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View original postI've been looking into exploring Sanskrit grammar sometime in the nebulous future, so it was a very serendipitous find to have these two classics (yes, I know they are outdated to an extent) in nice hardcover editions for a total of $6.
View original postI only ever took it for one semester in college, and as a minor elective at that, so my Sanskrit vocabulary was never more than hundred or two hundred words, most of which I've forgotten by now, but in the verb conjugation especially the similarities to Latin are remarkable.
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View original postAlso found paperback editions in French of Flaubert's The Temptation of Saint Anthony and Montaigne's Essays, v. 1.
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View original postAnyone care to share any rare and/or personal favorites found while browsing through a used bookstore?
View original postI was in a used bookstore just today as it happens. The coolest thing there was a modern facsimile of a 16th century edition of Le Roman de la Rose, but they were selling it for close to 30 euros, so that seemed a bit much for a book I most likely wouldn't ever actually read, or not more than a few pages anyway (the font alone would discourage me from reading more than a page at a time). In general (as I have complainted about many times on this board, I know) used bookstores around here tend to have prices that are rather higher than in the States, so when you find really neat or old/valuable things, they tend to have a corresponding cost. Though that said, I did get five paperbacks for 5 euros, including, as it happens, another novel by Flaubert, Salammbô. And also, if Rebekah happens to read this, Keri Hulme's Bone People, so as to complete my collection of Booker Prize-winning novels from New Zealand. Now I just have to read both of them.
Salammbô is a very good book, by the way.
View original postAlso, while we're at it, are you (or is anyone else) familiar with a Polish early 19th century novelist called Jan Potocki, or his work (originally written in French) "The Saragossa Manuscript"? It seemed interesting, apparently a frame story inspired by the 1001 Nights, and the blurbs on the cover made it out to be some hugely influential work for the likes of Borges, Eco and others (Wikipedia says Neil Gaiman has referenced it on several occasions, too). So I was kind of surprised that I'd never heard of it before. Didn't buy it as the store's copy was in German, might as well read the French original then.
About 10 years ago, Vanin recommended that book to me. I read it and found it to be a great set of nested stories with a very good frame story. Need to re-read it sometime, perhaps in French if that is indeed the original language.
Illusions fall like the husk of a fruit, one after another, and the fruit is experience. - Narrator, Sylvie
Je suis méchant.
Je suis méchant.
This might interest Tom and perhaps one or two others
30/01/2014 09:02:11 AM
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Re: This might interest Tom and perhaps one or two others
30/01/2014 04:30:28 PM
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I don't have it in front of me, but I think it is modern French
31/01/2014 03:54:49 AM
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Re: I don't have it in front of me, but I think it is modern French
01/02/2014 03:01:44 PM
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Nice. Sanskrit is in some ways surprisingly easy if you know Latin.
30/01/2014 07:02:56 PM
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Great "obscure" classic, certainly a must for the likes of Larry
30/01/2014 09:34:42 PM
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Sounds good. Found the edition you mention on amazon.fr, added it to my wishlist now.
30/01/2014 10:21:46 PM
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Re: Sounds good. Found the edition you mention on amazon.fr, added it to my wishlist now.
30/01/2014 11:41:19 PM
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I would hope there were some similarities!
31/01/2014 03:58:29 AM
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