Nolan Can Read

male-author

November 10, 2023

China In Ten Words

By Yu Hua

I worry sometimes about my Education. I always thought it was like, pretty good, I got good grades in a wide variety of subjects, but then something like The Cultural Revolution comes to the fore and I am just astonishingly...

November 06, 2023

The Aeneid

By Virgil

Pretty good for self-insert fanfic. Better then the Iliad, better in parts and pieces than the Odyssey.

November 02, 2023

The Name Of The Rose

By Umberto Eco

I’ve been keeping a little inventory of books that misuse and abuse the word palimpsest. It is, in my opinion, a bit of a trap of a word - arcane yet evocative, strange sounding with a compelling meaning that is...

October 26, 2023

Treasure Island

By Robert Louis Stevenson

For a boy named Hawkins growing up by the (fresh, decidedly not pirate-infested) water, Treasure Island was a formative and exciting read about a boy named Hawkins traveling the world, finding pirates and treasure and friends. Rereading it to get...

October 24, 2023

Pirate Enlightenment

By David Graeber

This book is a fascinating little history of Madagascar and the kingdoms and societies during the golden age of piracy. I (and I imagine I am not unique here) know little of this corner of the world and corner of...

October 22, 2023

The Drawing Of The Three

By Stephen King

The second book in The Gunslinger series is less engaging. It is more ambitious than the previous, with King filling out his patchwork universe with connections to times, places and trends from Our World, that are ultimately not particularly poorly...

October 20, 2023

The Gunslinger

By Stephen King

Stephen King’s voice is smooth, straightforward, easily digested. Technically, aesthetically, he is quite good at that voice - but I don’t think when it comes down to it, that I care very much for it. It is maybe without flaws,...

October 20, 2023

Rosshalde

By Hermann Hesse

I recently reread Rosshalde because I was curious about an alternative to Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow - an author exploring what it means to live as and pursue art in a non-linguistic medium. I found what feels more authentic,...

October 18, 2023

The Wretched Of The Earth

By Frantz Fanon

Brilliant! Thought-provoking and insightful into the forces and structures of decolonialization, and a bit challenging. The prefaces by Sartre and particularly Homi K Bhabha (sesquipedalian though it is) do an excellent job of contextualizing the rest. It is a bit...