errrm Tal isnt that a book rather than an author? I just wikkied and it cam up as Lovecroft. It sounds very interesting though.
actually the more I read the more confused I am :confused: Who am I looking at?
Printable View
errrm Tal isnt that a book rather than an author? I just wikkied and it cam up as Lovecroft. It sounds very interesting though.
actually the more I read the more confused I am :confused: Who am I looking at?
1. Arkadi and Boriss Strugatski - Taliesin
2. John Updike - Pensive
3. Salman Rushdie - Schokokeks
4. Cormac McCarthy - Virgil
5. Truman Capote - Papayahed
6. Kurt Vonnegut - Charles Darnay
7. Oscar Wilde - Bazarov
8. D.H. Lawrence - Jamesian
9. Milan Kundera - Superunknown
10. Henry Rider Haggard - Grace86
11. Philip Roth - SleepyWitch
I have recently read Everyman by Roth and was not very impressed.
i haven't read it yet.. still trying to catch up with his latest book before that (The Plot Against America).. hehe, I didn't even know about Everyman before i read your msg.
um, I'd recommend Portnoy's Complaint, The Human Stain or The Dying Animal...
that's the ones I remember definitely... i read a couple of others (the Zuckerman ones and some others about the guy from The Dying Animal) but they are all blurred and merged into one book in my mind... maybe the political ones are more distinctive?
I have not read any other books by Roth and I don't mind giving him another try if it is chosen.
I think the topic of Everyman did not agree with me as its timing was not very good and it was somehow too close to home, too near the bone... but c'est la vie! :)
I cannot decide whom to nominate either... Thinking of Stephen King, Willa Cather, Edith Wharton, Henry James, Ian McEwan...
I dont despise them Im just a bit sick of them really ( and I havent read as many as most people here) I actually quite like them but I never read the "worthy" stuff I prefer the stuff that seems to have slipped through the usual nets. D. M. Mullock Craik, The more obscure L M Alcotts, E H porter , Kate Douglas Smith Wiggin, Maria edgeworth, George macdonald.Fanny Burney and thats just 19th centurey.Quote:
Originally Posted by Schokokeks
Can James and Wharton not both - technically - be considered "20th"-century?:D
I have been wanting to read his Atonement since last year but never had the chance. So, I might go ahead and nominate him.I don't have any problems with 19th century authors actually; I will read almost anything and everything (Have read since every single BC book chosen since I joined the forum.) I have read only one of book of both James and Wharton and I really liked their styles and would like to explore their works more... whether through the BC or not :)
You've never read any Oscar Wilde, have you? Try reading The Importance of Being Earnest or The Picture of Dorian Grey (especially Lord Henry Wotton's witticisms) and then tell me with a straight face that Wilde isn't fun.
However, I've already cast my nomination, but if anyone wants a writer who's uproariously funny, you should nominate Joseph Heller. Or I'll nominate him if no one else does and we open up to 2 nominations per person.