Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
There's always a lot of that in Pynchon's books, but he rarely clears it up because he's kind of a prankster.
Heh, I was just thinking about how LOT 49 is kind of like the DR. STRANGELOVE, except about "conspiracy" and even more po-faced.
The fact that he can't seem to resist funny/loaded names a la Terry Southern is one big tell that something funny is going on somewhere.
I was just cracking up reading the Wikipedia entry on TCOL49 because of the awesome names. For some reason, Dr. Hilarius being a Nazi scientist always seems over-broad in the context of the book, but it never fails to bring a smile to my face when I consider it elsewhere.
horse who's name I'm forgetting that got sent to the glue factory.
His name was Boxer. Poor Boxer. In fact I am sitting here tearing a bit thinking of how poor, loyal Boxer was betrayed. I sobbed and sobbed when reading the book. I am not sure that Animal Farm is the sort of book that it supposed to evoke an emotional response, but it did.
I cry at any book that has bad things happen to animals.
looks at Watership Down wearily
In the name of being well-read. I'll just double up in my AD's.
His name was Boxer.
Yes, thank you.
Poor Boxer.
Oh yes.
I am not sure that Animal Farm is the sort of book that it supposed to evoke an emotional response, but it did.
Me too. I think Boxer's fate was supposed get an emotional response, though.
Thinking critically about Animal Farm....
I think that George Orwell's writing philosophy was like Brecht's-- to incite action rather than emotion. I just find Brecht's (and Orwell's) works to be emotionally moving. I think it may just be a reaction to the melodrama that same before them, though.
I also am just guessing about orwell's motives, as I know little to nothing about him.
Okay, I've never read Animal Farm and now I ain't gonna. 1984, though, and scads of 50s-70s scifi, so I'm all countercultured up.
I read
Animal Farm
directly before reading
1984,
so it struck me how the former seemed almost like preparation for or a precursor to the latter.
They were both spring break reading material. Along with
Catcher in the Rye
and...maybe
A Streetcar Named Desire
? Possibly
Glass Menagerie.
There was at least one play, and I think it was Tennessee Williams.
Oh God, somebody's pulled Corwood's chain. We'll be here all night. (sighs, puts out peaches)
Did you read them on Spring Break as part of school, or on your own?
Back in the dark ages when I was in school, we never, ever, ever had to read anything when we were on vacation, although we read one book a year as "outside reading" which meant that we chose 1 of 3 or 4 books, and then took a test when we were done reading. I think vacation reading is weird, even though I read like a maniac on vacation. I feel like perhaps it would have made me want to read LESS.