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Literature Please come visit. People get upset, write poetry about it, and post it here. Sometimes we also talk about books.

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Old 09-24-2009, 11:35 AM   #2376
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A collection of 58 favorite horror stories of Alfred Hitchcock entitled "Tales of Terror". Thick, hardcover.
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Old 09-26-2009, 07:54 AM   #2377
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http://www.archive.org/stream/letter...61mbp_djvu.txt.

"THE LETTERS OF MOZART & HIS FAMILY VOLUME I"
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Old 09-26-2009, 04:14 PM   #2378
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The Doors of Perception
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Old 09-26-2009, 06:52 PM   #2379
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The Brothers Karamazov.
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Old 10-02-2009, 08:46 PM   #2380
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beloved-by toni morrison
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Old 10-02-2009, 11:33 PM   #2381
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Kink by Kathe Koja
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Old 10-06-2009, 01:55 PM   #2382
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Doctor Sax by Kerouac. It's actually pretty good - I'm really not crazy about him generally, but my girlfriend was reading it so I've made it my official bathroom reading, and I think I'm kind of into it.
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Old 10-10-2009, 06:02 PM   #2383
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"Why I'm not a Christian"
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Old 10-10-2009, 07:15 PM   #2384
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Almost done The Brothers Karamazov, but today I picked up Darkly Dreaming Dexter and an issue of Bust magazine, since Isa Chandra Moskowitz has a new column in it, and has a good looking vegan candy corn recipe in it. Also an interview with Tommy Wiseau. Its a pretty good magazine on the whole.

And Alia Shawkat was in it too and talked a bit about the Arrested Development movie, yay!
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Old 10-10-2009, 08:25 PM   #2385
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Old 10-10-2009, 09:56 PM   #2386
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"The Picture of Dorian Gray" by Oscar Wilde
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"Edgar Cayce: An American Prophet" by Sidney D. Kirkpatrick
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Old 10-10-2009, 11:38 PM   #2387
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Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky - Crime and Punishment
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Old 10-11-2009, 10:04 AM   #2388
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Just read 'Candide'.
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Old 10-11-2009, 11:31 AM   #2389
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"Dead Zone"
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Old 10-11-2009, 02:58 PM   #2390
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PANDAEMONIUM by Christopher Brookmyre...kind of Tom Sharpe meets Mary Shelley
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Old 10-13-2009, 03:19 AM   #2391
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Apathy's_Child View Post
Doctor Sax by Kerouac. It's actually pretty good - I'm really not crazy about him generally, but my girlfriend was reading it so I've made it my official bathroom reading, and I think I'm kind of into it.
I'm reading Satori in Paris.

Next week is either Kerouac's birthday or death anniversary. I can't remember which.
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Old 10-13-2009, 06:58 AM   #2392
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I think it's death, but I'm not sure either.

To be honest, I've learned in recent years that (as is the case with many authors) his life is so much more interesting than his work, and the work BECOMES more interesting as a result. (I didn't really like On the Road that much, and some of his poetry is frankly ridiculous, but I wonder sometimes if I would now knowing more about the guy.) A good biography makes you realise that the dude was so obscenely fucked up and riddled with self-loathing neuroses, his choices were basically narrowed down to becoming a serial killer or spawning the most influential American subculture of the century. I think that's why Big Sur was the only novel of his I ever really thought was anything special - although I didn't realise it at the time, it was the most brutally honest piece of work I've ever read by him. Most of his work is so suffused with a desperate determination to wring some beauty out of the world, it just comes across a little hollow. (Though probably more understandable in the original OtR where the stricken drug references have finally been published.)

However Doctor Sax was satisfying, and I liked it. Next up is Cities of the Red Night by William Burroughs.
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Old 10-13-2009, 11:59 AM   #2393
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I find that most poets usually have a few poems that they think are brilliant, but make the rest of the world go... "Ok... I haven't done THAT, so I'm going to take your word for it, but that doesn't mean I have to like your piece. How fucked up were you when you wrote that?"

I'm really enjoying Satori, and it makes me look forward to my semester in Europe this January. It's sort of a story about tracing his roots in France, and I'll be going to Hungary to meet my cousins during the break from school in Austria, so I hope my experience in Europe will be comperably as interesting (and involve as much sex with beautiful women) as the experience Kerouac had.

I've also been trying to read more American authors before the trip, because we do have interesting literature, and I'd like to be able to explain some of the American nuance the way my friend from Dublin can go on and on about the cultural relevence of Oscar Wild or James Joyce, or Sanja talks about Tolstoy and Dostoyevsky.
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Old 10-13-2009, 10:36 PM   #2394
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Reading It again. I abhor clowns and fear them with an ungodly terror.

The situation's always the same. I pick up the book, start reading, and when I get to Georgie Denborough with his arm getting ripped off by the clown standing in the sewage drain I freak. End up spending a week with the lights on and end up looking over my shoulder.

Then when I feel better I pick it back up and read until about the time where Ben Hanscom sees the clown in the field with the mummy's face and the balloons that fly the wrong way in the wind I freak out again, and...repeat.


Don't know why I read this trash.

Come to think of it-why haven't I ever posted this in the scary book thread?
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Old 10-15-2009, 11:47 AM   #2395
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I am currently plodding through A Echo In The Bone. Not as good of the rest of the series. At least this one doesn't have to be returned to the library.
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Old 10-15-2009, 02:07 PM   #2396
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pineapple_Juice View Post
Reading It again. I abhor clowns and fear them with an ungodly terror.

The situation's always the same. I pick up the book, start reading, and when I get to Georgie Denborough with his arm getting ripped off by the clown standing in the sewage drain I freak. End up spending a week with the lights on and end up looking over my shoulder.

Then when I feel better I pick it back up and read until about the time where Ben Hanscom sees the clown in the field with the mummy's face and the balloons that fly the wrong way in the wind I freak out again, and...repeat.


Don't know why I read this trash.

Come to think of it-why haven't I ever posted this in the scary book thread?
I used to find IT scary until I watched the movie. I couldn't finish it because I'd just picture the movie after that and laugh.

I'm reading Making A Killing: The Political Economy of Animal Rights by Bob Torres. Its about how the left, particularly anarchists and marxists should be concerned about animal rights.
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Old 10-15-2009, 02:15 PM   #2397
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I am reading *shudder* Dan Brown's Angels and Demons, at a friend's request. It is utter drivel, and I hate it. I am only finishing it because then I can say, "Yes, yes, I did read it all. No, it did not get better. I gave it all the chance a person possibly could, but the man is an idiot and a hack. A wealthy, published hack. God damn it all, why does the public eat up this tripe?"

Actually, I will probably buckle and simply say that commercial fiction is not usually what I read, so this was, er, an experience. Then I will hang my head in shame.
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Old 10-15-2009, 02:47 PM   #2398
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YOU WILL HATE THE ENDING.

It was a shitty book but the ending was just a kick in the nuts while you're down.
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Old 10-15-2009, 03:46 PM   #2399
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I am reading *shudder* Dan Brown's Angels and Demons, at a friend's request. It is utter drivel, and I hate it. I am only finishing it because then I can say, "Yes, yes, I did read it all. No, it did not get better. I gave it all the chance a person possibly could, but the man is an idiot and a hack. A wealthy, published hack. God damn it all, why does the public eat up this tripe?"

Actually, I will probably buckle and simply say that commercial fiction is not usually what I read, so this was, er, an experience. Then I will hang my head in shame.
I refuse to read that damned man out of principle.
All that furore over the Da Vinci Code, regurgitating an idea that had actually been floating around for two decades since The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail, and suddenly he's considered some sort of esoteric genius.
I understand that his latest effort had to be re-written by editors to make it even vaguely readable.

And yep...the public gobbles up tripe because they can't get their heads around anything that actually requires them to think. Baigent, Leigh and Lincoln is hardly what you might call scholarship but you can pretty well guarantee that of those that gobbled up da Vinci probably less than 0.00001% went on to read the Holy Blood.
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Old 10-15-2009, 04:23 PM   #2400
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I refuse to read that damned man out of principle.
All that furore over the Da Vinci Code, regurgitating an idea that had actually been floating around for two decades since The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail, and suddenly he's considered some sort of esoteric genius.
I understand that his latest effort had to be re-written by editors to make it even vaguely readable.

And yep...the public gobbles up tripe because they can't get their heads around anything that actually requires them to think. Baigent, Leigh and Lincoln is hardly what you might call scholarship but you can pretty well guarantee that of those that gobbled up da Vinci probably less than 0.00001% went on to read the Holy Blood.
And Holy Blood has long been debunked. Even the third Gabriel Knight game at least had fun with it and threw shit like VAMPIRES into the mix.

Gabriel Knight has something in common with IT, someone tie it together ^_^
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