Brian E Reynolds Brian E’s Comments (group member since Jul 25, 2017)


Brian E’s comments from the Reading the Chunksters group.

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31572 Nike wrote: " How can I make you change your mind? Why not vary the editions every second chapter? 🙃 I do understand your predicament, I recently read "Two cities" and thought it difficult to choose from my two different editions that I have. I solved it by letting my partner read one and I the other. If that counts as a solution.."

Nothing to be done. Truthfully the deciding factor for my decision to skip reading Alone in Berlin back for the 2023 Goodreads Group Read is the same as for my decision to skip it for your current Buddy Read. Lack of time. I have a lot planned already in the next few months, none I want to jettison.

I will be reading these books as part of series in GR groups or in a series I started due to a GR group:
The Plains of Cement by Patrick Hamilton
Party Going by Henry Green
The Dark Horse by Rumer Godden
With No Crying by Celia Fremlin
The Guermantes Way by Marcel Proust (a Chunkster)
Ripley Under Ground by Patricia Highsmith
The Sum of Things by Olivia Manning
Miss Mapp by E.F. Benson

and also reads of these books through June:
Ruth by Elizabeth Gaskell
Towards the End of the Morning by Michael Frayn
The Stars Look Down by A.J. Cronin (a Chunkster)
The Mysterious Island by Jules Verne (a Chunkster)

So much time and so little to read.
31572 Hugh wrote: "I think Every Man Dies Alone is the same book as Alone in Berlin."

Yes, it is. Hence the wink ;)

I spent much of 2023 watching the prices of these two editions in my Amazon cart and Blackwell's wish list while trying to decide which of these two to buy for the August 2023 Never Too Late To Read Classic GR Group's read of Fallada as its German author of the month:
Every Man Dies Alone by Hans Fallada Alone in Berlin by Hans Fallada

I liked the Penguin edition of Alone in Berlin because it matched my copy of Little Man, What Now? by Hans Fallada and the title would help identify the book with the author in the future. I also much prefer having art rather than photos of people on my book covers.
On the other hand, I prefer the more poetic nature of the melancholic Every Man Dies Alone title.

I finally solved my dilemma by deciding not to participate in the Fallada read.
31572 Nike wrote: "I'm about to start reading Alone in Berlin by Hans Fallada. Maybe some of you are interested in a group or buddy reading? Different editions are between 495 and 766 p..."

As I am trying to read In Search of Lost Time, The Balkan Trilogy and The Levant Trilogy I don't think I have time for another long book at this time.
I have read Fallada's Little Man, What Now? and have considered reading him again. But, if I do read Fallada, I think I'd choose to read Every Man Dies Alone Every Man Dies Alone by Hans Fallada instead. It's only 529 pages ;)
Dec 09, 2023 01:30PM

Dec 06, 2023 12:34PM

31572 Hugh wrote: "Thanks for all the hard work you have done on the summaries Brian"

I'm glad to assist the Moderator as long as I don't have to be the Moderator. I had recently led a discussion of a Trollope novel in the Reading the 20th Century group and found that doing the review necessary for writing summaries helped me better understand what I had read. Due to this, I was willing to do them here.
However, doing the summaries does mean you devote about double the usual time toward a book. I felt that, even if you did get hold of a copy of the book, it would have been really tough for you to devote single time let alone double time to reading the book. As I had nominated it and wanted to read it, I was both willing to and somewhat obligated to summarize here. I felt that writing the summaries was valuable as an aid to me regardless of whether anyone else read them. So not a waste of time at all.

Hugh, you could further thank me by telling what you thought of the Booker winner and a few of your favorites from the shortlist.
EDIT: Hugh, I've read your review of Prophet Song and will likely read it sometime next year.
Dec 05, 2023 02:39PM

31572 Cat, I addressed your question in the Week 10 discussion.
Dec 05, 2023 02:38PM

31572 Cat wrote: "Brian E wrote: "[...] as I think she might have led him astray if he had let her." I'm puzzling over this - Please would you help me to understand this angle?"

I'm addressing this question from Week 8 in this Week 10 discussion so I don't have to use spoilers for some of it. I hope this helps you understand what I was trying to say.

My personal opinion and feeling was that second wife Chris was more self-focused in her advice to David than the first wife Beth was. I thought Beth helped guide David in making better decisions, one that would best effectuate HIS values and goals. Chris had so many of her own strong personal opinions on things, I think her advice would have tried to guide David into decisions that reflected HER values and goals rather than helped David effectuate his own. I say this knowing that Chris did know and bow to David's Bamfylde-first attitude. But that's on the "big picture level" On the "small picture" individual situation level, Chris had opinions on the correct result and pronounced them even knowing it might conflict with David's.
Two examples:
1. When former student Christopherson came to announce he was going to help the Republicans in Spain, Chris jumped in with 'good for you' encouraging him rather than letting David handle the counseling. He was David's student not hers.
2. Rather than merely coaching Sax and Beth into how to approach David to get his blessing on their early marriage, Chris actively encouraged them in the early marriage.

Thus, the short answer is that I thought Chris might lead David into decisions reflecting Chris's values and goals. By using the term "Astray" I meant in a direction than did not meet David's own goals and values.
David knew that about Chris and accepted them and that's why things between them worked. It was David's long-time sage Howarth that gave him the wise advise to give Chris her own arena, the Cradle, where she could be kept busy effectuating her own values and goals in her arena and be too busy to get involved in David's business.
Dec 04, 2023 11:07AM

31572 I thought it interesting that Julia and David agree it is best not to tell their son Charles "Clark" of his true parentage. My guess is that if this happened at 21th Century Bamfylde they would NOT choose to keep it a secret. Contemporary mores favor such disclosure, at least when the child is old enough. Another contemporary factor favoring disclosure is the easier access to information via technology. Non-disclosure tends to cause more problems due to the child's own discovery than early disclosure would have.
Dec 04, 2023 10:35AM

31572 I liked the ending of the story with David bringing in Earnshaw so that he can experience what David experienced. It is an reminder of the cyclical nature of life, something that David's recollections of Britain bouncing back from previous internal bloody conflicts also relects. David comes to finally feel that somehow, even with much loss, everything comes out alright in the end.
Dec 04, 2023 10:31AM

31572 TO SERVE THEM ALL MY DAYS – 10th Week - PART IV, Chapters 1-3

I will put the summary in spoilers. (view spoiler)
Dec 04, 2023 08:28AM

31572 Nidhi wrote: "Tomorrow I will put my comment in spoilers alert tag. Right now I am using app."

Yeah. I avoid using the app as, not only is it more limited, but I am too. I'm inept at using my phone as a full-use computer. I was out of town for 3 days using the app to check in and hoped Hugh wouldn't post Week 9 while I was gone because I had no idea how to post my Word document summary via the app.
I don't think we need to stress about the unlikely possibility of anyone else starting the book getting to Week 4 yet.
Dec 04, 2023 06:32AM

31572 TO SERVE THEM ALL MY DAYS – 9th Week - PART VIII, Chapters 1-3
I will put the summary in spoilers. (view spoiler)
Dec 04, 2023 06:28AM

31572 Nidhi, for the sake of anyone in the future reading this novel along with the threads you might want to consider putting the part of your post, the last two sentences, that deal with events not yet occurring by Week 4 in spoilers.
Dec 03, 2023 09:00PM

31572 I read Of Human Bondage 18 years ago and was surprised how much I liked it. Five stars. I did enjoy and empathize with Philip Carey even though much of his personal pain is self-inflicted. He was definitely flawed, but likeable.
But I thought David was flawed too. (view spoiler) While I did empathize with David, I found him to be only moderately likeable.
Nov 23, 2023 10:45PM

31572 Yeah, I agree that being a long-term politician would not be a good fit for Chris. I agree with your analysis too. I didn't think her previous attitude indicated the flexibility she'd need for the role.
Of course, her political demise works well for our storyline. Even with her freedom to marry with a pending divorce, her political life and David's career would not be able to mesh to enable them to marry. So to avoid having the storyline spin in place and let us finally get to another phase in David's personal life, something had to give.
Now to see if adding Chris into the Bamfylde equation adds some spice to Bamfylde events. Things progressing nicely for David at Bamfylde can be satisfying but makes for a snooze-inducing story after awhile. You can't keep the plot going with vignettes of carious student's incidents. With Carter, Alcock and Blunt now gone, David's going to need some other person to battle with and supply some conflict and the dramatic tension this story thrives on.
Nov 22, 2023 12:56PM

31572 TO SERVE THEM ALL MY DAYS – 8th Week - PART VII, Chapters 1-3
I will put the summary in spoilers. (view spoiler)
Nov 16, 2023 10:06PM

31572 Nidhi wrote: "When i started reading this book, i guessed its covers a war and a school, but in this section we are on threshold of Great Depression and will soon be entering the second war. Much like a history ..."

When it started I didn't really think about what period of time this would cover, but I soon realized it was going to go on for some years. I still don't know how long it will go on, but I prefer to be surprised.
I do like learning history, through fiction about the times and especially learning the social history through fiction written in the times.
Nov 14, 2023 04:46PM

31572 TO SERVE THEM ALL MY DAYS – 7th Week - PART VI, Chapters 2-4
I will put the summary in spoilers. (view spoiler)
Nov 11, 2023 10:04AM

31572 I first ran into the practice of "ninging" in British public schools in Robert Graves's memoir Goodbye to All That. The early part of that memoir dealt with Graves' boarding school experience where Graves portrays a practice much like the one described here.
However, my impression of the 'ninging' practiced at Graves school, or at least by Graves himself, was that it was much closer to the romantic low-level homosexual practice that Alcock feared it to be than the mere male growth/bonding experience that David asserts it to be. I do remember feeling creeped out by Graves' portrayal of the practice I called it predatory.

My full comment on the subject in my review was:
" I was initially thrown off by Graves schoolboy memories, primarily the culture of predatory attachments made by older to younger students at his public school."
Nov 07, 2023 05:13PM

31572 TO SERVE THEM ALL MY DAYS – 6th Week - PART V, Chapters 3-5; PART VI, Chapter 1

This week's summary: (view spoiler)
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