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March 2024 group read
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Mike
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Feb 03, 2024 10:26AM

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First published 1938 U.S.A. pp 192
Dorothy Baker’s Young Man with a Horn is widely regarded as the first jazz novel, and it pulses with the music that defined an era. Baker took her inspiration from the artistry—though not the life—of legendary horn player Bix Beiderbecke, and the novel went on to be adapted into a successful movie starring Kirk Douglas, Lauren Bacall, and Doris Day.

A Memoir of the Warsaw Uprising is both a work of memory and a work about memory. Miron Białoszewski, the great avant-garde Polish poet, memorializes the doomed uprising of the Polish population against their Nazi masters, which began on August 1, 1944, and was eventually abandoned on October 2, 1944, with the physical destruction of Warsaw, street by street and house by house, and the slaughter of 200,000 civilians. [More if you click on the book...]

I know many of us here enjoyed The Summer Book, so it may be time to sample some more of her work.


This popped up as a recommendation on Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ. Not a book I've come across before. Nor an author I have read before. Thought it looked good. Also seems to be available as audio on Audible;





That's great Cordelia. I will be starting this weekend. I wanted to catch up with book prize reading and finish Rahel Varnhagen: The Life of a Jewish Woman. I will add my thought in another week or so.


I too, liked the novel but was struck at how the plot went. Carpenter seemed to be aiming for a type of realism sèen more in narrative nonfiction than in the genre of hardboiled fiction to which this book belongs. Thus I felt the emotional ups highs and lows that are present in that type of fiction were lessened of their dramatic effect. I also was a bit jarred by the movement from the poolhall storyline to the prison narrative. The poolhall did not seem played out before the author switched it up and I was curious why he decided to change things. But it was a riveting read and quite interesting as a West Coast novel.

Me neither. I have never heard of this author before. Isn't it like that with this series of books. I must look out for others of his.
Sam. I didn't really see this as hard-boiled. I felt that it was really realististic - perhaps heading more towards noir - which I really like.
I didn't have trouble with poolroom vs prison. Same sort of people I suppose.


I had problems with it since the book was following conventions that reflect stories of troubled youth having adventures, getting into trouble etc. but it then followed Jack whose story follows more of the conventions of a prison novel where a troubled sociopathic character (though not totally unredeemable) gets into trouble, goes to prison and tries to survive. I did not feel the author's decision to move from young hooligan conventions to prison conventions helped the novel, though like you I didn't feel it was unwarranted when considering the realism. I do feel it forced the reader to undergo a change in expectation. The prison part allowed the ex-con latter third with the unsuccessful relationship and downbeat ending. Again proponents of realism could claim that is what follows but it gave the book the feeling of earlier American naturalism, something akin to Jack London, Stephen Crane, or Theodore Dreiser, and I am not so sure how I would reflect on this in a year or two. Still well worth reading.
Books mentioned in this topic
Rahel Varnhagen: The Life of a Jewish Woman (other topics)Hard Rain Falling (other topics)
A Memoir of the Warsaw Uprising (other topics)
Young Man with a Horn (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Don Carpenter (other topics)Dorothy Baker (other topics)