Fear Fantastique discussion
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What are you reading, folks?
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Someday I'm going to finish Twilight Watch - and when I do I shall mayhap read some short stories - not saying it's not good, but it shore is looong...
Rob wrote: "I don't think you've asked that before.
Pygmy isn't what I'd call typical Palahniuk, but it's my favorite of his so far. Very funny in an often twisted kind of way. Harcore "patriots" who can't ..."
Rob; Is there a lot of explicit sex is the twist?
Pygmy isn't what I'd call typical Palahniuk, but it's my favorite of his so far. Very funny in an often twisted kind of way. Harcore "patriots" who can't ..."
Rob; Is there a lot of explicit sex is the twist?

Wow, that's an impressive amount of books. I'm reading Haunted by Palahnmjolmlml?? (that man has a complicated name) and so far...eh. It's like reading a satire - the characters are all unsympathetic.
I'm curious to know what you think of American Psycho...
I'm curious to know what you think of American Psycho...


I'm reading another Murakami, A Wild Sheep Chase, which I am much enjoying. He has a lot of dry humor in this one, along with the surreal atmosphere - and I always learn new things about Japan!


i'm NOT an ayn rand fan. wish i could say i was. and her personal politics...hmmm.

After that, I am going straight for the newest Yoko Ogawa translation:
Book review: 'Hotel Iris' by Yoko Ogawa
April 9, 2010 | 2:21 pm
Approach with caution: "Hotel Iris" by Yoko Ogawa (Picador, $14) is a strange novel, gorgeously translated. It is the story of Mari, a 17-year-old young woman who works for her tyrannical mother in a hotel by the sea. She meets an older man, a translator of Russian novels, who lives on an island and is rumored to have murdered his wife. He is a pain artist -- ties her up, hits her, spits on her and humiliates her. And she loves him, seeks him out again and again.
“It occurred to me that I had never heard such a beautiful voice giving an order,” Mari thinks. “It was calm and imposing, with no hint of indecision. Even the word ‘whore’ was somehow appealing.”
The text is so clean you can feel the eerie ocean breeze. You think you ought to stop her, but you’re not sure how or if it is really the right thing to do. You know her mother has caused more damage than the translator ever could. Unlike our world of laws, instincts and moral imperatives, you don’t understand the world of this novel at all. Why would this young, beautiful girl need this fastidious, terrifying man?
-- Susan Salter Reynolds

I just started The Book of Lost Things and am really liking it - Connolly has a very clean writing style that I admire.

As for me, I am reading



Clean writing style - that sounds appealing to me.


McKinley is one of my guilty pleasures (along with Alice Hoffman). She creates a very interesting world in Sunshine - and there's a huge emphasis on baking!
I'm reading Oscar and Lucinda - hasn't really hooked me yet...
I'm reading Oscar and Lucinda - hasn't really hooked me yet...


Currently slogging through Drood - about halfway through and still not sure what I think of it. I usually like unstable narrators, but Wilkie Collins sure does have a tendency to natter on...


yeah, I keep slogging along on this - it's probably over 800 pages - ye gods. I hate to not finish a book...
Books mentioned in this topic
Sweetheart (other topics)Heartsick (other topics)
Bless Me, Ultima (other topics)
The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane (other topics)
American Psycho (other topics)
More...
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you just jinxed it! what is this? The third or fourth release date for that book?