"I’m not really sure who I am but I love reading books."
Krzysztof Kieślowski, 1941-1996chromenos
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
been a while
Monday, April 13, 2026
Sierra de Gredos
this arrived and I realized it was published years before The Fruit Thief so I dropped that (few pages in)
and picked up this. Unusual in many ways, hmm, what was he thinking that prompted this one? Main character a woman, a banker, to boot! What's up? But still, a wanderer. Character and her author, a hired biographer. Story, no myth.
"I have always hoped for a commission like this: not a work but a product to deliver. An order.' A man of rhythms? What kind of rhythms? "Above all the rhythms of understanding, that most inclusive of feelings, hand in hand with the rhythm of remaining silent, and leaving things unspoken." 9
this copy very heavy, an ingram printing product, maybe ten years old? very heavy paper, unlike those other recent copies printed in texas two weeks ago.
ok this will be a wild wandering like the Walked Out One Night. Banker, woman, instead of a pharmacist, and she will realize and transform in various ways. No names, no specific landscape, but landscape as dreamscape.
for going to texas I'll take the small book, two novellas, tale of demons and merry month of may unusual in that they are novellas with titles and sub-titles
stroll around Netherwood the other day interesting, depressing. The refined famous house degraded right and left by junky houses built next to it and by the whole neighborhood. Lechusas now has the look and feel of a village. almost even more pleased with and proud of the whole west side
Friday, April 10, 2026
successful day
have done a poor job of reading this essay yesterday but at the point I am at there's this: "Thus, he reflected later, in an attempt at a successful day, everything, at least in moments of misfortune, of pain, of failure, when things were going wrong--the essential was to summon up the presence of mind needed for a different variety of this moment and thus to transform it, by a liberating act of awareness or reflection, whereby the day--as though this were the prerequisite for its success--would acquire it élan and its wings." 271
what follows is worth noting because it goes with the previous post about Lacey and Repetti
"You make it sound as though your successful day were child's play.
No answer."
---
ecstasy meant panic
amazed at the size and emptiness of the toilets in the American Express Company near Opéra
this whole long passage about his day pp 277-278 so wonderful
Day, let everything in you ripen something for me. 281
Unexpectedly, still in the dark, the thrust of joy in carrying on.
this essay on the successful day is Handke's prose poem prayer, his faith in writing, in the day, yes he does quote St Paul but it is the St Paul of "bring me that cloak I left with Carpus at Troas."
See how the snow falls past the empty bird's nest. Arise to transubstantiation. To the next dream?
must re-read the essay some time because I miffed missed reading well the early part of it the second part was successful!!!
now to take up The Fruit Thief back to the dream of story, of narrative flow
tomorrow I can stroll in the Netherwood Park area and see the designated modernist house by Arthur Dekker, built just five years after Milner Mansion on Mackland but a generation apart in mindset. Maybe even two generations if we put Wright in there to buffer Gaw Meem from Mies. 2271 sq ft, 10k sq ft lot 4 bedrooms 2 baths 1961 vs 1966 4 beds 3 (2/12 baths) 2966 sq ft 10+k sq ft lot
how would Handke respond? (Lacey -- Repetti)
someone posted this so I can't resist pasting up a closing segment just to see how it flies
I might suggest for him, hmm, well, what have I been doing for the past fifty years? breakthrough, backthrough, breakbefore
If the writing of fiction is a treatment, what else could that treatment be but a cathartic, a purgative? The things purged in Lacey’s writing are not only strong emotions but also—and more often—ideas, images, phrases associated with those emotions that previously had a merely private and inchoate existence. Their significance remains uninterrogated until they appear on the page, written by her own hand but coming as if from elsewhere. The drama of the memoir side is most palpable in the moments when these purgings happen without conscious effort or warning—when we catch the author surprising herself, when she describes how the act of putting a particular idea, phrase, or feeling in the head, mouth, or body of a character allows her to suddenly recognize that that very thing has always been present in herself, concealed or disavowed. The fiction, likewise, is deepened and intensified upon rereading (like a Möbius strip, you have to go all the way around twice to complete the circuit), when we are compelled to imagine Lacey writing the text and arriving at such moments of spontaneous insight.
This constant return to the scene of writing—this demand that we grasp the text not just as a written thing (this being the demand of classical postmodernism, with its delight in self-reflexive textual play) but also as a writing, as the product of a writer struggling with her material, encoding that struggle into the text itself, and producing some unaccountable hybridity in excess of the “real”—is Lacey’s great breakthrough. Coupled with that is the refusal of the conflation of the person writing (the author-as-mere-author) with the act of writing itself. To write is to pass the material of one’s life through an inscrutable matrix that somehow defies the laws of physics by yielding something more than what went in. In this mysterious sense, something happens when a person writes that is profoundly impersonal. If there is a primal scene of contemporary autofiction, it is this passage through writing from the merely personal to the impersonal—and Lacey has pointed the way there precisely by refusing to write a properly autofictional work.
LARB CONTRIBUTOR
Jon Repetti is a writer and critic living in New York City. He has a PhD from Princeton University and works in publishing.
Wednesday, April 08, 2026
Tiredness
a key essay first published in about 1990 If only I had read it before reading Don Juan because in this essay he gives his whole interpretation of Don Juan as a tale of tiredness, a hero of tiredness
"Tiredness is greater than the self. Everything becomes extraordinary in the tranquillity of tiredness . . . . "
"despite the typically mystical stammering in your way of expressing it" note how stammering would go with shimmering in Handke's dictionary
remember too how was it in jukebox? that he mentioned in passing how St Teresa was of the school of relaxation into quiet surrender versus those who held one should tighten all the muscles of the body to experience God most directly
last image of mankind reconciled in its last moments in cosmic tiredness
holy
For the first time to my knowledge Handke uses the word holy and says I believe in that sort of transfiguration. In the essay on Tiredness after the detailed remembering of the whole village helping to thresh and store the hay into the barn. we-tiredness, the past transfigures
this telling is a pure picture equals in shared tiredness united purified carpenters putting up roofs a people of tiredness the music of clairaudient tiredness
(he decided he wanted to be a writer around age 13, at 23 or 24 he published The Hornets and dropped out of university)
there is no picturable tiredness among the middle class they regard it as a misbehavior like going barefoot (Kim Jones in Madrid as nanny for Pedro and Marga!)
Ray Davies sang I'm Not Like Everybody Else The Kinks godfather of british pop now 82 also knighted
how did I miss The Kinks? and miss this song---is it a pre-anthem for Otroverts ? his face in the b&w photo does look familiar
another ending
Finished Thucydides Once Again yesterday. Love how in the final epic our traveler argues with himself, scolds himself for being annoying, for falling into the trap of looking for big meanings once again, for allowing established arcs of imagery to take over the telling. And he manages to end the wonderful small book of observations on a poignant note because he has been back to Mt St Victoire to wander part that has been recently destroyed by fire and the paths are all gone. "But if resignation, why, then, "additional"? . . . He ends with questions."
Wonder if he wrote these, culled them from his notebooks into a gathering as a counter-statement to the long, rambling essays. Just to do it. Just to show his skill and gifts in a manner opposite the other books.
Now to read the two essays remaining in the Quiet Places. Tiredness and Successful Day. Waiting for the Sierra Gredos volume to show so I can stay with the chronology.
In Tiredness already a line that reminds me of when I lived out in Bethesda or Silver Spring in the house of a woman who rented me a room, what semester or year, the last? at Maryland. "the tiredness of being alone in a rented room on the outskirts; solitary tiredness." 157
Friday, April 03, 2026
amazing final sentence
late afternoon, Friday. Super bright day, high winds have come back. Long nap before and during GH, Bela still there. I just finished Handke's essay on The Juke Box. Surely David Foster Wallace had read it at some time. Since Soria is so important for it and we have spent some time in Soria it had that special resonance even though I remember very little about Soria except being grumpy that we were even there where there clearly was nothing. Ok, the 12th century church of Santo Domingo which Bela kept trying to get me to look at more closely every time we walked around it, the street on the right being so close to it as to almost be shaving off the corner of the building. Photos on google show that they have fixed that, looks like they made it all pedestrian zone all around the church. Neither of us can recall exactly why we ever spent some time in Soria. Machado yes, but nothing of Valle-Inclán. My only notable memory is of a long walk I took down along the river, wide stretches of reeds in the shallow edges on both sides. Some young women, teenagers were playing around ahead of me and across on the other side at a distance, it was the town side, a man, middle-aged, appeared in the tall reeds, almost hidden but not quite enough, stood still and then moved slightly in very familiar bodily movements, he was masturbating as he watched the young girls far across the river.
So Handke weaves all around his topics, juke boxes and geologies and Soria and how place and the spark of writing and of completing a piece of writing are all involved in the details of places. He has found Soria of all places has one Chinese restaurant. The essay closes with this sentence which the great translator had rendered so well I can understant what Michael Lentz meant when he praised Handke's magnificent writing style in German. "The young girl, otherwise idle, was painting Chinese letters into a notebook at the next table, one close to the other, in a writing far more even than his own during these weeks (not only the storm gusts, the rain and the darkness when he took notes outdoors, since he had been at work, had ruined it), and as he kept watching her, a girl who had to feel incomparably more foreign than he did in this area, in this Spain, he sensed with amazement that he had only now really set out from the place he came from."
This almost took my breath away and with some tears. How powerful this is exactly because I have been reading his work in timeline order and so I have seen him repeat and repeat so many large and small details over and over in various ways. In this essay he mentions the woman who invited him to share experience, sex, love, with him, in Alaska at a bar where they saw each other. In his other work he allows his imagination to flesh out what happened, in this essay he explains that it did not happen, after all, but it might have and maybe it should have. She takes him out to the parking lot where her Land Cruiser is parked. "And in this moment it became clear to him that for once in his life there was a decision imagined not by him alone but by someone else; . . . . it was the moment when Percival hovered on the verge of the question that would prove his salvation, and he? on the verge of the corresponding Yes. And like Percival, and not because he was uncertain---he had that image, after all--but as if it were innate and quite proper, he hesitated, and in the next moment the image, the woman, had literally vanished into the snowy night." 229
wow, such writing such consciousness, awareness of one's consciousness, recalled & reconstructed & situated within the tale of Percival It is from Chretien de Troyes Perceval: The Story of the Grail. He hesitates to ask why the spear bled, why the king suffers, and fails in his quest. (ok had to look that up)
"as if it were innate and quite proper" a result of his naive adherence to advice against speaking too much
Wednesday, April 01, 2026
1 April
Well, I just finished Handke's Don Juan. But did I even read it? It is short and slight and yesterday and the day before I was passing my eyes over passages, pages, without letting them in very much or taking me out very much. But this afternoon, the wind howling and raging outside, I did comprehend the final twenty or so pages, or pretended to get them somewhat clearly, with sufficient attention to declare that the book is after all wholly in line with April Fool's Day. It is not a joke, this tale, no, but it jokes and pokes and slips and slivers all over the place. Of course, non-euro that I am, I am barely informed about Don Juan and I have no lifetime store of info or feeling coming from the whole body of lore found in the operas and plays and re-tellings and embellishments---Racine, Molier, Mozart et al. Later this summer I can ask my French grandchildren to tell me all about Don Juan and Eliot now 12 will fill me in and Emma will instruct me in all the nuances of his stories. So now I am finished with this little book and I know enough about Handke to know how much I have missed even if I know how many of his pet peeves, moves, memes and steps I recognize from all of his other books. Took a look on youtube at a longish movie made about him when he was really young--in 1975. He had made a good amount of money, 100k franks with the Slow Homecoming and other books and lived large with his six year old daughter in a noble apartment in the 16th! His hair is long and his manner superbly brilliant, quick and confident, and puzzled and puzzling.
We both enjoyed the visit with Dr Mirta this morning. She's referring Bela to an orthopedic surgeon to explore hip surgery. We now live once more with the transport chair and pivots. Bela was able to walk into the shower this morning and get dressed in the usual manner. All the stuff I ordered for bed care has arrived so we are stocked for further catastrophe. What will happend and what will be the timeline? Have to give up trying to figure that, imagine it, or plan for it. Let things happen as they will. We both seem to sleep in strange clumps of time. Breaking Bad has taken over our lives and we have at last only the last season to finish up. General Hospital guides us each day with its love and wisdom.
I posted one of those photos of all my books stacked up to compete with the other performative male readers on the social media sites. In the Ortovert quiz I said I never use those things but I realize that indeed I do, so I guess my point score might rise from 243 out of 280 up to 248 or 250. Should take the quiz a few weeks from now.
What next? Complete the essays in Quiet Places and wait for the Thucydides book to get here. The Don Juan has a whole anti-women section that surely enraged lots of readers---but by 2004 when it appeared being the provocateur was well established in Handke's quiver of personas and arrows, and having the women be avengers and destroyers fit perfectly both the feminism and anti-feminism of the times and of the inner logic of the whole Don Juan figure of legend and culture.
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
Monday 30th
Bela's hip has given out, in some pain with it. Rested in bed earlier. Made it to the table for lunch, in the blue recliner all afternoon, both took long naps. Almost 5 now.
Finished Handke's mushroom essay. He says his essays are as slow as a milk train near dawn.
page 135 would type out the long paragraph. Fit my needs earlier when I was ordering toilet supplies and fearing what might be next.
Shakespeare "so consciousness doth make maniacs of us all"
embrace taking things as they came, laissez-faire, not interfering
at every moment, horrifyingly and ceaselessly aware---instead of letting things go, leaving welll enough alone
well these words had more resonance in the terror of the moment earlier---is this it? will Bela be bedridden from now on?
one rose on each of our rose bushes, red in front, pink in the back