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synthguy View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Your favorite literature
    Posted: March 19 2005 at 15:59
Two of Arthur Miller's plays have always been my
favorites. "Death of a Salesman" and "The Price". He had
great insight into the human condition.
Kurt Vonnegart's "Slaughterhouse Five" is perhaps my
favorite novel. I enjoy Wells and Conan Doyle also.
I've read seven or eight Stephen King novels, which I
enjoy, but to me, are the equvalent of Saturday morning
carto
Wearing feelings on our faces when our faces took a rest...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 15 2005 at 15:29
All the Richard Bach novels.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2005 at 16:03

Originally posted by Jim Garten Jim Garten wrote:

Originally posted by James Lee James Lee wrote:

For my part, I fancy Jacqueline Ess...  


Only one thing to say to you....

Shut up!

Interesting how many of Clive's female characters are sexually deadly...there's an opening for some amateur psychoanalysis there, but I don't want to ruffle any gay feathers.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 10 2005 at 13:20
Originally posted by Emperor Emperor wrote:

Originally posted by Manunkind Manunkind wrote:

YES! This is one thread I will be coming back to again and again!

 Henry Miller (Tropic of Cancer

 

Do you remember that scene with some Indian in a toilet?

Actually I don't .

I'm a postgraduate student of literature, so I really have to read a lot and forget stuff very quickly. I only remember the 'feel' of a given book. But then again thanks to my weak memory I can re-read as much as I want and start off afresh each time.

"In war there is no time to teach or learn Zen. Carry a strong stick. Bash your attackers." - Zen Master Ikkyu Sojun
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 10 2005 at 02:56
Originally posted by James Lee James Lee wrote:

For my part, I fancy Jacqueline Ess...  


Only one thing to say to you....

Shut up!

Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2005 at 07:54
Originally posted by James Lee James Lee wrote:

I like his short stories a lot more than his novels...but apart from Robert Aickman, I think he's the best modern horror writer. For my part, I fancy Jacqueline Ess...  
Hemingway has a lot of wanderful short stories. In fact, during his Paris years (described in A moveable feast) he survived by selling such stories to american newspapers.
Please forgive me for my crappy english!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2005 at 04:55
I like his short stories a lot more than his novels...but apart from Robert Aickman, I think he's the best modern horror writer. For my part, I fancy Jacqueline Ess...  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2005 at 03:17
Originally posted by tuxon tuxon wrote:

I found Imagica from Barker to be a better read, good writer this Barker Character


Barker is one of my favorite authors - not the most prolific, by any means (whatever happened to part two of 'Galilee', Clive? ), but well worth it from the 'books of blood' short stories (don't let the title put you off) to the Epics, 'Great & Secret Show' and 'Imagica'. Those aside, however, I still find myself going back to re-read 'Weaveworld' every now and again....

I think I secretly fancy Immacolata

Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2005 at 01:56
Originally posted by Emperor Emperor wrote:

Bulgakov

I really liked "Heart of a Dog". I hear "Master and Margarita" is his best, I haven't read it yet- what do you think?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2005 at 01:22
Originally posted by Manunkind Manunkind wrote:

YES! This is one thread I will be coming back to again and again!

 Henry Miller (Tropic of Cancer

 

Do you remember that scene with some Indian in a toilet?

I Prophesy Disaster...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2005 at 01:21

I like as artifical as scientifical literature.

My favorite authots are: Dante, Shakespeare, Druone, Hasek, Dostoevsky, Bulgakov, Miller, Scott, Hemminguway...

I Prophesy Disaster...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2005 at 01:18

Originally posted by mirco mirco wrote:

Take some writer from the beat generation, or Henry Miller.

 

Really, Henry Miller is the UNICUM!  One of my favorite authors - he is very thoughtful and unformal one, also able to discribe different accidents and situations as no-one...

Though, be careful if you cannot stand with a dirty kind of humor...

I Prophesy Disaster...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 08 2005 at 23:23
I found Imagica from Barker to be a better read, good writer this Barker Character
I'm always almost unlucky _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Id5ZcnjXSZaSMFMC Id5LM2q2jfqz3YxT
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 08 2005 at 23:13

Clive Barker is really intersting, "Weave World" is one of the crazziest things I've ever read. Great book. Lots of good stuff, read Epics like Homer, and Virgil, and Chaucer (easy to read if you're English, especially if also French.)



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 07 2005 at 18:16
Your'e not so far: in fact Cortazar spent a very large part of his life in Paris, and died there if my halzeimer don't trick me. So he wrote about France big time.
Please forgive me for my crappy english!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 07 2005 at 18:11
Originally posted by mirco mirco wrote:

Originally posted by Reed Lover Reed Lover wrote:

Love all the work by the following authors:

Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Ernest Hemingway
John Dos Passos
Bill Bryson
Michael Moore
Isaac Asimov (inc non-fiction)
Martin Amis
Franz Kafke
Gunther Grass
Steven Donaldson

oh,and of course, Neil Peart!

 

Just finished reading Chronicle Of A Death Foretold (marquez)
and the worst book I have ever had the misfortune to read:

The Celestine Prophesy by James Redfield

utter crap and not only a load of nonesense but incredibly poorly writtenDead

Avoid this at all costs-trust me!

Reed, can you find good translations of García Márquez books? He is a very prolific and imaginative writer, one of the fathers of magic realm, a latinamerican movement with good exponents during the 60/70. Another latin americans that can be of your taste are Julio Cortazar, Jorge Borges (both argentinian) and Mario Vargas Llosa, from Ivan and Cesar land, Perú.

Yes,translations are available. Marquez is an established world-famous author and no doubt his books are available in many languages.
I have read some  Cortazar, translated by the same person who translated my copy of Marquez's "Chronicle"-Nicaraguan Sketches (?Nicaragua tan violentemente dulce ?) and one called Hopscotch (I cant recall the original title)but it was a long time ago.Although he has an South American name I always thought he was French for some reason(Embarrassed)




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 07 2005 at 18:01
Originally posted by Reed Lover Reed Lover wrote:

Love all the work by the following authors:

Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Ernest Hemingway
John Dos Passos
Bill Bryson
Michael Moore
Isaac Asimov (inc non-fiction)
Martin Amis
Franz Kafke
Gunther Grass
Steven Donaldson

oh,and of course, Neil Peart!

 

Just finished reading Chronicle Of A Death Foretold (marquez)
and the worst book I have ever had the misfortune to read:

The Celestine Prophesy by James Redfield

utter crap and not only a load of nonesense but incredibly poorly writtenDead

Avoid this at all costs-trust me!

Reed, can you find good translations of García Márquez books? He is a very prolific and imaginative writer, one of the fathers of magic realm, a latinamerican movement with good exponents during the 60/70. Another latin americans that can be of your taste are Julio Cortazar, Jorge Borges (both argentinian) and Mario Vargas Llosa, from Ivan and Cesar land, Perú.
Please forgive me for my crappy english!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 07 2005 at 14:13

Love all the work by the following authors:

Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Ernest Hemingway
John Dos Passos
Bill Bryson
Michael Moore
Isaac Asimov (inc non-fiction)
Martin Amis
Franz Kafke
Gunther Grass
Steven Donaldson

oh,and of course, Neil Peart!

 

Just finished reading Chronicle Of A Death Foretold (marquez)
and the worst book I have ever had the misfortune to read:

The Celestine Prophesy by James Redfield

utter crap and not only a load of nonesense but incredibly poorly writtenDead

Avoid this at all costs-trust me!




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 07 2005 at 10:41

My favorite book of all time is probably the novelization of Star Wars. Just kidding. I really dig any book by John Updike.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 07 2005 at 08:48

Richard Brautigan - Trout Fishing In America (I'm 14 and i do read stuff like that!), and yes, he was a genius


Teenage sucks hard -- Emo sucks even harder
Epic. Simply epic.
       
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