No Country for Old Men isn't as good as The Road. The accents seem more forced in print than they did on screen and there's far too much of the "back in the day, the world was..." narration.
― milo z, Wednesday, 19 December 2007 20:51 (eighteen years ago)
everyone seems to hate no country for old men
I liked it well enough -- not at all my genre -- until the sheriff's "society's goin to hell cuz people don't say 'please'" chapter.
ha xpost
― Dr Morbius, Wednesday, 19 December 2007 20:53 (eighteen years ago)
i never read denis johnson before - after seeing tree of smoke on every year end list i got already dead and am crazily enjoying it - tho only 50 pages in.
― jhøshea, Wednesday, 19 December 2007 20:54 (eighteen years ago)
Already Dead is great but it lags a bit in the middle. it has some absolutely gorgeous passages though.
― the table is the table, Wednesday, 19 December 2007 20:57 (eighteen years ago)
denis johnson for me is like Jesus' Son >>>>>> Already Dead >> Fiskadoro > Resuscitation of a Hanged Man but I liked parts of all of them. Jesus' Son is an all time fave
― dmr, Wednesday, 19 December 2007 21:03 (eighteen years ago)
jesus son is super ace
― max, Wednesday, 19 December 2007 21:07 (eighteen years ago)
movie is pretty good too
Strange Piece of Paradise, Terri Jentz (2006)
Two college girls participate in something called the "Bikecentennial", which involves bicycling across America in '76. A few days into their journey, they are camping out in the Oregon desert, and some guy drives his truck over the tent in which they are both sleeping, and then attacks them both with a hatchet. Miraculously, they survive and manage to go on with life. Over the years, the author becomes increasingly haunted by the psychological scars that she bears from the whole traumatic ordeal (the axe-dude was never caught), and she courageously ends up re-visiting the scene of the crime and begins to track down the psychopath. The greatest true crime book ever? And, unlike most entries in the genre, it's written in first-person...plus the author is just plain rad. A fucking great book.
That's my Reading Rainbow style review!
― dell, Wednesday, 19 December 2007 21:11 (eighteen years ago)
i started tree of smoke, read about 100 pages--there wasn't anything wrong with it, but it wasn't really grabbing me either.
i suck at reading fiction these days, though.
― mookieproof, Wednesday, 19 December 2007 21:20 (eighteen years ago)
Me too, why is that? Someone broked my imagination?
― dell, Wednesday, 19 December 2007 21:25 (eighteen years ago)
Actually, though, it takes imaginative facilities to read non-, so maybe I just can't truck with whatever authors' own imaginal worlds these days. By and large, my favorite fiction has always been roman a clef shit, anyways.
― dell, Wednesday, 19 December 2007 21:27 (eighteen years ago)
Jesus' Son is amazing.
I got a copy of his first novel (Angels) yesterday, I think that's up next.
― milo z, Wednesday, 19 December 2007 21:39 (eighteen years ago)
Anyone else read his plays? I think they were sort of unfairly knocked.
Speaking of plays, anyone ever read anything by Will Eno. I think he's totally brilliant.
― the table is the table, Wednesday, 19 December 2007 21:46 (eighteen years ago)
i just finished tree of smoke, too. it was - yeah, mr. que - kind of 'bleh.' it didn't really come together in the end, and though it had all the trappings of an Important Novel, i put it down wondering exactly what i'd jsut read.
― remy bean, Wednesday, 19 December 2007 21:53 (eighteen years ago)
i read swallows and amazons on laurel's recommendation, and loved it. i am in the first chapters of swallowdale now
― remy bean, Wednesday, 19 December 2007 21:54 (eighteen years ago)
my mom LOVES the swallows and amazons books and always was trying to get me to read them when i was younger... i could never get into it
― max, Wednesday, 19 December 2007 21:58 (eighteen years ago)
lehane - gone baby gone thomas - deluxe routledge comp reader - foucault
― stevienixed, Wednesday, 19 December 2007 22:04 (eighteen years ago)
-> i agree. fantastic book.
― stevienixed, Wednesday, 19 December 2007 22:05 (eighteen years ago)
The Green Man - Kingsley Amis Henry James: The Young Master - Sheldon M. Novick
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 19 December 2007 23:42 (eighteen years ago)
green man has been on my list forever ... is it worth picking up?
― remy bean, Wednesday, 19 December 2007 23:48 (eighteen years ago)
The supernatural stuff isn't as considered as Amis' usual chronicle between the sexes (the novel has the most inept threesome in lit history).
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Thursday, 20 December 2007 02:10 (eighteen years ago)
Re-Reading: William Gass "On Being Blue"
Reading: A. C Grayling "Descartes: The Life and TImes of a Genius" Achille Mbembe "On the Postcolony" Aleister Crowley "Konx Om Pax" J. P. Sartre "Sketch for a Theory of the Emotions" Howell "Logic and Rhetoric in England: 1500 to 1700" Empson "Milton's God" plus various "how to" books about revising your dissertation
Having Read Aloud to Me: C.S. Lewis "Out of the Silent Planet"
Up next: Parker's mammoth bio of John Milton
― Drew Daniel, Thursday, 20 December 2007 03:36 (eighteen years ago)
^^^do they all get equal play?
― mookieproof, Thursday, 20 December 2007 07:06 (eighteen years ago)
Achille Mbembe "On the Postcolony"
i just had to read part of this for class; i liked it a lot
― max, Thursday, 20 December 2007 07:09 (eighteen years ago)
STRESS: The Nature and History of Engineered Grief, by Robert Kugelmann also still working on Walker Percy's Lost In The Cosmos which I highly, highly recommend so far
― El Tomboto, Thursday, 20 December 2007 07:25 (eighteen years ago)
if not for the short & informal semiotics lesson in the middle then at least for the hilarious/tragic questionnaires
Actually it's pretty interesting how STRESS, Lost in the Cosmos, and my last book - Normal Accidents by Charles Perrow - all sort of dovetail on similar points. Also see Why Things Bite Back by Edward Tenner for more discussion on how modern life is amazingly bad for everyone
― El Tomboto, Thursday, 20 December 2007 07:27 (eighteen years ago)
like, in a more interesting and intellectually honest way than "fast food nation" is
― El Tomboto, Thursday, 20 December 2007 07:28 (eighteen years ago)
that book sucked
not as funny as KA's best social satires but good, a strange and interesting little supernatural mystery.
― m coleman, Thursday, 20 December 2007 11:06 (eighteen years ago)
ive been considering k amis for a while...i fear hell be a touch to mannish for my taste, but...its worth a go
mostly hacked through todd gittlin's the sixties and the twilight of common dreams...in both cases theres something about his "prose" style i like -- a certain "prophetic voice", to accept a term, that i find necessary in nonfiction these days and a good amount of allusive language -- and a good amount to too close to his home prattle. indeed, too much prattle in general. hes also a bit too tied to born-on-the-fourth-of-the-cold-war thinking for my taste. i appreciate his criticism of later 60's thought, but ... something annoyingly stodgy, as though he can't get past his own frustrations...im reading his stuff to prep on a book idea about the break between the babyboomer gen and what ive been calling "the new lost generation"(and evidently im not alone in that), and his stodgy, strangely higher-than-thee, now-that-ive seen-it-all, approach that proves my points, sooooooo. to the same end im constantly rereading the grails of didion's essays, some galbraith, c wright mills, bucky fuller, etc...need some if stone and w. apppleman williams
otherwise: playing with mailer's why are we in vietnam ray mungo's return to sender (have to find a copy of total loss farm ... and get that new book about communes in vt) don delillo's great jones (something very annoying about this..perhaps just the character. the character names are terrible. so cute (something i couldnt take from k vonegut and irks me about tom pynchon) and that new collection of letters between the mittford sisters (which is charming as all hell and makes me ...oh, whats the word when yr sentimental for something you never had?)
― bb, Thursday, 20 December 2007 13:36 (eighteen years ago)
http://cache.daylife.com/imageserve/0fiT27cfyN00t/340x.jpg
― n/a, Thursday, 20 December 2007 13:41 (eighteen years ago)
bb: if you havent read any kingsley amis lucky jim is definitely where to start. "a laff riot" -- j-p sartre
― m coleman, Thursday, 20 December 2007 13:45 (eighteen years ago)
ha, well, if jp likes it...
n/a: how is that?
― bb, Thursday, 20 December 2007 13:46 (eighteen years ago)
something annoyingly stodgy
Ben, Alex Cockburn of thr Nation and Counterpunch refers to this track of tediousness in ex-lefties as "Gitlinization."
― Dr Morbius, Thursday, 20 December 2007 14:27 (eighteen years ago)
modern life is amazingly bad for everyone
Still my fave Blur album.
― Dr Morbius, Thursday, 20 December 2007 14:29 (eighteen years ago)
it's pretty good, though i may be too dumb for it, which is distressing. he'll be going along all pop-sciencey and it's fine and then all of a sudden drop into serious linguist mode and i have to read everything three times before i can grasp it
― n/a, Thursday, 20 December 2007 14:30 (eighteen years ago)
i love great jones street - so funny
― jhøshea, Thursday, 20 December 2007 14:31 (eighteen years ago)
oh, its funny alright..and everything i like about dd...just..wish hed quit it with the cute shit
doc: ha...hillarious...i remember gitlin being annoying as all get out in the weather underground film...its like he just doesnt see certain things right in front of his face while claiming hes onto it...(indeed he pulls out "mr jones" a few times in the 60's: days of...).
n/a arrgh...serious linguists...are...tedious...
― bb, Thursday, 20 December 2007 14:35 (eighteen years ago)
its it because...not enough ellipses...
― jhøshea, Thursday, 20 December 2007 14:38 (eighteen years ago)
basically
― bb, Thursday, 20 December 2007 14:43 (eighteen years ago)
i'm reading cradle to cradle: remaking the way we make things by william mcdonough and michael braungart.
http://www.mcdonough.com/images/cradle_cover.gif
next up is counterculture green: the whole earth catalog and american environmentalism by andrew g. kirk.
http://www.kansaspress.ku.edu/images/kircou.jpg
― get bent, Thursday, 20 December 2007 22:02 (eighteen years ago)
hmm lemme know how the kirk is. first one looks good too
have you read that book plenitude by rich gold?...my ladyfriend was reading it...and speaks v.v. highly of it
― bb, Thursday, 20 December 2007 22:10 (eighteen years ago)
i want that book on the whole earth catalog too.
i am reading this: http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/71KYH1ED23L.gif
― artdamages, Thursday, 20 December 2007 22:13 (eighteen years ago)
oops: http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/71KYH1ED23L.gif
plenitude is on my "i'll get around to it eventually" list. :-)
there's so much to read on this subject; it's overwhelming and more than a little repetitive sometimes.
― get bent, Thursday, 20 December 2007 22:34 (eighteen years ago)
true,very true...its hilarious in that regard...soon there will be landfills full of them
― bb, Friday, 21 December 2007 14:21 (eighteen years ago)
except cradle to cradle's zero-waste production/packaging means it can be UPCYCLED and used as biological and technical nutrients, resulting in a CLOSED-LOOP SYSTEM and saving everyone from getting cancer and having six-eyed mutant babies!
*pats self on back*
― get bent, Friday, 21 December 2007 16:32 (eighteen years ago)
Got some nice books for my b-day! proven fact: friends give better books than parents. charley patton bio by calt & wardlow blood meridian breakfast on pluto - mccabe that book abt TG & COUM that i started a thread about
also was at the bookstore today and saw a few books that looked interesting. new A1an Licht book on "sound art" and a new moondog bio. not to mention my ever-lengthening list of novels and novelists.
― ian, Saturday, 22 December 2007 04:45 (eighteen years ago)
im confused by alan lichts book...its all pictures of sound art
i think ill pick up the moondog book after xmas
― bb, Saturday, 22 December 2007 14:54 (eighteen years ago)
Faulkner - The sound and the Fury and As I Dying. Coleridge's brilliant and confusing (both qualities peak at the exact same points) Biographia Literaria. Bukowski - Post Office Lenin - What is to be Done?
Might start on E.P.Thompson's The Making of the English Working Class. If not now then probably never.
― xyzzzz__, Saturday, 22 December 2007 15:01 (eighteen years ago)