Tonamel on 2/10/2006 at 20:29
I want to submit The Areas of My Expertise, by John Hodgeman, because it's completely awesome. However, I don't think I will, because there's really nothing to discuss once you've read it.
I'll try to come up with something.
BEAR on 2/10/2006 at 20:40
Hmm, when I read that post I thought I knew him, I didnt realize he was an author, I've just seem him on the daily show.
edit: after reading the wiki on him, he was a guest on the daily show and next appeared as a commentator, I remember his original interview now.
tungsten on 2/10/2006 at 20:47
I'd like to suggest A Wild Sheep Chase by Haruki Murakami. Simply one of the best books ever written (even in the translation).
PS: please make more threads. It's confusing to find a "newly opened" suggestion thread with 2 pages of replies... Don't hesitate to make 3 threads a month (as long as you get them in before S_T)
Gorgonseye on 2/10/2006 at 21:12
I submit The Damnation Game by Clive Barker. Damn good book if you ask me, and worth a read.
Paz on 2/10/2006 at 21:32
Jealousy by Alain Robbe-Grillet.
"In Jealousy, Robbe-Grillet's most famous and perhaps his most typical novel, he explores his principal preoccupation, the meaning of reality. The novel is set on a tropical banana plantation and the action is seen through the eyes of a narrator who never appears in person, never speaks and never acts. He is a point of observation, his personality only to be guessed at, watching every movement of the other two characters' actions and events as they flash like moving pictures across the distorting screen of a jealous mind."
Sounds like a laugh riot.
Scots Taffer on 3/10/2006 at 07:34
I'd like to submit The Blind Assassin for the book club, for no reason other than I'm currently reading it and it's bloody good, not something I'd ever pick up under normal circumstances (but did so at the same time as the terrible The Life of Pi).
Amazon sez:
Quote:
The Blind Assassin is a tale of two sisters, one of whom dies under ambiguous circumstances in the opening pages. The survivor, Iris Chase Griffen, initially seems a little cold-blooded about this death in the family. But as Margaret Atwood's most ambitious work unfolds--a tricky process, in fact, with several nested narratives and even an entire novel-within-a-novel--we're reminded of just how complicated the familial game of hide-and-seek can be:
What had she been thinking of as the car sailed off the bridge, then hung suspended in the afternoon sunlight, glinting like a dragonfly, for that one instant of held breath before the plummet? Of Alex, of Richard, of bad faith, of our father and his wreckage; of God, perhaps, and her fatal, triangular bargain.
Meanwhile, Atwood immediately launches into an excerpt from Laura Chase's novel, The Blind Assassin, posthumously published in 1947. In this double-decker concoction, a wealthy woman dabbles in blue-collar passion, even as her lover regales her with a series of science-fictional parables. Complicated? You bet. But the author puts all this variegation to good use, taking expert measure of our capacity for self-delusion and complicity, not to mention desolation. Almost everybody in her sprawling narrative manages to--or prefers to--overlook what's in plain sight. And memory isn't much of a salve either, as Iris points out: "Nothing is more difficult than to understand the dead, I've found; but nothing is more dangerous than to ignore them." Yet Atwood never succumbs to postmodern cynicism, or modish contempt for her characters. On the contrary, she's capable of great tenderness, and as we immerse ourselves in Iris's spliced-in memoir, it's clear that this buttoned-up socialite has been anything but blind to the chaos surrounding her.
Stitch on 3/10/2006 at 14:47
Quote Posted by Scots_Taffer
the terrible The Life of Pi).
Big words formed from reading, what, a fifth of the book? A sixth?
Still, I'll agree that <U>The Blind Assassin</U> is a much better book.
Aja on 3/10/2006 at 20:24
No doubt Life of Pi is cryptic and scholarly beyond the comprehension of all but the most academic individuals.
The part about zoo animals was especially hard.
Scots Taffer on 4/10/2006 at 10:01
Okay, yeah, I only read a fifth and feel free to dismiss my opinion as uninformed but you certainly can't label it ignorant as it was quite clearly transparent as to what the author was trying to achieve - and if that's some half-hearted attack, Aja, it was kind of weak, if not then I apologise. I don't hold a general revulsion of academics, I was one, my wife is one, and many of my friends are - there are ways that academics can hold themselves that irk me, but fuck, there's lots of things that irk me and everybody else in the world!
Anyway, on with the recommendations!
d0om on 4/10/2006 at 18:02
I have recently finished reading The Kite Runner which is absolutly brilliant
"In his debut novel, The Kite Runner, Khaled Hosseini accomplishes what very few contemporary novelists are able to do. He manages to provide an educational and eye-opening account of a country's political turmoil--in this case, Afghanistan--while also developing characters whose heartbreaking struggles and emotional triumphs resonate with readers long after the last page has been turned over. And he does this on his first try."
I would heartily recommend reading it.