I was just looking at the Amazon entry for Family Tree, and they include a Library Journal review that reveals the big twist in the opening sentence. Bah on spoiler-revealing reviewers!
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."
FEAR AND LOATHING IN LAS VEGAS certainly opened my eyes to what you could get away with in a "nonfiction" narrative (in quotes because Thompson himself said he had to fictionalize a lot).
THE SHINING scared the hell out of me. But the earliest that a freaky horror story put the zap on my head was reading Edgar Allen Poe back in grade school. THE TELL-TALE HEART, THE CASK OF AMONTILLIADO (sp?) and, especially, THE BLACK CAT were seriously deranged.
Seconding -t's V.
To this date, the least commerical novel I have ever read. It was all about "if you can't keep up with the preconceptions turned upside down ... piss off."
eta: Noone else has remarked on it here, so I will. Jim Baen has passed on. A light has gone out.
I hadn't heard about Jim Baen. Sad now.
He was certainly one of the major influences on modern sf, and, at least when I talked to him, a nice, funny, smart guy.
Books which fuck with my head: Mary Gentle's Ash sequence. If you can get through it, but it's major mindfuckery. Good stuff.
headTARDIS
That reminds me! Doctor Who starts up again in Australia next week!
It always boggles my mind when someone dislikes Watership Down. I t shouldn't , I worked with enough people that prefer realistic fiction, but I am still always amazed.
I read Watership Down right after reading something or other on the human tendency to anthropomorphise animals. I still enjoyed it, but couldn't shake off the meta-.
Though I think my fave WD reference is when the Goodies did it. "Belllllammeeee..."
Sheri Tepper's book Sideshow really fucked with my mind
Grass, Raising the Stones, and Sideshow are the best things of Tepper's that I've read. I can see how Sideshow would be weird, and the twins finding pleasure together made perfect sense to me. You really need both Grass and Raising the Stones to get the most sense out of Sideshow.
Watership Down gives me great joy. When Bigwig struggles to his feet and said, "My Chief Rabbit told me hold you here," and the invaders go, "Oh, my god, he's not the Chief Rabbit? There's someone *he* obeys??" Wonderful moment. I'm obviously very big into the "Here I am with my last breath, defying you" thing.
Wonderful moment.
Isn't that everyone's favorite moment of Watership Down?
Although I'm kind of fond of the bit where General Woundwort becomes a kind of generalized boogeyman for keeping little rabbit kids in control.
I prefer more realistic fiction, but, c'mon. Talking rabbits are cool.
Isn't that everyone's favorite moment of Watership Down?
Probably. Though I have a real fondness for the whole digging-out-the-snare sequence, and the run from Efrafa to the boat.