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Reflections on the puddle of life

Fictionally uninspired

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Hello peeps hope you are all well and happy and enjoying life. I am here and there, very busy, hating my job and working at my OU course. Keeping busy.

But I have a dilemma, as the title of this blog indicates. No, I'm not faking a lack of inspiration but I am uninspired by fiction. How has this happened? I sometimes get burn out from reading too much, but recently I've been reading at a more relaxed pace, giving myself time to do some writing in the meantime. In the evenings I've been slowly picking my way through The Odyssey, which is brilliant, but I really want to take it slow so taking it on the train to read is no good for me. I finished my current train journey book (Prince by IB Michael, I've read it before and it's beautiful) and picked up a book called In Search of a Distant Voice by Taichi Yamada which was just dreadful and I couldn't bring myself to finish it. So I put it in my 'to swop' pile and looked through all my books that I own and haven't yet read and...well I wasn't inspired to read any of them. In fact, I was thinking of not reading at all!

So help me Lit net. The list below is the list of my unread books. I need help being convinced to read one of them. Sell one of my books to me, please. Sell hard, I'm really uninspired.

I'm Not Scared - Niccolo Ammaniti
The Master and Margarita - Bulgakov
Veronika Decides to Die - Paulo Coelho
One Thousand and One Ghosts - Alexandre Dumas
The Name of the Rose - Umberto Eco
In Evil Hour - Gabriel Garcia Marquez
The Sorrows of Young Werther - Goethe
The Glass Bead Game - Hermann Hesse
America - Franz Kafka
The Painted Bird - Jerzy Kosinski
The Leopard - Lampedusa
War - J M G Le Clezio
Invitation to a Beheading - Vladimir Nabokov
Blindness - Jose Saramago
Iron in the Soul - Jean Paul Sartre
Germinal - Emile Zola
Tropic of Cancer - Henry Miller
Never Let Me Go - Kazuo Ishiguro
Silence - Shusako Endo
The Corrections - Jonathan Franzen
Lucky Jim - Kingsley Amis
The Three Musketeers - Alexandre Dumas
The Iliad - Homer
Tales Of Moonlight and Rain - Ueda Akinari
Spring Snow - Yukio Mishima
The Pillow Book of Sei Shonagon
Black Swan Green - David Mitchell
Palm of the Hand Stories - Yasunari Kawabata
Fires on the Plain - Shohei Ooka
Amrita - Banana Yoshimoto
Empire of the Sun - J G Ballard
Girlfriend in a Coma - Douglas Coupland
House of Sand and Fog - Andre Dubus III
The Golden Notebook - Doris Lessing
A Maggot - John Fowles
The Poisonwood Bible - Barbara Kingsolver
What I Loved - Siri Hudsvedt
Suttree - Cormac McCarthy
All The Pretty Horses - Cormac McCarthy
Cities of the Plain - Cormac McCarthy
The Crossing - Cormac McCarthy
The Ticket That Exploded - William S Burroughs
The Soft Machine - William S Burroughs
The Place of Dead Roads - William S Burroughs
Crossing to Safety - Wallace Stegner
The Women's Room - Marilyn French
V - Thomas Pynchon
Christmas Holiday - W Somerset Maugham
The English Patient - Michael Ondaatje
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Comments

  1. Silas Thorne's Avatar
    Hey Fifth, that's a great selection of books you haven't read, which shows that you must have a wonderful library of books that you have read. I'm sure I've got a big list of good books that I haven't read too, many that I've picked up from second-hand book sales, but I'd have to admit that some of them, though they might be good, might not be good for me at the present time.I'm probably not the best person here to give you advice on which of these books will bring you out of this 'uninspired by fiction' stage, though I have read some of these, but for a train-reading book maybe it is better to find a book among these that you enjoy reading. Maybe, one evening, start at the top of the list and start reading the first page of each book until you find a book you've read several pages without meaning to, a book that hooks into your present interest and mood.
  2. qimissung's Avatar
    I have exactly the same problem, Fifth. Maybe I'll post mine this weekend. Of the ones you listed, I would probably enjoy "Empire of the Sun" the most. So start there. Start with something fun.
  3. JuniperWoolf's Avatar
    Whatever you do, don't read Blindness! For the love of god, throw that depressing-for-the-sake-of-being-depressing in the fire immediately. I guess this is the opposite of what you asked us to do, but it's one of my missions in life to spare as many people as possible from experiencing the crisis that is Blindess at all costs. Just don't do it, man.
  4. TheFifthElement's Avatar
    Silas great suggestion. Appetite for reading is linked to mood isn't it? I watched a programme last night about the origins of the Greek myths in Hittite (sp?) mythology, and it was fascinating. Made me want to read more ancient Greek literature and, oddly, some ancient literature from my own land like Beowulf (yes, I must) and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight and The Mabinogion. My wish list is getting bigger!

    Qimi Empire of the Sun is a great suggestion. I am very tempted by Ballard, knowing how much I've loved his other works. But part of me wants to keep it in reserve. I don't exactly know why, but I suppose it's a little bit like having a stash of chocolate; something you can turn to in an hour of great need. It's a good choice though. It may be next on my list. You make a good point; a lot of the books on my list are quite heavy and perhaps that's why I'm put off reading them. Plus a lot of them are over 300 pages long and that always gives me pause. I'm so uncommitted Do post your list. Hopefully we can inspire each other

    Juniper goodness, I've never come across such a vociforous response to Blindness before! The only thing is the perverse little demon inside me is now very intrigued as to what it is that's so depressing about Blindness that it should be avoided at all costs and I am now tempted to read it! I do love Saramago, but I think I'm not in the right state of mind to tackle his walls of text so perhaps I'll quash that little demon and take your advice instead.

    Thanks all.
  5. qimissung's Avatar
    I' posted my list, Fifth. I notice it's considerably shorter than yours. I am still determined to read these. I bought them because I was interested in them, after all.

    Question-why do you hate your job? I thought you liked it. You've only had it for about a year, haven't you? Is it that you want to write more?
  6. TheFifthElement's Avatar
    Sigh. My job. I am constantly reminding myself that changing jobs has a cycle. For the first 6-9 months, it's great; there's a lot to learn and it's interesting learning new things and trying new things out and mastering some of them, if not all. But after that gestation period I start to get frustrated that I'm not progressing as I expect, and I start to discover the parts of my job that are really going to hack me off. So I am there right now.
    I love the work, the actual work involved in what I do. But that's only a small proportion of the job. The rest entails trying to get consensus from a management team of 8 people who aren't going to agree about anything in a million years so inevitably I'm going to annoy them all at some point and I spend an awful lot of time to-ing and fro-ing between their egos well aware that once they get in a room together they'll bat it out in 5 minutes, but in the meantime I can have spent hours trying to come up with a mutually satisfactory solutions only to end up with a solution which satisfies no one, not even me. It feels like a large exercise in wasting time. So most of the time I feel like one of those army messengers, you know the one's that come back with their head chopped off? It's kind of like that. Brutal, mostly.
    I know once I've gained a bit more confidence, and I'm more sure of what I'm doing I'll be able to handle it, but at the moment I'm just being batted from one thing to the next and it's pretty exhausting.
    That's it. Moan over
  7. Silas Thorne's Avatar
    Hey Fifth, bought 'Empire of the Sun'. Really enjoyed it for about 30 pages, then started reading a Jeff Lindsay 'Dexter' novel and temporarily forgot to go back to Ballard. Will return to it after I extract myself from crime fiction.
    Do you use De Bono with your team? Maybe you can get them to put on different coloured hats or shoes. Maybe then use the 'White Pillow' technique: giving them all white pillows to fight each other with and shutting the door.
  8. TheFifthElement's Avatar
    Hi Silas I started reading Empire of the Sun. It's really good. If you ever get back to it, I'd be interested in your thoughts. It doesn't have Ballard's customary lyricism; it's not quite as trippy and lush as I'm used to from him, but it is very good. A good choice there. Before that I read a book called Men in Space by Tom McCarthy who is my new favourite novelist. I was saving it, but decided to read it anyway. It's intensely clever, almost too clever. I feel like I ought to read it again, which is how I've felt about all McCarthy's books. Pick up what I missed.

    I like your idea for the creative writing class. I'd love to do it, but sadly it's all online. Maybe I could start an online pillow fight. That'd be a first. Forum activity has picked up this past week. We now have 4 people contributing (including me). It's a start.
  9. Silas Thorne's Avatar
    I meant for your work...
  10. TheFifthElement's Avatar
    silly me. Yes, it's a good idea. Unfortunately it'd probably turn into a fist fight or a 'who can disparage who the most' verbal battle. Then someone would get sacked. Probably me. It's probably the only thing they could agree on
  11. Silas Thorne's Avatar
    Hey, went back to 'Empire of the Sun'. Wonderful writing! I'm still reading it.
  12. TheFifthElement's Avatar
    I'm glad you're enjoying it Silas. J.G. Ballard is a pretty good writer. I finished Empire a few days ago, and found it a very affecting read. Sad, disturbing, and yet non-judgemental. It's weird to think that Ballard actually experienced something of that, as although the story isn't 100% autobiographical it is based on his experiences in a Japanese POW camp as a child. I find Ballard a fascinating read. Good call by Qimi!
  13. Virgil's Avatar
    Lucky Jim is a blast of fun. You should enjoy that. The Leopard is a fine novel. Hope you've gotten inspired by now.
  14. TheFifthElement's Avatar
    Nice to see you around Virgil Lucky Jim is a good call, I'm pretty sure I'll read that in 2011. And The Leopard; I've nearly chosen it three times now so it's bound to come out soon. Hope you and the family are all well.
  15. Virgil's Avatar
    Thank you Fifth. Everyone is doing well. I will have to provide an Matthew update blog. Thanks for asking.