Page 6 of 23 FirstFirst 123456789101116 ... LastLast
Results 76 to 90 of 341

Thread: Disturbing books.

  1. #76
    Mad Hatter Mark F.'s Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    Paris
    Posts
    675
    Quote Originally Posted by Haven View Post
    callmeburroughs.tripod.com/joan.htm

    Maybe he did, maybe he didn't play Wm. Tell [extrapolating, arrow, Wm. Tell]... seems not substantiated, might have been a tabloid fabrication. Very sad. 13 days of jail... doesn't seem enough.

    Re the flinging the pages over his shoulder as he wrote, trying to remember, if that was actually in the Naked Lunch? I think that it was, actually got a really good memory of it, even talked about it with others who had read the novel. He was doing meth amphetamine with of course heroin. Kerouac is my hero, haven't read that much Ginsberg, but sure they would have been supremo editors for even this challenge. Excellent genre piece. Really glad you mentioned it.
    Yeah he was playing William Tell but with a hand gun. It happened in Mexico where he fled to avoid imprisonment for holding (heroin, benzedrine? I forget).
    "And the worms, they will climb
    The rugged ladder of your spine"

  2. #77
    I agree with others that Alice in Wonderland and the works Kafka and Joyce are indeed quite odd. I also think the passages of Anais Nin's diary entries dealing with her unusually close relationship with her father very outlandish as well. Even with such strangeness, these authors are able to construct the bizarre with wonderful prose.

    Georges Bataille's work is quite bizarre as well
    "there is an absolute
    and that must be in the heart"

  3. #78
    Inexplicably Undiscovered
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Location
    next door to the lady in the vinegar bottle
    Posts
    5,089
    Blog Entries
    72
    Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace. It's a heavy tome indeed, including footnotes! It's set in the not-so-distance future when all of the chickens of contemporary society
    come home to roost. I think that awful movie The Ring
    ripped off one of the plot elements in Infinite Jest.

  4. #79
    Voice of Chaos & Anarchy
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    In one of the branches of the multiverse, but I don't know which one.
    Posts
    11,338
    Blog Entries
    585
    Quote Originally Posted by Haven View Post
    callmeburroughs.tripod.com/joan.html

    Maybe he did, maybe he didn't play Wm. Tell [extrapolating, arrow, Wm. Tell]... seems not substantiated, might have been a tabloid fabrication. Very sad. 13 days of jail... doesn't seem enough.

    Re the flinging the pages over his shoulder as he wrote, trying to remember, if that was actually in the Naked Lunch? I think that it was, actually got a really good memory of it, even talked about it with others who had read the novel. He was doing meth amphetamine with of course heroin. Kerouac is my hero, haven't read that much Ginsberg, but sure they would have been supremo editors for even this challenge. Excellent genre piece. Really glad you mentioned it.
    That story wasn't in Naked Lunch or in another of his novels, but it has appeared in different forms in biographies, and it was assested to by a number of people, which is why there was no legal action against him.

  5. #80
    In a rainbow. Mortis Anarchy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Tulsa
    Posts
    1,206
    Blog Entries
    39
    I recently just bought Naked Lunch...I haven't started it though House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski is pretty strange...good, but different.

  6. #81
    Registered User kemal's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Location
    istanbul
    Posts
    10
    the last man in the world
    All that is in the world is love
    And knowledge is nothing but gossip

    fuzuli

  7. #82
    Person plh's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Rhode Island
    Posts
    7

    Wierd

    The Dream Quest of Unknown Kaddath, by H.P. Lovecraft. Lovecraft is a former denizen of my adopted state, 'Lil Rhody. That is the weirdest damn thing I ever read. I don't know anyone else besides me that actually liked it, except my son, but he is a total weirdo like his old man.
    -plh

  8. #83
    ...................
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Posts
    182
    The wierdest piece of literature so far would be the Cask of Amon Tillado by Poe. I don't necessarily like Poe, but I made the efforts to read it.

  9. #84
    Voice of Chaos & Anarchy
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    In one of the branches of the multiverse, but I don't know which one.
    Posts
    11,338
    Blog Entries
    585
    Quote Originally Posted by plh View Post
    The Dream Quest of Unknown Kaddath, by H.P. Lovecraft. Lovecraft is a former denizen of my adopted state, 'Lil Rhody. That is the weirdest damn thing I ever read. I don't know anyone else besides me that actually liked it, except my son, but he is a total weirdo like his old man.
    -plh
    If you read more of Lovecraft's work, you will find things that make seem as commonplace as it really is.

  10. #85
    Regency book&film worm! emmsi_*tobyrox*'s Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Location
    England
    Posts
    18
    A play rather than a book : Waiting for Godot by Samuel Beckett freaked me out...by its absurdness if that is a word!
    "The person, be it gentleman or lady, who has not pleasure in a good novel, must be intolerably stupid."
    ~Jane Austen~

  11. #86
    thatsright thechampion's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    noneyo
    Posts
    52
    no. you have no conceptualization of wierd. i can't get over this guy. he freaks me out. this is a direct quote from "The Riddle of the Traveling Skull" by Harry Stephen Keeler. the chapter that this is out of is called "A Chinaman He Catch Himse'f a Light!":
    It must be remembered that at the time I knew quite nothing, naturally, concerning Milo Payne, the mysterious Cockney talking Englishman with the long-beaked Sherlock-Holmesian cap; nor of the latter's "Barr-Bag" which was as like my own bag as one Milwaukee wienerwurst is like another; nor of Legga, the Human Spider, with her four legs and her six arms; nor of Ichabod Chang, exconvict, and son of Dong Chang; nor of the elusive poetess, Abigail Sprigge; nor of the Great Simon, with his 2163 pearl buttons; nor of - in short, I then knew quite nothing about anything or anybody involved in the affair of which I had now become a part, unless perchance it were my nemesis, Sophie Kratzenschneiderwumpel - or Suing Sophie!

    its a mystery novel. yes, he is published

  12. #87
    Registered User Etienne's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Posts
    967
    The Temptation of Saint-Anthony by Flaubert

  13. #88
    Windthatshakesthebarley Black Flag's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2002
    Location
    Missouri !!!
    Posts
    82
    Ulysses by James Joyce. In the same vein, A Portrait of an Artist as a Young Man, technically the prequel to Ulysses. Dubliners was kind of strange, too.
    Maybe they're not exactly "weird", but are most definately difficult to follow.
    I'm not sure what Joyce was smoking.
    Of course, if he had written Ulysses in a normal style, it might be pretty boring. A man wakes up, eats breakfast, goes to work, takes a lunch break, wanders around the streets of Dublin for a while, plays with himself on the beach (yeah, it's what you're thinking), and goes home. And those are the highlights as I remember them. It's been a few years since I've read it.
    "Friends stab you in the front" --Oscar Wilde

  14. #89
    Registered User Zelly's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Somewhere Under The Rainbow
    Posts
    219
    To be honest... Peter Pan.

    I liked it, but it was so strange.
    "Everytime I look in your eyes, everyday I'm watching you die."

  15. #90
    Searching for..... amalia1985's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Athens, Greece
    Posts
    4,660
    "The Breast" by Philip Roth, we read it in the third year in the Modern American Literature class in my university. Really fun, but realy weird, at the same time...
    None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe that they are free.
    -Goethe

Similar Threads

  1. Harry Potter
    By jessw in forum General Literature
    Replies: 550
    Last Post: 12-03-2011, 12:12 PM
  2. Favorite Books
    By Admin in forum General Literature
    Replies: 112
    Last Post: 05-29-2010, 05:15 PM
  3. Books About Vampires
    By samah in forum General Literature
    Replies: 110
    Last Post: 07-21-2009, 08:41 AM
  4. Books about books.
    By Nightshade in forum General Literature
    Replies: 25
    Last Post: 05-23-2007, 01:22 AM
  5. Disturbing books, good or bad?
    By diceman81 in forum General Literature
    Replies: 29
    Last Post: 07-13-2006, 09:13 PM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •