Tag Archives: book

BOOKLUST: Archie Grand Notebooks

17 Sep

Does it still count as booklust if there aren’t actually any words on the inside? I have decided it does. These notebooks from Archie Grand are probably not the most useful (how many Equestrians do you meet in any given day) but they sure do look  good.

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I’m thinking that the only people this one might actually be useful for would be Elizabeth Taylor and that crazy Indonesian lady I heard about the other day who was getting married for something like the 27th time. You’d be forgiven for losing track of them once you hit the 5th or 6th mark.

Note the use of liked instead of like. It is probably safe to assume that if you were once married to someone that you did actually like them at some stage, however short that stage might have been.

I’m guessing these ones are for display purposes only.

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Either that or the pages are glued together.

BOOKLUST: ‘Panic Stations’ – Illustrations by Jean-Jacques Sempé

10 Jun

I was first introduced to the illustrations of Jean-Jacques Sempé during high school French lessons. Although the languages department suffered from a serious lack of interest from the students while I was there (my French class had four students) we were lucky enough to have access to some great books which had survived from a time when languages enjoyed a higher level of participation. Among them were the ‘Le Petit Nicholas’ books written by René Goscinny (creator of the Astérix comic book) with illustrated provided by Sempé.

Sempé’s illustrations have appeared on the cover of The New Yorker magazine numerous times and appeared regularly in Paris Match, a weekly french magazine. He has also illustrated 28 compilations of cartoons and has created illustrations for 18 books.

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Phaidon has recently released ‘Panic Stations’, the fifth collection of sketches and cartoons by Sempé. The subject matter of the anthology ranges from his favourites – “unspoken truths, failed communications and hidden talents” and also features some new characters such as artists, psychoanalysts and married couples who appear alongside “unpredictable children, tyrannical computers and surprisingly friendly aliens”.

What I particularly like about Sempé is his subtle and conscious use of colour (when he use it at all). His illustrations are simple and unpretentious and often remind me of the illustrations of Hergé (creator of ‘Les Aventures de Tintin’). It is entirely possible that Sempé drew inspiration from the work of Hergé who begun work on Tin Tin in 1929 and continued the comic until his death in 1983.

‘Panic Stations’ is available from Phaidon for $39.95AUD.

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Unfortunately the images Phaidon provided from ‘Panic Stations’ were tiny so here is a selection of illustration from one of his children’s books, ‘Martin Pebble‘.

KANYE: I don’t read books, but I do write them.

31 May

51KaOax-ZML._SL500_AA240_When asked why he doesn’t read, Kanye West stated that “sometimes people write novels and they just be so wordy and so self-absorbed.” Am I the only one who is worried that a person who is unable to construct a simple sentence has been allowed to write and publish a book?  Also, he seems to be confusing the novel with it’s distant cousin, the autobiography.

His book of ‘Kanye-isms’ is a collection of ‘thoughts and theories’ including the enlightening motto “[l]ife is 5% what happens and 95% how you react!” I find it surprising that he can be so vocal about his anti-intellectualism despite the pride and respect he voices for his mother, particularly in his song ‘Hey Mama’ (in which sings ‘I promise you I’m goin’ back to school’), considering she was university English professor before giving it all up to manage his music career.

You can buy his book, entitled “Thank You and You’re Welcome” from Amazon. Just quietly, I wouldn’t recommend it.

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