Authors you will never read

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

i didn't even see the lerner comment. he's very worth reading. the most recent two novels were flawed but in ways that were instructive. he writes about literature--and language--in a way that is worth grappling with

treeship., Wednesday, 5 August 2020 16:59 (three years ago) link

he writes about literature--and language--in a way that is worth grappling with

Yeah, this is the crux of it. The Hatred of Poetry is one of the pithiest encapsulations I've read of why no one pays attention to poets, especially those of the living variety.

pomenitul, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 17:00 (three years ago) link

I mean, most authors, probably.

But yeah, fuck JK Rowling - I doubt I would have read her before, but I'm sure as fuck not reading her now.

emil.y, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 17:02 (three years ago) link

Donna Tartt

pomenitul, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 17:02 (three years ago) link

donna tartt is good though

treeship., Wednesday, 5 August 2020 17:03 (three years ago) link

Leïla Slimani

pomenitul, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 17:03 (three years ago) link

Basically, all authors whose writerly expertise is limited to psychosociological explorations of upper middle-class specimens and most authors who are utterly uninterested in the formalist challenges posed by modernism and its precipitates to this day.

pomenitul, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 17:11 (three years ago) link

Most authors, of course, but this is ppl you come across enough times, like its on your radar...but the answer is just a flat no.

Yes to Dave Eggers, Franzen, Updike, Oates and Rowling lol (although I would like to read more children's books when I am older)

Ian McEwan
Martin Amis
Angela Carter
Deborah Levy

LOL a ton of LRB/NYRB people's fiction. Most of it is because I don't particularly care for what they write

John Lanchester
Colm Toibin
Andrew O'Hagan
Adam Mars-Jones
Tim Parks
Adam Thirwell
Jenny Diski (I like her essays but I reckon she doesn't have fiction in her)
Lauren Oyler (same as above, even before she publishes anything)
Lorrie Moore (aka the Sally Rooney discourse)

xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 17:15 (three years ago) link

every Tartt novel could be more tarttly written.

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 5 August 2020 17:16 (three years ago) link

Also: novelists that have been dissed by Gabriel Josipovici.

pomenitul, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 17:19 (three years ago) link

Btw there's some overlap between this thread and

People You Suspect Are Frighteningly Overrated But Don't Actually Know Enough About To Say So

pomenitul, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 17:21 (three years ago) link

I somehow doubt that I'm ever going to get to Norman Mailer.

jmm, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 17:38 (three years ago) link

David baldacci
Dan brown

brimstead, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 17:52 (three years ago) link

Philip Roth

Lily Dale, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 17:52 (three years ago) link

The one novelist whose work everyone reads, and cites, and praises, and always sounds tedious, self-obsessed, and offensive, and which I have so far managed never to read, is ...

Philip Roth.

So I like to think of it as a lifelong ambition to maintain this record, but not sure I'll manage it.

the pinefox, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 17:55 (three years ago) link

Remarkable simultaneous posting with Lily Dale! :D

the pinefox, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 17:55 (three years ago) link

I have wondered a few times lately how The Human Stain reads in 2020...very poorly I would guess

rob, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 18:02 (three years ago) link

ill let you know im thinking of reading the human stain soon-ish

johnny crunch, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 18:03 (three years ago) link

have you read other Roth? If nothing else, I certainly wouldn't start with that one.

Do we have a "Authors you regret reading" thread? (I'm not thinking of Roth btw)

rob, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 18:07 (three years ago) link

Do we have a "Authors you regret reading" thread?

Not that I know of, but I had the same thought.

pomenitul, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 18:08 (three years ago) link

yea ive read lotsa roth xp

johnny crunch, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 18:10 (three years ago) link

william luther pierce
lew wallace

Kate (rushomancy), Wednesday, 5 August 2020 18:14 (three years ago) link

I read loads of Amis as a teen, and will never find reason to read any more, and wish I'd spent the time reading something else.

emil.y, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 18:24 (three years ago) link

pomenitul will appreciate that I read The Orenda literally about a week before the scandal broke as a first step to learning more about indigenous literature

rob, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 18:55 (three years ago) link

Je est un autre is evergreen for a reason.

pomenitul, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 18:58 (three years ago) link

Ian McEwan. I hate English novelists almost as much as I hate English comedians. Some of the dead ones are pretty good though.

Sonny Shamrock (Tom D.), Wednesday, 5 August 2020 19:13 (three years ago) link

I like Tom McCarthy.

pomenitul, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 19:14 (three years ago) link

He's probably got some Irish in him, that would explain it.

Sonny Shamrock (Tom D.), Wednesday, 5 August 2020 19:17 (three years ago) link

Good thread, but I haven't been able to read in recent times so I recuse myself.

Time Will Show Leo Weiser (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 5 August 2020 19:17 (three years ago) link

Lee Rourke’s another good’un.

pomenitul, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 19:18 (three years ago) link

See my previous post.

Sonny Shamrock (Tom D.), Wednesday, 5 August 2020 19:20 (three years ago) link

I know, ‘twas on purpose.

pomenitul, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 19:21 (three years ago) link

I trudged through 70-odd pages of Embassytown so technically he doesn’t count but: China Miéville.

pomenitul, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 19:25 (three years ago) link

When I read Updike, I needed a deep cleaning.

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 5 August 2020 19:29 (three years ago) link

i'm probably never going to read cormac mccarthy at this point

Give me a Chad Smith-type feel (map), Wednesday, 5 August 2020 19:32 (three years ago) link

Hitler

Rishi don’t lose my voucher (wins), Wednesday, 5 August 2020 19:34 (three years ago) link

Bridget Hitler’s Diary

Rishi don’t lose my voucher (wins), Wednesday, 5 August 2020 19:43 (three years ago) link

I think David Foster Wallace would be a good candidate for never reading, if one had not yet started reading him.

the pinefox, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 19:45 (three years ago) link

God

pomenitul, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 19:53 (three years ago) link

Feel like there's a number of 'you should probably read these dudes in your twenties' dudes (like Kerouac and Hesse) who I haven't read and probably won't get around to now that I'm long past my twenties.

Why does this relates to Yoda? (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 5 August 2020 19:55 (three years ago) link

Tbf both are great midlife crisis reads, especially Hesse.

pomenitul, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 19:56 (three years ago) link

I get what you're saying OL, but honestly it's probably better for your soul to read Kerouac at an age when you can see the gender dynamics clearly and not be influenced by them

rob, Wednesday, 5 August 2020 21:26 (three years ago) link

When I read Updike, I needed a deep cleaning.

OTM. They should put Updike and Billy Collins in a sack with [insert third offender of your choice here] and throw them in the Tiber.

Time Will Show Leo Weiser (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 6 August 2020 02:04 (three years ago) link

great midlife crisis reads, especially Hesse.

Hesse's Steppenwolf is basically a mid-life-crisis-themed book and was written based on his own mid-life insecurities and reactions. Whether it would cast a helpful light on anyone else's mid-life crisis is highly speculative.

the unappreciated charisma of cows (Aimless), Thursday, 6 August 2020 03:49 (three years ago) link

Lol on Roth being CIA:

Enlisted for the army but was exempted for 'special training'. Long association with the neocon faculty of the University of Chicago. Habit in the 80s of 'discovering' writers from the Eastern Bloc, none of whom actually lived there.

— Elvis Buñuelo (@Mr_Considerate) August 5, 2020

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 6 August 2020 09:18 (three years ago) link

I think there's a difference between "authors you are never going to be interested enough to get round to", "authors whose work strongly repels you morally" and "authors you have assumed are going to be terrible and/or don't fit your self-defined personal brand".

The first makes total sense - no one can read everything after all - the second does as well. The third is an impulse to be challenged and interrogated.

Also for real saying you're never going to read JK Rowling or even someone like Ian McEwan is like ostentatiously stating that you've never heard a Coldplay record.

Matt DC, Thursday, 6 August 2020 09:28 (three years ago) link

tbf - and i don't disagree with the implied critique of *this* thread and its endless iterations - but on a purely practical note you have to choose to engage with a book in a different way to your potential environmental exposure to music

À la recherche du scamps perdu (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 6 August 2020 09:37 (three years ago) link

Dickens
Tolstoy
Bronte

29 facepalms, Thursday, 6 August 2020 09:47 (three years ago) link

Is it though? For one it's very hard to avoid hearing a Coldplay song in a shop or in passing (I think that's the only way I've heard this group). And then it's easy to endure 3 minutes. Whereas with a book you can quite easily avoid it as it won't be 'forcefully' put in front of you.

I think your third can also be split. I've been around the block long enough but also am older AND have less energy/patience to put into reading something that I think I know how it's going to go. So assuming that a thing will be terrible is ok? Maybe one day your assumptions will be interrogated.

I agree that don't fit your brand is terrible, but that can be a separate thing that has very much come along with social media? xps

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 6 August 2020 09:52 (three years ago) link

lol <3

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

Amazed it hasn't been translated tbf. Dibs on an abridged Bildts version!

Monte Scampino (Le Bateau Ivre), Tuesday, 15 September 2020 15:02 (three years ago) link

I'd like to know more! What's the experience of reading it?

imago, Tuesday, 15 September 2020 15:08 (three years ago) link

Amazed it hasn't been translated tbf. Dibs on an abridged Bildts version!

― Monte Scampino (Le Bateau Ivre), Tuesday, 15 September 2020 bookmarkflaglink

It's longer than Proust, but yeah a volume would be good. Looking at this overview and his debut sounds good.

http://www.letterenfonds.nl/en/author/194/jj-voskuil

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 15 September 2020 15:40 (three years ago) link

Amazed it hasn't been translated tbf. Dibs on an abridged Bildts version!

― Monte Scampino (Le Bateau Ivre), Tuesday, 15 September 2020 bookmarkflaglink

It's longer than Proust, but yeah a volume would be good. Looking at this overview and his debut sounds good.

http://www.letterenfonds.nl/en/author/194/jj-voskuil🕸

No mean feat. DaBaby (breastcrawl), Tuesday, 15 September 2020 15:57 (three years ago) link

apologies for that, office life is getting to me it seems.

No mean feat. DaBaby (breastcrawl), Tuesday, 15 September 2020 16:05 (three years ago) link

🚨Giveaway alert🚨 We have two proofs of Jon Fosse's I IS ANOTHER (tr. Damion Searls) to give away. Reply to this tweet with your favourite notable doppelgangers or twins and be entered to win a proof. Giveaway ends tonight at 6 PM BST. pic.twitter.com/kGvtndJRDa

— Fitzcarraldo Editions (@FitzcarraldoEds) September 15, 2020

This series of books by Jon Fosse. Nothing I've read about it strikes me as something I'd like. Sounds like a post-Knausgaard cash-in tbh.

xyzzzz__, Friday, 18 September 2020 09:51 (three years ago) link

Someone told me everything I have said about mental health is meaningless because it doesn’t continually address the class struggle. And I am thinking back to when I nearly fell to my death and genuinely believe a treatise on structural inequality would have been a bit too heavy.

— Matt Haig (@matthaig1) September 20, 2020

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 20 September 2020 14:58 (three years ago) link

wanker

how do i shot moon? (Noodle Vague), Sunday, 20 September 2020 15:36 (three years ago) link

andrea long chu

mellon collie and the infinite bradness (BradNelson), Sunday, 27 September 2020 21:42 (three years ago) link

four months pass...

Lockwood as novelist is probably going to be ok, but not as good as her tweets, which is where the magic happens

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 14 February 2021 23:16 (three years ago) link

xxxp that's a crazy assumption, that Jon Fosse would ever be influenced by Knausgaard. if there's one author who fully has his own thing it's Fosse, and this new septology is very much still that 'own thing' he's been doing for decades.

abcfsk, Monday, 15 February 2021 07:59 (three years ago) link

Not influenced so much as a cash-in. Let's get someone who is male, middle-aged, Norwegian..

xyzzzz__, Monday, 15 February 2021 08:20 (three years ago) link

His translated novels have been well received for a while. He's also one of the most performed dramatists in the world for the last couple of decades. So I don't know that a modest push behind his new, major work (which is winning prices and rapturous praise back in Scandinavia) can be construed as a cynical cash-in. But sure, I guess all promotional efforts will look for synergy with another trend in some way.

abcfsk, Monday, 15 February 2021 11:49 (three years ago) link

I think my problem here is an association with an author I don't like much, but also it encourages bad reviewing to say this is like Knausgaard when I'm sure there are worthwhile differences that are never explored.

xyzzzz__, Monday, 15 February 2021 13:07 (three years ago) link

All I'll say is a dislike for Knausgaard is no indication of whether or not you like Fosse, their writing styles couldn't be more different

abcfsk, Monday, 15 February 2021 14:09 (three years ago) link

All the authors whose work has been lost due to war, disasters or just the inevitable march of time. Never reading any of them.

Daniel_Rf, Monday, 15 February 2021 14:22 (three years ago) link

They sound like a buzzkill anyway.

jmm, Monday, 15 February 2021 14:33 (three years ago) link

What's the best "Internet novel"?

— Malcolm Harris (@BigMeanInternet) February 15, 2021

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 16 February 2021 09:20 (three years ago) link

All I'll say is a dislike for Knausgaard is no indication of whether or not you like Fosse, their writing styles couldn't be more different

― abcfsk, Monday, 15 February 2021 bookmarkflaglink

Cool I'll have a go and see how I get on.

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 16 February 2021 09:21 (three years ago) link

Writers I primarily encounter being tits on social media: Roxane Gay, Matt Haig, etc

Tsar Bombadil (James Morrison), Tuesday, 16 February 2021 10:07 (three years ago) link

now imagine nabokov on twitter

mark s, Tuesday, 16 February 2021 10:45 (three years ago) link

be fun spotting his alts

mark s, Tuesday, 16 February 2021 10:45 (three years ago) link

https://www.shared.com/content/images/2017/03/timthumb--2--1.jpg

mark s, Tuesday, 16 February 2021 10:46 (three years ago) link

Best internet novel is Jarett Kobek's 'I Hate the Internet.'

The return of our beloved potatoes (the table is the table), Tuesday, 16 February 2021 14:46 (three years ago) link

Piers Anthony
Terry Goodkind

wasdnuos (abanana), Tuesday, 16 February 2021 16:17 (three years ago) link

it’s fun to imagine nabokov composing his tweets on index cards and then passing them off to someone else to post

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Tuesday, 16 February 2021 17:28 (three years ago) link

Lol, sinkah

The Ballad of Mel Cooley (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 16 February 2021 17:28 (three years ago) link

xp Véra no doubt

John Wesley Glasscock (Hadrian VIII), Tuesday, 16 February 2021 17:32 (three years ago) link

two years pass...

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 bookmarkflaglink

8000 words on Voskuil. Sounds really great.

Here's the teeniest taste of my JJ Voskuil piece in @readliberties: https://t.co/kKk2fr1vJw

— Adrian Nathan West (@a_nathanwest) October 5, 2023

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 5 October 2023 23:09 (six months ago) link

Looking at his Wikipedia page I see he published a 'scientific work' entitled 'Hanging the Afterbirth of the Horse'. I'm in!

Zelda Zonk, Thursday, 5 October 2023 23:34 (six months ago) link

I have a bias against Franzen because of the kerfuffle over his comments on Edith Wharton. He's probably a gifted writer, but so are a lot of others.

My brother is a huge fan of William T. Vollman, I have a hard time believing anyone who writes that much can write all that well.

I'll add Scott Adams to the list, even though that's fish in a barrel.

immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Thursday, 5 October 2023 23:45 (six months ago) link

William Vollmann’s historical novels are very good.

Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Friday, 6 October 2023 00:07 (six months ago) link

I love Bill Vollman but that is because I respect a person who gets interested enough in a subject to become an expert in it through sheer force of intellect, chance, and economic privilege. Imperial, Train Dreams, the newer ones about peak oil— I mean the guy isn’t necessarily the best stylist, but he makes up for it in terms of research and “experience”.

butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Friday, 6 October 2023 00:09 (six months ago) link

Vollmann also has a disturbing origin story that probably explains his unique drive

Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Friday, 6 October 2023 00:09 (six months ago) link

I'll take y'all's word for it, I don't have that many years left on Earth.

immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Friday, 6 October 2023 00:12 (six months ago) link

He doesn’t either!

butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Friday, 6 October 2023 00:32 (six months ago) link

haven’t read any of his fiction yet but enjoyed both volumes of carbon ideologies. currently wrapping up part 1 of the abridged rising up and rising down, which is pretty good. as table says, his obsessive attention to detail is immersive, love all the historical threads he brings up and the sort of “dialogues” he constructs between the ideas of eg Trotsky and Lincoln or whatever. I enjoy his deadpan understated sense of humor as well.

brimstead, Friday, 6 October 2023 01:27 (six months ago) link


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