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Old 04-11-2006, 10:42 PM   #51 (permalink)
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Danile Steel - Summers End

i personally am not a big fan of those types of books but i LOVED this one.. i tried reading other books like that one, by her and other romance writers but i didn't get the same excitement reading them and got bored fast..
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Old 04-15-2006, 10:50 AM   #52 (permalink)
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in the middle of "mine" by Robert Mccammon. The woman in it is a friggin' psycho...but you do kind of feel for the broad in the begining, at least I did. You feel bad for her. But then she goes and shoots the kid in the woods and then it just all takes off...Though, you have to feel bad for Laura too...Meh, anyone who's read it will know what I'm on about.
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Old 04-15-2006, 11:19 AM   #53 (permalink)
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Quote:
Had The Blair Witch Project been a book instead of a film, and had it been written by, say, Nabokov at his most playful, revised by Stephen King at his most cerebral, and typeset by the futurist editors of Blast at their most avant-garde, the result might have been something like House of Leaves. Mark Z. Danielewski's first novel has a lot going on: notably the discovery of a pseudoacademic monograph called The Navidson Record, written by a blind man named Zampanò, about a nonexistent documentary film--which itself is about a photojournalist who finds a house that has supernatural, surreal qualities. (The inner dimensions, for example, are measurably larger than the outer ones.) In addition to this Russian-doll layering of narrators, Danielewski packs in poems, scientific lists, collages, Polaroids, appendices of fake correspondence and "various quotes," single lines of prose placed any which way on the page, crossed-out passages, and so on.

Now that we've reached the post-postmodern era, presumably there's nobody left who needs liberating from the strictures of conventional fiction. So apart from its narrative high jinks, what does House of Leaves have to offer? According to Johnny Truant, the tattoo-shop apprentice who discovers Zampanò's work, once you read The Navidson Record,

"For some reason, you will no longer be the person you believed you once were. You'll detect slow and subtle shifts going on all around you, more importantly shifts in you. Worse, you'll realize it's always been shifting, like a shimmer of sorts, a vast shimmer, only dark like a room. But you won't understand why or how."
It's one of those intertwined books, with four stories going on at once. I loved it. Absolutely loved it. But you do have to have the devotion to sit through and read it, as it's not just a one- or two-sit reader.
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Old 04-15-2006, 12:39 PM   #54 (permalink)
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I just finished reading "The Sound and the Fury".
I highly recommed this book.




Al Aronowitz documenting The Beatles' arrival in America; Glenn O'Brien dishing the dirt with Madonna; Nick Hornby reappraising pop deities Abba; Caroline Coon witnessing the birth of punk; Will Self sparring with Morrissey; Jon Savage entering the fractured mind of Kurt Cobain; Lenny Kaye riding Grand Funk Railroad. Plus Greil Marcus on The Band, Mary Harron on Warhol, Vivien Goldman at the Wigan Casino, John Mendelssohn in South Central LA ... and many others.

This book gathers some of the best and most entertaining rock writing of the last forty years, coming at rock and roll from several different angles and spanning four decades of good, bad and ugly. The editor, rock journalist Barney Hoskyns, explains in his introduction:
'The Sound and the Fury anthologises some of my favourite pieces, by some of my favourite music writers — heroes both sung (greil Marcus, Jon savage) and unsung (Bill Millar, Robot A. Hull). Read the words of Michael Lydon and Mary Harron, Mick Farren and John Mednelssohn, Richard Cook and Simon Reynolds. Imbibe Cliff White on Marvin ***e, Caroline Coon on Johnny Rotten, Will Self on Morrissey. To all future rock'n'roll writers, I say: soak up these timelessly invogarting pieces and consider the opportunity you have to make a difference. Let go, tell the truth, express yourselves.'

‘Barney Hoskyns' anthology of rock journalism is thoroughly entertaining. It opens with Al Aronowitz's account of The Beatles' first trip to the US, where we learn of John Lennon's method of keeping his feet on the ground: 'When I feel my head starting to swell, I just look at Ringo and I know perfectly well we're not supermen.' Written in 1964, it's a superb snapshot of the Beatles being swept towards superstardom: not just great rock journalism, but great journalism, period. There are old interviews with Neil Young and Bob Dylan ('I don't think I'm gonna be understood until maybe 100 years from now'), as well as think pieces about psychedelic rock and reviews of famous festivals. A British writer, Barry Miles, goes to New York in 1972 to see the New York Dolls and their glammed-up ambisexual fans, and describes in comic horror the de Sadean stage show of the transvestite support act ('But no, there is more... '). Writing a year later, American Greg Shaw looks back across the Atlantic at the Mod movement and, in his enthusiasm, almost echoes Wordsworth's 'but to be young was very heaven': 'what it must have been like to be a Mod in London in 1965!' More up-to-date highlights include a 1990 interview with Madonna, in which she comes up with a truly impressive insult: 'Is that your head, or did your neck just throw up?' and Jon Savage's 1993 article about Nirvana, notable not least for Kurt Cobain's plaintive: 'When you feel bad in America, it's like losing your stomach.' Some of the writing is superb, such as Mick Farren's 1976 gonzo report on country music in Nashville for the NME. Much of this material would not be published today. Although coverage of pop music is wider than ever, the quality of the attention devoted to it has undoubtedly diminished. Yet arguably the legacy of rock journalists is everywhere. As the main practitioners of the style that Tom Wolfe dubbed new journalism, the rock-journalism approach has permeated the mainstream media. Compare the reporter embedded with a military unit in Iraq with the hack on the tour bus. 'You cannot make friends with the rock stars,' a rookie music writer is warned in Cameron Crowe's film, Almost Famous. Who would have thought similar advice could apply to war correspondents?’ —Financial Times

‘There is something oddly touching about this book. So much youthful passion burns within its prose: it reeks of the heady sweat of pop concerts, of joints smoked while listening to guitar solos in delicious, tortured solitude, of beer spilled beneath frenetic feet. The passions aroused by rock music are deep, exquisite and lasting. Yet at the same time, they are ephemeral, protean, defiant of analysis ... for all its armour-plated literacy, Will Self's 1995 Observer interview with Morrissey brought back helpless thoughts of the precious private communion that I once had with The Smiths. Twenty years on, the feelings aroused by that sound are exactly the same. It is just that everything else has changed’
—Laura Thompson, Daily Telegraph
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Old 04-15-2006, 02:09 PM   #55 (permalink)
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Wow, a book about rock journalism being titled with a Shakespeare homage. I never thought I'd see the day.
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Old 04-28-2006, 10:27 PM   #56 (permalink)
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Right now I'm reading the Kamasutra. It is pretty good, tells you how to keep a good hygene among other things.


What can I say I'm a bored person.
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Old 04-28-2006, 10:34 PM   #57 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jazzfromhell
Wow, a book about rock journalism being titled with a Shakespeare homage. I never thought I'd see the day.
Yeah I guess but more directly its Faulkner since it has the "The" there and in King Leer its actually just "sound and fury" but im a lit nerd.

Anyways, I was poorly recommended Salingers "Nine Stories" and its highly regarded but frankly I think its ****. He goes for a mood and vibe and his end is more of feeling than...coherent.

I don't know, there short, read and decide for yourself, but heed this word of advice, borrow it first, don't buy it.
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Old 04-29-2006, 12:55 AM   #58 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by TheBig3KilledMyRainDog
Yeah I guess but more directly its Faulkner since it has the "The" there and in King Leer its actually just "sound and fury" but im a lit nerd.

It's actually from Macbeth. Or at least, it's also in Macbeth, I haven't read King Lear yet so I don't know if it's in that. And, as for it possibly being Faulkner, I suppose that's just as surprising, because if anything that'd be even harder for a bunch of stereotypical rock n roll dudes to read.
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Old 04-29-2006, 05:11 AM   #59 (permalink)
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sound and the fury is great. and it is by william faulkner
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Old 04-29-2006, 06:23 AM   #60 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by TheBig3KilledMyRainDog
Yeah I guess but more directly its Faulkner since it has the "The" there and in King Leer its actually just "sound and fury" but im a lit nerd.

Anyways, I was poorly recommended Salingers "Nine Stories" and its highly regarded but frankly I think its ****. He goes for a mood and vibe and his end is more of feeling than...coherent.

I don't know, there short, read and decide for yourself, but heed this word of advice, borrow it first, don't buy it.
i bought it and read it while i was a teen and absolutely loved it. sure, not all the stories are brilliant, but "for esme with love and squalor" and "teddy" are absolutely amazing...he's a real master at the form.
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