Introducing the Sunday Stroll

Since the Sunday Salon membership is full, I thought I'd start something a little different for myself: the Sunday Stroll. It's inspired by the French flâneur -- a stroller, lounger, saunterer, loafer, through a city in order to experience it rather than to arrive at any specific destination. This is how I often tend to read, I pick up a lot of books I never finish, although I'd still like to discuss them, since they still have impact and meaning for me. So on Sundays I can recount the strolls I've taken through books and/or the bookish world. (Ie, how many trips did I make to the bookstore this week...)

Ever since the end of January when I read The Magicians by Lev Grossman (which I really enjoyed, with its references to Harry Potter & Narnia, as well as relating to the thing about having trouble being content with life as it is, but which also really made me rather sad thanks to the disillusioning ending), I have not been able to finish a book. I have kept trying to find favourites to reread and then giving up and moving on to the next one. I've tried Harry Potter, Wives & Daughters, North & South, Anne of Green Gables, even Emma! I got furthest with Emma, but since I only just reread it last fall, I was lured away from it as well. None of my typical comfort reads were working, they all just seemed a little bit too safe and (gasp) boring -- they are all essentially coming-of-age stories, as well as romances, they are all about young girls (or boys, in Harry's case), while I am now into my early 30s and I realized with a start that maybe I am occasionally wanting to read something more mature. (I'm not saying Jane Austen and Elizabeth Gaskell are at all immature, just that I can read beyond young girls growing up and experiencing idealistic romances!)

So I picked up The Age of Innocence since I'd been thinking of rereading it at some point as the first step before embarking on more Edith Wharton reading, as I did like her before, I just found it too sad and knew that if I kept reading her books, more sadness awaited. I found her beautiful style of writing and American perspective to be a breath of fresh air. I'm now over halfway through, but the sadness is building and once again, I've slowed down to a halt. Henry James (of all people) is partly to blame, along with my idea for a new reading project that developed from starting on Wharton.

For years I've been fascinated by the Second French Empire of Louis-Napoleon III, between 1852 and 1870, and I've tried to find books to read about it. Emile Zola in particular of the great 19th century French authors sets most of his novels in that time period, to show the corruption of Napoleon III's regime. (I reviewed his novel The Kill here on my old book blog.) Flaubert and others were also writing then, but the thing is just that the French are so darn pessimistic. And due to my ongoing depression, while I want to challenge myself with their work and love learning about French history, I just can't always take it. (Especially when the main female characters keep dying at the end of the books for their horrible transgressive sexuality!) I've tried reading the Goncourt brother's diaries of the time as well and found them sexist and pessimistic (but more because they weren't getting famous enough) too. And there isn't a lot of historical fiction written about the period either, sadly. (Although Helen Humphreys, my favourite Canadian author, just released one called The Reinvention of Love, which I received for Christmas and haven't read yet, about Victor Hugo's wife and the literary critic she has an affair with.)

So, all that to say, reading The Age of Innocence, which is set in the 1870s of Wharton's New York childhood, even though it was written decades later, made me think that maybe I could try reading any books from or about the latter half of the 19th century, set in any European or N. American country, preferably among the upper classes. One of the things I absolutely love about these types of books are the clothes. Yes, maybe it's shallow, but I swoon over the ball and opera gowns described in Anna Karenina and The Age of Innocence, as well as in A.S. Byatt's Morphio Eugenia and Zola's books. They all end badly but at least they were pretty while it lasted! (On my tumblr I'm also collecting pictures of paintings and reproductions of dresses from the period, which are so so lovely.)

Which leads me back to Henry James. My local bookstore currently has a large quantity of this edition of The Golden Bowl, which I'd been eyeing for a while, before finally giving in and getting it. (The painting is so pretty, I couldn't resist! I never used to care much about pretty books, this is all your fault, book blogging!) And then because it was so pretty, I actually started reading it, even though The Wings of the Dove is my book nemesis (I so want to read the whole thing and somehow never can). And then I actually found it interesting and readable! For a few chapters at least. Maybe Wharton helped me get in the mood for James. At all events, now I am yet again adrift in a sea of books, not sure what to pick up or go back to next. I do still want to finish The Age of Innocence and tell you all about it (especially the clothes!), I just have to work my way back there. I occasionally enjoy bookish trips to New York, but most of the time, my reading is firmly entrenched in Europe. And now that I'm back over there, I'm debating something else...

See, there's a new movie of Anna Karenina coming out this fall (directed by Joe Wright) and even though Keira isn't my favourite actress for period dramas (although she was surprisingly good in A Dangerous Method), I'm still super excited because I love the book. And now I'm debating a reread. I've tried that before and failed, but maybe now I'll have more motivation? I have taken out the chunky Pevear & Volokhonsky translation from my library today, just in case I decide to go for it. (I think I'll give it another go, just because. Anna. Karenina! I'm excited and a bit obsessed with pictures from the various film versions.) I read the older Constance Garnett translation my first time because it was the one I liked the best then, but it seems a little too dated this time. Of course the story is also sad, but at least there will be lots of great clothes and glamorous scenes at balls and train stations and horse races! (And also lots of farming and hunting with Levin, which I found awfully dull before, but maybe I'll like him a bit more this time? Some people find Anna annoying, but I was fascinated by the romantic melodrama of her story last time. I just wish there was more of a balance between how earnest and good Levin is and how exciting Anna is...)

I will keep you posted on how it goes and hopefully I won't flake out on every book I start for the rest of the year or even for the rest of the month. (Any suggestions on how?) I have nearly finished A Jane Austen Education by William Deresiewicz, so that's something and I do have a whole week off from school now, so maybe I can power charge through a few of these books! I live in bookish hope. Or maybe I can just enjoy wandering my way through literature, without worrying about needing to prove how much I've read and reread. (Although part of the reason I came back to book blogging was to try to challenge myself to finish more things...) I'm also considering posting quotes from books as I read them somewhere, either here or here.

And that's your Sunday stroll through the way my brain picks up and puts down books, bibliophiles. If anyone wants to sway me on which of these three books to read/finish first (out of Anna Karenina, The Age of Innocence, and The Golden Bowl), you're perfectly free to! Especially if you want to read along with me.

PS. Also I have been debating rereading Mansfield Park. And I read a chapter or two of The Warden by Anthony Trollope a few days ago, just because it's so easy to download random things onto my kindle. Stop it, brain.

Comments

  1. I'm going to read Anna Karenina for the Back to the Classics challenge. I haven't read it before, I've borrowed my mother's copy and she said she loved it. I didn't know that there was a film of it coming out, should be good.
    Joanne

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    1. I don't mean to reply to seagreen reader really, but there were no other options for posting a comment - I think my page didn't load properly. Anyway, I had a few reading suggestions. Have you tried Guy de Maupassant, mostly a short story writer, but occasionally a novelist who writes wonderfully well. And I also love Theophile Gauthier's Tales of the Fantastic, which you can sometimes get hold of in translation. I would recommend Colette's novels about Claudine (beginning with Claudine at School) which were written at the turn of the century and are fun and cheeky and yet moving too as Colette follows Claudine through adolescence and marriage. My favourite author of last year, though was Willa Cather. Try A Lost Lady, to see what you think of her.

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    2. Yes, occasionally I can't get the comments page to load either, I haven't used this blog in so long, I don't know what's up with it!

      I do own a collection of Guy de Mauspassant's short stories and they look good, they're on my shelf with my other 19th century potentials. I've never heard of Theophile Gauthier though, so thanks for the recommendation. I read some Colette last year and really liked her, so I'm sure I'll read more at some point. I've thought of trying Willa Cather too, although I've never been sure where to start. Thanks for all the recommendations, Litlove!

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    3. I hope you like Anna Karenina, Joanne. It's such a special book for me too, there are so many grand scenes and the character exploration is great.

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  2. It's so nice that you're back! ... especially since we read so many of the same books and authors. I love the idea of a Sunday stroll (and sometimes, with an audiobook on my Ipod, I mean that literally...)

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    1. Hi Audrey, it's nice to see you here! I have been enjoying your posts on Edith Wharton and I'm sure I'll get back to reading more of her this year. I rarely listen to audiobooks, but walking and listening to a good book sounds fun.

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  3. I've been through phases where I can't settle down to a particular book, don't want anything sad and find re-reading frustrating, too. I think it's best to just take a break and your reading mojo will return. (I once took a reading break for 5 years - when I had the twins!!)

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    1. Oh my goodness, I couldn't go without reading for five years! I tried to stop reading for fun for a few years in university so I'd focus on my grades and I ended up being very depressed, so I don't think that's a good idea for me. But it is good to know that others go through reading slumps too. I'm feeling better though, as Anna Karenina has been the book to get me excited about reading again.

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