Objectively speaking, I was not too badly affected by Covid. I stayed out of hospital. I got better. But I had it before it was a common experience for many, and before vaccines were available; my system met the virus as it were innocently. A colleague who caught it at the same time, indeed in the same room, told me she'd ever afterwards been unable to concentrate on her reading. I ask myself now, nine months on, whether I've weathered similar doldrums. After Klara and the Sun and Dryden, mentioned in an earlier post, I reread The Bostonians , was admiring, but not enchanted. I tried reading Our Mutual Friend again, but found, as ever with Dickens, the higher-class scenes unpersuasive: my reading grew desultory, eventually broke down. I read some of a novel called Maxwell's Demon , till it got too postmodern even for me, and all of Martin Amis's The Zone of Interest , but more out of horrified fascination than any real appreciation. I read Kipling: Stalky and Puck of ...
'I suppose what one wants really is ideal company and books are ideal company.'