Originally Posted by
TheFifthElement
Both The Driver's Seat and Crash are great books. Crash I think is pretty polarising - it could be perceived as brilliant or cheap dodgy porn. Personally I found the obsession quality quite mesmerising.
Jerzy Kosinski's The Painted Bird was so disturbing I couldn't finish reading it. It just seemed to get more and more depraved and grotesque. Perhaps a truer representation of the horrors of war than are seen in most books. Similarly Ryu Murakami's In the Miso Soup is pretty depraved.
I wonder if it's as interesting how people interpret the idea of 'disturbing' literature. When I thought about this initially I thought about books that were oppressive or violent, but then I also thought of some books which have, I suppose, mentally disturbed me in some way like Catch 22 (Heller) and Hunger (Hamsun) both of which I had to put aside because they were making me feel crazy. Kobo Abe's fiction - The Woman in the Dunes, The Kangaroo Notebook & The Box Man - are disturbing in a different way, mainly in their representation of obsessional or oppressive elements of human nature. And then I thought about Mills and Boon books and Fifty Shades of Grey which are disturbing in other ways (I'm thinking writing quality & inexplicable popularity here!). Would be interested in other people's thoughts.