I’m reading a new biography of Glenn Gould, Kevin Bazzana’s Wondrous Strange: The Life and Art of Glenn Gould, which will be published in the U.S. this April by Oxford (it’s already out in Canada). Two passages caught my eye. The first is a list of Gould’s favorite books and writers:
He read classics of every denomination, from Plato to Thoreau, with a particular fondness for the Russians–Tolstoy and Dostoevsky in particular, but also Gogol, Goncharov, Turgenev. He was widely read in modern literature. His professed favourites included T.S. Eliot, Christopher Fry, and Franz Kafka, though he gave time to Borges, Camus, Capek, Gide, Hesse, Ionesco, Joyce, Malraux, Mishima, Santayana, Soseki, Strindberg, and much else….And at the head of the pack was Thomas Mann, especially Buddenbrooks, The Magic Mountain, Doctor Faustus, and the early story “Tonio Kr