- Jul 23, 2010
- 5,815
- 4,253
- AFL Club
- Hawthorn
just read the slap by tsiolkas and thoroughly enjoyed it.
suprised it has a relatively low rating.
suprised it has a relatively low rating.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I read Conspiracy Against The Human Race which I didn't enjoy as much but that was more of a philosophical bent than fiction. It's not that I necessarily disagreed with his pessimistic views it just felt a bit repetitive and could've been wrapped up in a much shorter span (like essay length).Yeah Ligotti’s work was the source of True Detective’s nihilistic tone (the first season). Check out his many short stories. Very weird and a very bleak world view.
The Yellow Wallpaper is a fantastic story, an absolute 'must read'. I also like Ligotti, but definitely in small doses.I've also just read My Work Is Not Yet Done by Thomas Ligotti - I'd heard him referenced on a few podcasts I've listened to (twin peaks podcasts that also delve into weird fiction) and thought it sounded up my alley so would give it a go. Was good, I enjoyed the first part of the book better than the latter part I think, his description of the banality and horror of the modern office job was excruciatingly real. I've got another of his books ready to go, Conspiracy Against the Human Race but I think I'm going to read the Yellow Wallpaper next, another book I've heard referenced on a twin peaks podcast (probably the same pod). I also want to read the Kurt Vonnegut bio Man Without A Country.
I'm getting good mileage out of ploughing through Henning Mankell’s Kurt Wallander detective/mystery series. Plenty of grisly murders and interesting cases for "every man" Wallander to unravel. They're pretty good! I'm up to the 8th story I think.
My list of standouts from the books I read this year:
The Sunne In Splendour (I think this one is from the 90s but I only read it this year)
The Bookbinder of Jericho and The Dictionary of Los Words - both excellent
The Marriage Portrait. I gobbled this one up in one night
Friends, Lovers and the Big Terrible Thing (Matthew Perry). One of the best celebrity memoirs I’ve read.
Have read them. They’re great.Try the Department Q series by Jussi Adler-Olsen. Books and movies are great imo.
Interesting.my 2023 so far, given it's winding down now:
5/5 (outstanding, joins my faves)
1. The Hamlet - William Faulkner
4/5 (excellent, engrossing)
2. The Odyssey - Homer (first time I read the proper text, although been enraptured with versions of the tale since childhood)
3. Jamaica Inn - Daphne du Maurier
4. The Passenger - Cormac McCarthy
5. Blonde - Joyce Carol Oates
6. Tess of the D'Urbervilles - Thomas Hardy
3/5 (good, recommendable)
7. The Town - Faulkner
8. We Were the Mulvaneys - JCO
9. The Letter of Marque - Patrick O'Brian
10. A Moveable Feast - Ernest Hemingway
11. To Paradise - Hanya Yanagihara
12. The Short Plays of Harold Pinter - Pinter
13. Requiem for a Wren - Nevil Shute
14. Beasts Royal: Twelve Tales of Adventure - O'Brian
2/5 (passable but probably wouldn't read again)
15. Stella Maris - McCarthy
16. The Little Hotel - Christina Stead
17. Frenchman's Creek - du Maurier
1/5 (unremarkable; tedious)
18. A Farewell to Arms - Hemingway (the novel form as a younger man just wasn't the best use of his writing)
(pre-Xmas) Queue:
The Flight of the Falcon - du Maurier
The Mansion - Faulkner
Reading it nowRe: The "What are you reading now" thread
The Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett.
I assume you don't mean in Greek (or do you?), which translation was it?2. The Odyssey - Homer (first time I read the proper text, although been enraptured with versions of the tale since childhood)