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Sleepless Nights
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
In Sleepless Nights a woman looks back on her lifethe parade of people, the shifting background of placeand assembles a scrapbook of memories, reflections, portraits, letters, wishes, and dreams. An inspired fusion of fact and invention, this beautifully realized, hard-bitten, lyrical book is not only Elizabeth Hardwicks finest fiction but one of the outstanding contributions to American literature of the last fifty years.
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review
vonnie862
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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Bailedbailed

Sadly, I have to bail on this one. It was really hard for me to get into. So instead of keeping it for another week, I decided to send it back to its owner.

#LMPBC #round17 #groupA

@pogue @TheBookHippie @Readergrrl

TheBookHippie So sorry it didn‘t suit you. 🙃 1y
32 likes1 comment
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vonnie862
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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Just letting my team know that I am back from Scotland and this book was waiting for me in my mailbox. I will start it soon.

#LMPBC #round17 #groupA

@pogue @TheBookHippie @Readergrrl

Readergrrl No worries! Scotland is such a beautiful country! 1y
23 likes1 comment
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Pogue
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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Mehso-so

@vonnie862 you should be getting this soon. @TheBookHippie @Readergrrl I am still not sure what I think about this one. I liked it and I didn‘t if that makes sense.

vonnie862 Good to know. I won't be back from Scotland until the 26th. We held the mail so hopefully it will be safe. 2y
26 likes2 comments
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Readergrrl
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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Pickpick

I found this to be an intriguing, deeply contemplative literary work. What struck me most about it was its ability to encapsulate the multifaceted nature of relationships. Through the narrator's encounters with friends, lovers, & acquaintances, the book offers profound insights into the intricacies of human connections. It reminded me of the various people who have passed through my own life, leaving indelible marks & shaping my journey. 4.5/5⭐

Readergrrl @Pogue I will have this in the mail to you tomorrow morning. I was just too darn busy to get it in the mail today! 2y
TheBookHippie I loved this book soooo much!!! 2y
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Readergrrl @TheBookHippie I did too!! I found some parts to be extra bittersweet for me. I lost my mother 2 years ago and my daughter is in the throes of 16 yo angst. This book reminded me just how important it is to take a breath and “exist“ in each day! Thank you for sharing!! 2y
Readergrrl @TheBookHippie I actually finished this book several weeks ago and put it aside because I needed to ruminate before I added my final comments. Of course, LIFE gets in the way, but I just reread my notes and now I want to buy a copy to share with my friends! 2y
TheBookHippie @Readergrrl I had very similar thoughts. 2y
TheBookHippie @Readergrrl I did the same and I‘m buying up her other books 😂😅♥️ 2y
batsy I love this book so much 💜 2y
Readergrrl @Pogue This book should arrive at your house by Monday, May 22nd. 🤞🏼🤞🏼🤞🏼 2y
Pogue @Readergrrl Yes! I will let you know when it get to me! 2y
Pogue @Readergrrl sorry about the late notice. The book got to me on Saturday. 2y
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JulietReads
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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Ruthiella 😂😂😂 3y
38 likes1 comment
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ClairesReads
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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Pickpick

Beautifully constructed on a sentence-by-sentence level, Sleepless Nights is a fragmentary, but immersive novel. Very loosely held together by the concept of ‘old woman looks back on her life‘ Hardwick masterfully constructs characters and contexts in brief episodic vignettes. I found Hardwick‘s writing very much like short stories, in that she captures the significance of moments in a life.

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Suet624
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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For those of you who read this book for #NYRBbookclub - The New Yorker has an article about Elizabeth Hardwick and Robert Lowell in the December 16th issue.

I took this photo at a bug/art exhibit. While it's beautiful, those bugs could also cause sleepless nights.

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2019/12/16/marriage-betrayal-and-the-letters-...

merelybookish I'll try to read later. I saw that a.book of their letters was being published. 5y
mklong How interesting! Thanks for sharing. 5y
Suet624 @mklong You're welcome!! 5y
Suet624 @merelybookish Just reading the article makes me understand her book a little bit more, but I'm not sure the timing of it all. Was her husband having an affair while she was writing the book? Had she already separated from him? I'm not sure. 5y
batsy I saw that and saved it in my Pocket app to read. My "TBR" of articles is probably as long as my actual book TBR now ??? 5y
38 likes5 comments
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KT1432
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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Pickpick

Just realized I never reviewed this. Probably between a pick and so-so, but I'm going with a pick because the parts I enjoyed were pretty luminous. Other sections were less engaging, but overall I found this group of memories that go back and forth through time to be interesting. I appreciated Hardwick's eye for acute observation! 3⭐️s #NYRBClub #NYRB #Classics #PopSugarReadingChallenge #PopSugar2019 #Pop19 #BookWithUnconventionalChapters

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youneverarrived
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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#nyrbbookclub Question 5 of 5.

Would you agree that the novel is “a vision of a radical new kind of writing, one suited to a woman‘s body and language and experience outside of the primarily masculine narrative tropes of the past”?

BarbaraBB No I think that‘s a bit exaggerated. It was 1979. It made me think of works by Simone de Beauvoir written much earlier. I do prefer De Beauvoir though. 5y
Suet624 Wow! That feels super-exaggerated. I agree with @BarbaraBB 5y
KT1432 I have no idea lol. I didn‘t really get the feeling it was more “suited to a woman‘s body,” but I did find it unique and refreshing at times. 5y
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Liz_M @lele1432 Right! I like the idea that it is written to escape masculine tropes, but in this era, I don't think tropes are tied to a physical body -- masculinity is cultural, not physical. 5y
Liz_M Also, I don't know how "new" it is either. It doesn't feel more radical or experimental than 5y
Leftcoastzen I agree with @Liz_M and @BarbaraBB Women have been writing their own world view for years forever subverting the masculine cultural gaze. 5y
KT1432 @Liz_M very true! 5y
sisilia What?! Lol 😅 No, I didn‘t even find anything special about it. 5y
merelybookish Wow! I don't even understand that! 😂 It made.me think of Mona Awad's Bunny when people in the MFA program keep talking about how to write the body. And the MC is like WTF? 5y
Liz_M @sisilia Ha! :-)) 5y
batsy I do think it's interesting to consider if the style is kind of radical. Was it kind of new & experimental at the time & place of publication? Coz in other times, languages, & cultures women might have been experimenting for a long time (thinking of Clarice Lispector, or even the Tale of Genji!). Like @merelybookish made a good point in the comments elsewhere that Hardwick was doing autofiction before it became the done thing. 👇🏽 5y
batsy But I agree with others that I don't think it's radically suited to only women's experiences, as such. Or the way women inhabit their bodies. That seems a wee bit hyperbolic :) Is that quote from the NYRB intro to the book? (I read a different edition.) 5y
batsy @sisilia 😅😅 5y
vivastory @batsy I think it might be from the appreciation piece by Groff. I recall reading it while researching Hardwick 5y
batsy @vivastory Thanks! I remember reading that Groff article awhile ago before I read the book; I'll have to give it another close read 🙂 5y
GatheringBooks Again, this is unappreciative me not seeing what the critics are jubilant about. I understand that it may be somewhat diff compared to other contemporary works published at the time - but @BarbaraBB is right about De Beauvoir. I am sure there are also other female novelists not from the US like @batsy referenced Genji who have also written nuanced narrative but with a semblance of structure. I am actually thinking now of Gertrude Stein & Anais Nin 5y
BarbaraBB Thanks @youneverarrived and @vivastory for coming up with these great questions and hosting again! 💕 5y
youneverarrived @BarbaraBB thanks for joining in 😁 5y
Billypar Yes, this was a great discussion, well done @youneverarrived and @vivastory 👏👏 A fun first NYRB club discussion for me- looking forward to future months! 5y
youneverarrived @Billypar I‘m glad you joined in. Great, insightful comments from you and all 😁 5y
DrexEdit Sorry I missed the discussion! It was a terrific one. I don't have anything to add. I can tell I'm going to have to be better prepared with this group. 😁👍📚 5y
18 likes21 comments
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youneverarrived
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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#nyrbbookclub Question 4 of 5.

Hardwick said, "I remember that I started writing Sleepless Nights because of a single line. The line was: “Now I will start my novel, but I don‘t know whether to call myself I or she.” In autofiction what percentage of the book should focus on the protagonist?

vivastory I think this struggle is present throughout the book. Hardwick doesn't seem as interested in a finished representation, as much as the process. I can see why poetry appealed to her so strongly. There was also the discursive attraction that the essay form offers. 5y
BarbaraBB I don‘t know the answer but I did think it was an interesting question she asked herself. 5y
vivastory @BarbaraBB Questions seem to appeal to Hardwick more than any attempt at definitions... that doesn't always work for me 5y
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KT1432 I would think autofiction would focus mainly on the protagonist, but since this seemed to be more than just autofiction, with her observations and relating stories of others, this didn‘t really follow that format. 5y
vivastory @lele1432 Completely agree! 5y
Billypar Yes, good point @lele1432 The Guardian article @BarbaraBB posted mentions her response to an interviewer on the autobiographical feel, stating that it wasn't "entirely taken from life, rather less than the reader might think." So if she chose 'I' over 'she' maybe she acknowledged the extent to which the narrator was herself, but wanted to have freedom to invent as needed when it suited what she wanted to explore. 5y
Leftcoastzen I almost bailed myself after the first part .I just glanced at it again and still 🙄.When it clicked for me could have had a lot to do with loving the idea , somewhat stereotypical, of the writers and/or artists life, odd and smart people , having interesting conversations in the night, cheap Chianti,scaping by ,etc. (edited) 5y
KT1432 @Billypar that makes a lot of sense! 5y
vivastory @Billypar That's a great point. I think she didn't want to be restricted by the purely autobiographical & the novel form allowed her that freedom 5y
sisilia Good one @lele1432 5y
merelybookish I think @BarbaraBB mentioned Simone de Beauvoir in another thread which is made me think of her quote about how "one is not born but becomes a woman." So somehow to write the I is to always wrestle or require the writing of the she. 5y
batsy I'm not sure how to answer this but great points @vivastory @Billypar @merelybookish I agree with Margot that to write in this vein is to ask the question of who is the "I" that writes. The whole book is kind of Hardwick asking that question. I think it's quite fascinating that to ask what makes a person conscious is to bring to the fore how they see the world & people & remember things. To get to know the protagonist through their observations. 5y
Billypar @merelybookish @batsy That's a whole different layer I never thought about. So instead of writing herself into her memories and looking at her actions (which we can't really step outside ourselves to do in real life), she wants to see how she observes/remembers other people from her life, and find herself through that process. And I suppose that's one reason the narrator stays up all night writing her letters. 5y
BarbaraBB @batsy @vivastory @Billypar @merelybookish Your observations make so much sense and make appreciate what she was doing so much more. 5y
GatheringBooks @Billypar @batsy @merelybookish appreciate your thoughts about I and She as the story‘s narrator - which for me also underscores the target “you” or target audience, as I felt that Hardwick was pretty dismissive with the “you” - not really caring whether her reader grasped her nuances, or understood her narrative. it was simply just “I” or “She” in the writing - with little attention on the “target audience/reader” or if there is even one, at all. 5y
merelybookish @Billypar @batsy I love how you've developed this idea more! Both of your describe this I/she decision so beautifully! I also think gender is important. The I somehow belongs to a man. It is an active, confident stance. The she opens up ways for Hardwick to tell other stories about women that reflect her truth too. 5y
merelybookish @GatheringBooks I agree that Hardwick doesn't seem too concerned with the you; she is not making it easy for the reader. But part of me wonders if that is complicated by the fact that this is a novel. If it were designated as creative nonfiction or poetry, it might seem less demanding/dismissive of the you. 5y
GatheringBooks @merelybookish i have been thinking about this the whole day. and I think what turned me off with hardwick is her seeming disregard for the invisible reader. i find that the books i love best are the ones that build connections or attempt a sense of kinship without pandering necessarily to the reader, just an authentic rendering with a genuine affection for the time spent by an invisible other going through one‘s words - which I never sensed in H. 5y
Billypar @merelybookish Thanks! I was in agreement with the #5 question comments, but I am very interested in questions about gender that this raises, both in terms of I/she and connections to authors dealing with similar themes, such as already-mentioned de Beauvoir and Woolf, and I'd add Doris Lessing to that list. Too much there to cover in Litsy comments though! 5y
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youneverarrived
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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#nyrbbookclub Question 3 of 5.

How would you categorize Sleepless Nights?

Rachel_nyc I am hoping someone can answer this question for me! Ha ha. Very difficult to categorize which is probably why the descriptions for this book did not prepare me at all for what I ‘d be reading. 5y
BarbaraBB I think it‘s autobiographical but not in the traditional format. Its stream of conscience character made it more of a literary read imo. 5y
vivastory I think it's really in a class by itself. Definitely a hybrid novel. Not strictly autobiographical novel, it often borders on prose poetry & her love for the essay form frequently shines through. 5y
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Aimeesue I wouldn't even know where to begin! Def has a very stream of consciousness feel, as @BarbaraBB notes. 5y
KT1432 Yes @vivastory! It definitely felt like prose in some instances and essays in others. 5y
vivastory @lele1432 @Leftcoastzen I'm definitely interested in reading her essays. I believe it was lithub that collected bits of wisdom from Hardwick & several pieces that really stood out to me were from her essays 5y
Liz_M To me it feels like a literary collage. It has a similiar feel to two other books I am reading, one for the stream of conscious (Pilgrimage by D. Richardson, 1920s) the other for the layering of details to tell a story (Anniversaries, by U. Johnson, 1970) 5y
BarbaraBB @Liz_M Two books I still need to read and am not looking forward to... 5y
sisilia This book is like her journal on-the-go. Whenever she remembered something about her past, she wrote it down. 5y
Liz_M @BarbaraBB I am loving Anniversaries. The only downside (which could be a bonus later) is the length. ☺ 5y
Liz_M @sisilia Another good description. 5y
batsy I love the answers above. A good question that I don't quite know how to answer. Maybe an essayistic novel? I do like that she's playing with the form of the novel and crafting a hybrid form like @vivastory mentions. 5y
vivastory @batsy Essayistic novel is a good description! One of my favorite passages was the section about Billie Holiday which had all of the hallmarks of a great lyrical essay 5y
batsy @vivastory Yes, that was one of my favourites too. It was so perfectly executed with so many layers of observation & feeling. 5y
BarbaraBB @Liz_M I am happy to hear that! 5y
GatheringBooks @sisilia exactly how i felt; it was a “journal-on-the-go” - although the literary craftsmanship and incisive insights and reflections about self and family and moving and celebrities and sense of place all demonstrate dense poetic caliber; yet, while I generally like this kind of writing, this one failed to capture my interest. may just be the time in my life. perhaps if i have read it at another time, it will resonate more tho i doubt it. 5y
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youneverarrived
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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#nyrbbookclub Question 2 of 5.

Did you get a sense of the narrator through the snippets and fragments of her memories? Or did you feel she was more of an outline, with the focus being on her encounters with other people?

Suet624 A great question. My only impression of her was that she was a very observant curmudgeon. That was all I needed to know, though. I never found myself judging her and instead applauded much of what she had to say. 5y
BarbaraBB I think there was a lot of Hardwick herself in the novel. She was more than an observer I think, helped by this article by Eimear McBride in the Guardian: https://www.theguardian.com/books/2019/jun/29/eimear-mcbride-elizabeth-hardwick-... 5y
vivastory @BarbaraBB I loved that article. There is also a great NY Times appreciation piece by Lauren Groff 5y
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Rachel_nyc Very good question. I think she provided a glimpse of herself through her interactions and musings but I don‘t feel like I got to know her per se as I often feel with characters in novels. @BarbaraBB Thanks for that link I‘ll def check out the article. 5y
vivastory I agree with @merelybookish review, comparing Hardwick's book to Rachel Cusk's, telling her own story through other people. It's interesting the people she chose to write about too. I had no idea until reading articles afterwards that she was married to Robert Lowell!! 5y
Leftcoastzen I felt like sometimes her observation had some judgment,sometimes not. In that way you feel you know her a little,not a lot . 5y
vivastory @Leftcoastzen I got the same sense. 5y
KT1432 I felt like I got glimpses of her vaguely, but actually got to know, and was more interested in, the people she observed. 5y
Billypar Agreed with the above comments- every now and then there is something revealing about the narrator's judgments/musings, but not much. Based on @BarbaraBB 's article (thanks for that!) it sounds like Hardwicke included a lot of her actual life mixed in with fictional events, but not sure if it was the kind of project where she wanted to craft a character that was very distinct from herself. 5y
Liz_M I didn't read this novel with enough focus, so I didn't get any sense of anything -- no sense of character, plot, or narrative arc -- the words melted away as soon as I read them. 5y
Leftcoastzen I think also these days readers read many books that very plot or character driven. We kind of know what we are in for so to speak. When a novel is more stream of consciousness or impressionistic description,it takes a mental adjustment.I‘m reading Ducks, Newburyport sometimes my brain is not up to it.😂 5y
BarbaraBB @Liz_M I recognize that! 5y
sisilia Haha @Liz_M 😄 Same here. I lost my focus in those snippets 5y
sisilia @Leftcoastzen My IRL bookclub just talked about it earlier today. Some books are just too quiet with nothing happens; not engaging enough for today‘s readers who mostly demand exciting plot 5y
merelybookish I felt we did get to know her, or a sense of her took shape through her observations, what she noticed or cared about. I felt like her portraits of small town Kentucky, Billie Holliday, communist heiresses, cleaning women revealed a lot about her or who she did/didn't want to be. 5y
merelybookish Adding as my thoughts are rolling, I feel like she presented several complex portraits of women who are more than what they seem. 5y
batsy @BarbaraBB I found that McBride essay useful! It was the intro for the Faber edition I read from. 5y
batsy I like that in coming in late to the discussion I can just sort of say, "what @merelybookish said!" ? I agree that while it seems like one can't quite get a handle on the protagonist, you learn to see what she cares about and pays attention to. Her observations were always surprising. And she seems deeply invested in women's stories. I found the Billie Holiday section & part 9 on the cleaning women she's known very moving. 5y
batsy I like how Joan Didion put it: "Elizabeth Hardwick‘s radical distrust of romantic individualism" https://bookmarks.reviews/joan-didion-on-elizabeth-hardwicks-sleepless-nights/ 5y
GatheringBooks @vivastory @merelybookish I am glad you mentioned Cusk (whom I still have not read but know about) because the style that Hardwick used is also one that reminded me of Lucia Berlin who is able to tell her story through other people but with way more effectiveness (I feel) and structure with a sense of the story going somewhere rather than pointlessly and self-indulgently meandering. Oops. Apologies but the narrative while incisive felt lost to me. 5y
GatheringBooks @batsy am glad you mentioned her notes on cleaning women because again i am vividly reminded of lucia berlin who also wrote about her experiences as a cleaning woman - also reflective, inward-directed, but with a clear storytelling arc that the reader can “ride on,” rather than get lost in which I felt with Hardwick until I simply lost interest. 5y
BarbaraBB @GatheringBooks @batsy Indeed, she does remind me of Lucia Berlin (whose Manual I too found hard to read). 5y
batsy @BarbaraBB @GatheringBooks I've not read Lucia Berlin but she's on my list—I'm very keen to give her a try. Hopefully soon! 5y
merelybookish That's sweet @batsy 😊 but whatever I say, you add to and make it richer! And @GatheringBooks I also now need to read Berlin and think everyone (well everyone who didn't hate Sleepless Nights) should read Cusk. I think her trilogy has more story/structure to it. 5y
Leftcoastzen @batsy I loved the Billie Holiday section! 5y
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youneverarrived
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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#nyrbbookclub Question 1 of 5.

Sleepless Nights is considered a plotless novel. What is the difference between plot & story?

Aimeesue A story's just What Happened, yes? Plot is kinda story dressed up with its hair done - all in the presentation. 😁 (edited) 5y
Suet624 If I was hoping to understand the plot of this novel I‘d go crazy. 😂😂 A story carries us, hopefully, to a conclusion. 5y
BarbaraBB I like @Aimeesue ‘s definition. I am often having a hard time reading plotless novels. 5y
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vivastory I agree with @Aimeesue Plotless novels contain a story, it's like the skeleton of the book. But they tend to propel the story through atypical narrative devices, often relying more on ideas & argument than character development. What is interesting in Hardwick's book is her strong sense of observation is what we typically expect from a novelist. 5y
LeahBergen I think “story” denotes something more cohesive than “plot”; it‘s something that drives the novel forward. But who am I to comment here? I bailed after Part One. 😆😆 5y
Leftcoastzen An observational book does tells a story , but, by and large, seldom has a plot. 5y
vivastory I think plot has to do with the incidents inside of the greater story. Which can sometimes be distracting from the story & sometimes can be equally interesting to, or greater than, the story. 5y
Liz_M @Aimeesue I'm contrary. 😁 For me it is the opposite -- a plot is what happens (one can summarize the plot of a book or movie in a few sentences), but a story is the whole -- the words, the imagery, the narrative arc and how they work together. (edited) 5y
Aimeesue @Liz_M You definitely can look at it that way! I tend to think of plot in terms of mechanics, the way the author chooses to relate the story. Unreliable narrator? Surprise twin sister appearing out of nowhere in a twist? Dual timelines converging in the present? That's plot to me. Maybe I conflate plot with map, tho. 5y
Billypar I like @Aimeesue 's notion of a story as 'what happened' and a plot as having more artifice. It seems like you could characterize this novel as a series of stories behind the narrator's memories (i.e. explaining why she's remembering a person or place). They may not even qualify as stories otherwise, outside of that context. But as @vivastory mentions, she certainly tells the stories more like a novelist in the observational detail. 5y
KT1432 @Liz_M I like the way you put it! I see them the same way, with the plot being what happens and the story encompassing many more elements. And I agree @Leftcoastzen. The more observational I find a book, the less it seems to have a plot. 5y
Billypar This is such an interesting contrast @Aimeesue and @Liz_M Do the different usages reveal anything? In "The story of 'x'", x might be a person, people, or event, and could be fictional or true. With "The plot of'x'", x is almost certainly a novel, play, or film. You could say "this novel tells the story of 'x'." But it seems more awkward to say: "This novel's story is as follows..." Not sure what to make of that though ? 5y
Aimeesue @Billypar I think it's idiomatic usage that's the sticking point. You'd say "Tell me a story," not "tell me a plot." "What's her story," not "What's her plot?" A plot is a design or plan, usually with hidden parts - gunpowder, treason, and plot. I think plotting is active; story doesn't require anyone in particular to direct it, it can just happen. Untangling the two is hard! 5y
Aimeesue @Billypar After poking around the internet a bit, it appears that E.M.Forster differentiates the two - story = chronological tale of what happens (the king died, then the queen died,) plot = why it happens and how it's presented (the king died, then the queen died of grief.) I'd bet I picked up those ideas in a Lit class someplace, or from Aspects of the Novel itself. (edited) 5y
sisilia 🤔 I agree with @Aimeesue on this. A story can be told without plot, and that requires a masterful delivery to keep the readers on track 5y
merelybookish I love plotless novels because I get annoyed by too much plot. Or I get annoyed when I notice plot. When I can feel or see the structure of the story. I find plotless novels to be more character-driven, stories that reside in small moments that aren't necessarily linked or connected. Sometimes nothing happens. 5y
Billypar @Aimeesue Thanks for those examples! I don't know if I agree with Forster's king and queen analogy, but I get causal links as a defining feature of plot. That anglistick link has a good analysis of the two. Page 2's description about 'space' (setting and characters) being parts of a good story rather than a good plot is very relevant to Sleepless Nights. 5y
Aimeesue @merelybookish OMG, yes! I have a hard time reading Dickens because he tortures his poor characters to further the plot. I can never forgive him for what he did to Esther Summerson. Being able to see the bones of a story annoys the heck out of me. It's also why I can read formulaic series. 5y
merelybookish @Aimeesue Right? I hate when characters are sacrificed to plot! And also why I can't read a lot of genre fiction which seems more plot driven. And don't even get me started on mysteries. 5y
batsy A good question & I've had a hard time thinking about this one. I think @Liz_M describes it best for how I understand plot vs story. Sleepless Nights for example tells us the story of the narrator in an unconventional form but lacks a plot. I love both plotty(? 😅) & plotless novels but it depends on the writing & how the story needs to be delivered. I notice how I read—I turn to the plotty novels, like mysteries, when I want to turn my brain off. 5y
batsy @Aimeesue @merelybookish You guys make a great point. I've read plenty of books, like thrillers, where the characters & even the story itself are sacrificed for a more "grabby" plot—multiple "twists" upon twists until the reader is bagel-shaped & exhausted. 5y
youneverarrived @batsy I do the same. If I want something that doesn‘t take much brain power I go for books that have more plot but in general I prefer the ‘plotless‘ novels. 5y
GatheringBooks generally i dislike plot-driven narratives, preferring introspective, emotionally-nuanced tales with a flair for storytelling. I consider plot as the story‘s blueprint, the bones, the structure, the frame like @Aimeesue and @billypar but again, i am not a writer, this is just me rambling about how the two differ. One can have a great plot but be a poor storyteller and vice-versa. A story is what allows me to connect to the narrative viscerally. 📚 5y
GatheringBooks @merelybookish oooh i love this description of plotless novels - sums up my preference precisely 👌🏼 but in hardwick‘s case though, the “sometimes nothing happens” just became a little too much that my mind turned away even while I was reading her words. 5y
Billypar @batsy I too sometimes enjoy 'plottier' novels, as long as the storytelling and characters are good, like the literary fiction novel that has a mystery at its core. 5y
batsy @Billypar Yes, I meant to clarify also—not all plotty novels are brain candy for me. Sometimes they're just really good, beautifully-executed fiction. I'm thinking of a lot of 19th century novels that I love. Or something more contemporary is Donna Tartt's The Secret History. 5y
Billypar @GatheringBooks This non-writer thinks your 'rambling' about the distinction is very well-said: I completely agree with how you characterized the difference. Connecting with a story viscerally is definitely the mark of a good storyteller. At one point yesterday, I was literally rambling to myself to try and sort out the difference, but I feel better now 😂 5y
Billypar @batsy Completely agree, and The Secret History is a great example of the best of both worlds when it comes to plot and storytelling. 5y
Aimeesue @Billypar @batsy Plottier (great word!) books can be great at times, which is why, I think, airport shops are full of mysteries and romances rather than nonfic and classics. Ain't nobody starting War and Peace on a 6 AM flight! 😋 And I tend toward more predictable books when I'm sick and lacking in energy. That said, Tana French, Donna Tart, Kate Atkinson, du Maurier, etc. have done some GREAT literary mysteries, which I've really enjoyed. (edited) 5y
merelybookish @Aimeesue @Billypar @batsy Haha, I also wanted to qualify my anti-plot comments from yesterday because I also have books where the plotting wowed me. Kate Atkinson is probably one of my favourites for that. She does new and innovative things with plot. Her most recent Jackson Brodie book was genius. It's only when I start to 'see' plot that I get annoyed. Which is kind of a snobby position I know. 😬 5y
Aimeesue @merelybookish I equate that kind of plot with really old movies with "special effects" where you can see the wires flying the UFO or the seams on the rubber monster mask. It breaks the illusion and I then have to suspend my suspension of disbelief because now I'm focused on how the filmmaker or author created the effect. That can be interesting, and I've def done it with books I love, just to see how it's done, but usually it ruins things for me. (edited) 5y
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saresmoore
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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So far, the conversations of my fellow attendants in the waiting room of the outpatient surgicenter have been much more interesting and revelatory than this book. So many good reviews from trustworthy readers! How did you guys get past the vaguely cryptic, narcissistic tone? #NYRBBookClub

batsy Interesting! Not quite sure how to answer that because I didn't feel like I had to struggle to get over the tone; on the contrary, I enjoyed it 😁 5y
saresmoore @batsy I‘m not sure why it‘s bugging me so much! Maybe because it reminds me of going back and reading my own journals—not that anyone would publish those—it just feels myopic and snobbish, not unlike my own musings. 😆 5y
LeahBergen I didn‘t get past the tone. I bailed and I NEVER bail. 😬 5y
See All 8 Comments
MicheleinPhilly I can‘t comment on the book because my slacker behind didn‘t read it 😬 but I hope everything is OK healthwise. ❤️ 5y
BarbaraBB I hard a hard time ignoring that tone indeed. 5y
Billypar I think I was a little tone-deaf as a reader 😳 It was tough for me to describe, so I'd agree with 'cryptic'. I feel like the narrator was the character I learned the least about, and I don't know if that was intentional, or if I just didn't give it a close enough read. 5y
batsy @saresmoore 😆 Yes to the flashes of snobbery; it definitely showed itself in parts. I guess myopia and self-absorption are going to be present in any first-person narrative, but books like this tend to be so subjective because of the tone ... It's either one gets on the with the voice or one doesn't. So I totally understand not being able to push past the tone if it's not speaking to you, so to speak 🙂 5y
Suet624 The beginning was tough and then I started to appreciate her grumpiness. 5y
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review
youneverarrived
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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Pickpick

I actually loved this from the opening line; it felt like I was there listening to her talk about her past memories. It‘s fragmented but that‘s what memories are like so I think in that way the form really worked. It builds up an idea of the narrator & her life. Some parts I was more invested in than others but overall it was a brilliant read. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ #nyrbbookclub

batsy Yes! To everything you said :) Lovely review 💜 5y
Billypar Nice review! Agreed that it took the form of what real memories are like- fragments that you find yourself assembling into a narrative. 5y
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merelybookish Great review! And I agree! Some chapters were more enthralling than others but I enjoyed them all. 5y
youneverarrived @Billypar thank you 😊 thats such a great way of putting it! 5y
vivastory Wonderful review! 5y
66 likes7 comments
review
Billypar
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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Mehso-so

Excited to join the #nyrbbookclub this month! I did enjoy this almost-a-pick. As others pointed out, Hardwicke's writing sparkles and made me consider, what does a collection of memories of others say about the memory owner? Or is it a riff on the act of remembering, how it creates these characters, like an author of fiction might? The end struck me as no different from the beginning and the flatness kept it from a pick- otherwise I was intrigued.

vivastory Great review! I agree that the end fell a little flat, but there was enough observational brilliance to make it work for me. 5y
Billypar @vivastory Thanks! Yes, 'observational brilliance' is a good way to describe her writing. I do regret how I read this: too many short sessions where I kept getting interrupted. I think I would have liked it more if I had just a few long, quiet sittings to be more immersed. 5y
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mklong Great review! Looking forward to the discussion. I‘m tagging @youneverarrived since she is September‘s co-host. We take turns each month to co-host with @vivastory 5y
Billypar @mklong Thanks! And whoops...thanks for clarifying- after seeing all the posts for Black Wings Has My Angel I decided I needed to join in the fun ☺️ 5y
mklong So glad you did! 5y
youneverarrived Great review! Interesting you say that about a collection of memories of others because as I was reading it it made me think of how much our memories and the stories we tell really do involve other people. 5y
Billypar @youneverarrived Thanks! And that is very true: given how common this is, you have to wonder what the particular memories we've held onto, even after years have gone by, says about our relationships with those individuals. 5y
BarbaraBB Great review! Will you be joining in the discussion tomorrow? 5y
Billypar @BarbaraBB Thanks! It's looking doubtful unfortunately, but I will if plans change. Is there a link sent out for the discussions via email? If not tomorrow, I definitely want to for a future month. 5y
BarbaraBB I just tagged you in @vivastory ‘s post about the discussion! 5y
Liz_M @Billypar Yes, this is not a good subway book! I could never remember where on the page I stopped reading and inadvertently read many bits over again. 5y
Billypar @Liz_M Yup, same with me, and I did read some of this on the subway. I tend to be stubborn about reading challenging novels on the subway against my better judgement. It's free time, and I want to finish it faster, so I trick myself into believing I can avoid distractions with enough determination 😁 5y
49 likes13 comments
review
batsy
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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Pickpick

I love how @vivastory described this as an "impressionistic scrapbook". Also Susan Sontag's blurb: " a novel of mental weather". I'll borrow from John Berger to subtitle this, "Ways of Seeing". A novel of fragments like prose poetry. Autofiction in which the narrator reveals herself through her moods, memories, & ways of seeing the world, propelled by Hardwick's glinting, probing intelligence. Every sentence a scalpel. I loved it ? #NYRBbookclub

Cathythoughts Excellent review ✨ 5y
KateFulfordAuthor Great review thanks 5y
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saresmoore Lovely review! I still haven‘t read it. 😬 5y
Suet624 Again with a brilliant review! Yes to everything you‘ve described. 5y
youneverarrived Great review 👌 everything you said is spot on. 5y
vivastory Fantastic review!! Sontag's description of mental weather really jumped out at me as well. I'm glad you liked it! 5y
batsy @saresmoore Thank you Sara, I'd love to know what you think of it! 5y
batsy @Suet624 @youneverarrived @vivastory Thank you! I look forward to our discussion 🙂 5y
merelybookish She was doing autofiction before it was even a thing! 5y
BarbaraBB Great review. You liked it so much more than I did. I read it early September and have a hard time even remembering what she was talking about... 🙈 5y
batsy @merelybookish She was! It's pretty amazing. 5y
batsy @BarbaraBB Haha ? It's a book of moods. I really like Sontag's "mental weather" blurb. Quite hard to remember in terms of characters or events, more like memories and sensations. If that makes sense ? I confess I think I'll find it quite hard to discuss! 5y
RohitSawant It's always delightful to catch up on your posts. Terrific review! 5y
batsy @rohit-sawant Thank you, Rohit! It's good to see you back :) 5y
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Aimeesue
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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Stella is not all that excited to be used as a book prop.
#NYRBbookclub
#pibble
#stella
#dogsoflitsy

CBee She‘s so pretty ♥️♥️ 5y
Jb2003 Omg, she‘s adorable. Sometimes the Chihuahua also disagrees, but that‘s the price of reading snuggles 5y
batsy Awww ❤️❤️ 5y
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Aimeesue @Cbee @Jb2003 @batsy She's such a big baby! We looooooooves her though. 5y
CBee @Aimeesue I adore pibbles ♥️ 5y
Aimeesue @CBee They are the BEST DOGS EVER. I know everybody thinks that about their dog's breed, but in this case it's true. 😄 5y
CBee @Aimeesue they get such a bad rap and I‘ll never understand it. I‘ve never met one I didn‘t love - and they are so loyal! 5y
Aimeesue @CBee They do have a really strong prey drive, which some bad people breed and train for, to make scary aggressive dogs. Most just need to be well controlled and trained, tho. And neutered. Pitbull attacks are committed 99.9% of the time by groups of unneutered males. But they good, good doggies to their people. 5y
CBee @Aimeesue yes! I totally agree. ♥️ 5y
jillrhudy Sweetest pup! ♥️ 5y
Aimeesue @jillrhudy She would like you to come visit so she can lick you. 😄 5y
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review
mklong
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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Pickpick

I went in with some apprehension after seeing all the bails from other #NYRBBookClub members, and I can see why, but this wound up working for me. It‘s a life told in glancing vignettes about those who shared her life. @MerelyBookish made an apt comparison to Rachel Cusk‘s Outline, and much like that book, I can‘t articulate very well why I found it so affecting. For the sake of discussion, I will try to by Sunday.

vivastory Yes, I thought the comparison to Outline was spot on. I'm glad you liked it! 5y
merelybookish I'm glad that comparison worked for you! I think they are both experimenting with how to write a woman's life, and I find that so interesting! 5y
batsy I feel the same. I found it affecting too but can't quite put in words why (if only Hardwick could supply the words for me!) And note to self: read Rachel Cusk! 5y
See All 6 Comments
mklong Oooh please do @Batsy! I'd love to hear your thoughts on Cusk's Outline trilogy. 5y
mklong @vivastory and @merelybookish I'm glad at least a couple of us liked it. Book discussions aren't much fun when everyone is just dumping on it. I am busy Sunday afternoon, so won't be there right at 2 est, but I'll check in that evening. 5y
BarbaraBB I didn‘t like this book, however I do like Cusk... 🤷🏻‍♀️😘 5y
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batsy
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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It's off to a very intriguing start for me :)

#NYRBbookclub @youneverarrived @vivastory

Ruthiella Totally intriguing! It‘s setting the reader up but what comes next...I‘m stacking this!😀 5y
vivastory I have to say that I am really loving it so far. I just finished part 3 & there is a lovely meditation/remembrance on Billie Holiday. As a die hard Holiday fan I was thrilled. 5y
Leftcoastzen I really liked that part too. 5y
See All 13 Comments
batsy @Ruthiella It's so far composed of fragments of thoughts, moods, memories, and may not lead to anything, but so far I love the way her mind works through her writing :) @Leftcoastzen 5y
batsy @vivastory I'm just going into Part 3 & looking forward to that bit. Her writing is winning me over. 5y
emilyhaldi Yay! Happy you‘re liking it. The fragments were a bit too... fragmented for me 🙃 5y
LeahBergen @emilyhaldi That‘s how I felt, too! 😆 5y
REPollock J‘ADORE, BRIGANDE! 5y
youneverarrived Glad you‘re liking it! Have to say I‘m loving it. I‘m on Part 5. 5y
Suet624 I have scads of post it notes throughout. 5y
batsy @youneverarrived I think I've moved on to the "love" camp as well ? 5y
batsy @Suet624 It's impossible not to stop and think at almost every other sentence. Such a slim book but the reading is going slower than I expected, and in a good way. 5y
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Suet624
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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I‘ve had many a sleepless night lately in which to read the random thoughts of this woman. I have to say that while it‘s a bit of a chore to read, there are passages that stun me. I see myself so clearly in her descriptions of the malcontent, of the snarky observer, of the person looking for meaning. I‘ve also known so many who are strident in their communist political views, yet end up living their lives like the rest of the “placid” masses.

merelybookish Nice! I also find some of her observations seering! 5y
BarbaraBB Great review 💜 5y
Suet624 @BarbaraBB thank you so much. 💕 5y
58 likes4 comments
review
Rachel_nyc
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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Mehso-so

It was not at all what I expected based on the description so I‘m glad I was “warned” by fellow #nyrbbookclub members! I found parts of this stream of consciousness novel captivating but also found my mind wandering while reading the rambling prose. Looking forward to the discussion!

sisilia Rambling prose... that what i thought as well 😃 5y
Rachel_nyc @sisilia ha ha I wasn‘t sure how else to put it! 🤣 5y
23 likes2 comments
review
merelybookish
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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Pickpick

Reminiscences of people and places, a plotless novel about the past's presence. Reminded me a bit of Rachel Cusk's Outline trilogy: how a woman writes her life by writing about everything except herself.
Which is to say I liked it. 😏 And I look forward to discussing (defending?) it soon!
#NYRBbookclub @vivastory @youneverarrived

LeahBergen Oh oh! 😆 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 5y
merelybookish @LeahBergen That's right bailer! 😜 5y
batsy Nice! 5y
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youneverarrived 😂 this is going to be an interesting discussion. You‘ve made it sound right up my street. After seeing people bail I was a bit apprehensive. I‘m only just starting it now. 5y
Suet624 Good review considering what we have to work with this month! 😂😂 5y
merelybookish @batsy Have you started it yet? Curious what you think! 5y
merelybookish @youneverarrived I understand! I have a thing for plotless novels and experimental writing by women so kind of fits my wheelhouse. 5y
merelybookish @Suet624 Thanks! 🙂 I take it you didn't love it? 5y
batsy I hope to start tonight or tomorrow! I loved her book of essays, Seduction and Betrayal, so I have high hopes for this one! 5y
merelybookish @batsy It makes sense she is an essayist. In many ways this feels more memoir than novel. 5y
vivastory Great review. I only read the first book of Cusk's trilogy, but I really enjoyed it. Looking forward to driving in & discussing. 5y
LeahBergen I have #BailersGuilt 😂😂 5y
Dragon 😻 5y
merelybookish @vivastory Thanks! This discussion should be fun! 5y
merelybookish @LeahBergen I'm sorry! You shouldn't! And I shouldn't have shamed you. Especially since there's a good chance I will bail on 5y
LeahBergen @merelybookish Oh, there was no shaming at all! I‘m heartily enjoying the different takes on this book as most of our group‘s previous selections were all universally liked. And who knows? I may hate my own pick next month. 😆😆 5y
Leftcoastzen Kitty!😻 5y
Suet624 I actually do like it but it‘s an odd one, for sure. 5y
BarbaraBB Looking forward to our discussion! 5y
85 likes19 comments
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merelybookish
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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A little food for thought for #shakespearereadalong folks in the #nyrbbookclub selection.

vivastory What are your thoughts on this so far? 5y
merelybookish @vivastory I'm not far in at all. So far it's like reading a series of disjointed diary entries. But the writing has already delivered a few gut punches...so I think I'll like it. 5y
merelybookish @vivastory Have you read it yet? 5y
See All 8 Comments
vivastory I was hoping to start it but there was a problem with my order. I should get it in the mail tomorrow & I'm hoping to read it this weekend. 5y
merelybookish @vivastory Seems doable. It's only 150 pages or so. 5y
vivastory Yeah, I don't have any plans so it shouldn't be a problem. Looking forward to it. 5y
batsy I kind of love this. And now I'm going to brazenly scrawl even more notes in the margins of my Shakespeare books 😂 5y
merelybookish @batsy Go for it Shakespeare! ✍️😁 5y
64 likes8 comments
review
Leftcoastzen
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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Pickpick

Can I make it a pick with an *? The middle part was so compelling to me but...Writing sometimes beautiful but doesn‘t draw one in .I‘ll say more in the #nyrbbookclub discussion.

LeahBergen This is going to be such a good discussion! 👏🏻👏🏻 5y
youneverarrived Discussion should be interesting! I‘m happy that you didn‘t bail - I was starting to think everyone was going to hate it 😬 5y
vivastory I think this will definitely be an interesting discussion! 5y
52 likes3 comments
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DrexEdit
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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My #lunchtimereading today. I'm hoping the #nyrbbookclub doesn't mind me tagging along with their reading. Between the NY theme and the stream of consciousness style, I'm really digging this book. I like the small snapshots that jump around.

But really this book had me from the beginning with: "Canadians, do not vomit on me!" surely I'm not the only one that's been vomited on on the NY subway! ???

BarbaraBB Of course you can join! This is not the best book though that we‘ve been reading together, imo. I am glad you‘re enjoying it though! (edited) 5y
DrexEdit @BarbaraBB it's weird how NYC tends to be a character in stories about the city. I feel like I know this NYC character the author is writing about, so it's enjoyable for me. I also know the tiniest bit about Lexington, but the author nails it as far as I'm concerned! 😊 So far, so good! 5y
BarbaraBB I did like the NYC character as well, but that was about it. 5y
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emilyhaldi The more the merrier!! 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 5y
DrexEdit @emilyhaldi yay! 😊 5y
Leftcoastzen @emilyhaldi once I got to part 3 and she wrote about Billie , became alive for me. 5y
youneverarrived Glad you‘re joining in 😙 5y
emilyhaldi @DrexEdit @Leftcoastzen I love NYC as a character which I hear comes front & center in part 3... I‘m going to give it another go this weekend 😊🤞🏻 5y
vivastory Glad you're joining us! 5y
38 likes9 comments
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Leftcoastzen
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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#nyrbbookclub my obsession with NYC is way beyond normal bounds so in part 3 where she describes her grubby New York existence,I‘m hooked.Had to look up bar mentioned as I had heard of it.

batsy How are you finding it so far? I need to start 🙈 5y
Leftcoastzen @batsy I might be the outlier, I did not like part 1 ,was “meh” on part 2, but really enjoying part 3 and all the other parts 😂Stopped tonight just before part 8. (edited) 5y
batsy That's encouraging 🙂 5y
youneverarrived I‘m so glad someone is actually liking it 😂 I‘m going to start it tonight. 5y
emilyhaldi Well maybe I need to keep going then!! I usually ❤️ anything about NYC... 5y
49 likes5 comments
blurb
Leftcoastzen
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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#nyrbbookclub I drove to another town and got another library card to read the selection everybody seems to be bailing on.😂

LeahBergen 😆😆 Here‘s hoping! 🤞🏻 5y
Leftcoastzen @LeahBergen ok , I read the first part , flashes of beauty but... I‘m going to blame my confusion on her ex Robert Lowell 🙃 5y
batsy This is a pretty great cover. I'm not keen on the NYRB cover so I got the Faber edition (which was also cheaper 😅) 5y
Leftcoastzen @batsy like the Faber cover ! This one is a first edition, 2nd printing,so old it has the old fashioned library check out card pocket inside front cover. 5y
Tanisha_A That's such an awesome spirit! 😂 5y
53 likes5 comments
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emilyhaldi
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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Bailedbailed

I made it about halfway through this one but Hardwick's writing style just isn't for me 🙃 #toomanyNYRBstoolittletime #NYRBbookclub

BarbaraBB I think a lot of us feel the same about this book. 5y
vivastory So far I haven't heard anything very positive about it from the group 5y
See All 10 Comments
LeahBergen Well, now I don‘t feel so bad. 😆 5y
Rachel_nyc Oh no! I haven‘t started yet but I will keep expectations low. 5y
Leftcoastzen 😬 5y
Leftcoastzen Waaaaaa 5y
Reviewsbylola What are the chances I might like this one? 5y
Reviewsbylola Ok cool I think I‘ll just skip it then. Why set myself up for failure?! 5y
90 likes10 comments
review
LeahBergen
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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Bailedbailed

Oh oh, #NYRBBookClub. I read Part One of this and HATED it. 😬😬

Does it get any better? Did I bail too soon?

vivastory I haven't started it yet. I was planning on starting it this weekend. 5y
vivastory I know @BarbaraBB gave it a so-so. 5y
sprainedbrain Oh boy... 5y
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batsy Oh no! I'm hoping to start over the weekend or early next week. 5y
LeahBergen @vivastory @sprainedbrain @batsy It could quite possibly (most likely) just be my reading frame of mind at the mo! 😬 5y
youneverarrived I honestly think this one might sound better than it actually is 🙈 saying that I‘ve not started...but reviews on it are mixed. (edited) 5y
BarbaraBB I wondered the same, if it was my frame of mind. It wasn‘t for me either. 5y
sisilia I loved her writing style, but not the storyline. I powered through it because it‘s quite thin, but it was painful for me 😪 5y
LeahBergen @youneverarrived I can‘t wait to see if you like it any better than I did! 5y
LeahBergen @BarbaraBB @sisilia Thank goodness I‘m not alone here. 😆 5y
Reviewsbylola Uh oh. Was this your pick or am I crazy?! 5y
Reviewsbylola NM I see that your pick is next month! Phew. 5y
emilyhaldi I'm halfway through and I don't think I can go on 😩 5y
LeahBergen @Reviewsbylola I would still be bailing if it was my pick. 😬 5y
LeahBergen @emilyhaldi Oh, thank God. I thought it was just me! 😆 5y
megnews Wow! The description makes it sound amaaazing! 5y
LeahBergen @megnews It totally does, doesn‘t it?? The execution, though? Eehhhh... might not be for everyone! 😬 5y
Leftcoastzen Now you are scaring me , I haven‘t started yet.😬 5y
saresmoore I‘m just annoyed at this point. My initial thought: “Who cares, you self-absorbed, pretentious old narcissist?!” Normally I only think that about male writers... 5y
LeahBergen @saresmoore 😆😆 I found her so irritating that I couldn‘t go on! 5y
98 likes20 comments
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batsy
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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#7days7covers #covercrush Day 1

Thank you for the tag @ShelfRighteous 💜


@Leftcoastzen if you're up for it—post a fave cover each day for 7 days, no explanation necessary 🙂

saresmoore Ooooooh! 5y
saresmoore P.S. You just reminded me that I ought to start reading this. 🙃 5y
batsy @saresmoore Love that 70s aesthetic ❤️ I just reminded myself to read it too 😂 (And I'm tagging you as well if you want to play 😘) 5y
See All 11 Comments
saresmoore Yasss 5y
Leftcoastzen I need to get on it as well!I am honored to play!This Book was also published as a green Virago! 5y
ShelfRighteous This is interesting! Need to check it out. Thanks for playing 🙂🙂 5y
batsy @Leftcoastzen I've just had a look at the green Virago cover 😍 5y
Leftcoastzen Right?!? 💚 5y
BarbaraBB This one is so retro! Love it! 5y
batsy @BarbaraBB Me too, love the retro vibes. 5y
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review
BarbaraBB
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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Mehso-so

It was not easy to keep focussing on the beautiful sentences among the stream of conscience memoirs of Elizabeth Hardwick. I was not really in the mood for such a read unfortunately. #NYRBBookClub

The memories of her youth took place in #Kentucky so I can use the book for #ReadingUSA2019.

(Pic: This summer I stayed in a hotel in Brooklyn with the best pillows ever. I have searched everywhere and was able to buy them online!)

Librarybelle The pillows do look very comfortable! 5y
Liz_M Now you have me curious about both the pillows and the hotel! 😉 5y
BarbaraBB @Liz_M Lol it was the Indigo in Williamsburg, it opened the night we were there. First guests ever! And it was cheap! I just checked and I couldn‘t afford to go there again now! The pillows felt like clouds 😉, I never slept so good. In case you‘re interested, the brand is IHG (international hotel group) 😘 5y
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LeahBergen Oh oh! I hope I like it better. And I need new pillows, too. 😆 5y
BarbaraBB @LeahBergen You probably will. For me it was just the wrong book at the wrong time. I was too impatient! 5y
emilyhaldi I'm in the market for some new pillows, so thank you for that!! 😆👌🏻 I'm starting this book today... 🤞🏻 5y
BarbaraBB @emilyhaldi I hope you‘ll like it! And I feel like a sales person for the pillows 😂😴🛏 5y
youneverarrived Decent pillows make all the difference 👌 I think it‘ll be hit and miss this book...seems to get mixed reviews. 5y
BarbaraBB @youneverarrived The writing is gorgeous and poignant, I think many of us will love it! 🤞😘 5y
GatheringBooks felt exactly the same about this book. found it too self-indulgent and meandering, pretty sentences notwithstanding. 5y
BarbaraBB @GatheringBooks I am glad you felt the same. I am looking forward to what our fellow readers will think! 5y
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merelybookish
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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Picked up the next #NYRBbookclub pick today. Looks like it's been kicking around Denver Public Library since 1979.
Excited to read this one!
@vivastory @youneverarrived

BarbaraBB Haha, kicking around since 1979 😂. I picked this one up as well today for our book club. 5y
youneverarrived Looking forward to seeing what you think of it 👍 5y
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GatheringBooks
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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Me. The mismatched china piece in my new environment here in Al Ain. :)
I love when books find me at the perfect time.
Reading this on Overdrive from my Singapore NLB subscription for my virtual #NYRBBookClub.
I miss the Singapore libraries most of all. 😭

Cathythoughts I love this metaphor.. ( I am so the mismatched ) .....but , , my cupboard is perfectly coordinated 🤔..... ... although lately a few mismatched have found their way in again (edited) 5y
BarbaraBB I hope you are settling in well in the UAE. And I hope you like the book. 5y
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sisilia
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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Mehso-so

2⭐️ I‘m conflicted about this novel. The writing is beautiful; but I feel like someone simply offloaded random ramblings about her past. Not my favorite, sadly 😓

BarbaraBB Great collection though 😍 #NYRB 6y
sisilia @BarbaraBB NYRB obsession 😆 6y
Cinfhen Nice review!! Always appreciate honesty 6y
sisilia @Cinfhen She was one of founders of The New York Review of Books, so I was hoping that it‘s a 5⭐️ read. Alas, there was no chemistry 6y
Cinfhen I didn‘t know that! That is surprising 6y
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sisilia
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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Cathythoughts 👍🏻😳😂 6y
QuintusMarcus Well, I can totally understand that. 6y
Suet624 😂😂😂 6y
59 likes3 comments
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sisilia
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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Currently reading 🤠

GatheringBooks looks good! :) 6y
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SkeletonKey
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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1. Scottish Festival, working on art, lots of reading.
2. Have not slept well this week at all.
3. Amsterdam, Chiang Mai, London
4. Neither!
5. 84 F 😥

#friyayintro @jesshowbooks

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Jen_Reads
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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1. Today I have lunch with a former coworker and then Work and Work
2. More like mornings. I haven‘t been sleeping well so I‘ve been tired
3. In the US I‘d say Boston or San Francisco. World I love Ljubljana and Zagreb
4. Sloth
5. It says it‘s going to be 86.

#friyayintro @jesshowbooks

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MysticRaven03
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick

Soooo I‘ve been MIA for a while and I‘ve missed you guys! I have a great excuse though! I had a baby and have been extremely sleep deprived and just a little busy 😂😂😂 loving every minute though and looking forward to hopefully being a bit more active on here again 💖

jfalkens Congrats 🎊🎉🎊🎉 and welcome back 🤗 7y
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IamIamIam
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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Had a long night with overtired kids so I didn't get much sleep. Not reading the tagged book, but I'm about halfway through my next #horrorpost book and I'm honestly excited about being stuck getting the car inspected today! I'm loving this, folks! @teebe @laundry_piles @Bengali.bookworm #NightmaresAhead
I tagged only a few, so don't be insulted if I didn't tag you guys! 😄👹👻

laundry_piles Yayyy!!! I need to mail mine out! Eek! 7y
IamIamIam @laundry_piles You'll get there! Did you like your book? 7y
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kspenmoll
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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#Odetosleep #tuneintonov #insomnia #sleeplessinCT
No idea why, but woke at 3 a.m. Wide awake. So I turn to Litsy... have to be up at 5:30 to ready for work. 😱 Lots of ☕️☕️☕️☕️ today. Perfect night for this song though-

tpixie Good luck! I hope you were able to fall asleep again after all! 7y
kspenmoll @tpixie thanks! Sleepy right now & of course time to rise & shine! 😴😜 7y
tpixie Lol of course! I woke at 4:12 and could have slept til 5! Better than you, but why does our body do this?! Enjoy your day!! 7y
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Cinfhen I love your graphics ~ sorry you had a restless night...hope your day is wonderful 🌸🌼🌻 7y
erzascarletbookgasm Hope you‘ll get an early night tonight. I like your graphics 7y
Nute This happens to me a lot. It is never close enough to the waking hour to be okay. It's always a loss of two to three hours of precious sleep. Hopefully, you'll sleep better tonight. 7y
Suet624 Ugh. That‘s the worst. 7y
kspenmoll @tpixie I made it through the work day(coffee!!!), then I made one stop before going home to nap & I locked my keys in the car...rather tired & spacey, no?! Fortunately I was close yo home & my husband came with extra keys. 😜 7y
kspenmoll @erzascarletbookgasm @Nute @Suet624 @tpixie Was in bed so early for night owl me! I am lucky, its rare that I wake & cannot go back to sleep. Thanks for your well wishes! 7y
tpixie @kspenmoll oh my! Glad you were close to home and husband was there! Lol 4:07 this am for me! I'm gonna try to get off Litsy and sleep. No work today for me, so I might be able to sleep again! Happy Reading!! 7y
sisilia Reminds me of Sleepless in Seattle 😊 7y
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LauraBrook
Sleepless Nights | Elizabeth Hardwick
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New Tricks, the latest issue of New York Review of Books (reading about Elizabeth Hardwick currently), in pajamas, with a purring Chico sleeping on my feet. Not a bad Sunday night.
#pajamaday #lazy #liveforpjdays

batsy Perfect! 7y
Nat_Reads *sigh* So perfect 😌 7y
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