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Marc
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Mar 26, 2013 05:59PM

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I've just finished Creatures of Appetite by Todd Travis, it's a decent thriller about a very nasty serial killer.
http://thecultofme.blogspot.co.uk/201...



I enjoyed Ballet of the Bones a lot.

I've just finished Creatures of Appetite by Todd Travis, it's a decent thriller about a very nasty serial killer.
http://thecultofme.blogspot.co.uk/201...-..."
um is there a type of serial killer who isn't essentially nasty? :-)

Ulysses is one I hardly started! and as it was a library book, I could see a lot of other people had taken it out and not read it either (it was still in pristine condition - no bacon rasher bookmarks or mysterious blobs and stray hairs... )
Think it is probably the most famous unread book.


I enjoyed that bit but had no idea what was going on.

I enjoyed that bit but had no idea what was going on."
Not yet Jud.But just the idea of it sounds fantastic!

Yeah, I'm in the UK as well. I just thought I'd give it a try to see what all the fuss was about. Still not sure.

For me, Ulysses is the greatest book ever written*. I didn't understand all of it, but that didn't detract from its genius.
* Well, it comes a close second to mine, obviously.

You should try Finnegans Wake. After I read Ulysses I was really looking forward to it. I waded through the first page. And then waded through it again. Then double checked that I hadn't ordered the Ukrainian edition by mistake. Then tried the first page again. Then put it back on the shelf.

You should try Finnegans Wake. After I read Ulysses I was really looking forward to it. I waded through the first page. And ..."
Will do! The fact that my books are already a little 'out there' shall we say and that I'm reading Ulysses whilst finishing the final book in my trilogy... hmmm it could spell the end of my fledgling career!

while not holding myself up to the master, much of my writing is stream of consciousness or internal monologue.
And though I've never read it, Finegan's Wake is all about the language I believe.


Same here, I went, looked, read half of the first page and decided that life was too short


Don't get me wrong. It's a work of genius. The fact that I'm not clever enough to understand it isn't Joyce's fault. It isn't just about the language, it's about the structure as well. For example, the book starts with the second half of a sentence and ends with the first half of the same sentence. I've read that you can start reading the book at any point and when you get to the end you can just carry on with the first sentence and carry on up to the point where you started.
The problem is that I'm not sure it even counts as stream of consciousness. The whole 600 pages are made up of Joyce's own invented words (some of which are taken from languages like Polish and Persian), puns and anagrams. Almost every single word.


A chap goes into a sweet shop and asks the person behind the counter for a punnet of mackerel: "Will that be fourpence or twopence you'll be spending?" asked the shop assistant. "It matters not", replied he, "I'm on my bike."
A touch of modernist humour for you there ;)


ha, hard to say! A B and E is in the internal monologue category. 52FF is a language-led flash fiction collection.
Hope that helps!

Don't get me wrong. It's a work of genius. The fact that I'm not clever enough to understand it isn..."
sorry, that's what I meant by it being more about language than storytelling.
There's a book by B.S.Johnson (can't remember which one) that comes in a box with loose leaves. You read the opening chapter and then you can read any of the other chapters (except the final one) in whatever order you fancy.

A chap goes into a sweet shop and asks the person behind the counter for a punnet of mackerel: "Will that be fourpence or twope..."
Postmodernist I'd hazard! :-)

ha, hard to say! A B and E is in the internal monologue category. 52FF is a language-led flash fiction collection.
Hope that helps!"
Having read the 1 star review on goodreads for A,B and E I have purchased it on the spot. That woman should be your publicist!

ha, hard to say! A B and E is in the internal monologue category. 52FF is a language-led flash fiction collection.
Hope ..."
ha ha ha. I got a similar one for one of my flash collections, which said it was just a load of words to them, which I thought was a pretty fair summation of all literature!

Having read the 1 star review on goodreads for A,B and E I have purchased it on the spot. That woman should be your publicist! ..."
It did strike me as a very thoughtful and positive 1 star review.
Hire her ;-)

Campaign of the Gods
Just about to start Alex

A Schroedinger book?

A Schroedinger book?"
written one of those as well :-)
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