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655914 Posts in 9232 Topics by 3396 Members Latest Member: - vlozan86 Most online today: 20 - most online ever: 494 (Jul 01, 2007, 02:59:53 PM)
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Author Topic: My teacher says I'm breaking books at an eighth grade level: book thread  (Read 11384 times)
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Greg Nog
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« Reply #200 on: Apr 10, 2012, 02:57:51 PM »

I'm gonna read this just so I can huffily sniff at your dad, "Oh, I'm familiar with your work."
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elpollodiablo
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Posts: 32624


« Reply #201 on: Apr 17, 2012, 08:02:26 AM »

Stuff I've read in the past couple of weeks:

The Grapes of Wrath - Steinbeck
The Zero - Jess Walter
Welcome to the Desert of the Real! - Zizek
Finished Kapital vol. 1
Giles Goat-Boy - John Barth
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think 'on the road.'
fishjim
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Posts: 1982


« Reply #202 on: Apr 17, 2012, 10:41:41 AM »

Stuff I've read in the past couple of weeks:

The Grapes of Wrath - Steinbeck
The Zero - Jess Walter
Welcome to the Desert of the Real! - Zizek
Finished Kapital vol. 1
Giles Goat-Boy - John Barth

How was Giles Goat-Boy? It's been on my shelf for years.
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Just wandering the countryside clearing caves.
elpollodiablo
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« Reply #203 on: Apr 17, 2012, 11:33:10 AM »

Mine too! I'd started it a couple-few times before and always got distracted before getting to the meat of the primary narrative (there's about 30pp of semi-metafictional preface and introductory material before the 'actual' story begins). It's a really fantastic example of early American literary postmodernism and a whole hell of a lot funnier than later works of the 70s and 80s. It's a multitiered allegory of the cold war, the rise of postmodern thought (Informationalism), religion, student movements, and international socialism, all encapsulated in a synecdochic university that stands for the whole world. It's also a pretty entertaining bildungsroman about a boy who gets raised among goats. Would recommend!
« Last Edit: Apr 17, 2012, 02:25:50 PM by elpollodiablo » Logged

think 'on the road.'
davy
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Posts: 24822


« Reply #204 on: Apr 17, 2012, 11:44:53 AM »

No fiction Pulitzer this year! First time since 1977.

And I wouldn't really care so much if one of the finalists wasn't my boy Denis Johnson. Close call!

Swamplandia was another nominee. Been halfway meaning to get around to that one.
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The drummer IS the foundation, p3wn.
elpollodiablo
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Posts: 32624


« Reply #205 on: Apr 17, 2012, 11:46:10 AM »

I wanna read Tree of Smoke.
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Nick Ink
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« Reply #206 on: Apr 17, 2012, 02:08:17 PM »

I've just started Alone In Berlin by Hans Fallada, translated by the poet Michael Hofmann.
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Seest thou what happens, Laurence, when thou firk’st a stranger ‘twixt the buttocks?!
fishjim
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Posts: 1982


« Reply #207 on: Apr 17, 2012, 02:39:47 PM »

And I wouldn't really care so much if one of the finalists wasn't my boy Denis Johnson. Close call!

Could've sworn I'd posted the Denis Johnson poem "Falling" in LPTJ before, but can't find it now. Will re-post again in the poem thread. I'm hot-and-cold on DJ's poems, but this one never fails to amaze me.  
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Just wandering the countryside clearing caves.
davy
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« Reply #208 on: Apr 17, 2012, 03:44:37 PM »

I wanna read Tree of Smoke.

It's kind of a slog, actually. I liked Jesus' Son, Train Dreams, Nobody Move, The Name of the World, Fiskadoro, and Resuscitation of a Hanged Man all better than Tree of Smoke.

Not to say it's bad, of course.
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The drummer IS the foundation, p3wn.
fishjim
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Posts: 1982


« Reply #209 on: Apr 17, 2012, 11:51:13 PM »

Dang, the new Alison Bechdel kinda sucks. Turns out her mother isn't half - nay, 9/10 - as interesting as her closeted homosexual funeral director father who shot himself.

Now I'm bummed for her.
« Last Edit: Apr 18, 2012, 12:57:09 AM by fishjim » Logged

Just wandering the countryside clearing caves.
G.C.R
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Posts: 6219


« Reply #210 on: Apr 18, 2012, 12:37:14 AM »

he didn't shoot himself, did he? he stepped in front of a truck I thought.
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I think it's fair to assume we'll be inebriated and covered in bodily effluvia all weekend
fishjim
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Posts: 1982


« Reply #211 on: Apr 18, 2012, 12:38:56 AM »

ah, you're right. not sure why i misremembered that - there's even a mention of the truck that hit him in this new one. most memorable part so far, actually.  Confused
« Last Edit: Apr 18, 2012, 12:57:24 AM by fishjim » Logged

Just wandering the countryside clearing caves.
davy
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« Reply #212 on: Apr 18, 2012, 10:32:40 AM »

Dang, the new Alison Bechdel kinda sucks. Turns out her mother isn't half - nay, 9/10 - as interesting as her closeted homosexual funeral director father who shot himself.

Now I'm bummed for her.

I just ordered this for our library!
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The drummer IS the foundation, p3wn.
fishjim
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Posts: 1982


« Reply #213 on: Apr 18, 2012, 12:16:37 PM »

Visually it's on par with the rest of her stuff, but narratively it's like an overlong therapy diary. Lots of panels of Bechdel in analysis, quoting Freud & Co. without a shred of irony, lots of TMI identification with Virginia Woolf, lots of Dream Analysis 101. It's like the graphic novel equivalent of Some Kind of Monster, with a narcissistic band of one. I hope she doesn't google herself and find this. Up to now I've been a loyal fan.
« Last Edit: Apr 18, 2012, 12:19:23 PM by fishjim » Logged

Just wandering the countryside clearing caves.
elpollodiablo
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Posts: 32624


« Reply #214 on: Apr 18, 2012, 12:40:44 PM »

Boy that sounds like the worst thing.
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Black Amnesia of Heaven
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« Reply #215 on: Apr 18, 2012, 12:41:18 PM »

except where he said it's the graphic novel equivalent of some kind of monster

i'd read the shit out of that
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elpollodiablo
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Posts: 32624


« Reply #216 on: Apr 18, 2012, 01:05:59 PM »

I'd be with you were it not for the title case.
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Greg Nog
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« Reply #217 on: Apr 18, 2012, 01:06:33 PM »

I was kind of lukewarm on Fun Home, even though I really like Dykes to Watch Out For.  I'm quite curious about this one.
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Greg Nog
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« Reply #218 on: Apr 18, 2012, 10:09:28 PM »

Me and Scott Lynch, author of The Lies Of Locke Lamora!


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G.C.R
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« Reply #219 on: Apr 19, 2012, 05:00:23 AM »

Greg if you were skinny and bald and beardless, you'd look hella like my other friend who is also named Greg.
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I think it's fair to assume we'll be inebriated and covered in bodily effluvia all weekend
jess
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Posts: 3571


« Reply #220 on: Apr 19, 2012, 11:41:26 AM »

I also have another friend Greg who looks weirdly like this Greg, but this other Greg is more like a shaggier, more unkempt, less muscular version. So kind of like if Greg were a dirty hippie.
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Greg Nog
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Posts: 21629


« Reply #221 on: Apr 19, 2012, 11:42:14 AM »

hey now, I'm plenty dirty
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jess
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Posts: 3571


« Reply #222 on: Apr 19, 2012, 11:46:25 AM »

Not this dirty, trust me. But I will amend it: if Greg were dirtier and a hippie.
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monkeypants
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Posts: 694


« Reply #223 on: Apr 20, 2012, 09:04:56 PM »

Anyone have any opinion about Steve Erickson?  I picked up his latest, "These Dreams Of You" merely because it caught my eye while browsing at a local book shop.  I'd never heard of the guy, but I liked the book quite a bit and he appears to have 6 or 7 other novels out that seem to be well regarded.  I'll definitely be checking out more of his stuff in the future.
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shitcakes drizzled with mediocrity syrup
Nick Ink
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« Reply #224 on: Apr 21, 2012, 03:32:22 AM »

Anyone have any opinion about Steve Erickson? 

I read Arc D'X when I was at university ( a looong  time ago!). It's a bizarre, time-warping story that starts out with Thomas Jefferson and his slave mistress in the eighteenth century and later flips quite dramatically into a sort of science fiction narrative. The author appears as a character at one point, issues of race are prominent, and there's quite a lot of sex and violence too.

It was a memorable book, and only the other day I noticed his name in the book shop and thought about picking something more recent up - maybe I will go for These Dreams Of You.
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Seest thou what happens, Laurence, when thou firk’st a stranger ‘twixt the buttocks?!
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