Look on the bright side! If you do have to self isolate, think of the opportunity to read all those books you don't normally have time for.
I'm itching to start my copy of Hilary Mantel's "The Mirror and the Light" but will hold off for a bit in case I end up in solitary.
Prompted by a couple of opposing posts on another thread, about whether society is on the cusp of collapse or things have never been better; I suggest trying to get hold of John Brunner's novels "Stand on Zanzibar", "The Sheep Look Up" and "Shockwave Rider". Written in the late 1960s/early 1970s they are quite Wellsian in their predictions of what may happen in the then future. Like many books of this nature, some things are way out but many are startlingly prophetic.
In case a longer reading list is required, any other recommendations out there?
Nah, I'm just going to waste the time on social media.
> Nah, I'm just going to waste the time on social media.
Then this may be useful for you
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/technology-51863924/coronavirus-how-to-safely...
On second thoughts, what a pointless, dumb and scaremongering article!
As it's you that pretty much exclusively uses your phone, how is it likely to become highly infectious!
> As it's you that pretty much exclusively uses your phone, how is it likely to become highly infectious!
How about, you're on a bus, you grab a rail that a skanky person has sneezed on, you then transfer skank to your phone, you go home, use your phone, make a cup of tea and transfer skank to kettle/milk bottle/tap etc.
Maybe I'll write a book about my experience, Covid 19: My Part in Its Downfall.
A torrid tale of eating crisps on the sofa in my underpants and watching far to many episodes of Game of Thrones.
> A torrid tale of eating crisps on the sofa in my underpants
I normally eat crisps straight from the bag
7 days locked in a room? Only one choice...Shogun by James Clavell
Reading if full of people
"In the mid-2018 estimate, Reading had a population of 230,046 while the smaller administrative area covered by the Borough of Reading had 163,203 inhabitants and a population density of 4,040 per square kilometre (10,464/sq mi)"
Margaret Atwood’s Oryx and Crake.
You don't want to be reading about disease when it's all over the media too!
I recommend Cannery Row by Steinbeck, It follows the adventures of Mac and the boys in the Palace Flop House Grill.
“[Cannery Row's] inhabitants are, as the man once said, 'whores, pimps, gamblers, and sons of bitches,' by which he meant everybody. Had the man looked through another peephole he might have said, 'saints and angels and martyrs and holy men,' and he would have meant the same thing.”
Other People
It's been 5 years since Terry Pratchett left us. I couldn't face reading the last book because then there would never be another to look forward to. I think it's time.
Enjoy it. It was rather sad in parts but to me it was more Terry that the previous few books had been.
Alcohol wipes, the kind that they use at the doctors pre injection work a treat and cost buttons on Amazon. Using my phone at work means it gets totally minging so I clean it every few days.
Should I get a treadmill?
A journal of the plague year- Daniel Defoe
Across the empty quarter- Wilfred Thessiger
Consolidations of the forest: Alone in cabin in the middle Taiga- Sylvain Tesson
A man without a country- Kurt Vonnegut
The beckoning silence- Joe Simpson
Solo faces- James Salter
The English patient- Michael Ondaatje
Lonesome dove- Larry Mcmurtry
Goodbye to all that- Robert Graves
Bringing out the dead- Joe Conelly
What am I doing here?- Bruce Chatwin
World's end- Boyle T Coraghessan
Given the way things are going though, my personal choice would be:
A confederacy of dunces- John Kennedy Toole
Seems to me like the perfect time/situation to go back to some of the great classics of philosophy. Or to look at them for the first time, if you haven't done so. Most relevant for today remains Nietzsche (imho, though that may sound crazy). Reading him is quite hard work, but continually amazing. At his best, he's like a kind of intellectual gymnast, outwitting you at every turn, getting you to admit, with many a dazzling argument, that your ideas are crap, only to rip the rug from under your feet at the very last moment, in some new, totally unexpected way, and show that more or less everything he's said so far is crap.
So we’re all talking crap? Or have I got the wrong end of the stick?
> World's end- Boyle T Coraghessan
I bought this a couple of months ago in a charity shop supermarket sweep. I have not opened it. Remind me what it’s about and convince me that it’s really good please!
T Coraghessan Boyle of course (danger of reading down the list on my Goodreads profile and writing shit down after a 12 hour shift and half a bottle of red). Just lifted it off my shelf and realise I have almost zero recollection of reading it, 25 or 30 years ago. Great reviews on the back from (in descending order) The Times, Observer, TLS, and USA Today, plus it won the Pen/Faulkner.
What I do remember is that it was a bit of a slog fest. My personal favourites of his are Drop City, The harder they come, Budding prospects and Riven Rock (well, I can at least remember enjoying them).
Also, the book I should have recommended (on my shelves but missed it off my Goodreads list)
After The Plague- T Coraghessan Boyle.
> So we’re all talking crap? Or have I got the wrong end of the stick?
What he's talking about are very difficult, abstract philosophical questions (such as certain kinds of moral judgements and the validity of certain kinds of beliefs, such as the existence of God). And very often the ready answers that people give he shows do not stand up to scrutiny. Also, when people give psychological explanations for things, these often do not go deep enough: there's sometimes a truer explanation hidden 'under' the explanation (he anticipates Freud with this). Overall, his philosophy is a warning not to talk nonsense – he particularly anticipates Wittgentstein, when the latter said, 'What we cannot speak about, we must pass over in silence.' By reading Nietzsche we actually learn a lot about ourselves, so it's the opposite of a waste of time. It's also highly thought provoking and a good mental exercise, and thus beneficial in the way that physical exercise is. Exercising the brain cells rather than the muscles.
Thanks, I don’t have it to hand but I remember flicking through it and seeing that it was “quality, therefore probably heavy going”!
Now's your chance to read War and Peace!
Has anyone on here actually read it?! I haven't - yet......
> Now's your chance to read War and Peace!
A mere warm-up for something properly epic: this is the time for Finnegans Wake. Cometh the hour cometh the book.
Surely, reading Nietzsche for mental exercise is a bit like "doing weights" for physical exercise. Not everyone's cup of tea!
Pretty much, yes. But the person 'doing weights' ends up stronger ...
> Pretty much, yes. But the person 'doing weights' ends up stronger ...
Unless it kills them...
A few that suit the times...
The Trial; Kafka
Something Happened; Heller (or ...Good as Gold)
The Plague; Camus
Cats Cradle; Vonnegut
I just bought Camus’ The Plague in a local charity shop. They said it had just been donated this morning! Make of that what you will
Yes, one of his better known aphorisms.
> A mere warm-up for something properly epic: this is the time for Finnegans Wake. Cometh the hour cometh the book.
When you've finished it I'll look forward to you posting a synopsis of the plot for everybody who has tried but failed to read it.
> A mere warm-up for something properly epic: this is the time for Finnegans Wake. Cometh the hour cometh the book.
A la Recherche du Temps Perdu ?
> When you've finished it I'll look forward to you posting a synopsis of the plot for everybody who has tried but failed to read it.
I'm a dedicated Joycean so spent almost a year of my life reading it closely. Sorry, but no synopsis from me. That would be like bolting Echo Wall.
> A la Recherche du Temps Perdu ?
Read it some time ago. Can't remember a damn thing.
> T Coraghessan Boyle ... T Coraghessan Boyle.
I did very much enjoy Water Music. Read it many times, and often read the bit about infection by tropical parasites to kids.
But I recommend everyone tries Overtaken, by Alexei Sayle.
> I'm a dedicated Joycean so spent almost a year of my life reading it closely. Sorry, but no synopsis from me. That would be like bolting Echo Wall.
Genuinely glad you enjoy it. Admire your patience and dedication. My comment was a bit smart *rsed. Sorry.
No need to apologise - my response was tongue in cheek, although I am a huge Joyce fan. Sadly I think my visit to this year's Bloomsday festival in Dublin may fall victim to the virus. I'm hoping flights are back on come June.
"Can't remember a damn thing. "
Maybe not focusssing hard enough where the moments can be overlooked?
Wasn't it about a girl - Madeleine somebody? I confess I was trying to be witty with my memory crack. I'm actually a fan. I spend a great deal of my life reading!
I'm pretty sure I haven't read it but I might be wrong with the state of my recall these days .
Room by Emma Donoghue
I am now praying that i don't have to self isolate!
Mrs Dude has decreed that if I'm well enough to read, I'm well enough to deorate so has gone out and bought a load of paint ;-(
Go out for a walk in the woods, could find yourself a vintage copy of razzle