The last books I’ll be buying for a while
The last purchase until income flows regularly again

Top to bottom:
David Eagleman ~ Sum. Stephen Fry apparently twittered that if people weren’t enchanted by this little book, he’d eat 40 hats. It was good enough recommendation for me and the first few chapters have issued stunning, clever challenges on what might happen when you die. Ever been bored by the mundane — prefer to try re-living your life having years of showers without break, eating a lifetime’s worth of food in one long sitting, sleeping your life’s sleep uninterrupted instead? Or if heaven was comprised of only your friends and chosen acquaintances? Consider the mundanity and lack of novelty. His cheeky take on if God were truly egalitarian is worth the cover price alone. I’m dipping into a chapter a day to make it last longer.
Pettina Gappah ~ An Elegy for Easterly. I can’t remember how I discovered this book, but I found a yellow sticky note with the title scrawled on it. This is a book of short stories about life in Zimbabwe under Mugabe’s influence and so far has been packed with eloquence, rage, dark humour and hope among fear.
Krissy Kneen ~ Affection. Most-publicised Australian memoir for some time. Can’t wait to dip into 40-year-old Krissy’s recollections of lived and unrequited desires before the invisibility of middle age sets in.
Bob Mason ~ Magic Circles. Bob did a PhD in the lyrics of the Beatles — that is enough street cred for me and a source of envy that I didn’t think of something so cool to study. This book is an accumulation of the music, lives and lyrics of the Beatles and their peers.
Kurt Vonnegut ~ Armageddon in Retrospect. I’ve been sitting on this book for a while: I’m wary of posthumously-produced works that the creator hasn’t had control over (Jeff Buckley’s estate, anyone?) but I’ll get around to reading the dozen stories and speech in this compilation.

Loved, loved, loved Affection. I think it’s one of those books people have a very personal, emotional response to … and yet it’s simply and approachably written. I hope you enjoy it!
Must get Sum. Yes, I am an unashamed Fry-groupie.
ThePurpleOwl
14 October 2009 at 18:55
I love Affection as well. I took a few chapters to fully absorb myself in Krissy’s life, but I just want to grab her and give her a big hug (and a high five for the times she had with Richard
).
librarytart
15 October 2009 at 17:05
When I saw the Magic Circles spine, I thought it might be a critical biographical account of The Goodies.
Can’t judge a book by its spine, either.
comrade harps
4 November 2009 at 19:15
Gee, that’s not a bad idea, comrade harps *puts thinking hat on*
librarytart
6 November 2009 at 8:33