I just recently read We Have Always Lived In The Castle by Shirley Jackson (an excellent book) and I'm reading Dandelion Wine by Ray Bradbury right now... I have a lot of "dead time" lately, and I've been reading (Lord of The Rings, etc) and I just want some suggestions for good books to read. |
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No Ceiling but Heaven, by Mykal Banta, if you can find it (your library may have a copy). The Things They Carried, by Tim O'Brien. (Droopy, have you read this?) The Mirror of Her Dreams, by Stephen Donaldson In Watermelon Sugar, by Richard Brautigan (I think it's still in print -- check your library, if not.) The Wisdom of the Heart, by Henry Miller |
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thats brautigan in that photo on yours. here are some other images of him, some which are book covers. this is the current edition of Watermelon Sugar, with the two other stories this is what i have and what mark has, he had that photo of him reading it up on the main page for the longest time. this is one I don't have that i want. This is the cover of "The Abortion", which is a sweet sweet dear story. This is probably my favorite. |
harlan ellison: the beast that shouted love at the heart of the world strange wine love ain't nothing but sex misspelled paingod (and other delusions) deathbird stories the (other) glass teat |
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anything else. It's the Lord of the RIngs in VR. |
"The Quantity Theory of Insanity"...Both by Will Self "The Wasp Factory" by Iain Banks (nasty piece of work. very unsettling) I don't recommend reading either of these authors if you are easily upset. Self is hilarious, but very ascerbic. His views on pyschotherapy are right on the mark...If you hate psychotherapy. Banks is one of the darkest authors I've ever read. This stuff is not for people who are really into the lighter side of literature. Be prepared. |
the red tent, anita diamant getting over it, anna maxted and kissing in manhattan, david schickler occassionally still picking up: all families are psychotic, douglas coupland |
donald barthelme - the dead father |
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http://sfweb.dang.se/a/zines/banks.pdf |
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Thank you all! Spider-I read "Going After Cacciato" for my english class, and I didn't really love Tim O'Brien's writing...but I'll look into it anyway. Call it a hunch, but I guess Brautigan is a favourite here. now if i only had the money to buy all of these... |
I had to interview a Vietnam vet for a paper I wrote in college, and I gave him this book after the interview. He wrote me and said the book made him think about a lot of new issues and he was grateful to me for giving it to him, if that tells you anything. Seriously, check it out from your library and give it a try. |
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Two years after I killed Blyth I murdered my young brother Paul, for quite different and more fundamental reasons than I'd disposed of Blyth, and then a year after that I did for my young cousin Esmerelda, more or less on a whim. That's my score to date. Three. I haven't killed anybody for years, and don't intend to ever again. It was just a stage I was going through." That's a snippet from the back of the Wasp Factory. It's not one of those books that you can really describe without making it sound ridiculous. You just have to read it. The reference to the Wasp Factory is the most disturbing and interesting part of the book, in my opinion. It's like this big organic pinball machine created out of tortured wasps, among other things. The ending is totally mind blowing. Actually, Spider, it might give you nightmares. I don't know. You might love it, though. |
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the wasp factory sounds drop dead boring. |
It's a story about a man's struggle with his manhood at a very trying time in his life. An A+ read. LS |
I read Lost in The Funhouse and that was quite enjoyable. (not just the short story, but the collection of several stories packaged under that name) |
then again, if you gots lotsa dead time... |
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