Here's a taste:
In its form and subject matter, Summertime has more in common with Elizabeth Costello and Diary of a Bad Year than Boyhood and Youth, but some of its central concerns are the same, and it is possible to see the John Coetzee who is the topic of Summertime as an adult version of the John Coetzee who is the protagonist of Boyhood and Youth (if we assume the protagonists of those books are the same John Coetzee . . .). In many ways, Summertime unites the strategies of the recent books with the earlier ones—not only Boyhood and Youth, but Dusklands, In the Heart of the Country, Foe, The Master of Petersburg, and Doubling the Point.As usual, this is a rich and diverse issue of TQC -- deserving particular attention is "Translate This Book!", in which dozens of translators, writers, editors, publishers, agents, journalists, etc. offer one title not available in English that they wish were.
how many memoirs has he written? For a guy who's such a recluse, he sure likes writing about himself.
ReplyDeletehave you read the post? I think you may be missing the point.
ReplyDeleteI'm too intellectually inferior to engage you in stimulating literary debate, Mr. Mumpsimus, but I am enjoying your displaced thoughts on misplaced literatures.
ReplyDeleteLoved your posts on Lydia Millet and Sorrentino.