anyone have any short story recommendations? particularly anthologies so i can sample a bunch of authors? i am looking more for early to mid 20th century stuff.
i have the norton anthology of contemporary short fiction but i almost gave up on the form after making my way through half of that book because nothing really grabbed me.
salinger and hemingway's stuff has been really great though, and i know they are heavy hitters but i get the sense that i probably prefer stuff from that era and not so much modern stuff. for instance i like junot diaz a lot, or his novel oscar wao at least, but 'this is how you lose her' didn't do much for me (and that seems to be considered an instant modern classic so far i believe). i also have fitzgerald's collection on deck.
but i am mostly wondering if there is an anthology from the early to mid 20th century. that seems to be a really fertile era. but so far i've found nothing but modern anthologies.
I thought After the Quake by Haruki Murakami was pretty good though IIRC there aren't too many stories in it (5 or so?). I haven't read The Elephant Vanishes or Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman by him yet but I would assume it's pretty good.anyone have any short story recommendations?
I just ordered a copy of Night Circus for my sister's birthday. She usually doesn't read and the only thing she recently read was Shades of Grey. I thought she'd like to try a real book for a change...twice
Are you sure you don't have a bootleg copy?
It's interesting, but really poorly written IMO. Is it intentional?
No punctuation, everything is "and then we....and then this happened....and then along came...." It's like an over excited 8 year old trying to tell you about his trip to the zoo.
I'm not sure. I've read around 20 pages, and he hasn't used speech marks once. There has been about 10 commas total over those pages. He also seems to use the word "and" an awful lot.Are you sure you don't have a bootleg copy?
Is it the first McCarthy book you've read? If so, I would probably suggest you read Blood Meridian first instead. Not because I think The Road is bad or anything, but i've seen way too many people give up on McCarthy forever because they didn't like The Road. Which sucks because Blood Meridian is one of my favorites
It's interesting, but really poorly written IMO. Is it intentional?
No punctuation, everything is "and then we....and then this happened....and then along came...." It's like an over excited 8 year old trying to tell you about his trip to the zoo.
No, not at all. It's McCarthy's style, and the dismissal of frippery like punctuation is just a part of that package.I know it's a literary classic, so I presume it meant to look like it was written by a child or something?
No, not at all. It's McCarthy's style, and the dismissal of frippery like punctuation is just a part of that package.
I'm going to keep reading. It's the version I posted, it seems legit.
As I say, I'm enjoying it. It's just, a bit, um, basic, is probably a polite way to say it. But his imagery is very evocative.
anyone have any short story recommendations? particularly anthologies so i can sample a bunch of authors? i am looking more for early to mid 20th century stuff.
i have the norton anthology of contemporary short fiction but i almost gave up on the form after making my way through half of that book because nothing really grabbed me.
but i am mostly wondering if there is an anthology from the early to mid 20th century. that seems to be a really fertile era. but so far i've found nothing but modern anthologies.
Just started this after browsing Amazon for like an hour looking for something to read.
Probably going to start this next. Save me.
The Host by Stephenie Meyer
Just started this after browsing Amazon for like an hour looking for something to read.
Really liked it, although I felt that the pacing was a bit odd at times. I think I'll probably also pick up the second book in the series.
I read The Final Empire a few months ago - for some reason the library hold list for the second volume was really long and I swear most people in queue before me brought it back late!
The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine by Michael Lewis, is an eye opening look at the recent financial crisis.
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I finished The Lathe of Heaven by Ursula K. Le Guin, and really liked it.I watched the PBS movie version from 1980, which was interesting but not great.When Orr loses LeLache, it's tragic.
You might wanna spoiler that ^
I finished it today to, was just alright for me. It had a great premise, but I don't think it ever really lived up to it. And Orr kinda irritated me, as did Haber, andI couldn't understand why Orr just kept on letting Haber take them down the path to hell.
If you enjoyed it, you might wanna check out Replay by Ken Grimwood. It explores a lot of the same themes and is far superior in my opinion.
It's interesting, but really poorly written IMO. Is it intentional?
No punctuation, everything is "and then we....and then this happened....and then along came...." It's like an over excited 8 year old trying to tell you about his trip to the zoo.
brofist.jpgI've probably made a huge mistake just starting this beast of a series when I have other books in queue.
You might wanna spoiler that ^
I finished it today to, was just alright for me. It had a great premise, but I don't think it ever really lived up to it. And Orr kinda irritated me, as did Haber, andI couldn't understand why Orr just kept on letting Haber take them down the path to hell.
If you enjoyed it, you might wanna check out Replay by Ken Grimwood. It explores a lot of the same themes and is far superior in my opinion.
Translated though. A fantasy novel set in Soviet Russia sounded intruiging and I had a gift card to use. Never heard about it before.
A lot of Le Guin's work is influenced by Taoist philosophy, and Orr is portrayed as a Taoist protagonist. Check out the analysis here if you're interested:
http://www.sfra.org/Coyote/daoistnovels.htm