casanovas sinnlichste Rezepte
Richard STENGEL:
Handbuch für Schmeichler & Arschkriecher
Maria EMBERGER (Hsrg.):
Laszlo Lugo Lugosi (Fotos)
Wien - gestern und heute
Inge MORATH:
New York
Und für meinen Mann - er hat es als Hörbuch und wollte es nun auch in gedruckter Form lesen - und für € 2,99 habe ich ihm diesen Wunsch gerne erfüllt:

Stefan ANDRES:
Wir sind Utopia
El Greco malt den Großinquisitor
Zwei Novellen
Montag, Dezember 03, 2007
Das Buch zum Wochenbeginn

Samstag, Dezember 01, 2007
Thema New York
