In case you have not read the introduction to my main site recently, which I expect likely, here is some of the first part:
Note: This site is created using iWeb which Apple has not supported for years, so be advised that it may become frozen in time without warning.
…
There is something to be said for publishing on paper.
That has now happened.
When I tried to upload ‘The Joy of Small Boats’ I was unable to connect to my site. Despite repeated efforts by the support team at Machighway, which hosts the site, and myself over the past two days, I still can’t connect. I expect the problem is that iWeb has become corrupted. I have kept an old MacBook with the Mojave OS just for iWeb because the application will not work on any more recent OS. There may still be a way, but upon reflection I am not sure I want to. There is enough on
https://www.inthepresentsea.com/the_actual_site/webbchiles.html
to keep my future biographers busy for years and if they want to know what happens from now on, they can come here. There is a life there.
So the main site is frozen in time. I am not. Yet.
I was asked to comment on the books I read in the last six months.
In looking over the list, several are classics and favorites I have read before, often more than once, and can highly recommend, though your tastes may not be the same as mine. BARRABAS, THE UNDERDOGS, THE MAIAS, VICTORY. I think I have read all of Conrad, much of his work at least twice, and find myself regretting there is not more.
While James Vance Marshall's THE WIND AT MORNING is not a classic, I think it should be and have written about it in a journal post a while ago.
hilton-head-island-wind-in-morning.html
I had the pleasure of coming across two new to me great authors last year: Yasunari Kawabata and Machado de Assis. Before even finishing the first of their books, I bought two more. I've read a second by Kawabata, but not yet de Assis. Both men are famous in their own countries and should be more widely.
LEGIONNAIRE was a pleasant surprise. The memoire of a young Englishman who enlisted in the French Foreign Legion and served at the end of the colonial war in Algeria. I found the view into a world I do not know interesting, educational and entertaining.
BOLIVAR is a fine biography of the liberator of much of South America and a study in perseverance, great success and great failure.
The one book on the list that I would not recommend is the 1900 edition of THE OXFORD BOOK OF ENGLISH VERSE. There are other editions that I have enjoyed, but the 1900 is full of obscure, verbose, graceless 'poems'. I put that in quotes because most of them do not deserve the name.
THE GREATEST DAY IN HISTORY, a day by day account mostly in the words of those then living of the last week of what we now call World War One was eye-opening and shocking.
Yesterday afternoon Carol and I saw AVATAR: THE WAY OF WATER. Carol saw it in 3D. I did not. I learned that 3D doesn't work with only one eye. The movie is entertaining and a technological triumph because it seems real and almost none of it is. Both of us agree, along with others, that at more than three hours it is too long.
1 comment:
It works with one and a half eyes but I don't think it improves it by much!
David
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