Sunday, July 12, 2026

Manasa Devi

goddess of snakes  156 in Ghost-Eye.  4:02 pm  Earlier today in scrolling on Insta I saw weird sculpture of Hercules fighting massive snakes, created by an earlier Danish artist--can I now find that if I search?  after I added Danish it showed up among host of images on google---

Created by the accomplished Danish sculptor Rudolph Tegner, with first edition started in 1919, in plaster.

Over a decade later the artist proposed that it be recrafted in bronze. Duly done, in 1932 it was unveiled not far from the train station. Due to improvement works around the ferries, it was relocated to the water’s edge in 1994.

Like many works of art, it wasn’t universally liked when unveiled. A lovely aside is that apparently it has received the sobriquet of The Little Person Fighting Tax Administration.

this by Permia on Trip Advisor

"I was cautious and risk-averse, while she was given to tempting fate--and it was perhaps for these reasons that I was just as intriguing to her as she was to me." 157  Dinu talking about his romance with Durga.  Would fit me and Bela, if instead of political rhetoric it would be dramatic flare.  And incautious travel (most dangerous road in the world in Bolivia in 1998, the road between La Paz and .  . . the name will not come up now.  Maybe later.  

the figures in the Manasa Devi stories are archetypes "who have lives of their own.  They are presences that literally arise out of the land and inscribe their stories upon the world."  Bingo--what Handke is about, has searched for all his life and works.  In his way.  Avoiding the pre-formed variants in the air at the time.  Language about archetypes from F & Jung et al.  

'No, no, Dinu!' she protested.  'Trust me: it's not we who choose the myths that guide our lives; it's they who choose us.  But once you've been chosen, beware, because they'll always be with you.'  161 Shoma to Dinu

came sooner  4:38  the road to Coroico  




Friday, July 10, 2026

His peculiar gift:

a magnetic needle blindly recording invisible storms.   Isabel Fargo Cole

Gurnah:  winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature!  so we guess Ghosh is soon . . . 

Friday the 10th

better part of the afternoon reading Amitav Ghosh's Ghost-Eye.  Missing Handke and Stifter, but this is something amazing.  Dozing too.  Intense headache in the morning.  Colin and Bela played the piano.  Now up to page 111 where Shoma and Husna are in the fish market preparing to fix fish to serve to Varsha. Laced into this story thread have been a number of other stories, cannot keep the family and frienship relationships clear, don't suppose you are supposed to, at least not in the Western realistic fiction way.  

Reserved wheelchair for trip.  Transport chair carry bag delivered today.  

Narrator living in Brooklyn is Dinu.  

Thursday, July 09, 2026

prophecy

Handke's short early play as secular liturgical litany with non-surprise ending:  Every day will be like every other day.  Next in the volume Call for Help.  Finished Shapland's A Room Above a Shop.  Moments but.  

Call for Help gem of early Handke:  No.  Perfect for Burke's theory of the negative.  

Years and years of study of Jung, MBTI and Enneagram prepared him to embrace the explanation of Otroversion as the explanation of explanations, subsuming all others, clarifying more than any other, providing the lifelong arc of insight that had taken him through all eighty-two years.  No. 

oh my goodness.  4:16 pm delightful, restful visit to the dentist earlier, big lunch now, reading about the troubled life and strange writings of Adalbert Stifter, Amitav Ghosh mentioned in the Introduction and the newest novel by Ghosh just delivered to the doorstep.  Nicholas writes about the novel on his blog, that's why I ordered it.  Even though it is hardback.  The other hardback that arrived as well is the very most recent work by Peter Handke,  The Ballad of the Last Guest.  Who is Ghosh and will he be the writer to succeed Handke once I've finished Stifter, and? Reiser?  Isabel Fargo Cole posits Ghosh's essay The Great Derangement against Stifter and she brings in Ursula LeGuin saying the novel is a medicine bag or bundle, "holding things in a particular, powerful relation to one another and to us." Now who is Amitav Ghosh.  I've seen his name.  Ok, his birthday is in two days! born 11 July 1956)[1] is an American[2] writer. wiki and his stature is enormous.  No wonder I need to know about him as soon as possible.  And he passes Handke's test because his interests are not simply historical but geographical, concerning landscape: "It was not intentional, but sometimes things are intentional without being intentional. Though it was never part of a planned venture and did not begin as a conscious project, I realise in hindsight that this is really what always interested me most: the Bay of Bengal, the Arabian Sea, the Indian Ocean, and the connections and the cross-connections between these regions.[19] 

By reading Ghost-Eye I will be on the edge of tomorrow as well as of today. Looking at the table right now I seem to be back into reading five or six books at a time rather than one book at a time.  

Sunday, July 05, 2026

lightbound

 part 2 of My Day in the Other Land

152  Lightbound all around and in the interstices of my soul.  

eyes  "selflessly empathetic, friendly   My heart stood still, and resumed beating a moment later, stronger than ever."   the Good Observer   a form of looking and listening   yawning as only newborns yawn

155  "No one had ever called me his friend that way. "  "and eventually he became my sweetheart" -sister

157 "yonder shore (you read that right, 'yonder')"  "flickering and fluttering on the keyboard of the waves"

5:16 pm finished My Day in the Other Land: A Tale of Demons    was he imagining his own death?  what death might be like if he had been the teller of it as a tale, a gathering of tales?  gentle and lovely story at the lake of being called away from being possessed by demons by a friend, The Observer

reviewers didn't know what to say ----

from Library Journal  

FICTION

The Second Sword: Two Novellas

Farrar. Feb. 2024. 192p. tr. from German by Krishna Winston. ISBN 9780374601447. $27. F
COPY ISBN
Nobel Prize winner Handke (The Fruit Thief) offers two novellas here. In the first, the narrator arrives home after several weeks of travel but leaves shortly after to avenge an insult made to his mother years earlier. What follows is a meandering and idiosyncratic daylong journey through the outskirts of Paris. The narrator encounters neighbors, shares bottles of wine with strangers, and engages children in staring matches, all the while becoming more and more intent on vengeance. In the second novella the narrator, a fruit farmer, has a psychotic breakdown, abandons his farm, and lives in a tent in a cemetery outside of town. His sister keeps an eye on him, and the townspeople view him with equanimity. When he recovers, he travels to a war-torn land across the lake. Mythological and religious imagery abound. Both stories are presented as interior monologues and have a hallucinogenic quality. The unpleasant personalities of the narrators may require persistence on the part of readers. Handke describes grim times but still manages to end on an encouraging note. 
VERDICT The most recent work by a writer who’s celebrated, influential, and controversial in Europe.

Sat the 4th

 Handke uses a great ancient line as epigraph for My Day in the Other Land:  "

"I, the idiot [Gk for private person], setting sail on my own course for the common good.

        ---Pindar, Olympian, XIII, line 49 

life by a thousand epiphanies 

My Day in the Other Land 

143  public space as a sort of fountain of youth 

transformation by a thousand gentle moments / gentle acts / reassurances

145  my oracular pronouncements    the idiot with the gentle gaze  community-enhancing demonic jolts 




Thursday, July 02, 2026

to trail a stranger

 I love the fact that Handke has said more than once how he enjoys trailing a stranger.  Here he describes it in The Second Sword, 84.  "Over the years it had become a kind of sport for me to trail a stranger, out of more than mere curiosity, on a hunch, and also--the decisive factor?--a sense of duty, from Métro line to Métro line, on metropolitan buses to the outskirts and then on the regional bus, and each of those sorties had afforded me richly satisfying hours or half-days, free of interactions or confrontations, and had stayed with me as a source of stories, always ready to be explored anew, far more than a mere pastime."  

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

the family

Finished Wallace's Broom.  Kaminski:  you don't suppose he would choose the books as the family story, do you?  Mother: Virginia Woolf's A Room of One's Own; Father: Sartre's Nausea; Child: Wallace's Broom.   Well, who knows?  Should I read Sartre at last?  Have never read anything by him.  Do I want to browse into Nausea or do I know enough "about" it already?  

starting again into Handke's The Second Sword   avenging  rhythm  place-pleasure 

28 My desire, if I have one at all:  to become aware of something by chance, yet, as described above, incorporate it fully into my imagination, once and for all, and then, under the spell of its image, drift off into a waking dream, awake to a degree unmatched by any other kind of wakefulness. 

glow, glimmer, gleam, even gray! differently  

29 "Could it be Eternal Recurrence?"  --- "No! What I saw, as a term and a thing, was the continuation." --"Eternal?" --- "No, just the continuation.  Onward to the continuation."

30  And I was filled with nameless delight in my current inactivity, and in the prospect of remaining inactive and letting things take their course, and on and on, et cetera and so forth.  

30 June  evening

great visit with Kim today, up from Newburyport and siblings, Olen in CO overseeing the kitchen renov.

How much I am enjoying every line of Handke---

47 And finally I, who usually couldn't bring myself to eat so much as a bite from early in the day until late morning or even early afternoon, actually felt hungry, and under the linden out in the yard consumed an apple, with intense enjoyment, an Ontario, as well as a piece of toasted pain festif from the local bakery, with each smack of my lips (that was how tasty this breakfast was) throwing my head back to gaze into the sky, as if I were enjoying the food of the gods.  I ate the apple as you sometimes eat pears, core and all.  


Sunday, June 28, 2026

the whole line

 333 We are helpless and inefficacious parts of a system until we recognize the existence of the system.


Infinite Jest demands emotional connection and empathy as a cure.  Does Kaminski do this enough?  

Yes, psychiatrist Dr. Rami Kaminski highlights empathy as a defining trait of "otroverts", a personality type he introduced in his book The Gift of Not Belonging: How Outsiders Thrive in a World of Joiners. Rather than lacking social skills, otroverts have an uncanny ability to connect and empathize deeply on a one-on-one basis, although they struggle to belong to social groups.

28 June  4:43 pm Sunday late afternoon

pp 362-378  I just read but can comprehend almost nothing even though the words made sense phrase by phrase and mentioned many things I've read before about but the gist and thrust of these pages and who is telling them evade me.  

I will soldier on.  If I read the book before, I must have stopped reading it about page 350 +/- and tried to find a cliff notes somewhere or speed read the ending or just have given up with it.  Tempted to do that now and go back to Handke.  He's in his early 80s now and writing clearly in folk tale modes.  Would some sugar and chocolate give my brain the clarity it needs? 

449 "Surely you're in a position to see that this eating business masks membranous turmoils far too . . . tumultuous to go into here."    Dr Jay says this 

hmmmm   plain as day, and night