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i never got around to finishing blood meridian...visually it was a very complex book to realize when reading, found it pretty taxing on the attention compared to a lot of what I've read. Maybe I'll get back to it some time when I'm in a more focused state, or even make the cardinal sin of going back to read it after I've watched the movie lulz.
go back and finish it. there is an awesome scene at the end where they are in a field of buffalo bones that to me was the highlight of the novel and one of the most visceral passages in all literature. that said as my friend put it best the book reads like herman melville crossed with john woo.
To me, Crime and Punishment is the most well-constructed novel I've read, in terms of plot, story. I haven't read the entire book in Russian (plan to, though, someday), so I can't comment too intelligently on the prose, but it's brilliantly executed. I wonder what Dostoevskii's process was, in terms of planning out his books.
To me, Crime and Punishment is the most well-constructed novel I've read, in terms of plot, story. I haven't read the entire book in Russian (plan to, though, someday), so I can't comment too intelligently on the prose, but it's brilliantly executed. I wonder what Dostoevskii's process was, in terms of planning out his books.
1. Wake up
2. Think of how much the world hates you and how much more talented you are than those famous hacks.
3. Project your hatred on the Jews.
4. Yell at your wife and tell her how bad she looks
5. Think about how broke you are.
6. Go gamble and lose some money to bring yourself down even lower.
7. Get snubbed by a waiter or some other servant to really rile you up.
8. Write.
Read Summer in Baden-Baden by Leonid Tsypkin
Fashion is a form of ugliness so intolerable that we have to alter it every six months - Oscar Wilde
1. Wake up
2. Think of how much the world hates you and how much more talented you are than those famous hacks.
3. Project your hatred on the Jews.
4. Yell at your wife and tell her how bad she looks
5. Think about how broke you are.
6. Go gamble and lose some money to bring yourself down even lower.
7. Get snubbed by a waiter or some other servant to really rile you up.
8. Write.
The Shadow of the Wind (Spanish: La sombra del viento) is a 2001 novel by Spanish writer Carlos Ruiz Zafón
The novel, set in post- Spanish Civil War Barcelona, concerns a young boy, Daniel. Just after the war, Daniel's father takes him to the secret Cemetery of Forgotten Books, a huge library of old, forgotten titles lovingly preserved by a select few initiates. According to tradition, everyone initiated to this secret place is allowed to take one book from it, and must protect it for life. Daniel selects a book called The Shadow of the Wind by Julián Carax. That night he takes the book home and reads it, completely engrossed. Daniel then attempts to look for other books by this unknown author, but can find none. All he comes across are stories of a strange man - calling himself Laín Coubert, after a character in the book who happens to be the Devil - who has been seeking out Carax's books for decades, buying them all and burning them. In time this mysterious figure confronts and threatens Daniel. Terrified, Daniel returns the book to the Cemetery of Forgotten Books but continues to seek out the story of the elusive author. In doing so Daniel becomes entangled in an age old conflict that began with the author himself. Many parallels are found to exist between the author's life and Daniel's and he takes it upon himself to make sure history does not repeat.
(Plot summary from Wikipedia)
A very impressing novel;which I never would like to read due to the fact that it is a world bestseller but i read it anyway because one of my friends gave it to me, and I will never miss it...
Dostoevsky's one of those writers I've always meant to check out...but I wonder how much is lost by reading a translated version. A main reason why there's a lot of 'classic' texts I haven't attempted, something about the filtering process just strikes me as strange, a weird tic. Don't imagine I'll be picking up Russian any time soon...
de sade for me could be too technical ....like a manual.....but some lines r very touching.....and stories from old whores r good.....theres nothing like shugar daddy stories.....even proust....swan loves total whore.....but how tuoching the story is.....so romantic...
but what started out as business has quickley turned to pleasure
genet felt too gay for me.....but i never made an effort......but he liked bukowski.....russians do not get bukowski......they do not go behind drink and shit.....its hard to see "that little flame".....
but what started out as business has quickley turned to pleasure
by the way ....did anybody noticed how houellebecq puts down nabokov,harmonie korine and lary clark in his last book.......im afraid im alone again....
but what started out as business has quickley turned to pleasure
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