THIS IS A READ-ONLY ARCHIVE FROM THE SORABJI.COM MESSAGE BOARDS (1995-2016). |
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By Darley on Saturday, May 30, 1998 - 05:12 pm: |
INDEPENDENT PEOPLE by Haldor Laxness LOLITA by Vladimir Nabokov THE MAN WITHOUT QUALITIES by Robert Musil I might choose Nabokov's ADA over LOLITA, but it would depend on my mood. Email me for discussion of any of these! Darley33@hotmail.com |
By Blindswine on Wednesday, June 3, 1998 - 03:04 pm: |
A Canticle For Leibowitz - Walter Miller, Jr. Cane - Jean Toomer Beloved - Toni Morrison Ender's War - Orson Scott Card Zen in the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance - Pirsig The Watchmen (illustrated) - Alan Moore Mumbo Jumbo - Ishmael Reed Race Matters - Dr. Cornel West The Great Shark Hunt - Hunter S. Thompson i haven't read anything since december. i need a good book to read. any suggestions? |
By Blindswine on Wednesday, June 3, 1998 - 03:08 pm: |
i'm sensing the word "favorite" in the title of this thread so i gotta add One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest and Catcher in the Rye. and about twenty other books i can't remember off hand... i'll be back. |
By Blindswine on Wednesday, June 3, 1998 - 03:14 pm: |
pretty much anything by Vonnegut. especially the one where he's imprisoned in a library in upstate new york... can't remember the title... Hocus Pocus? |
By Jim aka PajamaBoy on Wednesday, June 3, 1998 - 03:56 pm: |
OMIGOSH!!!!!!! Hocus Pocus is an AWESOME book!!! It's on my fave all time list. As are all of Vonnegut's... YAY!!! Also, To Kill A Mockingbird- Harper Lee Great Expectations - Dickens Going Postal- Stephen Jaramillo The Firm - Grisham Sadly I do not read as much as I should. I was a BIG reader when I used to frequent public transportation more than I do now. |
By Nelly on Wednesday, June 3, 1998 - 11:35 pm: |
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By Blindswine on Tuesday, June 9, 1998 - 08:04 pm: |
cosmic trigger - robert anton wilson |
By Sheila on Tuesday, June 9, 1998 - 08:37 pm: |
Biography of Virginia Woolf by Quentin Bell A Tour of the Calculus, David Berlinski |
By Martin on Friday, June 26, 1998 - 10:58 am: |
yo swine, what is this? |
By Blindswine on Friday, June 26, 1998 - 01:30 pm: |
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By Martin on Friday, June 26, 1998 - 01:45 pm: |
Just one more Q: when was it written? I asked becuase it was the first one on your list and I pretty much knew (and liked) the rest of 'em. and thanks for the piglinks.....flavorful...juicy...mostly... |
By Sheila on Friday, June 26, 1998 - 05:37 pm: |
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By Blindswine on Friday, June 26, 1998 - 08:02 pm: |
i read "tropic of capricorn" last year... i'm re-reading that along with "tropic of cancer" now... Anais Nin refers to miller as the "essential cosmodemonic writer"... i'm not quite sure i know exactly what that means... but i've got a pretty good idea... and i'm liking it. i'm gonna pick-up Sexus Nexus and Plexus on the way home. i figure it will either keep me out of the bars this weekend or hurtle me towards them... probably the latter. |
By Martin on Friday, June 26, 1998 - 08:23 pm: |
The Air-Conditioned Nightmare is worth your time as well. Dig! |
By Poem on Wednesday, August 5, 1998 - 06:07 am: |
Like Water For Chocolate -Laura Esquivel Love and the Other Demons - Marquez Alice in Wonderland - Lewis Carrol Well, I admit that this is a tentative list. |
By Blindswine on Wednesday, August 5, 1998 - 12:51 pm: |
"the acid house", "ecstasy", "marabou stark nightmares", and "trainspotting". excellent stories about drugged-up, drunken scots written in the local vernacular. welsh has a wild imagination paired up with a wealth of personal experience... lots of vivid tales dealing with pathos, violence, debauchery, and nihilism. read "The Granton Star Cause" in his collection, The Acid House. that story pretty much sums it all up. |
By Kelsey on Wednesday, August 5, 1998 - 02:06 pm: |
my favorite three books? that's really hard. i would have to say "sassafrass cypress and indigo" by ntozake shange "the little prince" by antoine de saint exupery (sp?) "bailey's cafe" by gloria naylor. maybe. i'm really not sure, though. there's so many good books in the world. |
Way over the top of the list. "Setting Free the Bears" by John Irving On the road in pre-Nazi Austria. "The Third Policeman" by Flann O'Brien Why you should always keep an eye on your Bike. |
The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway Idoru by William Gibson |
Startide Rising -David Brin Cosmic Trigger Trilogy - Robert Anton Wilson Oh, hell I can't stop at three: The rest of the Uplift series by Brin, also Earth by Brin. Hocus Pocus -Vonnegut Geek Love - Katherine Dunn Ulysses - James Joyce The Mists of Avalon -Marion Zimmer Bradley Ubik - Phillip K. Dick too many to even remember... |
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My favorites, if I may contribute: Paul Auster's New York Trilogy (esp. "Ghosts") The Knife-Thrower by Stephen Millhauser Winnie-the-Pooh by A.A. Milne The Wisdom of the Heart by Henry Miller The Carrier of Ladders by W.S. Merwin (poetry) No Ceiling but Heaven by Mykal Banta A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce A Light in August by William Faulkner The Things They Carried by Tim O'Brien The Robber Bride by Margaret Atwood Man's Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl Anything by Primo Levi (esp. The Periodic Table) (I read too much) |
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I wonder if anderson will sit on it forever or what. maybe he's waiting for her next book, cut man (about boxers, prostitutes and murderers) to come out. last time I talked to her, long ago (this long ago -- it was at a nirvana show), she said she was still working on it and that these things take a long time. she's a great conversationalist. if I work on my web page when I get back to the states, the first thing that's going up will be the transcript of a long talk I once had with her about cloning, cults, stephen king (she once gave a lecture in the portland library about how it is ok to like him), our junior high school and the kennedy assassination. she's also a total babe. |
started proulx's "the shipping news" last night. have already laughed out loud several times. |
I have read almost all of Vonnegut's books, with the exception of Galapagos. I have started it half a dozen times but for the life of me cannot get into it. Has anyone else been sucessful? As for two other books, I'd have to say, Harper Lee's "To Kill a Mockingbird," and Julia Sweeney's "God Said Ha!" Books I completely could not stand, were Stephen Crane's "The Red Bagde of Courage," and Hemingway's "The Old Man and the Sea." Oh, one more for my faves... "If I Ran the Zoo," by Dr. Seuss. |
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have never forgotten the communion-evoking simile "the sun hung like a wafer in the sky." thought it was the most contrived literary device I'd ever read. |
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big sur by kerouac damien by herman hesse bluebeard by vonnegut catch 22 another roadside attraction by tom robbins in watermelon sugar by brautigan Poetry(should come first but people are reluctant to read it) Ring of bone by Lew Welch Flowers of Evil by Baudelaire certain Frank O'Hara poems |
YEAH!!! I just read , The Abortion Romance and I am currently reading trout fishing in america. Check out Tokyo Montana Express also. Sexus by Henry Miller Under the Roofs Of paris By Henry Miller Nausea by Jean-Paul Sartre (play)Waiting for Godot-Samuel Beckett |
My favorite chapter is when the narrator talks to the old man who lights the lanterns. I've never met or spoken to anyone else who's read it. Tell us more about your thoughts! |
bluebeard by vonnegut catch 22 another roadside attraction by tom robbins in watermelon sugar by brautigan Ring of bone by Lew Welch the mention of these books takes me back to the late 1980s, when I worshipped my literature teachers. mr. tunnell, the kind of wonderfully priggish man who deep in his heart really believed that all american teenagers should fully understand the gerund, was a hesse fanatic. I was a purist and believed that translated novels were worthless but spent time with the black-and-white covered siddhartha and beneath the wheel instead of their bee-colored cliff notes counterparts anyway. I remember preferring beneath the wheel to his less plot-driven post-psychotherapy work (siddhartha, narcissus and goldmund, etc.). and that was back when I felt I needed to excel in every class even though I thought the study of literature was a complete waste of time, so I was keenly sympathetic to the beneath the wheel scholar protagonist. mr. tunnell was the one who, the day before we started work on lord of the flies, didn't show up for class and left us to our own devices, to see if we would stick each others' heads on stakes. |
his stuff was fun to read as a kid, but I bet it wouldn't age well. has he written anything since skinny legs and all or did he let the critics scare him off? he's cute enough, though. at 18 or 19 I wanted to ask him out but was afraid that even if he didn't reject me, which he would, I'd have to try to pose as a fan or something. |