Friday, October 23, 2020

Beers & Books XXII

Monsieur Nicolas;
Or, The Human Heart Unveiled:
The Intimate Memoirs of Restif de la Bretonne


Rétif de la Bretonne (23 October 1734 – 3 February 1806)

 

10 comments:

  1. Looks like my kind of beer. The pipe? - No. The book? - I will never know.

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  2. I think this one had 6,5%, which was just about okay with me. The one with 9% was too strong for my taste.
    The meerschaum pipe – I was never a passionate pipe smoker – is but a dust catching accessoire.
    The book? Interesting, but it will not make it among my top 100.

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    1. And, let's say, which ten might compete for your number one slot? To ask for an actual No. 1 might be stupidly restrictive. I am guessing Ulysses and Don Quixote might be in with a chance (Aileen the Alien not so :( :)

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    2. I am playing with the thought. Quite sure, though, each book having its own "magic", there would be no number one.
      But you are not wrong with your guessing.
      As for Aileen: I am playing with the thought not only to order the complete oevre, but to read it in 2021.

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    3. I await the results of your playing (re top 10) with interest (and maybe accompanied by your top ten beer bottles - with only one opened at most). A challenge for you to consider.

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    4. That would – for several reasons – be a tough challenge. I shall think about it.

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  3. A big, big hooray for books - books which live on long after their creators. Which sounds like an excellent epitaph to me.

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    1. A book being translated and published two hundred centuries after one's death – a pity one cannot buy one's own books then.

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  4. Oh! la la...Retif is quite a discovery, Sean. Reading about the content of his numerous books, I can understand why they were not included in my Nun's College Literature Course. Now, of course, I'm infinitely curious. But I doubt I'll ever be able to get the books in any libraries and bookstores in Toronto. You're so privileged to own them. It looks like they are in French?

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  5. Ah, Claude, the pious nuns will have hidden it from your eyes in their "poison cabinet".
    I do have the excellent German translation being published three years ago with about "but" one third of the origianal volume.
    The French original got published as a hardcover in 1989 by Gallimard. It has 1872 pages, which are 203 more than the 1669 pages that will become his opus magnum "Pre-Assyrian Philately in a Nutshell", as soon as Tetrapilotomos will have finished the proof-reading.
    ISBN-10: 2070111709; ISBN-13: 978-2070111701

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