Cory Cartwright
Cory Cartwright
The one place that I saw Texier's wines in Paris the list was done by an America. Texier told us he exports some 90% of his wines.
Octavine (2 Impasse du Bureau, 75011 Paris) has some old (1970s) bottles of Via Tondonia.
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
Take the train to Lyon. My wife was just there and enjoyed this place: http://www.georgesfive.com/.
originally posted by Brad Kane:
Now there's a relief. I saw the title and thought, Oh. I see Sharon wrote something about my trip to Paris.
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
Take the train to Lyon. My wife was just there and enjoyed this place: http://www.georgesfive.com/.
Wow, great list! I'd heard good things about the wine store that is affiliated with them, as well. Time to head back to Lyon.
Any suggestions on recommended English translations would be appreciated.
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
Jonathan, I don't know why you object to the title The Stranger, but then again, I haven't read Camus in ages.
I tend to agree with Mark Lipton (what else is new?), and am reminded sometimes of Michel Butor's description of Thomas Mann: that the ideology in his novels "dpasse en des hernies disgracieuses" sticks out like ungainly hernias.
+1 (both paragraphs)originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
I don't think the title refers to Meursault's either being in some sense unknown and from somewhere else to his society, which is what the word means usually in English. I don't even think it means he's strange as in bizarre, though he is that. It means he's an outsider, an alien, someone who doesn't belong, a foreigner psychologically. When I first read the book in English, I genuinely didn't understand the title for that reason.
I agreed with Mark about La Peste as well. But it's an allegory and allegories are virtually by definition insistent on their meanings or they'd be indecipherable. I like Thomas Mann too, though if Butor was speaking of Doctor Faustus (I don't know the quote), then I might agree.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
Jonathan, I don't know why you object to the title The Stranger, but then again, I haven't read Camus in ages.
I tend to agree with Mark Lipton (what else is new?), and am reminded sometimes of Michel Butor's description of Thomas Mann: that the ideology in his novels "dpasse en des hernies disgracieuses" sticks out like ungainly hernias.
I don't think the title refers to Meursault's either being in some sense unknown and from somewhere else to his society, which is what the word means usually in English. I don't even think it means he's strange as in bizarre, though he is that. It means he's an outsider, an alien, someone who doesn't belong, a foreigner psychologically. When I first read the book in English, I genuinely didn't understand the title for that reason.
I agreed with Mark about La Peste as well. But it's an allegory and allegories are virtually by definition insistent on their meanings or they'd be indecipherable. I like Thomas Mann too, though if Butor was speaking of Doctor Faustus (I don't know the quote), then I might agree.
How about "The Estranged" or "The Estranged One" for an alternate title?
originally posted by Yule Kim:
You must admit that the "The Estranged" is a wee bit pithier than "one furtive lagrimation."
Doesn't estranged imply one belonged at some prior point?originally posted by Yule Kim:
You must admit that the "The Estranged" is a wee bit pithier than "one furtive lagrimation."
originally posted by MLipton:
The Plague is, on balance, my preferred Camus novel: his penchant for didactic prose is kept to a minimum there, IMO. Even there, though, the allegory is rather heavy-handed, though that problem may lie more with the translator (they're a shifty lot, I hear). I would feel greater sympathy re your vinous isolation were it not for my existence here in vinous No Man's Land (though I did just spot bottles of the '06 Drouhin Chorey, a wine that impressed us greatly over Xmas, for sale at a local retailer's).
Best of luck on your quest,
Mark Lipton
originally posted by scottreiner:
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
Take the train to Lyon. My wife was just there and enjoyed this place: http://www.georgesfive.com/.
Wow, great list! I'd heard good things about the wine store that is affiliated with them, as well. Time to head back to Lyon.
mother fu**er, that is a great list!!!
originally posted by Scott Kraft:
Funny, I've always thought Bellow was IDEA LITE.
originally posted by Bwood:
originally posted by Scott Kraft:
Funny, I've always thought Bellow was IDEA LITE.
Apparently he would have viewed that comment as a compliment!