The other problem was that my blog post on tracking down the quotation about anticipation and pleasure in Barnes' book Flaubert's Parrot comes at the top or close to the top on Google searches for various combinations of pleasure + anticipation + reliable + purest + Flaubert + Barnes.
My Barnes experiences have been mixed: I loved A History of the World in 10 1/2 Chapters, quite liked Talking It Over and Love, Etc. (in the case of the latter, mainly because of the title, which I use as a tag), and didn't really get into Flaubert's Parrot. I'll probably cast an eye over his new novel, The Sense of an Ending, however. Not because I'm a Booker fan but because none of his works after Love, Etc. appealed to me much and so I hadn't even bothered to find out what this new one is about. I expect there are plenty of Booker whores in Marylebone, though, so I'll probably have a long wait at my library.
As for the quotation, it was a Dawson's Creek professor who coined the expression "anticipation is the purest form of pleasure...and the most reliable," referencing Flaubert's Une Education Sentimentale. But the DC writersplagiarised paraphrased this from Flaubert's Parrot, in which Barnes writes, "Isn't the most reliable form of pleasure, Flaubert implies, the pleasure of anticipation? Who needs to burst into fulfilment's desolate attic?" And Flaubert himself wasn't anywhere near as concise; he just waffles on and doesn't mention anticipation or pleasure.
My Barnes experiences have been mixed: I loved A History of the World in 10 1/2 Chapters, quite liked Talking It Over and Love, Etc. (in the case of the latter, mainly because of the title, which I use as a tag), and didn't really get into Flaubert's Parrot. I'll probably cast an eye over his new novel, The Sense of an Ending, however. Not because I'm a Booker fan but because none of his works after Love, Etc. appealed to me much and so I hadn't even bothered to find out what this new one is about. I expect there are plenty of Booker whores in Marylebone, though, so I'll probably have a long wait at my library.
As for the quotation, it was a Dawson's Creek professor who coined the expression "anticipation is the purest form of pleasure...and the most reliable," referencing Flaubert's Une Education Sentimentale. But the DC writers
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