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Prisoners of Pax Tharkas, Super Endless Quest #1 by Morris Simon and illustrated by Mark Nelson
I finished reading Prisoners of Pax Tharkas (1985), the first Super Endless Quest gamebook by TSR , written by Morris Simon and illustrated by Mark Nelson. This gamebook takes place in Krynn, the world of the Dragonlance saga. It is well-written, with an even, steady pace. The events take place contemporaneously with the early part…
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Letters of Anton Chekhov to His Family and Friends
I finished reading Letters of Anton Chekhov to His Family and Friends, translated and with a biographical sketch by Constance Garnett. This is just what it sounds like—a large collection of letters Anton Chekhov (1860-1904) wrote to family and various friends. He wrote to his mother, brothers, and sister, his friend and editor (Suvorin), other writers…
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Pines by Blake Crouch
I just finished reading Pines by Blake Crouch, a novel published in 2012. It’s a fast-paced, page-turning thriller with a lot of action and suspense shrouded in strange mystery. The story is told in fast, clipped, sometimes fragmentary language. As the enigma deepens, the reader is tantalized with little hints of what is really going…
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Dreamers (Sværmere) by Knut Hamsun
I just finished reading Dreamers (Sværmere; 1904) by Knut Hamsun, translated by W. W. Worster. In this short work, Hamsun tells the story of a handful of characters living in a small fishing village. With spare description he constructs a bright, crisp world that, despite the novel’s brevity, feels somehow real. I enjoyed the prose…
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Mithridates by Jean Racine
I just finished reading the play Mithridates (1673) by Jean Racine. This tragedy is set near the end of the Third Mithridatic War, a ten year conflict between the forces of Mithridates VI of Pontus and the Roman Republic. The story involves star-crossed lovers and a web of love and deceit, betrayal and loyalty. At…
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Youth by Leo Tolstoy
Book jot from January 2022: I just finished reading Youth by Leo Tolstoy (1857), translated by Judson Rosengrant. This is the third and final part of a series of autobiographical novels Tolstoy published early in his writing life. In Youth, the narrator enters university life and becomes “grown up”. As he enters this phase of…
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Masters of the Universe mini-comics and the art of Alfredo Alcala
The painting above is from the first Masters of the Universe minicomic, He-man and the Power Sword, published in 1981. These small comics were included with action figures. The art in this one, as well as several of the other minicomics, was done by Alfredo Alcala, a prolific comic illustrator in the ’80s and ’90s.…
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Tales of Mystery and Imagination by Edgar Allan Poe
I recently came across a collection of stories by Edgar Allan Poe with illustrations by Harry Clarke, originally published in 1923. I found the illustrations particularly striking, and thought I’d share a few here.
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Andromache by Euripides
I still have a few back-logged book jots I want to post. Here is one from December 2021: I just finished reading the play Andromache by Euripides (late 5th century BC), translated by Philip Vellacott. It is one of many tales from antiquity describing the rippling effects of the Trojan War and the lives of…
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Dream Tales and Prose Poems by Ivan Turgenev
I finished reading Dream Tales and Prose Poems (1879-1882) by Ivan Turgenev (translated by Constance Garnett). It contains the following short stories: “Clara Militch,” “Phantoms,” “The Song of Triumphant Love,” and “The Dream,” as well as a collection of numerous vignettes, titled “Poems in Prose.” This was a great read! I love Turgenev’s writing and,…