THIS IS A READ-ONLY ARCHIVE FROM THE SORABJI.COM MESSAGE BOARDS (1995-2016). |
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it's nonfiction about homeless folks who have gone underground to live. it's pretty interesting, although i'm not as taken with it as much as my roommates were. there are some fascinating interviews/vignettes.... |
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I ordered this great jack kerouac poster the other day that had been out of stock. I fancy myself a scientist and am reading this book about this guy who set out to scientifically prove that jesus was not the son of God only to become a firm believer from the things he uncovered. interesting stuff. |
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remember that shit. comes in handy when shoplifting. |
now I guess I'll proceed with "when she was good." I have a lot of periodicals to catch up on, though. |
by Jose Saramago I'm about 80 pages into "The Transmigration of Timothy Archer" by Phillip K. Dick. They both have some weirdish religious themes in common and I'm undergoing a reevaluation of my spiritual beliefs, so it oughta be interesting once I finish the book and try to digest the two. |
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"What I Think I Did" by Larry Woiwode (p. 53) "Ellen Foster" by Kaye Gibbons (p.13) "The Love of a Good Woman" by Alice Munro (p. 75) "Last Exit to Brooklyn" by Hubert Selby, Jr. (p.21) "Light in August" by William Faulkner (p. 501) |
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I used to be obsessed with Charles DeLint. "Jack the Giant-killer" is my favorite. |
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My best friend's dad thinks Saul Bellow is the greatest living author and tries to get me to start reading his stuff *right there* whenever I see him. I've tried to read some of Bellow's short stories but couldn't really get into them...i thought they were kind of boring. To each his own. |
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i will say that i liked his robust way of writing. he's less boring in a longer work, and a first-person narrative, where he can stretch out and have some fun (well, i think so). he's also a very "male" writer - not macho like mailer or horny like miller (my lesbian cousin loves henry miller), but still with the old male outlook. almost all of the main characters in his novels are divorced, and women seemed to be perceived as, at worst, bitches, or at least as something holding one back from true freedom. if ya gotta read bellow, start with the novella "seize the day". |
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On Chaim Potok: I've read three of his books and I really enjoyed them all. Biro: I agree on the Hollywood assessment. If it's made by a US studio, it generally sucks. I did see a british version of "1984" that was refreshingly true to the book. Very dark and depressing. |
I HAVE HAD FOR A LONG TIME. |
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