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Thread: Books you've read in the past year?

  1. #31
    Registered User aeroport's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by NickAdams View Post
    How helpful are the Gardner books to a writer?

    I posted a question, on Beckett's Trilogy thread http://www.online-literature.com/for...hlight=beckett, and would like to see if you can answer it.
    Gardner's awesome. Thing is, I haven't actually read any of his novels. I think he wrote upwards of twenty, though. (The James Bond books are written by a different JG.) I've read a few books on writing, and so far he's the only one who appears to approach the subject with anything like honesty. I just started his On Moral Fiction; it seems comparatively abstract so far, but The Art of Fiction and On Becoming a Novelist are definitely both worth reading - multiple times.

    I'll try the Beckett thread, but...

  2. #32
    A ist der Affe NickAdams's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jamesian View Post
    Gardner's awesome. Thing is, I haven't actually read any of his novels. I think he wrote upwards of twenty, though. (The James Bond books are written by a different JG.) I've read a few books on writing, and so far he's the only one who appears to approach the subject with anything like honesty. I just started his On Moral Fiction; it seems comparatively abstract so far, but The Art of Fiction and On Becoming a Novelist are definitely both worth reading - multiple times.

    I'll try the Beckett thread, but...
    Gardner wrote quite a few, but The Sun Dialogues and Grendal are the ones that come to mind. I haven't read either and his other two books, we've already discussed, are in my draw, on top of Mailer's Spooky Art, waiting to be studied. I skimmed through Art of Fiction, there's a lot of good stuff. I found a copy for a dollar at my favorite used bookstore; I figure it would make a nice gift for a writing friend.

    Grendal sounds interesting, but I would like to read Beowolf first before I get to the monster's P.O.V.

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  3. #33
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    Actually, come to think of it, I'm not sure we even covered Part II. Our professor talked about it a bit, but I think that we only were assigned Part I, and only an early bit of The Unnameable. We were covering quite a bit of stuff, and the prof was kind of trying to stress the later stuff - Godot, Endgame, etc. so we didn't do any of the novels in their entirety - four chapters of Murphy, I believe, and the first few chapters of Watt. Those two I'd like to go back to, though. The beginning of Murphy is hilarious.

  4. #34
    Registered User aeroport's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by NickAdams View Post
    Grendal sounds interesting, but I would like to read Beowolf first before I get to the monster's P.O.V.
    I thought the same, but now that I've read it I have no excuse... I have that and October Light sitting here, waiting for me...
    Jason and Medeia is another.

  5. #35
    A ist der Affe NickAdams's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jamesian View Post
    Actually, come to think of it, I'm not sure we even covered Part II. Our professor talked about it a bit, but I think that we only were assigned Part I, and only an early bit of The Unnameable. We were covering quite a bit of stuff, and the prof was kind of trying to stress the later stuff - Godot, Endgame, etc. so we didn't do any of the novels in their entirety - four chapters of Murphy, I believe, and the first few chapters of Watt. Those two I'd like to go back to, though. The beginning of Murphy is hilarious.
    Beckett is a suprising funny. But I don't suggest you look at the thread then, becaus I posted a spoiler that has to do with the second part. If you get a chance to go to the second half, please do; it's extremely rewarding.

    I'm well versed in scripture or much literature, so I don't get Beckett's allusions, but there is so much in there that you could have read nothing else and still enjoy his work.

    I would be interested in what you found, or the Prof pointed out, in the first part. Of the many things I read into it, I read it as a commentary on literature. There is a great reality to the first part, because there is no dialogue and the conversations that happened are summed up in a conclusion by the narrator- who remembers conversations in verbatim?

    Faulkner said he wrote a sprawling as he did, because he wanted to get the world in a sentence. I think Beckett achieved that with so much less.

    This is getting way off the thread.

    Are you a Joyce fan?

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  6. #36
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    Well, is anyone really a Joyce fan? He's almost impossible to like as an author - one just sort of reads through it, trying to halfway understand, coming away just sort of marveling at the guy's intelligence... We read a few of the Dubliners stories, 'Portrait', several chapters of 'Ulysses', and "Anna Livia" from the Wake. I actually think it's all pretty cool, but Ulysses tires me a little. I was surprised to find that bit of the Wake actually understandable. I certainly couldn't get all of it, but the meaning was more or less..."clear" isn't quite the word...let us say "sorta gettable". Interestingly, in one of the Gardner books, when he's talking about "mannered" writing (i.e., when the author's voice is intruding on the fictional world, or "dream" as he calls it), he mentions Joyce's regret, late in life, that he hadn't stuck with the earlier style from 'Portrait' and 'Dubliners'... Yeah, altogether I think he's alright. You?

  7. #37
    Mad Hatter Mark F.'s Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by NickAdams View Post

    How is Women by Bukowski? I was reading a little of Pulp in B&B today.
    If you like Bukowski you should like it, I pick it up you're a Hemingway fan and their writing style seems very close, at least to me. I'd only read Post Office and Factotum before this, and Women contained more humour than those other two. It's a nice, easy read, with a lot of tenderness for the characters.

    My only problem with Bukowski is that he tends to retell a lot of episodes of his life in different novels, short stories and poems, so if you start binge reading his work, it gets slightly repetetive.
    "And the worms, they will climb
    The rugged ladder of your spine"

  8. #38
    Quote Originally Posted by tudwell View Post
    I definitely like Prisoner of Azkaban best.
    Agreed, Tudwell. Harry Potter #3! - although I haven't actually had the chance to sit down to #7 yet.

  9. #39
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    Over the past year, I've read:

    The Prestige - Christopher Priest
    Jane Eyre - Charlotte Bronte
    Wuthering Heights - Emily Bronte
    Hard Times - Charles Dickens
    A Tale of Two Cities - Charles Dickens
    The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie - Muriel Spark
    The Tempest - William Shakespeare
    Macbeth - William Shakespeare
    100 Years of Solitude - Gabriel Garcia Marquez
    Memoirs of my Melancholy Whore - Gabriel Garcia Marquez
    The Prophet - Kahlil Gibran
    Veronika Decides to Die - Paulo Coelho
    Persuasion - Jane Austen
    Crime and Punishment - Fyodor Dostoevsky
    The Idiot - Fyodor Dostoevsky
    Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - JK Rowling (also reread GoF, OoTP and HBP)
    Once and Always by Judith McNaught
    Unchained Melody by Norberto Mercado
    Makamisa: the search for Rizal's third novel by Ambeth Ocampo
    Old Man and the Sea - Ernest Hemingway
    Sense and Sensibility - Jane Austen

    currently reading - Man of the Century (The Life and Times of Pope John Paul II) by Jonathan Kwitny, and The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky

  10. #40
    A ist der Affe NickAdams's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jamesian View Post
    Well, is anyone really a Joyce fan? He's almost impossible to like as an author - one just sort of reads through it, trying to halfway understand, coming away just sort of marveling at the guy's intelligence... We read a few of the Dubliners stories, 'Portrait', several chapters of 'Ulysses', and "Anna Livia" from the Wake. I actually think it's all pretty cool, but Ulysses tires me a little. I was surprised to find that bit of the Wake actually understandable. I certainly couldn't get all of it, but the meaning was more or less..."clear" isn't quite the word...let us say "sorta gettable". Interestingly, in one of the Gardner books, when he's talking about "mannered" writing (i.e., when the author's voice is intruding on the fictional world, or "dream" as he calls it), he mentions Joyce's regret, late in life, that he hadn't stuck with the earlier style from 'Portrait' and 'Dubliners'... Yeah, altogether I think he's alright. You?
    Joyce's regret, as you said or as Gardner said, is interesting. I haven't read any of Joyce, but he regret that he moved away from mannered writing or that he applied it? I want to be familiar with old and middle english, before I read Joyce.

    Quote Originally Posted by Mark F. View Post
    If you like Bukowski you should like it, I pick it up you're a Hemingway fan and their writing style seems very close, at least to me. I'd only read Post Office and Factotum before this, and Women contained more humour than those other two. It's a nice, easy read, with a lot of tenderness for the characters.
    Thanks. I'll put Women on my book list.

    Quote Originally Posted by Mark F. View Post
    My only problem with Bukowski is that he tends to retell a lot of episodes of his life in different novels, short stories and poems, so if you start binge reading his work, it gets slightly repetetive.
    Like Woody Allen.

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  11. #41
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    Quote Originally Posted by NickAdams View Post
    Joyce's regret, as you said or as Gardner said, is interesting. I haven't read any of Joyce, but he regret that he moved away from mannered writing or that he applied it? I want to be familiar with old and middle english, before I read Joyce.
    According to Gardner - and I think I sort of agree with him - the "mannered" stuff comes later. Definitely in Finnegans Wake, and in Ulysses as well. You don't really need to know much about Old and Middle English to read Dubliners or Portrait of the Artist. And of course, if you're reading the other works...it won't help you anyway.
    No one reads the Wake comfortably without being familiar with English, Russian, French, Swahili, Norwegian, German, probably Icelandic, and about fifty other languages - not an exaggeration.

  12. #42
    The Story of My Life bibliophile190's Avatar
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    No one reads the Wake comfortably without being familiar with English, Russian, French, Swahili, Norwegian, German, probably Icelandic, and about fifty other languages - not an exaggeration.



    Yet another book I'll have to fight my way through.
    A room without books is like a body without a soul.
    -Marcus Tullius Cicero

  13. #43
    Registered User Takeahnase's Avatar
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    Books I've read this year so far, minus the odd few which may have slipped my mind...

    Lolita
    Crime & Punishment
    The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
    Notes From the Underground
    The Bell Jar
    Steppenwolf
    The Red and the Black
    Wuthering Heights
    A Wild Sheep Chase
    Three Men in a Boat
    Northanger Abbey
    Animal Farm
    The Double
    A Brief History of Time
    Letters to Lily
    Perfume
    One Hundred Years of Solitude
    The Lovely Bones
    The Selfish Gene
    1984
    Me Talk Pretty One Day
    On the Road
    The Hobbit
    Fight Club
    And I'm reading 'Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?' at the moment, along with Vladimir Nabokov's 'Glory'.

    Too many books, so little time!
    I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived.

  14. #44
    veni vidi vixi Bakiryu's Avatar
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    I've read more but I don't have enough time to type!

    Harry Potter 7
    The Hitchiker's Guide to the Galaxy
    The Restaurant at the End of the Universe
    The Golden Compass
    Dickens: I hate pip!
    Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell- Susanna Clarke
    John Irving: The Cider House
    Shakespeare: Romeo and Juliet
    Interview With a Vampire - Anne Rice
    The Vampire Lestat - Anne Rice
    Queen of the Damned - Anne Rice
    The Tale of the Body Thief - Anne Rice
    The Devil Memnoch - Anne Rice
    Angels and Demons - Brown
    Twilight - Meyers
    New Moon-Meyers
    Eclipse - Meyers
    Romeo and Juliet
    Tithe-Holly Brown
    Eldest-Christopher Paolini
    Howls Moving castle- Wynne Jones
    Sabriel-Garth Nix
    Artemis Fowl-
    A.F. And the Arctic Incident-
    A.F and the Eternity Code- Eoin Colfer
    A.F. And the Opal Deception-
    A.F. and the lost Colony-

    H.P. and the Philosophers stone-
    H.P. and the chamber of Secrets-
    H.P. and the prisoner of azkaban-
    H.P. and the goblet of fire- J.K.Rowling
    H.P. and the order of the phoenix-
    H.P. and the half Blood Prince-
    Last edited by Bakiryu; 09-01-2007 at 09:43 PM.
    Shall these bones live?

  15. #45
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    Quote Originally Posted by bibliophile190 View Post
    Yet another book I'll have to fight my way through.
    Don't fight it! You'll hate it if you do. You have to sort of let go while you read it and let the meaning present itself (or sort of roughly sketch itself, anyway). I found it helpful, given a particular stretch of text, simply to go through it once without stopping and see how it works out, then - if you must - go back and look over the passages you're (more than reasonably) uncertain about. It doesn't help that much to review like that, though, from what I can see. It only intensifies that feeling that some critic or writer (maybe Beckett) described of diving into a stream only to find yourself a moment later completely dry back on the ground where you started...

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