A Love Supreme

© 2012 Proper Manky

Digging deep into one of jazz history’s finest albums ever. Of unbelievable intensity. Almost some kind of holy object. Somehow, as if by magic, everything comes together here. There’s so much empathy, respect, and understanding between the musicians. It’s simple and straightforward, it’s insanely complex. For some, it’s perhaps hard to listen to at first but it’s so immensely human. Touching, really. Ashley Kahn’s book about the album covers it perfectly.

As Elvin Jones, the drummer in the A Love Supreme quartet, is quoted to have said: “It’s unique. In a sense, it’s not even jazz. […] It’s totally spiritual: old people can appreciate it, little kids who haven’t been indoctrinated into music in any way can appreciate it. Every time someone hears it, that music touches them somehow.” True that.

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Alonso Cueto – The Blue Hour (La hora azul)

Done reading.

Fantastic novel about a lawyer in Lima who uncovers his father’s brutal story as a high colonel in the Peruvian Armed Forces. About the country’s recent sordid past and the struggle against the Sendero Luminoso in the 1980s. Named for the hour of first light, this is a sweeping novel about a flawed but in the end sympathetic character (“I felt like a puppet of myself”) and his search for his deceased father’s story, his own family, a mysterious woman from Ayacucho, and ultimately himself. Part history lesson, part love story. Deeply moving and hard to put down. One of the better books to come out (in translation) this year. I got my copy from Amazon UK.

One review is here.

The book contains this short story that the main character wrote at some point:

Cueto has a way with picturesque descriptions. A small sample:

They’ll recognise me or my wife Claudia. My wife Claudia. It feels strange calling her that as though she was a stranger. The arc of her name reminds me of a rainbow – at least that’s what I told her last night.

[His wife’s aunt] liked to wear flowery dresses; she seemed determind to wear fabrics that represented all the gardens, forests and jungles of the world. She had dresses with creepers, lianas, bunches of flowers, grasses, but also tigers, butterflies and horses. I sometimes felt as though you could put on a hat, fill a water bottle, pay the entrance fee and step inside her dress for a safari. […]

As we were having coffee, I moved my hand too quickly and knocked the cup all over [her] dress. She threw up her hands and gave a shriek. The flower-print dress was streaked with coffee like dirt tracks through the forest. […]

‘It’s perfect,’ I said, pointing to her dress. ‘A perfect little path to go for a walk in the countryside, don’t you think?’ Then I bent down with a napkin to wipe her dress, but couldn’t stop myself from saying aloud, ‘If you didn’t wear dresses that make you look like a deranged parrot, I wouldn’t have been distracted.’ As I said it, I saw the words hang in the air, like a trail of red letters over the astonished company, and they seemed so alien to me I didn’t say anything more.

In winter, Lima takes the concept of misery to its highest level. […] Objects have no form. The sea is the sky. The ground is the air. The color of winter is not grey, it is the absence of color. Lima in winter might be said to be the grandeur of desolation. For all things that exist, Lima exalts towards nothingness.

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Brussels Bistro

Despite having a massive shellfish allergy reaction after enjoying their mussels, this tucked away bistro in Laguna Beach is highly recommended. Repeat diners since 2002.

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Valerio Varesi – The Dark Valley

Done reading.

Second in the Commissario Soneri series, now also a popular television drama in Italy. Nice mountain landscape descriptions of the Ligurian Apennines south of the upper Po Valley roughly between Parma and La Spezia on the coast.

Not the best of crime stories but entertaining nonetheless. Published by MacLehose Press, known for quality translations from Italian, Spanish, Polish, Icelandic, French, and Arabic. Lots of good authors there.

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John Lanchester – Capital

Done reading. 

Not abook about money in the strictest sense.  John Lanchester’s latest novel, Capital” *, is set in London and follows the lives of residents of Pepys Road leading up to and during the financial crisis of 2008.

There are many different characters ranging from a professional banker and his wife to the Pakistani owner of a corner store to a graffiti artist modeled on banksy to a Polish handyman and an immigrant traffic warden from Zimbabwe. Lanchester doesn’t write a fast-paced story but he gets into the heads of all his characters and writes with deep empathy and profundidad

* The book contains the phrase “proper manky” meaning something close to the right kind of dirty, not cleaned up or tarted up.

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