04.26.2007, 08:04 PM | #61 |
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en casteSHano como dices tu
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04.26.2007, 08:05 PM | #62 | |
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Sí, shuvia, y todo eso. ¿De dónde sos?
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04.26.2007, 08:07 PM | #63 |
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de por ahi... ja ja ja
(perdona, pero mi identidad secreta... es secreta). (en serio). |
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04.26.2007, 08:08 PM | #64 |
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No, te entiendo perfectamente.
Pero sé que hay un latino dando vueltas por ahí. ¡Nos vemos pebete!
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04.26.2007, 08:09 PM | #65 | |
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eso sí! |
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04.26.2007, 08:22 PM | #66 | |
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Ah, read that one twice, which is highly unusual for me. If I were to add Lovecraft to my list though, and of course I should, I'd have to put Dream-Quest to Unknown Kaddath at the top. |
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04.26.2007, 08:55 PM | #67 | ||
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Man! I've read the stand about ten times too, probably eleven or so. I don't know what it is, each year (and usually the time's around when I get the flu or something) I simply pick it up and start it off and, damn, the week flies by. I guess it's such a well written thing, clolsely describing the shape of the world we all know slowly fading away, and being replaced by a new order... (weird to notice you're under the influence too, floatingslowly!!!) fascinating. most prolly the biggest impact on me, as far as it goes. I really enjoy S. King's body of work (and yes, DIFFERENT SEASONS kicks ass! Skeleton Crew is also badass... THE MIST!!!!). i'd also have to put WSB's THE SOFT MACHINE in here too... awesum. then... the NEW YORK TRILOGY by Paul Auster dramatically changed something in my perspective also... doppelgänger, anyone? truly bizzarre, and a very fucking cool scenario. |
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04.26.2007, 09:26 PM | #68 |
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A Poet in New York- Federico Garica Lorca God he made me look for poets in my language.
Residence on Earth- Pablo Neruda he made me think of the sadness of the world. |
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04.27.2007, 04:11 AM | #69 |
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The Art of Dreaming & The Teachings of Don Juan: A Yaqui Way of Knowledge by Carlos Castaneda, were a trip.
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04.27.2007, 05:03 AM | #70 |
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The first novels to impress me were 1984, read in 1984, and Faulkner's Noise and Fury.
The latter has since been blown to pieces after I read Ulysses. This one is far more subtle, and Joyce's kindness is heart-warming. Other, lesser impacts, but, well, still : Virginia Woolf's Mrs Dalloway, if you can't go through Joyce. Bulgakov's White Guard, which lead me to read another great book (nic fit told it before) The Master and Margarita. Dostoîevski's Crime & Punishment. Céline's Voyage au bout de la nuit for its rhythm, the pulsating images of war and chaos, the humanity of the author through the character of Robinson - I know that it's odd to talk about humanity when mentioning Céline, a writer who hated everybody and would be sued for antisemitism after WWII, but you can see that in this book, his first. Malcolm Lowry's Beyond the Volcano, for apparent chaos brilliantly arranged too. PKDick's Radio Free Albemuth (I had read in a Lee Ranaldo interview that that book in particular had made the Youth want to pay a hommage to the man on Sister) - there's a chapter there that makes your sanity shiver : the narrator, a writer named Philip stops talking about the current action to claim that he is not a drug addict, that his readers shouldn't trust what people, including his own editor, say about a former book he wrote, the subject of which being something 100% like A Scanner Darkly... After that chapter I closed the book ad listened to the Butthole Surfers USSA and madly laughed out loud. And recently, among authors whose hearts are still beating, Deadkidsongs by Toby Litt, fot its perversity, and Eugenides' Middlesex for its wideness. |
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04.27.2007, 05:47 AM | #71 |
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Danny the Champion of the World is my most memorable from childhood.
Fear and Loathing and The Wasp Factory (Iain Banks) will always have special places in my head. |
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04.27.2007, 12:54 PM | #72 |
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Ishmael by Daniel Quinn
Story of B by Daniel Quinn Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance by I can't remember. (anyone know this book? It was stolen from me and I can't remember the author. ) Famous Last Words by Timothy Findlay
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04.27.2007, 12:56 PM | #73 |
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oh and..
Siddhartha by Hermann Hesse (read the german original and the english translation. The german being the better one naturally, as translations tend to lose grasp of certain elements.)
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04.27.2007, 01:04 PM | #74 |
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Almost anything by Truman Capote
Sylvia Plath - The Bell Jar Jack Kerouac - On The Road
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Don't say unconscious No don't say doom If you got to say it let me leave this room Cuz what I want I want now and it's a whole lot more than 'anyhow' |
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04.27.2007, 01:12 PM | #75 |
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I'm absolutely serious. The first one that made me really love to read. This was like in 4th grade.
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Ever notice how this place just basically, well, sucks. |
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04.27.2007, 08:11 PM | #76 | |
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I searched Amazon.com and it says it was written by Robert M. Pirsig. Somehow that title rings a bell, but not the author. Good luck.
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04.27.2007, 10:18 PM | #77 |
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I am proud to report that I have never read that book by Pirsig even though people have personally recommended it to me tens of times.
Similarly, The Hitchiker's Guide to The Galaxy (Douglas Adams) is one I've never read & probably never will...ditto for Generation X by Coupland. Utter crap I tells ye! Now, don't fuck wit me 'bout this. I've never read any of these in full, but, you know, every douchebag on the planet seems has these literary colostomy bags on their bookshelf, so I've scanned each many, many times. Please just read & ignore this & carry on with this nice, civilized thread.
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04.27.2007, 10:30 PM | #78 |
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I like atari's burstouts of (almost senseless) rage. It's good to know someone is alive on planet Earth!
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04.27.2007, 10:42 PM | #79 | |
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Well, thanks for the slack, max.
To clarify for others: It's just that if pressed I would rather read something entertaining rather than fluff pop-psychology/pop-philosophy poisoning by some idiot hippie philosopher charlatan. Someone mentioned Simon Le Carre and I would rather read one of those or maybe a rock bio, good sci-fi, an Elmore Leonard, a Barry Gifford, a Vonnegut, an Ian Fleming, (shit, maybe even a Louis L'amour) instead of Zen & the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance. Man, I've really got to get going. Quote:
That's like, so deep, man. Again, just read & tell me I'm fucked in abbreviated fashion if you disagree. I'm not intending to "hijack" the thread; I'm just in a bit of a sour mood.
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Robert Rauschenberg, Canyon, 1959. Combine on canvas 81 3/4 x 70 x 24 inches. |
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04.27.2007, 10:49 PM | #80 |
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Dude! I'm totally on yr side. I was taking note actually, I mean... I'm pretty pissed off myself. And sometimes all I see, is a shitty stupid world where the trend and the fashion rule the mind of the stupid.
...and not having found a label for my band's output really gets on my nerves. |
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