The BURIED Book Club discussion
May I ADD please?

She has 228 ratings and 31 reviews on goodreads, but 171 and 19 of these are for her non fiction book about education, her novels are very under read(many have no reviews at all). I read one recently and it was quite good, very psychological and had some cool imagery.

If she is good as you say she is, she's totally BURIED! ADD please!
And I see that her Spinster got made into a Shirley MacLaine movie.

Kirkus review:
"Alienation, rejection, the eroding, narrowing vocabulary of love as love seeps away part and parcel of the narrator's present predicament incarceration in an insane sytum. Remembering imagining he continues an agonizing replay of his relationship with his wife, Lucile/Cecile, his ""lost Spain,"" the woman who had cheated and abandoned him. His fantasies. . . grotesque burlesque, find them in emasculating sexual situations and again in a bizarre triangle as he wins her away from a Negro circus boxer only to learn that he is not the sole recipient of her favors. The final (true?) image leaves him as the husband cuckolded by his best friend who remarks dispassionately ""she is much more a fiancee and a mistress than she is wife."" The loss and disillusionment here are tapered and tempered by irony. And the author's intricate images, projections, have an excellent translator in Helen R. Lane."

TOTALLY BURY'd! ADD please!


I have now! ADD please!
I just scooped up an hd of Seven Serpents & Seven Moons ; right down my alley. Both hd and pb are available for a penny from both amazon and abe.



Very much so! And so much so we have a thread for her! ::
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...


someone's selling one for a whole 30 cents on amazon it looks like.

ADD please!
and for more Canadian stuff :
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...


As for attention, he seems rather buriedish. A total of 11 ratings for what could be his only notable novel, and for all 17 of his published works in the database, including slang dictionaries and collections of quotations, he's gotten 40 ratings in total.
He had no Wikipedia page until I added one about thirty minutes ago. Before that, his name redirected to The Irish Times, and the insulting part is that that page didn't even mention him, whatever his contribution to that rag may have been. ("They call all these local rags the Times.")
The important thing is that Inish is rather Wow.

This is good to know, it's at eye level on one of my shelves so I frequently contemplate reading it.

Ditto.

Yes. Inish qualifies. ADD please!

He has a total of 86 ratings and 18 reviews for 12 books, which strikes me as very few given the quality of the writing. I poked around the group and didn't find a thread for him.

Yes! ADD please!

I haven't read any of it yet but I am snoopin out a copy right now!

Sounds about right. ADD Pleazzze!!!

Wonderful books. I wrote about Bedouin Hornbook in My Man and Other Critical Fictions.

"This closed intertextuality is situated moreover in a universe of discourse that even to the casual Ghanaian reader is almost hermetic, even though entirely public, because it presumes an intimate knowledge of very many details of southern Ghanaian life and speech, and their recall in contexts that at first may seem highly unusual.
...
Indeed, a thoroughly informed reading of any of Laing's novels would seem to require annotation on a massive scale, at least as extensive as has been devoted to Finnegan's Wake. "

YES!!! ADD pleaze! [I've got a stack of African books stacking up for '17=reading ;; will have to peel my eyes for this delicious sounding morsel. THanks. ]

Here is an example of his work:
Taboo
His guardian angel whispered to Fabian, behind his shoulder:
"Careful, Fabian! It is decreed that you will die the minute you
pronounce the word doyen.”
"Doyen?" asks Fabian, intrigued.
And he dies.

YESSSS! ADD Pleazee!



Ya gotta click on "Discussion Board" on the top or "More Discussions" at the bottoms. Folders get hidden if nothing's been added to them in a long time...
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/group...
or, the whole kit-n-kaboodle :
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/list_...

Basic Black with Pearls won the Toronto Book Award in 1981. I can't find much information about her other novel. There's also a short story collection out there.
OH I just did a search on amazon and apparently Basic with Black Pearls will be re-released on NYRB in April of 2018, so it won't be buried long: https://www.amazon.com/Basic-Black-Pe...
Currently on GR she has 46 ratings and 7 reviews spread over 4 distinct books.

Basic Black with Pearls won the Toronto Book Award in 1981. I can't find much information about her other novel. The..."
YES!! ADD pleaze!

Norman Hidden is one of the "fellow travellers" treated in Amongst Those Left: The British Experimental Novel 1940-1980, which is where I came across him. I have duly read his autobiographical collage with the splendid title Dr. Kink & His Old-Style Boarding School which I would like to report is a wonderful discovery - but sadly isn't. At least, not for me. Not as odd as I had hoped, I suppose. Review at https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

In any case, I think she's sufficiently buried and sufficiently awesome to be added.

She sounds interesting - which of the two major works are you currently reading?

"Sanford, who was born Julian Shapiro in Harlem and trained as a lawyer, may have been the most neglected of serious 20th century American writers. His books are a stunning fusion of formal experimentation and supple, lyric prose. There is nothing like them anywhere in American letters. Though he sometimes was compared to the young John Dos Passos, Sanford's work was so original that it confounded critics and their categories -- probably to his professional detriment."
I'm going to read a volume of his experimental autobiography once I finish one of my present books.

ADD please!!

ah hell yeah. ADD pleeze!
[good to hear for you again, Ali!]

She's written a few novels and a few books of poetry, only one (maybe? can someone find evidence of others?) has been translated to English. She has 6 reviews (only 2 in English) over 9 distinct works. Here's the book I found in English:
People in the Room is a novel. "A deathly scene from a wax museum come to life, in a closed, feminine world" -- César Aira (not sure if that's praise or what, but it sounds interesting haha, and I love Aira, so anything he blurbs is at least noteworthy)

"Like Sadegh Hedayat’s The Blind Owl, the works of Franz Kafka—or perhaps like Mann’s The Magic Mountain thrown into a meat-grinder—The Hospital is a nosedive into the realms of the imagination, in which a journey to nowhere in particular leads to the most shocking places."
Books mentioned in this topic
The House Without Windows and Eepersip's Life There (other topics)The Hospital (other topics)
People in the Room (other topics)
Amongst Those Left: The British Experimental Novel 1940-1980 (other topics)
Dr. Kink & His Old-Style Boarding School (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Maxwell Bodenheim (other topics)Barbara Newhall Follett (other topics)
Ahmed Bouanani (other topics)
Norah Lange (other topics)
César Aira (other topics)
More...
Yes! ADD please!