Luis Panini
@luispanini.bsky.social
730 followers 230 following 99 posts
Reader / Writer / Architect. Major mottoes: "I would prefer not to," "yes I said yes I will Yes," "I can't go on, I’ll go on."
Posts Media Videos Starter Packs
luispanini.bsky.social
Fresh from the press and my latest addition to the Gertrude Stein pile. Probably the 113th book in my home library written by (or about) the matriarch of Modernism.
luispanini.bsky.social
Por La melancolía de la resistencia o Tango satánico. Saludos.
luispanini.bsky.social
Come on board the Kraszna train, darlings. You won’t regret it.
luispanini.bsky.social
Worked all day. Went to a bookstore. Both titles were sold out. Drove to another. Found them a few minutes ago. Can’t read them now. Still happy to have them.
luispanini.bsky.social
Pausing the Dostoevsky read through I started at the beginning of the year (I need a short break from his voice). Up next: the complete fiction of Albert Camus.
luispanini.bsky.social
How does one engage with a writer whose body of work seems to represent the epitome of solipsistic creation? His purported novels are no more than countless vignettes conjoined in a universe of hopelessness, solitude, and total indifference. Award the Nobel Prize to Botho Strauß.
luispanini.bsky.social
I could “attempt” at reading the text in Galician, but like you said, her use of language is not traditional (at least in many of the poems), so I stick with Spanish translations. She’s phenomenal.
luispanini.bsky.social
She’s recorded in a tongue on the verge of collapse a litany of transposable voices and disjointed perspectives that reject Manichaean dualities, all to create the foundations of refurbished identities that can neither be named nor described. Award the Nobel Prize to Chus Pato.
luispanini.bsky.social
In his exceedingly long poetic sequences –always epic in scale– polyphony can turn into a cacophony of everyday voices as he renders, in a most accessible way, a peculiar migrant experience while expanding the possibilities of the poem. Award the Nobel Prize to Π.O. (Pi O).
luispanini.bsky.social
My goodness. You are too kind. I really appreciate your words. I’ve been off for a couple of weeks (dealing with a personal tragedy), but I’ll share a few (new) names as of tomorrow.
luispanini.bsky.social
Thank you. I hope so too.
luispanini.bsky.social
My favorite of hers (so far) is Flights. I haven’t read anything by her since 2019, but very curious about these 2. She’s solid. Maybe is not your kind of author and that’s ok. Happens to me with many that most people find extraordinary and I just feel like I missed something too.
luispanini.bsky.social
Thank you, Karen. I didn’t know that about The Emposium. Sounds amazing. I’m not the biggest fan of Mann, but I still want to read his Doctor Faustus. Having said that, his Snow chapter in TMM is top notch.
luispanini.bsky.social
Yesterday’s purchases… I had read everything by Olga Tokarczuk available in English translation before she got the big prize, but nothing that was translated after it, so I need to remedy that. And The Sea, the Sea has been on my radar for many years. It’ll be my first Murdoch.
luispanini.bsky.social
Did I drive like a maniac to my local bookstore upon learning that Eimear McBride’s latest novel hit the shelves on this side of the Atlantic?
Is the night dark and full of terrors?🙄
luispanini.bsky.social
Thank you. I really appreciate the support. I hope you’ll find some new names among this year’s selection. There will be very few and somewhat unknown outside their countries of origin.
luispanini.bsky.social
His intellectually rigorous novels —mental abodes of a late Modernist that may produce in the reader a permanent feeling of vertigo—, masterfully explore the complexities of entropic realities, even through the consciousness of a disembodied entity. Award the Nobel Prize to Joseph McElroy.
luispanini.bsky.social
Thank you, Elizabeth. 🙏
luispanini.bsky.social
Thank you so much for your kind words. I’m at peace knowing that I did everything possible for her. Didn’t want to see her go, but she was about to enter a phase of suffering that I was not going to allow.
luispanini.bsky.social
Thank you, Bryce. I appreciate your support. Jacinta’s sister passed away 3 years ago and not a day goes by in which I don’t think about her. I know I’m still grieving and I don’t see an end to it, but now is manageable.
luispanini.bsky.social
I do, Rachel. Her sister passed away 3 years ago and I’m still not fully recovered. Think of her every day. Thank you. 🙏
luispanini.bsky.social
Thank you, Kristy. 🙏