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Super-Infinite
Super-Infinite: The Transformations of John Donne | Katherine Rundell
8 posts | 7 read | 8 to read
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review
Aimeesue
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Rundell‘s prize-winning bio of John Donne was a sheer pleasure to read. Having only read a bit of his poetry, I now know enough about Donne to win the Jeopardy! category. A remarkable life, but not always admirable-17th century men, amirite? Rundell did a remarkable job here.
Just down the literal road from me, the Folger Shakespeare Library has some of his few surviving letters; I‘d like to visit them when the Folger reopens. Link in comments ⬇️

Aimeesue Folger Shakespeare Library‘s interview with Rundell: https://www.folger.edu/podcasts/shakespeare-unlimited/john-donne-katherine-runde... 10mo
batsy Glad you enjoyed it! It was such a treat. 10mo
Aimeesue @batsy it was so good! 10mo
40 likes2 stack adds3 comments
review
RobES
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This was excellent! The style was light and facetious at times and I felt like I understood a tiny bit more by the end ... It definitely made me want to read his poetry again.

batsy Rundell has a light touch that still conveys depth and complexity. A great skill for a biographer of a poet, imo 🙂 11mo
37 likes1 comment
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batsy
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I studied John Donne in college & was unprepared for how his poems surprised & delighted me. It's been years since I've read him but Rundell's lovely biography has given me the itch to rediscover him. Just like Donne's subject matter was perfect for him, the way in which he transformed feeling & bodily experience to thought, so is Donne the perfect material for Rundell. Her style is playful, fluid, thoughtful, always compelling. This was a treat!

jlhammar Looking forward to this. Glad to hear you enjoyed it! 11mo
Aimeesue Excellent review! Made me want to read this, and poets and poetry are. . .not what I‘m usually drawn to. Stacked! 😁 (edited) 11mo
Ruthiella Do you listen to On the Road with Penguin Classics podcast? The January 18 episode was with the author and I found it fascinating. I really want to read her book now and maaayybe read some Donne poetry. 11mo
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Lcsmcat I love Donne‘s poetry so this sounds interesting to me. Stacked. 11mo
batsy @jlhammar @Aimeesue I loved her writing in this and she that she's written some children's books that I need to check out! 11mo
batsy @Ruthiella No, thank you for mentioning it! This would be a perfect episode to check out after the book 🙂 11mo
batsy @Lcsmcat Great! I definitely recommend it. 11mo
RobES I'm reading this at the moment and loving it! I just finished Impossible Creatures and I think I spy inspiration from this book in that one!!!! 💕 11mo
batsy @RobES Oh, lovely! I'll add that to the list. I just realised that a book I've stacked sometime ago is by Rundell, too, so lots to discover 🙂 11mo
81 likes6 stack adds9 comments
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Sophronisba
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This is the kind of energy I intend to have on my deathbed: “Queen Elizabeth died, aged sixty-nine, in the spring of 1603. Quick-witted and quick-tempered to the very grave, she refused to go to bed; when Robert Cecil told her she must, she was said to have slapped him back: ‘Must! Is must a word to be addressed to princes? Little man, little man!‘“

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Sophronisba
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The most unhinged passage I will read today: “Maps could be the sexiest paperwork. In around 1330, the Lombardian Opicinus de Canistris was making an anthropomorphic map: a scribe in the papal office of the Apostolic Penitentiary, Opicinus drew maps in which landmasses took on eyes and fingers.

Sophronisba Opicinus used maps to transform and unfix; in one map, Spain and Italy make the leg and head of a female figure, with Avignon, the French seat of the Pope, as the heart; Corsica and Sardinia are small turds, while the top of Africa is the head of its female interlocutor. Elsewhere, Venice is a vulva alongside a sea of sperm.“ 2y
12 likes1 comment
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Sophronisba
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“The power of John Donne‘s words nearly killed a man.“

-- Katherine Rundell, _Super-Infinite: The Transformations of John Donne_

#FridayReads #FirstLineFriday

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jlhammar
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Congratulations to Katherine Rundell, winner of the The Baillie Gifford Prize for Non-Fiction 2022. Can‘t wait to read it!

#BaillieGifford2022

Singout Oooh, one of my University essays was a contrast of Donne‘s and Herbert‘s theological perspectives. I haven‘t read him for a while. 2y
batsy Oh, nice! I want to read it, too 🤩 2y
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RaeLovesToRead
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Aaaaaaand another Waterstones trip ?

Got chatting to the man at the till who thinks I'll love John Updike and Douglas Stuart. He's the second person to recommend Lonesome Dove to me this year, so I'm sure I'll be back to make another purchase soon ?

I'm particularly intrigued to read about John Donne whose poetry I adore ? "Mark but this flea and mark in this, how little that which thou deniest me is..." (Nice try, Donne ?)

vivastory I've been thinking of reading Lonesome Dove sometime soonish 3y
Cathythoughts Very nice ! I loved Shuggie. 3y
batsy I love Donne and have had my eye on the Rundell book 😍 I thought Heaven was brilliant, though a tough read because of it's subject. 3y
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RaeLovesToRead @vivastory I've heard it's really absorbing... and the guy at the till seemed to have good taste so I'll definitely be giving it a look 😊 3y
RaeLovesToRead @Cathythoughts I've heard only good things! 😁😁 3y
RaeLovesToRead @batsy Donne is wonderful and from what I've read online, a very interesting character! I haven't read breasts and eggs yet, but I understand this one stands alone 😊 3y
Branwen Douglas Stuart is great! 3y
RaeLovesToRead @Branwen That's great!! 😊 Booker winners have been a bit hit and miss for me in the past 😅 3y
57 likes8 comments