View Full Version : Mean, evil Literature? Even funny?
ich555
09-19-2012, 05:11 PM
Hey,
can anyone give me hints on that? Something like mean, evil, sarcastic, cynical literature. Not in plot (splatter, cruelty), but more in description, on the refelxive level. If even funny, id be delighted. Not too classical (sade, celine and the like).
Like: Dirk Bernemann, Irene Welsh, Thompson, Pelewin, Vonnegut.
Thanks!
kelby_lake
09-20-2012, 10:57 AM
Lolita
Kyriakos
09-20-2012, 11:39 AM
The chants of Maldoror- Lautreamont
Summer M
09-20-2012, 02:25 PM
Catch-22, of course
Anton Hermes
09-20-2012, 04:33 PM
How about Naked Lunch by William S. Burroughs? That's the funniest, most evil one I can think of.
Alexander III
09-20-2012, 05:49 PM
Lermontov's A Hero of Our Time
E.A Rumfield
09-20-2012, 07:52 PM
Dostoevsky. I don't care if you don't want to read the classics. Fyodor puts everyone else down.
ich555
09-21-2012, 09:18 AM
Hi,
thanks for all!
But all too classical and burrows, lolita and catch 22 i know. But even these are too solid, mainstream, undaring.
Any more ideas?
Alexander III
09-21-2012, 09:21 AM
Hi,
thanks for all!
But all too classical and burrows, lolita and catch 22 i know. But even these are too solid, mainstream, undaring.
Any more ideas?
Yes...
Lermontov's A Hero of Our Time
hallaig
09-21-2012, 10:10 AM
Trainspotting by Irvine Welsh
Clovis
09-21-2012, 11:32 AM
Blood Meridian - Cormac McCarthy
The Man Without Qualities - Robert Musil
American Pyscho - Bret Easton Ellis
kelby_lake
09-21-2012, 12:39 PM
Hi,
thanks for all!
But all too classical and burrows, lolita and catch 22 i know. But even these are too solid, mainstream, undaring.
Any more ideas?
The Pitchfork Disney by Phillip Ridley.
Kjetil
09-21-2012, 05:02 PM
Evelyn Waugh and Saki were both fairly ruthless, as well as enormously funny.
Clovis
09-21-2012, 05:45 PM
Molloy - Beckett
Clovis
09-21-2012, 05:49 PM
The Tin Drum - Grass
The Fall - Camus
But these are all also classics, sorry...
cafolini
09-21-2012, 06:26 PM
Eastwood's speech at the republican convention.
cacian
09-22-2012, 05:20 AM
Lolita
Hi Kelby which of the three descriptions do you apply to this book?
kelby_lake
09-22-2012, 01:33 PM
Hi Kelby which of the three descriptions do you apply to this book?
All of them. The novel is narrated by a deluded paedophile as a sort of love letter to a twelve year old girl he supposedly fell in love with, and it's essentially the Jamesian theme of Old Europe corrupting Young America. One of the most unreliable narrators ever.
Kafka's Crow
09-22-2012, 02:03 PM
The Story of the Eye by George Bataille:
http://ps28.squat.net/bataille_story_of_eye.pdf
Anything by Irving Welsh or Kathy Acker and obviously Songs of Maldoror.
Clovis
09-22-2012, 04:19 PM
The Saline Solution - Marco Vassi
ladderandbucket
09-27-2012, 05:57 PM
The short stories of Somerset Maugham are extremely cynical. Whilst not explicitly nasty in the way of, say, Burroughs or Irvine Welsh, Maugham has a cold, deterministic view of human nature which I find far more unsettling.
Certain types of writers want to show humanity at its depths. I get the feeling that Maugham saw it as rotten all the way to the top.
ralfyman
09-29-2012, 01:59 PM
The Master and Margarita
Tor-Hershman
10-01-2012, 02:17 PM
"My Life As A Small Boy" by Wally Cox ---really!
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