Stanlio

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Jack Kerouac: Sulla Strada
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
- The novel, constructed in 5 parts and written in the form of episodes, is set in the late 1940s and describes the youth of the cultural movement of the Beat Generation, traveling across the vast territory of the USA.
- JK wrote the book at the age of 29, from April 2 to April 22, 1951, in three weeks, fueled solely by coffee, based on a series of notes collected during his travels.
- It was typed on a 36-meter long roll of paper, which was given to him.
- The "scroll" was auctioned off in 2001 for a price exceeding two million dollars.
- Rejected by several publishing houses, always under McCarthyite censorship, it was read by Malcolm Cowley, who obtained from the author revisions of several passages and the replacement of real names with fictional names, and recommended its publication in 1957. (I wasn't even born yet, and they call me old...)
Jack Kerouac: Il dottor Sax
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
It's a novel from 1959 considered by JK to be his best novel, telling the story of a Franco-Canadian boy from New England. It represents the literary transposition of the author himself as he relives the dreams, nightmares, and fantasies of his childhood.
Jack Kerouac: Visioni di Cody
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
There is a significant part of the hallucinatory conversations between Kerouac and Cassady under the influence of marijuana...
Jack Kerouac: I sotterranei
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
"Once upon a time I was young and up-to-date and clear-headed, and I could talk about everything with nervous intelligence and clarity and without all the rhetorical preambles I now indulge in; in other words, this is the story of a disillusioned person who is no longer in control of himself, and at the same time, the story of an egomaniac, by nature and not for jest — this is just to start off from the beginning in an orderly fashion and to elucidate the truth, because that is precisely what I want to do."

(Jack Kerouac, On the Road, Feltrinelli, Milan 1992)
Jack Kerouac: I vagabondi del Dharma
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
It represents the ideal continuation of the novel "On the Road." "The Dharma Bums" condenses vast meditations on Buddhism, thus forming the apology of the mysticism of the beat generation. The protagonists are the beats: Jack Kerouac-Raymond (Ray) Smith, Allen Ginsberg-Alvah Goldbook, Neal Cassady-Cody Pomeray, Gary Snyder-Japhy Ryder.
Jack Kerouac: Big Sur
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
In the novel, the three brief stays in the cabin owned by his friend, the Beat poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti, on Bixby Canyon in Big Sur, a location in Central California, are summarized.

In the novel, all the characters are mentioned by an alias; in Kerouac's case, "Jack Duluoz."

Kerouac's autobiographical character is no longer presented, as in previous novels, as a bohemian traveler, but rather as a popular writer.
Jack Kerouac: Satori a Parigi
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
It is a short autobiographical story about a man who visits Paris and then Brittany in search of his roots.
Jack London: Martin Eden
Cartaceo I have it
- It tells the difficult life of a working-class boy, a sailor whose name gives the title to the novel, who desperately struggles to become a writer, inspired and supported in this by his love for "Bellezza" and for Ruth, a young daughter of the upper middle class in San Francisco. The class difference between the two young people and the related difficulties for Martin to be accepted as a possible husband for Ruth by her family will allow London to expose many of his theories, as he was a convinced socialist.

- The novel contains a strong critique of the cynical capitalism that prevailed at the time and had forced many Americans into a life of misery and makeshift solutions. (it wiki)
Jack Nitzsche: The Hot Spot
CD Audio I have it ★★★★★
Original motion picture soundtrack, this is a true rare gem that I recommend. It features John Lee Hooker and Miles Davis duetting alongside two other great names in blues, Taj Mahal and Roy Rogers.

It is the soundtrack of the eponymous beautiful film from ’90 directed by the esteemed Dennis Hopper.
Jacques Bacot: La vita di Marpa il Traduttore
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
Marpa the Translator (1012-1096), known in the West primarily as the irritable and discontented master who subjected his favorite disciple Milarepa to unheard-of labors before granting him any teachings, was among those who contributed the most to transplanting Indian Buddhism in Tibet.
Three times he left Tibet to undertake perilous journeys through Nepal and India in search of manuscripts and masters who could clarify the obscure doctrines of the Tantras.
Among the many extraordinary encounters, the one with Naropa was decisive; after instructing him and testing him with enigmatic messages, disconcerting visions, and wondrous apparitions, he designated him as his spiritual successor. (cit. Adelphi)
- Milarepa was a magician, poet, and hermit. He became one so completely that Tibetans struggle not to separate these three characters, and depending on their perspective as magicians, laypeople, or religious figures, Milarepa is their greatest magician, poet, or saint. (Jaques Bacot)
- One of those precious texts upon which, with each new reading, one measures what has been understood in the meantime. (René Daumal)
- The Life of Milarepa is a biography - the oldest one that has been handed down - by UgTsang smyon He-ru-ka about the Buddhist monk, mystic, and yogi master Milarepa.
James Joyce: Gente di Dublino
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
The protagonists of the book are people from Dublin, whose stories of everyday life are narrated. Despite the banality of the subject, the book aims to focus attention on two aspects common to all the stories: paralysis and escape. The first is primarily a moral paralysis, caused by the politics and religion of the time. The escape is a consequence of the paralysis, at the moment when the protagonists understand their condition. (from wiki)
James Joyce: Ulisse
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
Ulysses is the story of a day, June 16, 1904, of a group of Dublin inhabitants. Joyce chose this date because it was the day when Nora Barnacle, his future wife, realized she was in love with him. The characters, by seemingly randomly crossing each other's lives, determine the unfolding of events, and describe it through a continuous stream of inner monologue.

Joyce, having anticipated this, said he had "inserted so many enigmas and puzzles into the plot that they would keep scholars busy for centuries discussing what I meant" - which would make the story "immortal." (from wiki)

I have never finished this book, but I have started it several times over the past 30/35 years; however, I won’t give up, and soon I will dive back into it because it is sooo important...
James M. Cain: Mildred Pierce
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
How cruel, and blind, that sweet mother’s heart is.
Muddy and hypnotic, the novel where the American dream turns into damnation.
The story of a woman determined not to succumb in the years of the Depression becomes the dark mirror of a society where work does not liberate, but makes one a slave and a torturer, where oppression is a habit, and violence is always imminent. (quoted Einaudi)
James M. Cain: La morte paga doppio
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
The cynical Walter Huff becomes infatuated with Phyllis, the wife of Nirdlinger, one of his clients. A sordid affair arises between the two: with the lover's complicity, Walter devises a plan to get Nirdlinger to sign a life insurance policy, then stages a simulated accident. Although the plan is crafted down to the smallest detail, things start to unravel immediately after the murder. As the police and insurance agents investigate the case, not entirely convinced of the circumstances of Nirdlinger's death, the feelings between Walter and Phyllis dissipate rather quickly; the man soon realizes that the woman has skillfully used him from the very beginning. He thought he was the mastermind of the plan, but in reality, he was merely a pawn in the woman's diabolical scheme. (quoted from Wiki)
James M. Cain: Il postino suona sempre due volte
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
This story, almost unbearably stripped of a devastating passion – set in a rundown gas station on a highway... (quote from Adelphi)
Posthumously published on March 5, 1971, after Jimi's death, it mainly consists of unfinished material.
  • Stanlio
    7 sep 17
    All tracks are by Jimi Hendrix.

    Side A
    1 - Freedom - 3:24
    2 - Drifting - 3:46
    3 - Ezy Ryder - 4:09
    4 - Night Bird Flying - 3:50
    5 - My Friend - 4:40

    Side B
    6 - Straight Ahead - 4:42
    7 - Astro Man - 3:37
    8 - Angel - 4:25
    9 - In from the Storm - 3:42
    10 - Belly Button Window - 3:34

    Musicians:
    Jimi Hendrix: vocals, guitar, backing vocals on tracks 3 and 9, piano on track 1, production for all tracks except track 5
    Billy Cox: bass on all tracks except 5 and 10
    Mitch Mitchell: drums on all tracks except 3, 5, and 10, posthumous production
    Juma Sultan: percussion on tracks 1, 4, and 7
    Buddy Miles: drums on track 3
    Noel Redding: bass on track 5

    Other musicians:
    The Ghetto Brothers: choir on track 1
    Buzzy Linhart: vibraphone on track 2
    Billy Armstrong: percussion on track 3
    Steve Winwood: choir on track 3
    Chris Wood: choir on track 3
    Kenny Pine: 12-string guitar on track 5
    Jimmy Mayes: drums on track 5
    Stephen Stills: piano on track 5
    Paul Caruso: harmonica on track 5
    Emeretta Marks: backing vocals on track 9
From the back cover:
Destined to become one of the classics of Polish literature, this work written in French at the beginning of the 1800s has had one of the most singular journeys that the history of literature remembers. It is due to the well-known critic and writer Roger Caillois that it was rediscovered for the Western reader by publishing in France, in 1958, the part of the original text that has reached us, and prefacing it with an introduction that recounts the complicated history of the book: a tale of lost manuscripts, of partial publications in Petersburg and Paris, of subsequent plagiarism (involving some illustrious names, such as Charles Nodier and Washington Irving) that led to a small scandal among intellectuals and a trial. (continued...)
  • Stanlio
    17 nov 17
    (... continues the twist)
    Of the full text, which has been lost, there exists only a Polish translation, for over a century now, the faithfulness of which we cannot ascertain. Jan Potocki, the author of this book, is a Polish nobleman, belonging to the cosmopolitan high society of the late eighteenth century, at home in all the capitals of Europe, a curious and observant traveler who spends a long time in Morocco and even ventures, following a Russian embassy, to the borders between Mongolia and China. An enlightened politician, connected to Jacobin circles, later a private counselor to Tsar Alexander I, an indefatigable scholar of antiquities, author of lucid travel reports and historical-ethnographic works (he is now considered one of the founders of Slavic archaeology), Potocki expressed the exquisitely morbid undercurrent of his temperament in the Manuscript Found in Saragossa, a work of imagination that occupied him during the last twelve years of his life, until his suicide in 1815.
    The Manuscript is a series of ghost stories, encapsulated within one another like Chinese boxes: “a black Decameron,” one might call it, which however detaches itself from the superficial and gratuitous decorative style of romantic “horror” to reach the hallucinatory suggestion of great indecipherable symbols. Within it are found all the elements of black romanticism: outlaws and gypsies, gallows and cabalists, mysterious caves and disreputable inns, scandalous loves and diabolical apparitions; but the attentive reader will not fail to notice how this traditional armamentarium succumbs to the author’s underlying ambivalence, who, on one hand, feels the attraction of the magical and even the macabre, while on the other feels the “enlightenment” need to liberate himself from it. In this intimate tension, a visionary force creates figures and fables that resonate deeply with us, cutting through situations that are frankly comical, farcical, often purely libertine. The surprising effects that emerge from it, perhaps also due to the Spanish atmosphere pervading the stories, vividly evoke in our minds the name of Goya, whom Potocki knew and to whom a portrait of his is attributed.
    Pushkin was fascinated by the Manuscript, so much so that he began a translation in verse. But it is only today, after Caillois’s rediscovery, that this book has revealed itself to us as one of the most precious links in that chain of narrative which, starting from Galland's One Thousand and One Nights, and passing through Beckford's Vathek, arrives at the unrestrained fantasies of Hoffmann and the dream-like literature of our days.
  • Stanlio
    17 nov 17
    writes Maria Giovanna Assumma on Facebook: A book that is more books like Russian nesting dolls! A journey through all genres: coming-of-age novel, picaresque, erotic, fantastic, noir... Wonderful!
  • nes
    22 nov 17
    "A book that is more books like Russian nesting dolls! " I hope the esteemed Assumma won't take offense, but the concept could not have been expressed in a worse form.
  • Stanlio
    22 nov 17
    In fact, you’re not entirely wrong; even the phrase "A journey through all genres:" seems a bit too pretentious to me, as I don’t believe it touches on every single genre, but if someone who teaches says so, it must be possible... I found this description on ibiskoseditricerisolo.it after she published her first book, which describes her as follows:
    Maria Giovanna Assumma was born in Airola, in the province of Benevento.
    She has taught Italian and Latin at the Classical High School and has always dedicated herself to the study and deepening of the humanities and visual arts.
    She lives in Naples and Verso l’orizzonte is her first publication.

    Let’s hope that the concepts expressed in her book are less unfortunate...
Jerry Harrison: Casual Gods
Nastro Audio I have it ★★★★★
Second solo album by the guitarist who first played with The Modern Lovers, then with the Talking Heads, and finally with The Heads. Here, JH sings and plays the keyboards as well; the third track "Man with a Gun" was featured in the dramatic film "Congiunzione di due lune" ("Two Moon Junction" from 1988, which marked the debut of then thirteen-year-old Milla Jovovich), and in instrumental version in Jonathan Demme's cult road movie "Something Wild" ("Qualcosa di travolgente" starring Melanie Griffith, Jeff Daniels & Ray Liotta).
  • Lao Tze
    26 sep 17
    Well done to talk about it, this is Jerry's best with 'The Red and The Black' from 7 years earlier.
Jimi Hendrix: Blues
CD Audio I have it ★★★★★
Blues is a posthumous collection, consisting of eleven tracks recorded between 1966 and 1970, seven original compositions by Hendrix and four covers of famous songs, most of the material consists of studio outtakes, originally not intended for release.

Tracks:
Hear My Train A Comin' (Electric) (Jimi Hendrix) - 3:05
Born Under a Bad Sign (Booker T. Jones, William Bell) - 7:37
Red House (Jimi Hendrix) - 3:41
Catfish Blues (Traditional, arr. Hendrix) - 7:46
Voodoo Chile Blues (Jimi Hendrix) - 8:47
Mannish Boy (Muddy Waters, Mel London, Ellas McDaniel) - 5:21
Once I Had a Woman (Jimi Hendrix) - 7:49
Bleeding Heart (Traditional, arr. Hendrix) - 3:26
Jelly 292 (Jimi Hendrix) - 6:25
Electric Church Red House (Jimi Hendrix) - 6:12
Hear My Train A Comin' (Live) (Jimi Hendrix) - 12:08
  • Stanlio
    13 sep 17
    Jimi Hendrix: guitars, vocals
    Billy Cox: bass on Born Under a Bad Sign, Mannish Boy, Once I Had a Woman, Bleeding Heart, Jelly 292, and Hear My Train a Comin' (Electric)
    Noel Redding: bass on Red House, Catfish Blues, and Electric Church Red House
    Buddy Miles: drums on Born Under a Bad Sign, Mannish Boy, Once I Had a Woman, Bleeding Heart, and Electric Church Red House
    Mitch Mitchell: drums on Red House, Catfish Blues, Voodoo Chile Blues, Jelly 292, Electric Church Red House, and Hear My Train a Comin' (Electric)
    Jack Casady: bass on Voodoo Chile Blues
    Steve Winwood: organ on Voodoo Chile Blues
    Sharon Layne: organ on Jelly 292
    Lee Michaels: organ on Electric Church Red House
The novel tells the story of a married couple who, living with his friend and her niece, face the disintegration of their relationship and the formation of two new couples, which in a very short time will split up due to a series of adverse events, leading to a tragic conclusion. (from wiki)
John Fante: La strada per Los Angeles
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
"Attention: the one who will appear at the beginning of this novel, in the role of a humble ditch digger, is one of the most legendary characters produced by modern literature.
Beware of Arturo Bandini, the mighty writer, the ruthless leader, the invincible middle-distance runner, the irresistible lover, the tender son who gives blood and sweat to support a family of parasitic females.
Bandini the immortal, pride of Italy and America; the cunning Bandini who can’t be outsmarted; he is about to make his entrance and will conquer the world...
What a formidable novel this is." (Sandro Veronesi)
John Fante: Aspetta primavera, Bandini
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
- Arturo Bandini is 14 years old, lives in America, in a remote little town in the mountains, and owns a sled.

- His mother and father are Italian immigrants, but he would have preferred to be American.

- Then there’s his grandmother Toscana who considers her son-in-law Svevo, Arturo's father, a half failure and her daughter Maria a poor lunatic for marrying him.

- The Bandinis are not doing well, in fact: there is not a single thing that happens under the dreamy eyes of little Arturo that doesn't bear the mark of an ancestral, metaphysical, incurable Italian hunger.

- So much so that in the bundle of American words circulating in the family, the expression “chiedi se ti fa credito” is by far the most used. (einaudi.it)
John Fante: Chiedi alla polvere
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
Arturo Bandini, a young aspiring American writer of Italian immigrant parents, dreams of becoming a successful writer. After managing to publish a short story of his own, he moves from Colorado to Los Angeles in search of fortune.

Here he stays at a boarding house in the Bunker Hill neighborhood.

Wandering through the city in search of experiences, he meets a Mexican waitress, Camilla Lopez, and weaves a difficult and tumultuous love story with her, passionate and stormy: over the two lovers looms the specter of poverty and social inferiority… (wiki)
John Fante: Full of Life
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
"Full of Life is the story of a pregnancy and the loneliness that accompanies it. This book, the only major success of Fante during his lifetime, is the unforgettable tale of how a man and a woman can love and hate each other, be against one another, and then love each other again and feel together."

"In Full of Life, it is the dialogues that ensure the taste and spice, especially those between the protagonist Fante and Joyce. Tense arguments, laced with humor and nonsense, that revolve around a typical comedic pretext: the transparent and delicate curtain that separates a man's thoughts from a woman's." (einaudi.it)
John Fante: La confraternita del Chianti
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
"I’m sitting in my small, dirty room sucking my thumb trying to write a novel... The story of four old, drunken Italians from Roseville, a tale about my father and his friends." (John Fante)

The novel was "The Brotherhood of the Grape."
John Fante: Sogni di Bunker Hill
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
- The fourth and final chapter of the autobiographical cycle centered around the character of Arturo Bandini is set in Hollywood during the 1930s and 1940s.

- Dreams from Bunker Hill is also the last novel by Italian-American writer John Fante. It dates back to 1982 and was dictated by Fante, who was near death, to his wife Joyce Smart.

“Fuck Los Angeles, your palm trees, and your women with high asses, and your trendy streets, because I'm going home, I'm going back to Colorado, I'm going back to the damn best city in the United States: Boulder, Colorado.”
- John Fante -
John Fante: 1933. Un anno terribile
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
"The terrible year, 1933, is not linked to any historical event. It is just another year except for Dominic, the protagonist. It is terrible because it marks the moment when the young man becomes aware that in his life there is no alternative to escape. Embraced by his father's concrete mixer, he dreams of reaching California. That is, adulthood."
Vincenzo Cerami

1933 Was a Bad Year was published posthumously in 1985.
John Fante: Dago Red
Cartaceo I have it
It is a collection of thirteen stories by John Fante, composed of the following tales:
Family Kidnapping
Snow Mason
First Communion
Alter Boy
Professional
My Mother's Silly Song
A Wife for Dino Rossi
The Road to Hell
One of Us
The Odyssey of a Wop
Home, Sweet Home
The Iradiddio
Ave Maria
John Fante: A ovest di Roma
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
Cynical, ruthless, poignant self-portrait of a John Fante on the brink of maturity. Four lazy children devoted to marijuana and the music of Frank Zappa, a bored wife, a glorious Y-shaped house on the ocean coast: the life of Henry Molise, a fifty-year-old writer in a crisis of inspiration, seems destined for a predictable everyday existence filled with domestic fights and reconciliations, when a surprise - a true gift from heaven - joins the ragtag family: a gigantic, stubborn, dull - and gay - dog named with an epitaph: STUPIDO. With him, Molise's routine slides into a joyful and tender catastrophe. (einaudi.it)
John Fante: La grande fame
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
- The entire world of Fante, from the winters of childhood in Colorado to the conquest of Los Angeles, is present in these perfect, and often hilarious, prose.

- The protagonists of these stories, for once, are no longer the Italian-Americans of Colorado and California, but the seasonal Filipino workers who earn their bread hard in the fields or in the factories of the industrial suburbs of Los Angeles, aspiring to a better life... but above all to the Great Love, which sooner or later (or at least one hopes) arrives for everyone...
John Lee Hooker: Chill Out
CD Audio I have it ★★★★★
Read the excellent review written by Zarathustra for DeBaser on May 14, 2006, in prime time...
It is the second chapter of the Fourth World project, which began the previous year with the album Possible Musics, in collaboration with Brian Eno.

Musicians:

Jon Hassell – trumpet, pottery drum, Prophet 5 synthesizer, bowl gongs
Brian Eno – drums, bowl gong, bells
Michael Brook – bass
Miguel Frasconi – bowl gong
Walter DeMaria – distant drum
Jon Hassell: Aka/Darbari/Java: Magic Realism
Nastro Audio I have it ★★★★★
Engraving: 1983
Genre: Electronic, Jazz
Style: Future Jazz, Experimental, Ambient

track:
A1 Empire I
A2 Empire II
A3 Empire III
A4 Empire IV
A5 Empire V
B1 Darbari Extension I
B2 Darbari Extension II
Jon Hassell: Power Spot
Nastro Audio I have it ★★★★★
Mark Kirschenmann of Allmusic says: "It's not as stunning as the previous Possible Musics, yet Power Spot is one of the most significant recordings by this absolutely unique musician."

Musicians:
Jon Hassell - trumpet
J. A. Deane - acoustic and electronic percussion, alto flute
Jean-Philippe Rykiel - electronic keyboards, facsimile bass, percussion, strings, etc.
Michael Brook - guitar, electronic treatments (tracks 1, 2 & 6)
Richard Horowitz - electronic keyboards (tracks 1 & 2)
Brian Eno - electric bass (tracks 3 & 5)
Richard Armin, Paul Armin - RAAD electro-acoustic strings (tracks 2 & 4)
Miguel Frasconi - flute (track 7)
  • Stanlio
    19 sep 17
    Track listing (All compositions by Jon Hassell):

    1. "Power Spot" - 7:07
    2. "Passage D.E." - 5:25
    3. "Solaire" - 6:49
    4. "Miracle Steps" - 4:21
    5. "Wing Melodies" - 7:33
    6. "The Elephant and the Orchid" - 11:08
    7. "Air" - 5:20
Jon Hassell: Fascinoma
Nastro Audio I have it ★★★★★
Track List:
1. Nature Boy Composed By Eden Ahbez - 2:45
2. Datura Composed By Jon Hassell - Tambura - Rick Masterson*, Rose Okada - 4:31
3. Caravanesque Composed By Duke Ellington, Juan Tizol Drums - Joachim Cooder - Tambura Rick Masterson*, Rose Okada - 7:18
4. Wide Sky Composed By Jon Hassell, Richard A. Cox*, Ronu Majumdar, Ry Cooder - 6:35
5. Mevlana Duke Composed By Jacky Terrasson, Jon Hassell - 6:16
6. Secretly Happy Composed By Jamie Muhoberac, Jon Hassell, Ronu Majumdar - 6:33
7. Poiniana Composed By Buddy Bernier, Nat Simon - 4:28
8. Sensuendo Composed By Jon Hassell, Ronu Majumdar - 5:15
9. Suite De Caravan Composed By Duke Ellington, Juan Tizol - 12:09
10. Estaté ("Summer") Composed By Bruno Brighetti, Bruno Martino - 4:40
Jonathan Franzen: Le correzioni
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
I have never really thought in terms of plot, but rather of the connection between stories and characters. For each of the main characters, and for each of the main parts of the book, I have strived to respect the classic unities of place, time, and action. I wanted to find simple problems, simple situations – a man trying to prove to his wife that he isn’t depressed; a woman who loves to have fun embarking on a luxury cruise with a husband who shows intermittent signs of dementia – and then to inhabit them as broadly as possible.

Jonathan Franzen, from an interview with «The New Yorker» 24/12/2001
Jonathan Franzen: Forte movimento
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
Published in 1992 and set in 1987, it is a novel that, embracing postmodern techniques, approaches hysterical realism, becoming an "ecocritical" commentary on the lifestyle of contemporary society, especially that of the made in USA.

Through long descriptions, interrupted by elements of everyday life, such as the advertisements for the "Honda dealership in Schaumburg," famous snippets from the Clash, and the Red Sox games, Franzen describes the catastrophic events involving a chemical industry, the Sweeting-Aldren Industries, and Boston, as well as the characters in the book.
(cit. from wiki)
Jonathan Franzen: La ventisettesima città
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
St. Louis, Missouri, is a city paralyzed by stagnation and apathy, and the only warning that manages to shake it from its slumber is the arrival of the new police chief, S. Jammu, an Indian from Bombay.
Jammu is young, charismatic, and as soon as she takes office, she begins to realize that the most prominent citizens of St. Louis are involved in a gigantic political-economic intrigue.
So she decides to use Indian agents whom she absolutely trusts to rummage through the most hidden corners of their existence.
Little does she know that this will force her to rummage through her own.
Joni Mitchell: Chalk Mark in a Rain Storm
Nastro Audio I have it ★★★★★
This album features collaborations from many figures in the music world, including Peter Gabriel, Tom Petty, Billy Idol, Manu Katché, Don Henley, Steve Stevens, Willie Nelson & Wayne Shorter.