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2008-03-28
12:30 PM

Chekhov, Anton - Seagull

the play takes place at Sorins summer house. His sister comes to visit, her son is a beginning play writter, her lover is a famouse play writter she's a famous actress. The son's love falls in love with his mothers lover. The daughter of the house manager is in love with the son. The wise doctor is stocked by the wife of the house manager. they all love those that do not love them. i like this play

2007-06-20
3:07 PM

Voinovich, Vladimir - Moskva 2042

Владимир Войнович "Москва 2042"

easy read. absurd.
a man travels to the future Moscow and describes political situation (communism/monarchy)


ch2
У нас здесь, конечно, полная свобода в пределах разумных потребностей,


ch4
- Ах, дорогуша, - устало улыбнулся Дзержин. - Вы же сами знаете, что есть такие люди, которым лишь бы что-то писать. А что из этого получается, им совершенно неважно.

Я вспомнил: когда-то один человек в сером костюме сказал мне во время допроса: "Будь вы дураком, мы бы вам все простили. Но вы не дурак и хорошо понимаете, что именно содержится в ваших писаниях". Но он был не прав, потому что на самом- то деле я был дурак. Если бы я был умный, я бы выдавал себя за дурака. Но я был дурак и потому выдавал себя за умного. Однако за шестьдесят с лишним лет, прошедших с тех пор, я все-таки поумнел. И я самым решительным образом стал уверять Искрину в своей глупости и отсталости. Чем она, как показалось мне, была обескуражена.

ch5
- Да что вы! - Эдисон Ксенофонтович огорченно махнул рукой. - Он оказался обычным интеллектуалом. Голова большая, знаний много, а мысли не одной. Пришлось аннигилировать.

2007-03-29
11:10 AM

Suskind, Patrick - Parfume - The Story of a Murderer

wee haaa... read it.
and recommend it.

it is a weird kind of a tale. a man with no sent of his own, but with extraordinary smell capabilities creates a perfume that makes the world fall in love with him. His mother was hanged, he had a miserable childhood, noone loved him, he was crippled and ugly. sounds like a happy-end fairy tale... but it is so not....
while reading it i found myself stopping and sniffing around ... didn't find anything extra ordinary but it made me acutely aware of a whole different world of smells.

also, the book describes how big cities used to stink... and people too.
wonder if he was around today he'd think that we all stink? or did the world change from back in the day.
also a nice point that we feel not only based on visual stimulating but also olfactory perception... fermones and stuff.

2007-01-08
9:39 AM

Wilde, Oscar - The Picture of Dorian Gray

The only way to get rid of a temptation is to yield to it. Resist it, and your soul grows sick with longing for the things it has forbidden to itself.

2007-01-04
12:33 AM

Hesse, Herman - The Glass Bead Game

Amazon link 50 pages in. I still don't know what the 'game' is about. just beads and strings and it's bigger than life.... hmmm getting restless. heh 12/13 56 pages in. something is finally FINALLY starting to happen. I HATE THIS BOOK! 1/3/07 falling asleep reading it.... page 76. he's in a monestery studying/teaching... 1/4/07 a very beautiful description of visions during meditation of Kneht. specifically about a boy and old-man following each over in cycles. 1/5/07 i did a lot of background research on this book, probably read more of background than of the book itself. So what most of the serious readers are saying about the book is that it is an introspective study of human character within imaginery social chierarchy. human character being Kneht. if that was so i can name a dozen sci-fi fantasy books that explore just that topic. they did not win a Nobel Prize while proved to be a much more interesting read. May be I started with the wrong book. they say stepenwolf is something one should start with. for now i do not see what the big fuss is about. and i'm trying. trully really to like this book. currently Kneht became Master of the Game.... Quotes...

2006-12-08
1:14 PM

Dovlatov, Sergei - Zapovednik

I really didn't want to read him. Mainly because he was just so gosh popular. Everyone read Dovlatov. Everone loves him. So i didn't want to read him. I get turned off if something is overhyped.

Finally i gave in. I had nothing to read on the bus and took the book from Denis.

It's great. The language is easy. The absurdities are trully Kafkan. I like his depiction of Russia better than his depiction of America. But both are equally entertaining. I did notice the fact that certain things he uses twice. For instance he depicts how he goes to bed with a woman (lover) and describes her shoes in comparison to his own shoes. Then he uses the same scene when describing his wife. this is not major, but noticable.

2006-10-30
12:39 AM

Nabokov, Vladimir - Lolita

Interesting. very interesting. ok provocative, gives food for thought, easy read, loved the style, excellent imagery. Sick. Sorry Vladimir.

i mean lets be open minded and decide that given that he was in love only with Lolita and didn't care about other little little girls this makes him less of a pedophile than he is. certain parts of this story almost make you forget that she's 12 and he's god only knows how old. almost though not really. and the excuses... she came on to him, the mother died almost as though someone was helping him...

but i guess that makes it interesting. to get into the head of a pedophile. makes you actually wonder about Vladimirs ways. this is not the first book he wrote about a pedophile taking on a child after the mother tragically dies...

p.s. for some reason reading it in Russian. although it was written in English. had no idea it was so.


read a little bit of it in English ohhhh myyyy such akward language why is it considered a classic????? i couldn't go through a paragraph of that nonsense. it sounds much better in russian

ohh and he's still a pervert yak

11/20 i'm almost at the end. he stoped chasing Lolita and is now reminiscing. I don't like the style the language and i don't like the topic. but i'm still reading, skipping the most annoyingly reminscing to death parts. mind numbing really.


question the term Lolita has always ment (at least in my mind) a promiscuous little girl), how the hell did it come out from this book?



Перемена обстановки - традиционное заблуждение, на которое
возлагают надежды обреченная любовь и неизлечимая чахотка

2006-06-16
12:07 AM

Okudzhava, Bulat - Poetry

an excellent poet.
view words - great messages, awesome life stories.

http://spintongues.msk.ru/okudzhava.html

<a style="cursor:pointer" onclick="Core.showHideElement('collapsedText4');">Read More...</a>
<div id="collapsedText4" style="display:none;">
FRANCOIS VILLON’S PRAYER
While the world is still turning, and while the daylight is broad,
Oh Lord, pray, please give everyone what he or she hasn’t got.
Give the timid a horse to ride, give the wise a bright head,
Give the fortunate money and about me don’t forget.


While the world is still turning, Lord, You are omnipotent,
Let those striving for power wield it to their heart's content.
Give a break to the generous, at least for a day or two,
Pray, give Cain repentance, and remember me, too.


I know You are almighty, and I believe You are wise
Like a soldier killed in a battle believes he’s in paradise.
Like every eared creature believes, oh, my Lord, in You,
Like we believe, doing something, not knowing what we do.


Oh Lord, oh my sweet Lord, my blue eyed Lord, You’re good!
While the world is still turning, wondering, why it should,
While it has got sufficient fire and time, as You see,
Give each a little of something and remember about me!
МОЛИТВА ФPАНСУА ВИЙОНА

Пока земля еще вертится, пока еще ярок свет,
Господи, дай же ты каждому, чего у него нет.
Умному дай голову, трусливому дай коня,
дай счастливому денег, и не забудь про меня.


Пока земля еще вертится, господи, твоя власть,
дай рвущемуся к власти навластвоваться всласть.
Дай передышку щедрому хоть до исхода дня,
Каину дай раскаяние, и не забудь про меня.


Я знаю, ты все умеешь, я верую в мудрость твою,
как верит солдат убитый, что он проживает в раю!
Как верит каждое ухо тихим речам твоим,
Как веруем и мы сами, не ведая, что творим.


Господи мой, Боже, зеленоглазый мой!
Пока земля еще вертится, и это ей странно самой,
пока ей еще хватает времени и огня,
дай же ты всем понемногу, и не забудь про меня!

GEORGIAN SONG


To M. Kvilividze



I shall bury a grape stone in the warm fertile soil by my house,
and I’ll kiss the vine twig and gather sweet grapes, my reward,
and I’ll call all my friends to the feast, and love in my heart I will rouse...
Otherwise, what’s the purpose of living in this lasting world?

Dear guests, come to table, I extend you my kind invitation,
tell me straight in my face the opinion of me that you hold,
God almighty will send me forgiveness for my transgression.
Otherwise, what’s the purpose of living in this lasting world?

Dressed in purple, my charming Dali for me will be singing,
dressed in black, I’ll sit bending my head without saying a word,
I’ll be listening enchanted and I’ll die from deep love and sad feeling...
Otherwise, what’s the purpose of living in this lasting world?

When the sunset starts swirling and searching the corners around,
May the images float, as if real, again, may them swirl
right in front of my eyes: a blue ox, a white eagle, a trout...
Otherwise, what’s the purpose of living at all in this world


ГРУЗИНСКАЯ ПЕСНЯ


М. Квиливидзе



Виноградную косточку в теплую землю зарою,
и лозу поцелую, и спелые гроздья сорву,
и друзей созову, на любовь свое сердце настрою.
А иначе зачем на земле этой вечной живу?

Собирайтесь-ка, гости мои, на мое угощенье,
говорите мне прямо в лицо, кем пред вами слыву,
царь небесный пошлет мне прощенье за прегрешенья.
А иначе зачем на земле этой вечной живу?

В темно-красном своем будет петь для меня моя Дали,
в черно-белом своем преклоню перед нею главу,
и заслушаюсь я, и умру от любви и печали...
А иначе зачем на земле этой вечной живу?

И когда заклубится закат, по углам залетая,
пусть опять и опять предо мною плывут наяву
синий буйвол, и белый орел, и форель золотая...
А иначе зачем на земле этой вечной живу?
1967


THE BLUE AIR-BALLOON


A little girl's crying: her air-balloon is gone.
People console her, the balloon flies on.

A young maid's crying: no boy-friend as yet.
People console her, the balloon flies on.

A woman is crying: her husband has left.
People console her, the balloon flies on.

An old woman's crying: life's been so short.
The balloon has come back

ГОЛУБОЙ ШАРИК


Девочка плачет: шарик улетел.
Ее утешают, а шарик летит.

Девушка плачет: жениха все нет.
Ее утешают, а шарик летит.

Женщина плачет: муж ушел к другой.
Ее утешают, а шарик летит.

Плачет старушка: мало пожила...
А шарик вернулся, а он голубой.

1957
.</div>


2006-01-25
3:04 PM

Friedman L. Thomas - The World Is Flat

an interesting book about globalization, out-sourcing etc.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0374292884/002-6665180-4569652?v=glance&n=283155

http://www.thomaslfriedman.com/

2005-12-30
1:22 PM

Kundera, Milan - Unbearable Lightness of Being

1968 Check Republic

http://lib.ru/INPROZ/KUNDERA/legkost.txt

01/06 yup yup reading it right now. it's fabulous . in russian since i don't speak Check(?). will right about it later sooo recomended.

fabulous. one of the most beautiful things i have ever ever read.
just read a passage about the idea that this life that we are living is a scetch. Everything is led by chance and the decisions that we are making by this chance because the future and the consequences are unknown to us. This Earth is our first life. First trial. But there is another Earth where we are reborn with a knowledge of our first life. What decision will be made by us based on our previous knowledge. Would we be wiser? And then there is a third earth and we are reborn there as well with the knowledge of the previous 2 Earths. And so on and so forth. Fascinating.


"Она никогда не задавалась вопросами, которые мучат человеческие пары: он любит меня? любил ли он кого-нибудь больше меня? он больше меня любит, чем я его? Возможно, все эти вопросы, которые обращают к любви, измеряют ее, изучают, проверяют, допытывают, чуть ли не в зачатке и убивают ее. Возможно, мы не способны любить именно потому, что жаждем быть любимыми, то есть хотим чего-то (любви) от другого, вместо того чтобы отдавать ему себя без всякой корысти, довольствуясь лишь его присутствием."

"счастье есть жажда повторения."

2005-11-10
2:51 PM

Gladwell, Malcolm - The Tipping Point

This is in the same league as <a href="http://journals.fotki.com/OLKA/Library/entry/wwqftsqqkgf/">Freakonomics</a> The World is Flat, Blink ... etc...

Book is about how the epidemics spread, fashion trends are set, news is spread, crime is stopped.

What i found interesting is that he tackles basically the same ideas as the author of Freakonomics does from a different angle. Which on is correct... is a different question.

<a href="http://www.gladwell.com/tippingpoint/index.html"> Tipping Point Site</a>

2005-10-21
2:17 PM

Miller, Henry - Tropic of Cancer 1934

I am reading Miller. I don't know why i haven't come across his books earlier. But like most everything else that I read it happened by mistake.

Fascinating. Just free flowing stream of consciosness very vivid and engaging. His narrative seems to be so aloof the ugliness of his stories. Surprisingly, they do not evoke disgust or aversion. What an amazing capacity.

2005-07-29
3:57 PM

Khlebnikov, Paul - Conversation with Barbarian

Разговор с варваром

this book is one of the more frustrating books i've read. I am surprised that it hasn't been translated to English. It discusses the views and believes of Chechen musclims, goes over the history of Chechen havoc in Moscow, and philosophizes on the prospects of civilization.

The book was published in 2003. Khlebnikov was violently killed in 2004 on his way to work. it is widely believed that Chechens put a contract on him:
http://www.command-post.org/nk/2_archives/013518.html
Russian Editor of Forbes Magazine Shot to Death in Moscow


Photo of murdered Russian Editor of Forbes Magazine, Paul Khlebnikov, from Pravda.us

As reported on July 10, 2004, on the Pravda website:

- - - - - - -

Chief Editor of Russian edition of the Forbes magazine Paul Khlebnikov was wounded to death with shot at his head outside his office in Moscow at night of July 9.
He died in the ambulance car.

The police believe that the murder of Paul Khlebnikov resulted from his work in the magazine, Echo of Moscow reported.

According to the investigation, the two killers started firing at the journalist when he was going out of his office. They made 10 shots, 4 bullets hit the journalist. The criminals escaped in VAZ-2115 vehicle of dark color. The police conducted operation to capture the criminals, but it produced no results.

Police have found the VAZ car in which those who killed Pavel Khlebnikov escaped, the press secretary of the Moscow prosecutor's office, Svetlana Petrenko, told Itar-Tass.

- - - - - - -

American journalist of Russian origin Paul (Pavel) Khlebnikov was known as the author of the scandalous book "Kremlin"s Godfather Boris or the story of looting Russia". Before publishing the book, Mr. Khlebnikov published in Forbes the article saying that then-Secretary of Security Council Boris Berezovsky was involved in criminal business. Mr. Berezovsky sued the magazine for the article, the legal hearing lasted for several years and finally Berezovsky won. In 2003 Mr. Khlebnikov published one more scandalous book - "Conversation with Barbarian" on his communication with Chechen rebel commander Khozh-Akhmed Nukhaev. Russian tycoon Boris Berezovsky said to reporters on the phone after Khlebnikov's murder that he was careless in handling with facts.



It is worth saying that in May 2004 the Forbes published the list of the richest people in Russia. The magazine wrote that only Moscow alone accommodates 39 billionaires - more than in any city of the world. After publishing the list Khlebnikov told that the most of the people mentioned by the Forbes as billionaires, were indignant, they said the information about their wealth had been exaggerated and even threatened. However, Khlebnikov considered this as just emotional reaction and said that the threats were about suing the magazine.

- - - - - - -



Photo of murdered Russian Editor of Forbes Magazine, Paul Khlebnikov, from Forbes.com

After Khlebnikov's death, Steve Forbes, President and Editor-In-Chief of Forbes Magazine, sent this statement to Forbes employees:

- - - - - - -

It is with the deepest sadness that I inform you that Paul Klebnikov, 41, editor of Forbes Russia, was murdered in Moscow this evening. He was reportedly shot four times as he left work and died shortly thereafter.

Paul became the first editor of Forbes Russia at the magazine's launch in April 2004. Forbes Russia is a joint venture with Axel Springer.

Paul joined Forbes in 1989 and rose to the position of senior editor at the magazine, specializing in Russian and Eastern European politics and economics, before assuming editorship of Forbes Russia.

Paul was the author of Godfather of the Kremlin (September 2000), a biography of Boris Berezovsky, a Russian tycoon.

Paul embraced the opportunity to become the first editor of Forbes Russia. He knew Russia well. It was a country he loved deeply.

Paul was a superb reporter--courageous, energetic, ever-curious. I eagerly anticipated reading his stories. The information was always fresh, insightful, fascinating. He exemplified the finest traditions of our profession and served his readers well.

All of us at Forbes are devastated by what has happened and send our condolences and prayers to his wife and family.

- - - - - - -

Interfax reports that the matter is being investigated by the Moscow city prosecutor's office:

- - - - - - -

Investigators probing the murder of Paul (Pavel) Klebnikov, editor-in-chief of the Russian version of Forbes magazine, believe the crime was related to the victim's professional activities, a Moscow prosecutor's office spokesman told Interfax on Saturday.

"Taking into account the special significance of the criminal case, a decision was made that the case would be passed from the Moscow Northwestern district prosecutor's office to the city prosecutor's office for investigation," he said.

The Moscow prosecutor's office told Interfax that the capital's prosecutor Anatoly Zuyev ordered the Klebnikov case to be handled by the gangsterism and murder investigation department. "This is because the investigators from that department have gained vast experience in investigating contract killings," they said.

- - - - - - -

Per Pravda, the Russian prosecutors are linking the Forbes editor's murder with his investigative reporting:

- - - - - - -

The Moscow Prosecutor's Office believes there is a direct link between the murder of Paul Khlebnikov, Editor-in-Chief of the Russian edition of the Forbes magazine, and his investigative reporting, spokespeople for the Prosecutor told RIA Novosti Saturday. Khlebnikov was fatally wounded outside his office late July 9, and he died from the wounds in hospital.

Prosecutor Anatoly Zuyev has reportedly decided to hand the case over to the murder and banditry department of the Moscow Prosecutor's Office. Investigators of this department have vast experience in probing contact killings. Criminal proceedings in connection with Paul Khlebnikov's murder have been launched as pursuant to Article 105 of the Russian Penal Code.

Before being taken to hospital, the journalist told a by-stander that he had been shot at by a man he had seen before. Accounts by other eye-witnesses indicate that Paul Khlebnikov was followed by a dark-colored car. The driver stopped the car ten to fifteen meters away, opened the left-hand window and fired several shots at his victim.

Investigators who worked at the crime scene found nine 9-millimeter shells, one bullet of the same caliber, and other relevant objects, the Moscow Prosecutor's Office says in a press release.

- - - - - - -

The link to the nikita demosthenes post is here.

Posted by nikita demosthenes at July 11, 2004 07:39 PM | TrackBack

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2005-07-08
3:21 PM

Magee, Bryan - The Story of Philosophy

A wonderful overview of great philosophers. I always wanted to read something that will put all those names together into one big picutres. so this was it.

2005-06-21
7:24 PM

Akunin, Boris - Statskiy Sovetnik


ok, i was skeptical about reading him. Mainly because of all the hype. All of a sudden the whole world was reading Akunin and loving it... ohhh boy. so i started. didn't like it at first starts of kinda slow. then it gets to you and you can't put it down until you know who did it. and that's my defenition of a good detective story. All about the pre-war detective Erast Fandorin. ...

2005-06-01
1:33 PM

Sartre, Jean Paul

The Transcendence of the Ego

I believe i read this one in college either in Philosophy class or one of my English classes i don't remember which one the topic of Existentialism came up. Sartre is perhaps the greatest philosopher of 'our' time and is said to be the father of Existentialism movement. This was Sartre's first philosophical book that brushed away phenomenology and presented existential-phenomenology. )His beleafs went along with Nietzsche, who was also existentialist)
some quotes:
"Existence is prior to essence. Man is nothing at birth and throughout his life he is no more than the sum of his past commitments. To believe in anything outside his own will is to be guilty of 'bad Faith.' Existentialist despair and anguish is the acknowledgement that man is condemned to freedom. There is no God, so man must rely upon his own fallible will and moral insight. He cannot escape choosing."

Flies--
it's a play about human guilt and social order. A modern remake of Oresteia.

2005-03-18
2:19 PM

Ridley Matt

Matt Ridley examines the mapping of the human genome.
He describes what the genome is, how it works, and examines how this new knowledge will affect medicine, the pharmaceutical industry, business, politics and our lives. He takes one chromosome for each chapter, assigns a topic to it, intelect for instance, and discusses it in full depth. He examines the most important scientific achievement since the splitting of the atom, Genome makes a useful and entertaining contribution to understanding who we humans are and where we are going.

<a href="http://flysci.com/genome/index.asp">summary here</a>

2005-03-18
2:31 PM

Pope, Alexander - Poems

Pope was an interesting character. He was aflicted with tuberculosis of the bone and thus was very short, hunchedback with severe migranes. He was raised as a Catholic which affected him greatly.

Rape of the Lock - was written to reconcile two families which separated when a lock was cut off from one of the girls in the family.

An Essay on Criticism: - pope philosophizes on the order of nature: "Good nature and good sense must ever join; / To err is human, to forgive divine"

2005-03-15
1:18 PM

Plato

one of the greatest greek philosophers, a student and THE source to Socrates philosophy and life
Republic -- basic question is ask what is Justice, ventures into virtues such as wisdom courage moduration... society, citizen etc

Phaedo -- introduces Forms discusses immortality of the soul

In 'Crito: The Individual and the State' he depicts Socrates final days and returns to the topic of justice, morals, responsibility etc

2005-03-15
1:32 PM

Aristotle

Aristotle's effics

while Aristotle was a student of Plato his views were a bit different than his teacher's. For instance Aristotle believed that you can find universal qualities in particular things while Plato believed that material things are only shadows of true reality, which exists among ideas and forms.

Aristotle's Effics addresswes the nature of the good life for a human being.

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