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Andrea Cortese
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Topic: Who’s of these the most "prog" writer? Posted: October 25 2005 at 16:08 |
I think three writers are in pole position: Dante Alighieri, Tolkien and Poe
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Manunkind
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Posted: October 25 2005 at 16:15 |
How could you have forgotten Cervantes? He and Rabelais spearheaded the novel.
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"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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Andrea Cortese
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Posted: October 25 2005 at 16:19 |
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Manunkind
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Posted: October 25 2005 at 16:25 |
Well, you can't have included everyone . Some other suggestions of mine would be Borges, Beckett and Nabokov.
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"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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Andrea Cortese
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Posted: October 25 2005 at 16:30 |
Manunkind wrote:
Well, you can't have included everyone. Some other suggestions of mine would be Borges, Beckett and Nabokov. |
I could have mentioned also Giovanni Verga, Ludovico Ariosto, Joseph Conrad and Samuel Coleridge!
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porter
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Posted: October 25 2005 at 17:44 |
hehehe.. what about T.S. Eliot? Reaaaaally prog!!
Since he's not here, I'll vote for James Joyce.
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"my kingdom for a horse!" (W. Shakespeare, "Richard III")
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bluetailfly
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Posted: October 25 2005 at 17:48 |
This is an interesting concept, but I'm not sure of the reason behind most of these choices.
I would lump most of these: Shakespeare, Thomas Mann, Poe, Joyce, Melville, and others in with classical composers, not prog rock bands.
I would think that writers that compare to prog bands would be their contemporaries, like Calvino, Vonnegut, Moorcock, Ellison, Pynchon, Marquez, and others as well as some you've mentioned like Borges.
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"The red polygon's only desire / is to get to the blue triangle."
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The Wizard
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Posted: October 25 2005 at 18:20 |
J. R. R. Tolkein
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Phil
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Posted: October 26 2005 at 09:42 |
Neat idea! I don't think of say, Shakespeare, Virginia Woolf or James Joyce as being proggish. I'd say Tolkein.
I'd suggest Hermann Hesse as a possible addition to the list......
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Andrea Cortese
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Posted: October 26 2005 at 09:49 |
Phil wrote:
Neat idea! I don't think of say, Shakespeare, Virginia Woolf or James Joyce as being proggish. I'd say Tolkein.
I'd suggest Hermann Hesse as a possible addition to the list......
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Thanks Phil!
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Peace Frog
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Posted: November 07 2005 at 15:41 |
Too bad I don't read too much. I voted Tolkien. Lord of The Rings is too long for me to read, but I really enjoyed what I read of it.
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Atkingani
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Posted: November 16 2005 at 21:18 |
I voted for Poe.
I recommend Brazilian writer Machado de Assis, a really proto-progger... many of his books are in English and other languages. Susan Sonntag and Kurt Vonnegut are (were) Machado's fans.
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Guigo
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Cygnus X-2
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Posted: November 16 2005 at 21:57 |
No George Orwell or Ayn Rand?
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TheProgtologist
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Posted: November 16 2005 at 22:07 |
Tolkien
and where is Bukowski?
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Ivan_Melgar_M
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Posted: November 17 2005 at 01:08 |
Franz Kafka is my choice (even when Poe and Dovtojevski are very close), I would add Jorge Luis Borges in the list.
About Kafka, I always believed The Trial by Kafka has been one main inspiration for The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway, both Mr K and Rael are the main characters of the plot and neither of them knows how or why they became part of it, both are betrayed by their friends and/or family, both try desperately to leave and keep getting deeper into and endless labyrinth with no escape.
Iván
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Norbert
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Posted: November 17 2005 at 02:52 |
I voted for F.M. Dostoewski.Kafka is very close.Thomas Mann can be considered as well.
Borges , Hesse could be added, and even Garcia Marquez .
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Sean Trane
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Posted: November 17 2005 at 03:06 |
YOU FORGOT ISAAC ASSIMOV!!!!
from your list , I chose Proust
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let's just stay above the moral melee prefer the sink to the gutter keep our sand-castle virtues content to be a doer as well as a thinker, prefer lifting our pen rather than un-sheath our sword
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Moogtron III
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Posted: November 17 2005 at 04:39 |
Poetic, epic, conceptual, with his mind in a secondary world, a master in major scale sagas as well as shorter stories, looking for inspiration in old sources, but using modern story telling techniques, popular among young as well as old...
That can only be one man... J.R.R. Tolkien.
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R.Darkmoon
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Posted: November 17 2005 at 21:59 |
There's no Garcia Marquez, Huxley, Asimov or even Jose Agustin (Mexican author search for his book "De Perfil") or Verne...
Well.. Kafka for me. Folowed by Poe, Aligheri and Dostoievsky
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I'm not antisocial, I just don't like wasting my breath...
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Norbert
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Posted: November 18 2005 at 02:57 |
By the way, William Blake is also missing.
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