I’ve never been to Berlin, but I feel like I’ve come to know it through this book.
Read MoreReviews
Review: A Little History of Poetry
The poets featured each enjoy a potted biography that places them and their work in the context of the time. Extracts rather than whole poems are presented, and this is both an advantage and a disadvantage.
Read MoreReview: Who will run the frog hospital
If you like stories about teenaged angst, and especially female teenaged angst, you will like this book. Well I don’t and I didn’t.
Read MoreReview: The Comfort of Strangers
Rather than write the traditional sort of review, I thought I would do it in the form of one of those quizzes one sees in popular magazines. Answer each question honestly, and keep a note of your answers on a sheet of paper so you can add up the score at the end.
Read MoreReview of Things Seen, by Annie Ernaux
There is something to be said for short pieces that stand alone as impressions but yet together form a tapestry of a whole picture. Once certainly gets a sense of the aspects of Paris which, as in any tourist-attracting city, are not to be discovered in the guidebooks.
Read MoreReview: Giovanni's Room
Giovanni’s Room, which is the only work of James Baldwin’s that I’ve read so far apart from a few articles, also starts at the end. The result is a story that is intriguing and gripping within the first few minutes.
Read MoreReview: Closely Observed Trains
There is some very beautiful writing in this book, and plenty of humour.
Read MoreJournalistic integrity and the need to compromise
Dovlatov was a journalist in the then Soviet Union, and this book comprises a series of compromises he was obliged to make, in order to keep his job. What’s interesting to me is that the censorship he describes goes on a very subtle level.
Read MoreReview: Film Studies courses
A few years ago I decided that it would be interesting to sign up for courses in film studies. Not just to learn about films, but because I thought understanding the language of film would be useful in my writing. I wrote about this in Film Studies as a Way of Improving Your Writing.
The courses have been really useful in that respect, and have enabled me to make all sorts of connections. For example, and as I described in the article just mentioned, one film director’s approach seemed to me to have parallels with a French writing movement known as the Oulipo.
The courses at the Bishopsgate Institute are taught by Hilary Smith, and she usually starts with a discussion of what makes a good film, before going on to the specifics of the genre or categorisation under discussion. That's another example of a parallel. In The Primary Duty of a Translator I posed the question: what makes a good translation?
As the most recent course I did has finished now, I thought it worth might be useful to say what I enjoy about the Bishopsgate film courses in general, because more are planned. (At the time of writing, the forthcoming course is “Greatest films of the 21st century”.)
First, the tutor, Hilary, is a real expert, not someone who happens to have been drafted in at the last minute and has spent a couple of hours mugging up using Coles Notes! Students need to feel looked after by their teacher, and although that concept is usually thought of in terms of health or mental health, I think it applies to wealth and well-being too. Regarding the “wealth” aspect, I don’t want to come out of a session wondering why I’ve allowed myself to be ripped off by someone who knows less than I do about the subject. As for “well-being”, all of us feel good at learning something new, and having “aha” moments.
That brings me on to the next thing I like about these courses. Quite often, Hilary will point out that if this scene seems vaguely familiar, it’s because the director was paying homage to the director of another film. It reminds me of jazz. Quite often, in a jazz solo, in which the tenor saxophonist (say) is demonstrating his adherence to the school of music known as “any note will do”, there will suddenly be a snatch of another tune. It makes you jolt upright and think, “Wait a minute, wasn’t that…?”
This kind of knowledge also contributes to a sense of well-being when you can casually say to a friend or family member, “Of course, what Lean was referencing in this scene is…” as if it is, or should be, common knowledge.
Real experts don’t need to pretend to know everything, and Hilary demonstrates this often. There’s always at least one person on the course who knows quite a bit about someone or something, and when they say they discovered X, Hilary will be the first to admit she hadn’t known that, and will look it up.
My final comment in the Zoom chat of our final session was “Thanks for a very rich course”. By “rich” I mean we not only discuss a film’s antecedents and who or what it influenced, but see clips of different versions so we can compare them, interviews with people connected with the film, and further reading.
In conclusion, attending film studies courses has helped me to hone my critical facilities. In just the same way as I ask myself questions like “Why has that camera angle been used?, “What is that lighting meant to convey?” and “Why that particular piece of music for this scene?”, I bring a questioning approach to my reading: “Why that adjective/image/order of paragraphs?” That, in turn, plays back into my approach to writing. Sometimes I find myself spending 15 minutes finding the exact word I need. The average reader may not notice — but they will probably be affected just the same.
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Review: The Oxford Dictionary of Idioms
I’ve been enjoying delving into the meaning of some of the expressions we come across all the time — and a few we don’t.
Read MoreReview: Bonjour Tristesse
Under normal circumstances I wouldn’t pick up the (fictitious) memoir of a 17 year-old girl….
Read MoreReview of Teach Like a Writer
This book aims to change that by providing insights into the writing process from several very different genres.
Read MoreReview of Why They Can't Write
Does the enormous amount of help that teachers give to students to help them learn how to write, help them to learn how to write?
Read MoreReview: The Awakening, by Kate Chopin
I loved the writing. Some of it is very funny, all of it is well-observed.
Read MoreReview: The Kreutzer Sonata, by Tolstoy
The real question is: was she or wasn’t she?
Read MoreReview: First Love, by Turgenev
This is the story of a boy of 15 falling in love for the first time, as related by his middle-aged self. What can I say?
Read MoreTwo reviews of The Penguin Book of the Prose Poem
As I’ve written two reviews of this book, I thought I’d publish the links to them in one place — which is here!
Read MoreA potentially useful word website
Could this website be a substitute for a printed usage guide?
Read MoreBook review: Bird By Bird
It's not often one comes across a book which purports to contain instructions on both writing and life. Does the concept work?
Read MoreWriting prompts for kids
Do you have a child you’d like to encourage to write? This writing prompt website may be of interest.
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