Readiscovery

What I've read and discovered

  • The Glamour of Grammar

    The Glamour of Grammar sounds like an oxymoron, but there is a link between the two words, says the author, Roy Peter Clark.  He explains: The bridge between the words glamour and grammar is magic. According to the OED (Oxford English Dictionary), glamour evolved from grammar through an ancient association between magic and enchantment. There

    Read more

  • The Pregnant Widow by Martin Amis is a romp of an autobiographical novel with all the sex any young man could want. The hero, Keith Nearing, is an Englishman in his 50s looking back on an idyllic summer holiday in Italy when he turned 21 surrounded by permissive, pulchritudinous girls.

    Read more

  • If you love to read, read The Shallows by Nicholas Carr. His views on what the internet is doing to our brains have been disputed by others. If you love the internet, you won’t like it when he argues the internet encourages cursory reading. We flit from one web page to another, watch videos, check

    Read more

  • Melvyn Bragg on Singlish

    This may be my last post for about a month. I hope to be blogging again from the middle of November. So, before the hiatus, one last post about Singapore. Here is Melvyn Bragg writing about Singapore English. He is an eminent British journalist, who edited the recent issue of The New Statesman magazine, which

    Read more

  • The Lady and The Monk: Four Seasons in Kyoto, by Pico Iyer, is one of the books I have most enjoyed reading this year. Pico Iyer writes beautifully and lovingly of Japan. It is, in fact, a love story. Published in 1992, it’s about a year he spent in Kyoto, where he fell in love

    Read more

  • Poems Singapore

    I saw this book and loved it at first sight. How could I not with its poems about Singapore? It is called Words: Poems Singapore and Beyond and edited by Edwin Thumboo. As luck would have it, the very first page I opened had a poem by him about the transformation of Singapore. The poem,

    Read more

  • Here’s September 1 one day late: September 1, 1939, written by WH Auden in New York when Germany invaded Poland, starting the Second World War. The war produced epic novels and movies. Casablanca was made in 1942, the year America joined the war after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour. Brief Encounter was made in

    Read more

  • People may not remember it, but George W Bush's approval ratings were well over 80 per cent when he declared war on Al Qaeda in Afghanistan in October 2001 following the September 11 tragedy. The ratings chart is from the BBC. Tony Blair cuts to the heart of Bush's appeal back then with this illuminating

    Read more

  • Greene, in fact, thought The Quiet American was superior to The End of the Affair. He said so in his autobiographical Ways of Escape.

    Read more

  • Martin Amis is 61 today. Happy birthday. Here’s his own take on ageing from his latest novel, The Pregnant Widow, published this year. Martin Amis – never amiss with words: This is the way it goes. In your mid-forties, you have your first crisis of mortality (death will not ignore me); and ten years later

    Read more