Wednesday, November 6, 2024

Quincy Jones and Frank Sinatra: the audacious partnership that rocketed them to another planet



Quincy Jones and Frank Sinatra

Quincy Jones and Frank Sinatra: the audacious partnership that rocketed them to another planet

Jones was behind many inflection points in American music, but it all began with a brotherhood with Ol’ Blue Eyes

Andrew Lawrence

Tuesday 5 November 2024


In 1958 Quincy Jones was working in Paris when he received a call on behalf of the princess of Monaco. Grace Kelly had convinced the principality to host a fundraising concert for the United Nations Refugee Fund and booked Frank Sinatra to perform – but she needed Jones’s help finding Sinatra a backing orchestra.

Gabriel García Márquez: 'I felt close to him immediately'

 

Gabriel García Márquez
Photo by Colita

Interview

Gabriel García Márquez: 'I felt close to him immediately'

This article is more than 10 years old


Translator Edith Grossman believes Love in the Time of Cholera is one of the great novels of the 20th century


Susanna Rustin

Saturday 26 April 2026

Pedro Páramo review – Mexican magic realism is full of time slippages and perspective shifts

 


Review

Pedro Páramo review – Mexican magic realism is full of time slippages and perspective shifts

Adapted from Juan Rulfo’s influential novel, Rodrigo Prieto’s fractured drama of a son’s return home is confusing but powerful


Phil Hoad
Mon 4 Nov 2024 11.00 

Netflix adapts Pedro Páramo

 


Netflix adapts Pedro Páramo, the great Mexican novel that inspired Márquez

New film of Juan Rulfo’s revered novel, considered founding text of magic realism, is first film adaptation in half a century


Thomas Graham in Mexico City
Tuesday 5 November 2024


“I came to Comala because I was told that my father lived here, a certain Pedro Páramo.”

Tuesday, November 5, 2024

Selfies of war crimes in Gaza





A group of Israeli soldiers takes a selfie near the ruins of a Gaza town on the Israeli border on February 19.TSAFRIR ABAYOV (AP)

Selfies of war crimes in Gaza

An Al Jazeera documentary brings together horrific images of the devastation in the Strip, including those recorded and shared on social media by Israeli soldiers demolishing houses, humiliating prisoners, or playing with Palestinian women’s underwear


RICARDO DE QUEROL
NOV 05, 2024 - 04:50 COT

There are reasons to be wary of Al Jazeera: the largest news channel in Arabic, which also broadcasts in English, is owned by the Emirate of Qatar, which is only too happy to deploy its influence in the region. It sparked the Arab Spring, which succeeded in toppling some tyrants but not in consolidating democracies (there is none in Qatar either). There are also reasons, perhaps more, to pay attention to what Al Jazeera has to say: not only as a thermometer of how Arab countries are reacting to the Middle East conflict, but also because it is the global television channel with the greatest presence in Gaza, given that the major international media outlets are denied access. It has first-hand material that it continues to broadcast despite the fact that Israeli forces killed four of its journalists (and the entire family of its local chief, Wael Dahdouh, who continued to work through the heartbreak.) It is no longer present in Israel, where its activities have been banned.

Operation Save the Celebrities: The inner workings of the therapists who help stars lead a ‘normal’ life




Operation save celebrities: The inner workings of the therapists who help stars to lead a ‘normal’ lifeGETTY IMAGES / PEPA ORTIZ (COLLAGE)

Operation Save the Celebrities: The inner workings of the therapists who help stars lead a ‘normal’ life 

The tragic death of Liam Payne, who had previously sought help to cope with life in the spotlight, brings new life to the debate over whether early, unbridled fame is compatible with emotional stability

MIQUEL ECHARRI
Barcelona - OCT 26, 2024 - 23:05 COT
It’s undeniably rough to have sipped from the cup of fame at an early age, only to wind up excluded from the A-list. The process of restoring a celebrity’s damaged psyche can be traumatic, its outcome uncertain.

From a cult to Hollywood royalty: Joaquin Phoenix, the star who has overcome it all


Joaquin Phoenix at the Academy Museum Gala in Los Angeles in October 2024.TAYLOR HILL (FILMMAGIC/GETTY)

From a cult to Hollywood royalty: Joaquin Phoenix, the star who has overcome it all

One of the most brilliant and unconventional actors of his generation turns 50 at an interesting juncture in his career. Although his last two major projects have flopped, he has a knack for coming back when least expected

EVA GÜIMIL
OCT 28, 2024 - 09:32 COT

Joaquin Phoenix’s life has always been unconventional. Born in Puerto Rico, the 50-year-old actor was raised by parents, Arlyn and John Lee Bottom, who shared a strong countercultural spirit. The couple met while hitchhiking, married soon after, and, disillusioned with American politics, left California to explore South America. There, they raised their five children — River, Rain, Joaquin, Liberty, and Summer — leading an itinerant lifestyle with little concern for material possessions. Their quest for purpose led them to join The Children of God, a religious group in which they spent years preaching while living in extreme poverty. They eventually broke ties with the group after receiving a letter from its leader, David Berg, urging members to engage in sexual relations with as many people as possible to recruit followers.

Why best-selling books are getting shorter

 

La Central Bookstore
A bookstore in Spain.ÁLVARO GARCÍA

Why best-selling books are getting shorter

A study based on lists published by ‘The New York Times’ indicates that the average length has fallen 51.5 pages, which represents a decline of 11.8%

Monday, November 4, 2024

Quincy Jones, producer and entertainment powerhouse, dies aged 91

 

Quincy Jones, producer and entertainment powerhouse, dies aged 91

Widely and wildly talented musician and industry mogul worked with Michael Jackson, Frank Sinatra, Will Smith and others


Ben Beaumont-Thomas
Mon 4 Nov 2024 07.54 


Quincy Jones, a titan of American entertainment who worked with stars from Frank Sinatra to Michael Jackson and Will Smith, has died aged 91.

Saturday, November 2, 2024

Gliff by Ali Smith review – reading the signs of crisis


Gliff by Ali Smith review – reading the signs of crisis

Two children decode a dystopia, in a chilling and wistful novel that speaks to our times


Paraic O’Donnell
Sat 2 Nov 2024 07.30 GMT


Ali Smith has never been afraid to take cleverness seriously. It is a distinctly European sensibility, yet its fullest vindication came amid the xenophobic pageantry of Brexit. The Seasonal Quartet was the work of an intellectual first responder, urgently cataloguing the treasures of pluralism as the body politic celebrated its sweaty fiesta of insularity. Not many novelists could have pulled that 

William Boyd: ‘Fantasy is a genre that I cannot abide any more’

William Boyd


The books of my life

William Boyd: ‘Fantasy is a genre that I cannot abide any more’

The novelist on why he can’t read JRR Tolkien, being hooked on Muriel Spark and obsessed with James Joyce


 William Boyd

Fri 1 Nov 2024 10.00 GMT


My earliest reading memory

In west Africa, where I was born in 1952, in Ghana to be precise. Aged about five, reading Rudyard Kipling’s The Jungle Book in a large-format, copiously illustrated edition.

My favourite book growing up
The Basil Duke Lee stories by F Scott Fitzgerald. They are not well known. I read them in my early teens. They are heavily autobiographical – Fitzgerald was writing about his own adolescence. For the first time, it seemed, a writer spoke directly to me. “Yes,” I thought, “this is exactly how I feel.”


The book that changed me as a teenager
Catch-22 by Joseph Heller. I read it, utterly rapt, on an overnight flight from London to Lagos where my family was living at the time. It was 1970 and I was 18 years old. I thought it was the most wonderful novel ever written: funny, cruel, absurd – defiantly, brilliantly anti-war. And I was flying into Nigeria’s civil war, the Biafran war. Art and life conjoined.

The book that changed my mind
Mister Johnson by Joyce Cary. Another African book about a young Nigerian clerk working for a district officer in the 1920s. When I was in my teens, growing up in Nigeria, we had a cook called Mr Johnson. That was what drew me to Cary’s masterpiece and it was revelatory in its empathy and honesty. Cary opened my eyes to the Africa I was living in. I later, coincidentally, wrote an introduction to the book and, later still, adapted it for a film directed by Bruce Beresford.

The book that made me want to be a writer
The Heart of the Matter by Graham Greene. The novel is set in Sierra Leone during the second world war – a west African country I had visited, very similar to the two countries I had lived in, Ghana and Nigeria. I read it in my late teens and for the first time I saw how personal experience of a place – its landscape, atmosphere, weather, textures – could be transformed into fiction, into art.


The author I came back to
Muriel Spark. I think I first read her work too young; I couldn’t connect with her clever, oblique spareness, her dry, ironic take on the world. Then I was asked to review A Far Cry from Kensington, many years later. And I was suddenly hooked. I’ve read everything she’s written.

The book I reread
Ulysses by James Joyce. I am an obsessive Joycean, as fascinated by the man as by the work. But I keep going back to Ulysses. I have about eight copies of it for some reason.

The book I could never read again
The Lord of the Rings. I read it aged 12 and was entranced. That is the age to read Tolkien. Fantasy is a genre that I cannot abide any more.

The book I discovered later in life
The Untouchable by John Banville.

The book I am currently reading
The Echoes by Evie Wyld.


My comfort read
Pale Fire by Vladimir Nabokov.

 Gabriel’s Moon by William Boyd is published by Viking. 


THE GUARDIAN