Category Archives: MY Writing
My various thoughts/rants depending on the mood I was in when I wrote them!
Foreign Novel Review: Das Siebte Kreuz – The Seventh Cross
I originally bought The Seventh Cross by Anna Seghers simply because it was on sale in a bookshop in Vienna. Admittedly, this is usually not a good reason to buy a novel but it turned out I had bought myself a real bargain. The Seventh Cross is one of the best books I have ever […]
Continue readingForeign Novel Review: Schachnovelle – The Royal Game
One of my favourite authors, this is Zweig’s last work and probably his most well-known – at least in German speaking Europe. Written just before he and his wife committed suicide while in exile from the Nazis in Brazil, Schachnovelle tells the story of a chess game on board a liner from New York to […]
Continue readingForeign Novel Review: Jeder Stirbt für sich Allein – Alone in Berlin
Alone in Berlin is to quote the German newspaper Der Tagesspiegel, “the literary rediscovery of the century”. Originally written in the autumn of 1946 and in under 4 weeks by the writer Hans Fallada, the novel gives a chilling insight into life under the Nazi regime whilst providing a testament to the endurance of the […]
Continue readingForeign Novel Review: Fabian
Fabian, as its author Erich Kästner insisted, is the story of a moralist even though he clearly lives in immoral times. The book depicts Berlin in the moral decay and chaos that epitomised the dying days of the Weimar Republic just before Hitler and the Nazis take power. This is a Berlin, teetering on the […]
Continue readingForeign Novel Review: Die Groẞe Hitze oder Die Erretung Österreichs durch den Legationsrat Dr Tuzzi – The Great Heat or How Legationsrat Dr Tuzzi Saved Austria
If you want an insight into Austrian humour (and let’s face it, who doesn’t?) then this is the perfect book. I mentioned to the Austrian friend who gave me the book that it would be a nightmare to translate into English, whereupon he noted that it would be a nightmare to translate it into German. […]
Continue readingForeign Film Review: Tirez sur le Pianiste – Shoot the Pianist
The directors behind the French New Wave (la nouvelle vague) had a great love of American movies and Tirez sur le Pianiste is a wonderful pastiche of two great Hollywood genres – gangster movies and film noir. The New Wave was an artistic movement which has had a profound effect on movie making ever since, so […]
Continue readingForeign Film Review: Mephisto
Based on the1936 novel by Klaus Mann, the film charts the rise of an actor – Hendrik Hofgen – who sells his soul to the devil (or his incarnation in 1930s Germany, the Nazis) – to become the most celebrated actor of his day, and ably depicts the price he ultimately pays for fame and […]
Continue readingForeign Film Review: Les 400 Coups – The 400 Blows
Made in 1959 by François Truffaut, Les 400 Coups is one of the most significant films to come out of the French New Wave. If you’re wondering what the title means, don’t. It’s meaningless in English. In French “faire les 400 Coups” means to get into a lot of trouble, to lead a crazy life, to be a […]
Continue readingForeign Film Review: Le Bossu – On Guard
In short, it’s a French swashbuckler movie (think Errol Flynn movie without the tights and set in France at the turn of the 18th century). Being French of course, there’s some nudity and a rather dodgy love story which it gets away with in that way only the French really can. The film stars Daniel […]
Continue readingForeign Film Review: La Reine Margot – Queen Margot
La Reine Margot features many of the then leading lights of French cinema, Isabelle Adjani in the title role, Queen Margot, Daniel Auteuil as King Henri of Navarre, Jean-Hugues Anglade as Charles IX and Vincent Perez as Margot’s protestant lover, de la Môle. Though my knowledge of 16th century French history is shaky at best, […]
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