The Hipster Lit Flow Chart

Here on Goodreads, we've got all kinds of readers: Romance, Sci Fi, Armchair Sailors, you name it. This month we decided to focus on an interesting subset of our gigantic and diverse community—The Hipsters. After analyzing the data, and admittedly, taking some editorial liberties, we've determined a few things. The life of the hipster is hard. Between worrying the band you love is about to go big and wondering whether it's finally time to wash your raw denim jeans, you don't have a lot of time to think about what to read next. To make matters worse, now that you've raced through his collected essays, Both Flesh and Not, you've run out of David Foster Wallace books. That's where Goodreads comes in. Behold our hipster lit flow chart! Answer a few simple questions, and we will hook you up with your next favorite book. Life should always be this easy.
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Syahira
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Nov 27, 2012 05:08AM

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D8


...says the author, who mentions GoodReads but links to Amazon.
And PS, I LOVE IJ, wouldn't consider myself a hipster (although I do live in Brooklyn & enjoy pour-over coffee), but take umbrage with it as a must-read to be a hipster, as that impression cheapens the commitment and reward IJ demands.
Suggest everyone read Leaving the Atocha Station, which I really did enjoy (poetic prose, lost in translation in Spain for a summer), and build up to tackling IJ. Or try DFW's other fiction to see if you're interested. Best of luck.

For the record I also enjoy pour over coffee. I'm a fiction junkie, probably post hipster.



2666
Remembrance of Things Past
Embassytown
The Gone-Away World
The Satanic Verses
Fun Home
Some Things That Meant the World to Me
Choke
The Ask
How Should a Person Be?
The Boy Detective Fails
Open City
The Orange Eats Creeps
Zone One
The Devil in Silver
Leaving the Atocha Station

Correction:
hipster = people [pretending to be] interested in good, experimental and modern literature






Since every list demands that people complain about what's not on the list, I will add: What, no Chris Ware?
No hipster lit reading list can consider itself complete without including at least one hipster-approved graphic novel. (Not COMICS; never COMICS.)



Ooh. I wish!



And Last Exit To Brooklyn is the current Group Read, because it beat out Zone One?
:O


"hipster = people interested in good, experimental and modern literature?"
Correction: hipster = people [pretending to be] interested in good, experimental and modern literature
****************
Correction of the correction: hipster = a word used by New Yorkers to describe non-New Yorkers who read the books they pretend to read
If you want to be a hipster, then read my 'Daunting' shelf:
http://www.goodreads.com/review/list/...

hipster 97122 up, 24026 down
Hipsters are a subculture of men and women typically in their 20's and 30's that value independent thinking, counter-culture, progressive politics, an appreciation of art and indie-rock, creativity, intelligence, and witty banter. The greatest concentrations of hipsters can be found living in the Williamsburg, Wicker Park, and Mission District neighborhoods of major cosmopolitan centers such as New York, Chicago, and San Francisco respectively. Although "hipsterism" is really a state of mind,it is also often intertwined with distinct fashion sensibilities. Hipsters reject the culturally-ignorant attitudes of mainstream consumers, and are often be seen wearing vintage and thrift store inspired fashions, tight-fitting jeans, old-school sneakers, and sometimes thick rimmed glasses. Both hipster men and women sport similar androgynous hair styles that include combinations of messy shag cuts and asymmetric side-swept bangs. Such styles are often associated with the work of creative stylists at urban salons, and are usually too "edgy" for the culturally-sheltered mainstream consumer. The "effortless cool" urban bohemian look of a hipster is exemplified in Urban Outfitters and American Apparel ads which cater towards the hipster demographic. Despite misconceptions based on their aesthetic tastes, hipsters tend to be well educated and often have liberal arts degrees, or degrees in maths and sciences, which also require certain creative analytical thinking abilities.

OK, not entirely true. They have to hold important books in their hands-my understanding is the opposite of the above, they may or may not read the book but the impressing of others is what it's all about. Or even better, the not-impressing of those too tragically unhip to even know they should be impressed.
My problem with hipsters that although they work hard to look unconventional and casual, their clothes are beyond my dreams. So naturally, I'm so hip I have to look down on them.
Btw, I've read most of the books on the "daunting" shelf & the rest are on my TBR.
And the flow chart is a riot, except I've read most of the books from every category which I guess just makes me chaos personified.
Or better, not in a category. (Too much to hope for?)

D8"
That is some mighty poor sentence construction. And why would someone make a "wannabe-ish semi-add" (what?) for a book that came out over 10 years ago?


Which is unfortunate, because the half of these I've read are wonderful books. They're missing out.

hipster 97122 up, 24026 down
Hipsters are a subculture of men and women typically in their 20's and 30's that value independent thinking, counter-culture, progressive ..."
I love many things about hipster culture, but I find the contempt toward everything that does not conform to their idea of such things both saddening and of the type that indicates self-contempt.
Plus the young woman who thinks pandas should go extinct really creeps me out.

"Hipster The Get Down"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mzYHHl...

Kevin wrote: "I think it's probably hipper to read The Pale King. More lofi, ya know?"
AHHH! Finally, someone mentions The Pale King.I thought it was a mistake to read it before IJ. I started reading it yesterday and am savoring every bit of it. My only regret (again) is that I chose to read this before the quintessential Infinite Jest.. Or, have I done the right thing? Ahh, DFW was such a genius. His prose scintillates!Also, the lack of semicolons RULESSSS!

Karah
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