Authors you will never read

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (527 of them)

rowling is one for the "authors i wish i could unread" thread

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Friday, 28 August 2020 23:38 (five years ago)

F451 is as much about technology as it is about censorship, though. Screens everywhere, people wearing earbuds at all times.


yeah, i don’t much care for SF values on its predictive capability, but bradbury was rly good at the aesthetic, and how the citizens F451 interface with the electronic aural space is justifiably praised i think:

And in her ears the little Seashells, the thimble radios tamped tight, and an electronic ocean of sound, of music and talk and music and talk coming in, coming in on the shore of her unsleeping mind. The room was indeed empty. Every night the waves came in and bore her off on their great tides of sound, floating her, wide-eyed, toward morning. There had been no night in the last two years that Mildred had not swum that sea, had not gladly gone down in it for the third time.

Fizzles, Saturday, 29 August 2020 10:16 (five years ago)

and there’s a good deal of strangeness in bradbury stories generally as well.

Fizzles, Saturday, 29 August 2020 10:17 (five years ago)

Agree with Fizzles! This is powerful stuff!

the pinefox, Saturday, 29 August 2020 11:13 (five years ago)

It's good, will give his stories a go.

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 29 August 2020 11:29 (five years ago)

I’ve found Pratchett’s books pretty good comfort reading during the lockdown. Haven’t read many since I was a teenager - I keep expecting them to be full of dated jokes, forced whimsy and clumsy plotting, and then they turn out to be generally delightful (albeit whimsical and dated). Plotting much tighter than I remember, especially on the watch books. Vehemently pro-diversity and anti-fascist, which plays well right now.

Chuck_Tatum, Saturday, 29 August 2020 16:24 (five years ago)

Bradbury is easy to make fun of and his authorial persona is maybe some kind of a less pervy or more oblivious Asimov but his best stuff as others have noted, seems to really hold up. And his cousin Malcom doesn't get enough love around here.

Two Little Hit Parades (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 29 August 2020 17:09 (five years ago)

yeah Bradbury has obvious flaws but when he's on he's great. Also this is one of my favorite opening paragraphs to a story:

I live in a well. I live like smoke in the well. Like vapor in a stone throat. I don't move. I don't do anything but wait. Overhead I see the cold stars of night and morning, and I see the sun. And sometimes I sing old songs of this world when it was young. How can I tell you what I am when I don't know? I cannot. I am simply waiting. I am mist and moonlight and memory. I am sad and I am old. Sometimes I fall like rain into the well. Spider webs are startled into forming where my rain falls fast, on the water surface. I wait in cool silence and there will be a day when I no longer wait.

JoeStork, Saturday, 29 August 2020 17:51 (five years ago)

Huh, maybe I will read Bradbury again.

Guayaquil (eephus!), Saturday, 29 August 2020 17:53 (five years ago)


Bradbury is easy to make fun of and his authorial persona is maybe some kind of a less pervy or more oblivious Asimov but his best stuff as others have noted, seems to really hold up. And his cousin Malcom doesn't get enough love around here.

― Two Little Hit Parades (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, August 29, 2020 1:09 PM (one hour ago) bookmarkflaglink

"Ray! Ray! It's Malcolm! Your cousin, Malcolm Bradbury? You know that new sound you were looking for? Well listen to this!"

peace, man, Saturday, 29 August 2020 18:20 (five years ago)

I think "There Will Come Soft Rains" is great simply because it predicts "smart home" bullshit and places it in the context of world-destroying nuclear war. Really intelligent and interesting writing.

healthy cocaine off perfect butts (the table is the table), Saturday, 29 August 2020 18:27 (five years ago)

Lol, peace, man.

Two Little Hit Parades (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 29 August 2020 19:10 (five years ago)

(Looking at Amazon for a paperback copy of the Bradbury short story collections for possible Christmas present and it's out of print and going for 75 quid)

koogs, Saturday, 29 August 2020 22:04 (five years ago)

Emily Gould.

https://www.bookforum.com/print/2701/emily-gould-s-novel-of-music-and-motherhood-in-early-2000s-new-york-city-23943

xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 2 September 2020 09:51 (five years ago)

In a 1994 interview, Bradbury stated that Fahrenheit 451 was more relevant during this time than in any other, stating that, "it works even better because we have political correctness now. Political correctness is the real enemy these days. The black groups want to control our thinking and you can't say certain things. The homosexual groups don’t want you to criticize them. It's thought control and freedom of speech control."

Tsar Bombadil (James Morrison), Wednesday, 2 September 2020 09:58 (five years ago)

No surprise given his folksy 1950sness, but still.

Tsar Bombadil (James Morrison), Wednesday, 2 September 2020 10:02 (five years ago)

Tom Sharpe was a guilty pleasure for me as a Raymond Carver reading teenager in the 80s, and I've always thought Pratchett's books would have simlar vibe, but with added fantasy, so doubly off-putting.

fetter, Wednesday, 2 September 2020 10:36 (five years ago)

xp: Well, that's depressing!

peace, man, Wednesday, 2 September 2020 10:47 (five years ago)

Pratchett's not a leering douchebag, though.

Tsar Bombadil (James Morrison), Wednesday, 2 September 2020 11:50 (five years ago)

tom sharpe has always belonged in this thread

mark s, Wednesday, 2 September 2020 12:01 (five years ago)

as does bruce dickinson

https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/A1eW2U9v8GL.jpg

mark s, Wednesday, 2 September 2020 12:02 (five years ago)

Emily Gould

Yes, x1000.

pomenitul, Wednesday, 2 September 2020 12:42 (five years ago)

Atwood is good not bad, I appreciated her speaking up against TERFS. I really wasn’t that into The Testaments, though, which was terrible as the original Handmaid’s Tale is a masterpiece.

scampo italiano (gyac), Saturday, 12 September 2020 11:14 (five years ago)

Yeah that was good, though the stuff on bots is terrible, and I'm allergic to most dystopias these days.

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 12 September 2020 11:24 (five years ago)

that = speaking up for trans rights

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 12 September 2020 11:26 (five years ago)

Hemingway and Miranda July both firmly on my must not read list

hoos springsteen (qiqing), Saturday, 12 September 2020 20:30 (five years ago)

Stay away from Atwood's frankenfood lectures called the maddaddam trilogy, as well as her comics. Otherwise she's written some good stuff.

tao lin, knausgard, osha, hitler

wasdnous (abanana), Sunday, 13 September 2020 01:44 (five years ago)

yeah, nothing about tao lin or knausgaard sounds appealing or interesting to me at all

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Sunday, 13 September 2020 03:19 (five years ago)

xp I read and liked Oryx and Crake earlier this year - it was pleasingly weird and disturbing and I then bought The Year off the Flood but haven’t read it yet.

scampo italiano (gyac), Sunday, 13 September 2020 10:16 (five years ago)

I would just humbly submit that people not become confused between Tao Lin and Tan Lin. The latter is one of best writers in the US afaic

healthy cocaine off perfect butts (the table is the table), Sunday, 13 September 2020 11:41 (five years ago)

Fuck

So JK Rowling’s latest Cormoran Strike book (which is 900 pages long! WTF!) is apparently about a trans serial killer. I think we all knew this was coming, though I personally thought that lead times would put this plotline off until book 6.

— Abigail Nussbaum (@NussbaumAbigail) September 14, 2020

xyzzzz__, Monday, 14 September 2020 19:13 (five years ago)

ffs

pomenitul, Monday, 14 September 2020 19:14 (five years ago)

The thread (just reading it now) is an interesting discussion of Silence of the Lambs!

xyzzzz__, Monday, 14 September 2020 19:20 (five years ago)

it's good and i think gets the flaws in SofL right, except maybe for the authority issue? which is maybe somewhat um *complicated* by the fact that harris's deepest well of authority eats ppl he dislikes

*(a book i also have a lot of time for)

mark s, Monday, 14 September 2020 19:52 (five years ago)

Even if this was translated I think it will be difficult to find the time with multiple novel cycles :-(

Damion Searls told me about a book he wants to translate: "The Office" by J.J. Voskuil (7 vols, 5500 pages — triple Anniversaries, twice Proust, half-again Knausgaard), about 30 years of a man's life working at a Bureau for Dialectology, Folklore and Onomastics.

— Dustin Illingworth (@ddillingworth) September 13, 2020

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 15 September 2020 09:08 (five years ago)

I may read Silence of the Lambs, however (only saw the film once but it possibly obscures a ton from that book?)

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 15 September 2020 09:10 (five years ago)

Film is pretty faithful to book iirc but book does a lot of getting inside the killer’s head and the film obviously doesn’t do much of a job of that. Book definitely more sympathetic but then the film was always controversial so not hard.

scampo italiano (gyac), Tuesday, 15 September 2020 09:24 (five years ago)

Demme, being an ex-Corman alumni, dials up the 'horror' aspects of SOTL a bit in terms of performance and (especially) the sets - whereas Lecter's cell in the Michael Mann version of Manhunter is all antiseptic white, in SOTL it's a shitty brown dungeon.

Ward Fowler, Tuesday, 15 September 2020 09:40 (five years ago)

Demme's sensibility is a lot closer to Harris's than Mann's though

Number None, Tuesday, 15 September 2020 09:54 (five years ago)

mann's launched will graham into the csi-o-sphere

also lecter is called lecktor for some reason

mark s, Tuesday, 15 September 2020 09:58 (five years ago)

ONLY good thing about Manhunter is the good Brian Cox

how do i shot moon? (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 15 September 2020 10:03 (five years ago)

The bit where In-a-Gadda-da-Vida is playing is so bad my toes have still not uncurled since 198whenever

how do i shot moon? (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 15 September 2020 10:04 (five years ago)

https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v03/n22/martin-amis/football-mad

(it's from 1981, just email boosted in their "diverted traffic" series of unlocked pieces from the past)

mark s, Tuesday, 15 September 2020 11:33 (five years ago)

ONLY good thing about Manhunter is the good Brian Cox

lies

in any movie or tv show featuring william peterson there is also the good thing of keeping an eye out for his incredibly bandy legs

you are like a scampicane, there's calm in your fries (bizarro gazzara), Tuesday, 15 September 2020 13:05 (five years ago)

both red dragon (the book) and manhunter (the movie) are good

mellon collie and the infinite bradness (BradNelson), Tuesday, 15 September 2020 14:14 (five years ago)

Voskuil's magnum opus deserves to be translated into English. It's a lot but a lot of it is great.

Monte Scampino (Le Bateau Ivre), Tuesday, 15 September 2020 14:51 (five years ago)

LBI delivering as usual

imago, Tuesday, 15 September 2020 14:53 (five years ago)

lol <3

Monte Scampino (Le Bateau Ivre), Tuesday, 15 September 2020 15:00 (five years ago)


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.