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Originally Posted by montsnmags
I have been long reading David Foster Wallace's Brief Interviews With Hideous Men and sitting him in my own personal pantheon of OMG!-I-SO-LIKE-TOTALLY-LOVE -THIS-AUTHOR-LIKE-OMG! Greats. The recently slowly-read short story within, Tri-Stan: I Sold Sissee Nar To Ecko was most amusing and confusing (thus slowly-read). I have not read any else of Foster Wallace's, though I have Infinite Jest in the TBR pile.
Anyone else read/love/hate any of his works?
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Hi Marc!
I too have Infinite Jest on my wishlist, but I haven't read anything by Wallace yet.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Andanzas
The Savage Detectives (and 2666) are among my favorite novels ever. I am not going to give my opinion of them because it would seem a gross exageration. I just loved them so much. I haven't read other books by Bolaņo, but I plan to read all of them. The guy is a master. So sad he died when he was producing his best work.
Lately I haven't been reading as much as usual. Since my son was born (he is 2 now) I am always tired and find very little time for myself. Right now I prefer novels with strong plots, as they are more likely to keep me awake (just finished Sharpe's Tiger by Bernand Cornwell and loved it). I am currently reading Blood Meridian and, while I am enjoying it, I am reading it very slowly because it requires of all of my concentration (English is not my first language, as you can guess by my poor writing). Several years ago I read The Road in a couple of days and was impressed by the intensity and simplicity of its style. Blood Meridian? I've been reading it for four weeks and I am still not done. I feel like I am wasting a great book.
Anyway, the last great author I discovered is probably Murakami. Loved Kafka on the Shore, Sputnik Sweetheart, his short stories, and, above all else, Norwegian Wood. It's one of the most humane, intense, and moving love stories I've ever read.
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Never heard of Bernand Cornwell, i'll have to check him out...
I also found that the elaborate style of Blood Meridian got a little in the way of my enjoyment. I have never read a book with so many words I didn't understand and never even had seen before, some of them were not even in my dictionary. I much preferred the style of The Road, to me it feels less showy, the style of a more mature writer who doesn't feel he has anything to prove.
Love Murakami too, and I haven't read enough of his books, I should add them to my wishlist...
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Originally Posted by TGS
Perhaps I should give Bolaņo another try - I expected to like him, perhaps my head was just not in the right place.
Strange about Blood Meridian, I am a native English speaker and I seem to be reading it very slowly too, (and there is nothing wrong with your English that I can see!). It's not a criticism but I wonder whether it is to do with the style of narration and the "difficulty" of forming representations of what is being read.
Also agree about Murakami - haven't read anything bad by him, (but I could have lived my life quite happily without read "What I think about when...").
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The Savage Detectives was a slow starter for me. As I said, the first part was OK but I wondered what all the fuss was about. Also, the not so great French translation didn't help. The second part took me some time to get into, with all the different narrators and going back and forth in time, but now I'm loving it and starting to identify and relate to all those different people talking.