The Angel Esmerelda: Nine Stories
I found out by accident that this is out this week. I'm not sure I've ever read any short stuff by him, except Pafko At The Wall by default I suppose. I find him quite hard to imagine in short format, actually.
― Ismael Klata, Tuesday, 8 November 2011 22:24 (twelve years ago) link
the recent new yorker one - midnight in dostoyevsky - is one of my fav things i've read in the magazine. & i like the harper's one also. am psyched to pick this up, though postponing to get the one w/the photographic (blue?) cover rather than the 'neat' new black illustrative edition thing.
― Abattoir Educator / Slaughterman (schlump), Wednesday, 9 November 2011 01:20 (twelve years ago) link
is it that he's kinda...college-y? i'm trying to be tactful. its just strange how much i was into him in my 20s, and i mention on this thread that i want to go back and re-read, but in the end...i don't really want to. tactful, cuz there are younger people than me on here who might feel what i felt way back when. when i read his stuff. i'm sure i'd still like some of the books. or it could be that he just lost the plot and me circa underworld.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 02:25 (twelve years ago) link
i also feel like critically he is no longer the BIG DEAL he was circa underworld. always feels strange to think of writers in rock band terms. people really wanted other people to know that cormac was the genius of the century back then too. not so much now. not that people don't still dig both of them, but they don't have that distant mystique that they once had. writing zombie books will do that to a guy.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 02:28 (twelve years ago) link
woah, had no idea this thing existed! thanks y'all
― markers, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 02:31 (twelve years ago) link
is it that he's kinda...college-y? i'm trying to be tactful
Not sure if you're addressing the new book or the thread title, Scott, but I don't know if I'm picking you up right. I'm quite encouraged by the little I've been able to find out about this new collection, especially that a lot of it's older stuff, because it gives me hope that it'll be about real people in real situations rather than the literary theory side of the guy.
If that makes sense. By way of explanation I adore Underworld and Libra, but now maybe mostly for their treatment of domestic concerns - LHO's marriage, say, or the adultery or NY Italian sections in Underworld. The meta bits (I'm sure they're there) hold no interest for me; so eg White Noise, while wryly amusing and all, feels more like an exercise I don't need to be a part of.
Maybe that's the 'college-y' you're talking about? For me that sort of thing is a layer of meaning I don't need, I'm already working hard enough to follow the real story underneath. Writers who prioritise the metalayer and forget the other bit are the worst imo - DeLillo can do both ime so yeah, I'm intrigued by this new collection.
― Ismael Klata, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 11:26 (twelve years ago) link
oh yeah i was just thinking of delillo in general. not the new collection.
see, i had no interest in libra, but i'm not a huge fan of fictionalized/alternate history fiction. and the same can be said about underworld. the original pafko intro turned me off so much when i read it that i didn't want to read the book. but i most definitely WAS inspired by his earlier stuff in a big way. i thought he was kinda brilliant! my tastes did change over time though. i don't really have anything BAD to say about him now. and i mention the rock band thing just cuz i was thinking about the earlier/better cliche and how unfair it can be. i dunno. i REALLY should pick up some of the old stuff and see how i feel about it.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:15 (twelve years ago) link
i haven't liked anything that i've read post-underworld. i think that's more it than that he's college-y. i still love him, though. i should pick up some of the old stuff, i guess, though i don't want to find out i don't like him as much!
― horseshoe, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:18 (twelve years ago) link
by "that's more it" i mean, i think it's more that he's kind of lost the plot a little.
― horseshoe, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:19 (twelve years ago) link
hes kind of too serious now! i liked point omega but its not funny at all, and without the humor he ends up sounding sort of like a parody of himself
― max, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:21 (twelve years ago) link
hes certainly not writing anything now that would win over skeptics
yeah i feel like his reputation has faded a bit. haven't read anything after underworld, tho maybe i read the body artist? don't remember much about it. funny scott mentions cormac. . . reading and loving suttree right now, though it's still early. and i finally finished blood meridian! loved it once i realized it was meant to be boring in the middle.
― Mr. Que, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:23 (twelve years ago) link
i think he writes/wrote amazing sentences, but they don't always add up to a novel that would sustain my interest anymore, i'd suspect. i should reread end zone, that book was kind of crazy!
― Mr. Que, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:24 (twelve years ago) link
yeah that's even true of underworld. i like that book more than a lot of people i think, but a lot of it was me getting mesmerized by it on a sentence level.
― horseshoe, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:25 (twelve years ago) link
everything ive read except 'libra' seemed sorta conceptually empty and i get what scott means abt 'college-y'. i mean white noise is abt a college professor but i think the whole 'consumerism is the governing ideology of late 20th c. america/life is a meaningless charade ordered by ad jingles' is a p... undergraduate sentiment.
― so solaris (Lamp), Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:26 (twelve years ago) link
you're conceptually empty!
― horseshoe, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:28 (twelve years ago) link
it's been a while since i've read white noise, but that's not what i took away from it.
― horseshoe, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:29 (twelve years ago) link
like my favorite thing about delillo in endzone and white noise is that as seriously as he takes his craft and his ideas, he also doesnt take them seriously. and that ability to joke about himself got lost somewhere around, i dont know, mao ii? or underworld i guess (havent read it). like the main professor character in point omega is pretty similar to murray in white noise--but the guy is deadly serious instead of being a figure of fun
― max, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:31 (twelve years ago) link
has anyone read 'amazons'
― max, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:32 (twelve years ago) link
love the idea of outgrowing writers, tho. like you can read salinger's long/short stories after you graduate from college and you'll be okay, but don't try to re-read catcher in the rye* or it will destroy you forever.
* i realize that some people can re-read catcher with no problem, but i think you catch my drift.
― Mr. Que, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:32 (twelve years ago) link
parts of underworld are jokey but there is a sort of ponderousness to it, i see what you mean
― horseshoe, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:32 (twelve years ago) link
haha book threads exist just to piss me off i will have you know i reread catcher last year and it destroyed me. maybe i'm a case of arrested development.
― horseshoe, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:33 (twelve years ago) link
'amazons' is p fun iirc
― johnny crunch, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:33 (twelve years ago) link
ooo i want to read amazons. how would one read it though? it's long out of print, right?
― Mr. Que, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:33 (twelve years ago) link
i think it's weird to pin the idea of him being less appealing somehow on his moment having faded; i know there was def a time when he was v zeitgeisty - there is that quote where he's talking about the fading relevance of linear narratives, which i'm sure he wasn't alone in recognising, or nec a pioneer of but which he does sorta epitomise, i think - but i feel like the change in context for readers can just make the books a different thing, portraying the beginning of an era rather than capturing the present moment.
i think i get the idea that he's college-y because there's a looseness to those early novels that is very invested in the poetry of how everything fits together, flitting between the beauty of the language to the new, cold landscape he's drawing. & maybe you have to 'buy into' that, have romantic faith in it the way you do at 20.
& idk, i like those last few novels, though i guess they're operating within his parameters, yeah, & the digressions of point omega aren't as shocking or absorbing as the earlier novels. but then we're onto some joseph heller shit about not transcending a framework that you drew the lines of.
xp, this is true, about the humourlessness, but i feel like that's more a thing of the austerity & anomie of the newer books, and the hyperactivity of white noise, &c. he's almost like love & death era woody allen in that, providing an additional sheen of absurdity to the very thing he's discussing.
― Abattoir Educator / Slaughterman (schlump), Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:34 (twelve years ago) link
i reread catcher last year and it destroyed me.
that's why i added the disclaimer--i bet you could read any book at the right time and place for you to read the book and it would wipe you out.
― Mr. Que, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:34 (twelve years ago) link
re amazons: think i bought the paperback off amazon p cheaply but a while ago. then lent it to someone & never got it back :\
― johnny crunch, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:34 (twelve years ago) link
okay but i also want to make the point that you are rong about catcher in the rye >:[
― horseshoe, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:35 (twelve years ago) link
oh yah never mind you can get it on amazon.
― Mr. Que, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:35 (twelve years ago) link
we're just talking about tastes here though! both of us are right, both of us are rong, even tho you are rong.
― Mr. Que, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:36 (twelve years ago) link
yeah i cld be mistaken, or reading things that max is taking as lighthearted to be moralizing, i just strongly remember the whole 'here they are right back at the supermarket' stuff as being really hectoring/overbearing and theres lots of good writing in white noise
xps - haha naw i like salinger a lot
― so solaris (Lamp), Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:36 (twelve years ago) link
i love salinger! just don't think catcher would "resonate" with me like it once did
― Mr. Que, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:37 (twelve years ago) link
i think part of the reason i remain so attached to don delillo even though i haven't read him in a while is that he seems like such a lovely person, at least the notion of him you get through his work, as opposed to basically every other writer i like. i don't want to be disabused of this notion so don't tell me if he's a wifebeater or something.
― horseshoe, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:39 (twelve years ago) link
but isn't the deal w/salinger that he captures a point in *your* life, being young & romantic, & w/delillo that he captured a moment in the twentieth century
― Abattoir Educator / Slaughterman (schlump), Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:39 (twelve years ago) link
if you read catcher as an adult it's all about wanting to protect holden and phoebe and it's a whole nother intense experience.
i mean maybe i misread white noise! or thought that delillo was "in on the joke" when he wasnt--but one thing that kept/keeps WN from feeling "collegey" to me is that it doesnt take its 'moralizing' or 'pondering' too seriously in general (there are obviously places where it does) and this keeps it from being unbearably 'MODERNITY DO U SEE.'
― max, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:40 (twelve years ago) link
he is in on the joke; that book is hilarious
― horseshoe, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:41 (twelve years ago) link
meanwhile falling man and point omega are both VIOLENCE AND WAR DO U SEE non-stop
not that i didnt enjoy them
― max, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:41 (twelve years ago) link
catcher is wonderful but i hated it as a teenager.
― occupy the A train (difficult listening hour), Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:41 (twelve years ago) link
i liked it as a kid but reading it now i don't think i got it at all. it's way better than i realized, for sure.
― horseshoe, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:42 (twelve years ago) link
yeah i think regardless of how much you like it as a kid you don't get it until you're an adult. i dunno i guess there are some smart kids out there.
― occupy the A train (difficult listening hour), Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:43 (twelve years ago) link
sorry i derailed delillo thread
― Mr. Que, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:44 (twelve years ago) link
are you going to reread catcher in the rye or what
― horseshoe, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:44 (twelve years ago) link
don derail
― occupy the A train (difficult listening hour), Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:45 (twelve years ago) link
already told you i was reading suttree! guess i'm going to have to.
― Mr. Que, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:46 (twelve years ago) link
<3
― horseshoe, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:46 (twelve years ago) link
yeah i didnt really like salinger as a teenager either but i enjoyed him a lot in my early 20s. whereas i think i might have really liked delillo in my teens but was p cold to him in early 20s. idk if that really means anything tho
to atone for my part in this don derailo i will pick up 'mao ii' again, which i have a mostly unread copy of in my apt
― so solaris (Lamp), Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:47 (twelve years ago) link
endzone is better
― max, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:48 (twelve years ago) link
its set at a college tho
― max, Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:49 (twelve years ago) link
i dont think i have a copy of endzone unfortunately and i already bought like six books this month so
― so solaris (Lamp), Wednesday, 9 November 2011 16:53 (twelve years ago) link