Jump to content
IGNORED

Now Reading


Guest The Vidiot

Recommended Posts

  On 9/6/2012 at 5:29 PM, Ron Manager said:

 

  On 8/31/2012 at 7:55 AM, chenGOD said:

Cloud Atlas.

Yes I picked it up because of the thread on here.

 

I was thinking of getting this too (not because of any watmm thread though)...

 

It's good, not great. Worth a read before the film comes out and people start declaring it "the most important book written in the last 20 years". Also the film trailer really overplays the linkages between people across generations. Some of it is there, but nowhere near as much as the trailer makes it out to be - it is not the integral part of the story.

백호야~~~항상에 사랑할거예요.나의 아들.

 

Shout outs to the saracens, musulmen and celestials.

 

Link to comment
https://forum.watmm.com/topic/30579-now-reading/page/75/#findComment-1874485
Share on other sites

I've finally picked up Will Self's : "My idea of fun" again.... interesting read..

 

  On 1/19/2020 at 5:27 PM, Richie Sombrero said:

Nah, you're a wee child who can't wait for official release. Embarrassing. Shove your privilege. 

  On 9/2/2014 at 12:37 AM, Ivan Ooze said:

don't be a cockroach prolapsing nun bulkV

Link to comment
https://forum.watmm.com/topic/30579-now-reading/page/75/#findComment-1874623
Share on other sites

Guest Glass Plate

recently read:

Cormac McCarthy - Child of God

Kurt Vonnegut - God Bless You Mr. Rosewater

Kenzaburo Oe - Nip the Buds, Shoot the Kids

Cesar Aira - The Literary Conference

 

Reading:

Cesar Aira - Varamo

 

Only standout book in the bunch was Child of God. McCarthy fucking delivers. Will make for an AWFUL movie. Way too literary for a visual transformation.

Edited by Glass Plate
Link to comment
https://forum.watmm.com/topic/30579-now-reading/page/75/#findComment-1874916
Share on other sites

Guest Ron Manager
  On 9/7/2012 at 7:11 PM, chenGOD said:
  On 9/6/2012 at 5:29 PM, Ron Manager said:
  On 8/31/2012 at 7:55 AM, chenGOD said:

Cloud Atlas.

Yes I picked it up because of the thread on here.

 

I was thinking of getting this too (not because of any watmm thread though)...

 

It's good, not great. Worth a read before the film comes out and people start declaring it "the most important book written in the last 20 years". Also the film trailer really overplays the linkages between people across generations. Some of it is there, but nowhere near as much as the trailer makes it out to be - it is not the integral part of the story.

 

Interesting, thanks, will probably check it out soon.

 

Just started David Peace's The Damned United. Having read his other books, however, two chapters in I feel like I'm waiting for Cloughie to start murdering people or something...

Link to comment
https://forum.watmm.com/topic/30579-now-reading/page/75/#findComment-1875106
Share on other sites

  On 9/9/2012 at 10:20 PM, Ron Manager said:
  On 9/7/2012 at 7:11 PM, chenGOD said:
  On 9/6/2012 at 5:29 PM, Ron Manager said:
  On 8/31/2012 at 7:55 AM, chenGOD said:

Cloud Atlas.

Yes I picked it up because of the thread on here.

 

I was thinking of getting this too (not because of any watmm thread though)...

 

It's good, not great. Worth a read before the film comes out and people start declaring it "the most important book written in the last 20 years". Also the film trailer really overplays the linkages between people across generations. Some of it is there, but nowhere near as much as the trailer makes it out to be - it is not the integral part of the story.

 

Interesting, thanks, will probably check it out soon.

 

Just started David Peace's The Damned United. Having read his other books, however, two chapters in I feel like I'm waiting for Cloughie to start murdering people or something...

 

The Damned United is a great read. The film's not bad either, but the book is awesome.

백호야~~~항상에 사랑할거예요.나의 아들.

 

Shout outs to the saracens, musulmen and celestials.

 

Link to comment
https://forum.watmm.com/topic/30579-now-reading/page/75/#findComment-1875234
Share on other sites

Finished the Lord Dunsany anthology (and a tongue-in-cheek Finnish collection of Lovecraft/Paavo Väyrynen parodies..), now reading this:

 

Vineland.jpg

 

Seems good so far after the two first chapters.

electro mini-album Megacity Rainfall
"cacas in igne, heus"  - Emperor Nero, AD 64

Link to comment
https://forum.watmm.com/topic/30579-now-reading/page/75/#findComment-1875237
Share on other sites

  On 9/11/2012 at 1:50 AM, usagi said:

speaking of covers, one of my pet peeves are books that have NOW A MAJOR MOTION PICTURE STARRING XYZ plastered all over the front. I hate that shit. I've been trying to find a copy of Fight Club that doesn't have that but it's pretty much impossible here.

 

I almost fell to pieces when I saw Jonathan Swift's original Gulliver's Travels with a cover picture from the Jack Black movie. :cisfor:

 

Imagine some kid buying the book thinking it will be like the movie with Jack's goofy comedy and then getting 300 pages of commentary on 18th century British society. Mind you, it's a good book but that kind of marketing is way misleading. Well, maybe some kid is going to get educated by accident..

electro mini-album Megacity Rainfall
"cacas in igne, heus"  - Emperor Nero, AD 64

Link to comment
https://forum.watmm.com/topic/30579-now-reading/page/75/#findComment-1875623
Share on other sites

Though, I kinda want to see the Bible with a cover image from the Life of Brian and the text "The book that inspired the hit movie Life of Brian".

 

life-of-brian_1374284c.jpg

electro mini-album Megacity Rainfall
"cacas in igne, heus"  - Emperor Nero, AD 64

Link to comment
https://forum.watmm.com/topic/30579-now-reading/page/75/#findComment-1875681
Share on other sites

  On 9/9/2012 at 6:13 AM, Glass Plate said:

Only standout book in the bunch was Child of God. McCarthy fucking delivers. Will make for an AWFUL movie. Way too literary for a visual transformation.

 

It's a great novel. I'm an unashamed fan of McCarthy, you should read more of his books if you haven't already. Suttree is my favourite.

Link to comment
https://forum.watmm.com/topic/30579-now-reading/page/75/#findComment-1876620
Share on other sites

  On 9/10/2012 at 8:09 AM, mokz said:

now reading this:

 

Vineland.jpg

 

Seems good so far after the two first chapters.

 

Was not impressed with Vineland, just seemed like a weak Tom Robbins novel with some literary nod to Hunter S. Thompson's vision of '60s American counterculture. But it's been a while, so maybe I'm being unkind.

I wouldn't say it was a bad book, just I expect more from the guy who wrote "Gravity's Rainbow", you know?

백호야~~~항상에 사랑할거예요.나의 아들.

 

Shout outs to the saracens, musulmen and celestials.

 

Link to comment
https://forum.watmm.com/topic/30579-now-reading/page/75/#findComment-1876671
Share on other sites

Vineland works better when read after Against the Day, imo. It's like a little "seventy years later" coda to a book that wouldn't be published for 15 more years.

 

I think it might be the best of Pynchon's "light" tier books (Lot 49, Vineland, Inherent Vice).

 

Vineland also has one of my favorite bits of Pynchon paranoid whimsy:

 

 

  Reveal hidden contents

 

Link to comment
https://forum.watmm.com/topic/30579-now-reading/page/75/#findComment-1876833
Share on other sites

I've read Lot 49 and Inherent Vice and loved both, so I guess I'll probably like Vineland too. :smile:

 

I've also read Gravity's Rainbow and V and enjoyed them too but they are quite a bit harder reads.. For example Inherent Vice seemed just to flow so smoothly that I could hardly put the book down. In comparison Gravity's Rainbow took some work to digest and I could only read it in short segments.

electro mini-album Megacity Rainfall
"cacas in igne, heus"  - Emperor Nero, AD 64

Link to comment
https://forum.watmm.com/topic/30579-now-reading/page/75/#findComment-1876894
Share on other sites

  On 9/13/2012 at 7:38 PM, baph said:

Vineland works better when read after Against the Day, imo. It's like a little "seventy years later" coda to a book that wouldn't be published for 15 more years.

 

I think it might be the best of Pynchon's "light" tier books (Lot 49, Vineland, Inherent Vice).

 

Vineland also has one of my favorite bits of Pynchon paranoid whimsy:

 

 

  Reveal hidden contents

 

 

fair enough - like I said - it's not a bad book. I'll give it another whirl after semester is finished. Reading load is insane this term.

백호야~~~항상에 사랑할거예요.나의 아들.

 

Shout outs to the saracens, musulmen and celestials.

 

Link to comment
https://forum.watmm.com/topic/30579-now-reading/page/75/#findComment-1877059
Share on other sites

Currently have my nose in quite a few books, which are as follows:

 

Trout Fishing in America by Richard Brautigan, which is a series of disjointed, often surreal, often quite funny vignettes connected by the idea of fishing for trout or simply the phrase "Trout Fishing in America", it is the source of my forum signature. The edition I have is a volume which also contains a collection of his poetry called The Pill versus the Spring Hill Mining Disaster as well as a story (In Watermelon Sugar) about a hippie community thought by some to be based on the real life hippie commune known as The Farm, which you can read about here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Farm_(Tennessee).

 

Forces in Motion by Graham Lock is to date the only book-length biography of acclaimed avant garde musician Anthony Braxton. It follows him on his 1985 tour of England, and covers both details of some of Braxton's ideologies, musical and otherwise, personal life biographies on him, and also covers a bit on the musicians who at that time were in his quartet, namely Gerry Hemmingway on drums, Mark Dresser on bass, and Marilyn Crispell on piano. One of the testimonials on the back of the book is from Braxton himself who encourages anyone who considers themselves a fan of his music to read the book. Very interesting stuff and reminds me not only of how interconnected the world of jazz is, but how brilliant and interesting a mind Braxton is.

 

VALIS is one of the last novels that Philip K. Dick had written and published before his death, and if I remember correctly is rather autobiographical, and is largely based on his own experiences with mental illness. Like his other books from around the time leading up to his death, it has a lot to do with his own ideas about religion and gnosticism.

 

I recently finished reading these two books: The Cosmic Connection by Carl Sagan, which is a pretty lovely, if dated, non-fiction piece all about contemplating our solar system from an outsider perspective and arguing the case for the importance for interplanetary exploration and the search for extraterrestrial life, and The Illuminatus! Trilogy by Robert Anton Wilson and Robert Shea, which is a very entertaining, if in some parts a bit dated, read of an interesting sort of conspiracy fiction/science fiction/detective fiction crossover which covers many areas from secret societies to psychedelic drug experiences to anarchists and politicians to Atlantis and all the connections between each of these things.

 

Some books I want to start after I'm done the ones I mentioned before are Lady Chatterley's Lover by D.H. Lawrence, Dennis Tedlock's translation of the ancient Mayan religious text the Popol Vuh, Bob Dylan's (to date) lone fictional novella, Tarantula, Stranger in a Strange Land by Robert Heinlein, Frank Herbert's Dune, Larry Niven's Ringworld, Silence: Lectures and Writings by John Cage, Arthur C. Clarke's Rendezvous with Rama, Stephen Wolfram's A New Kind of Science, The Savage Detectives by Roberto Bolano, Beneath the Underdog by Charles Mingus, Andre Breton's Nadja, Watership Down by Richard Adams, and I will try to find some good introductory books to do with mycology. Just need to prioritize these. Feel free to recommend me some books, I'm mostly interested in the following genres: science fiction/speculative fiction, modern/postmodern fiction/experimental literature, scientific non-fiction, music journalism, sociology/political theory, and something I'm interested in but really have barely read anything in is queer theory.

Link to comment
https://forum.watmm.com/topic/30579-now-reading/page/75/#findComment-1878262
Share on other sites

Im currently reading through House Of Leaves by Mark Z Danielewski for a second time, also paging through the Batman: Death In The Family story-arch, and just this Friday I picked up a copy of David Byrne's, How Music Works after I went to the interview/discussion event that I plan to start reading through. It's like a brief history and analysis of recording technologies and the way technology has impacted music over the years and rare music history type stories he's pieced together through extensive research. (The discussion/interview was really fucking interesting) plus I got my copy signed!!

Link to comment
https://forum.watmm.com/topic/30579-now-reading/page/75/#findComment-1878269
Share on other sites

Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   1 member

×
×