The resumption of 'ordinary' post-Ramadhan reading has proved slower and less steady this year than usual. Probably a sign of aging - a general slowing down. Fortunately I have got going largely as intended (these days I plan my reading ahead, strange as that may sound), so it hasn't been a complete disaster. However, I now find myself still engaging with material I thought I'd have put aside once Syawal arrived - most specifically, the reading of some of the later, shorter surahs from The Holy Qur'an in the translation provided in The Study Qur'an supplemented by another commentary. Actually I find the slow pace of this reading extremely conducive and have half-decided that I might make this activity (confined to an hour or so in the mornings at weekends and holidays) a permanent feature of life in general. We'll see.
The 'big' work of fiction now claiming my attention is Junichiro Tanizaki's The Makioka Sisters. The colleague who provided me with the translation said she thought there were shades of Jane Austen involved in the writing - always a good thing - and after a halting start I'm starting to feel that. Plenty of pages ahead, by the way, and I've a feeling I'm going to relish them. I started the novel after Raya, but I've been rereading Declan Kiberd's commentary on Joyce's great epic Ulysses and Us: The Art of Everyday Living since the last week of Fasting Month. Not sure why. A feeling that I needed to get connected with Joyce again, which has certainly worked for me. Lots of wisdom from Messers Kiberd and Joyce which somehow tied in with key ideas in my mind as Ramadan reached its conclusion and remain pressing in their way as life moves on.
And then there's (still) Finnegans Wake. More than 100 pages on and gloriously, comically, baffled by it all. Plus the great Henry Vaughan read-through wobbles on. Now dealing with various (late?) translations and (gasp!) love poems by the Welsh Wizard and, for the most part, thoroughly enjoying doing so, even if this kind of verse doesn't exactly set my world on fire.
That's all for now, I think. (Believe it or not, I have a list of what I'm supposed to reading somewhere, but I can't be bothered to check.) Oh, am also rereading and rewatching Pinter's The Birthday Party, but that's not exactly reading, is it? Or is it??