• 🇬🇧󠁿 🇸🇪 🇿🇦 🇮🇪 🇬🇭 🇩🇪 🇪🇺
    European & African
    Drug Discussion


    Welcome Guest!
    Posting Rules Bluelight Rules
  • EADD Moderators: Pissed_and_messed | Shinji Ikari

What are you currently reading? v2

Maribou Stork was probably my fave of his, and the novella A Smart Cunt at the back of the Acid House short stories

not reading anything just now but going to start some classic sci-fi with I Am Legend by Richard Matheson at some point
 
WXS5C.png
 
Just started Lucky Jim by Kingsley Amis cos I'll be writing an essay on it next week. Can't complain though. I did wanna do Cold Comfort Farm but my copy is either lost or eaten.
 
Pynchon's good - Vineland and The Crying of Lot 49 are a good place to start. Gravity's Rainbow is pretty fucking intense. It's good - I don't know if I'd say I enjoyed it, but it was an interesting, if tough, read.
 
Kin hell, you lot and your arty farty druggy books. :)
Got any Cafe Nero Latte's to go with them?

Currently rocking this bohemoth and loving every page

blue-blood-and-mutiny-the-fight-for-the-soul-of-morgan-stanley.jpg
 
Pynchon was a man ahead of his time. Couldn't make much sense of Gravitys Rainbow either but Lot 49 was the literary equivalent to Blonde on Blonde and I still remember the final sentence. Vineland is both a prophetic tour de force and a pure joy to read. Not that arty and highly recommended.

I've just started the first published biography of the prolific sex attacker and serial killer whose victims included not just Rachel Nickell but a girl of rare beauty I used to know and her infant. I'm hoping the book will help me understand how a free and lovely soul like her could meet such a terrible end at the hands of freak like him. Might also help explain why he went so long undetected and avoids the notoriety he deserves; even now, most people have never heard of him. His name is Robert Napper and he resides in Broadmoor. If anyone thinks he may ever be released or would shed a tear for his unhappy life, you're a more forgiving human than I am.

[edit] Two chapters in and I'm already stunned. And I learn I'd forgotten the sex of her child ( born after our acquaintance but still the sort of thing you might expect to remember) and respect for her memory obliges me to return and correct my error. Occurs that, while in a way you can't understand unless you forgive, forgiving ain't understanding. I wonder if the Social Services net would spot the young Napper today, Jesus, sure hope so. Read on.
 
Last edited:
Crying of Lot 49 is short, pretty easy to read and a good start. I'd miss out the heavies and go straight onto Vineland but other readers may think otherwise. Enjoy!
 
Anyone ever read LA Diaries ? by James Brown( Not the soul guy but the Alcoholic Screenwriter)
Fucking immense book but very bleak , Its even more heartbreaking as its non fiction


http://www.amazon.com/The-Los-Angeles-Diaries-Memoir/dp/1582437203


Would be right up many bluelighters street

The Blurb, Be warned this book isnt for the faint of heart

"Novelist Brown (Lucky Town; Hot Wire; etc.) mines the explosive territory of his own harsh and complicated life in this gut-wrenching memoir. The youngest child of a mentally ill mother and an absent father, Brown (b. 1957) grew up in the shadow of Hollywood with two older siblings: a brother, a moderately successful actor until his suicide at 27, and a sister who also dreamed of acting but took her life at 44. Brown's tales are harrowing: at five, he and his mother traveled from their San Jose home to San Francisco, where she set an apartment building ablaze. Arson couldn't be proven, but she was imprisoned for tax evasion. At nine, he shared his first drink and high with his siblings; when he was 12, a neighbor attempted to molest him; by 30 he was an alcohol- and cocaine-addicted writer-in-residence. During his marriage's early years, Brown often left his wife to feed his addictions, repeatedly promising her he'd reform. Desperate to fuel his writing career, he attempted screenwriting, but everything he pitched seemed too dark. Brown's genius compels readers to sympathize with him in every instance. Juxtaposed with the shimmery unreality of Hollywood, these essays bitterly explore real life, an existence careening between great promise and utter devastation. Brown's revelations have no smugness or self-congratulation; they reek of remorse and desire, passion and futility. Brown flays open his own tortured skin looking for what blood beats beneath and why. The result is a grimly exquisite memoir that reads like a noir novel but grips unrelentingly like the hand of a homeless drunk begging for help."
 
Last edited:
Vageuly remember seeing ... Garp and enjoying it but was many years ago and have never read the book. Have heard it's a good read though.

Very few novels really get translated to film properly. Such a different medium that it's pretty hard to do any decent book justice really. With some notable exceptions, naturally. Can't really think of all that many though tbh.
 
There was more banter about King in the movies thread then here, weird
I loved Pet Cemetary, it was an awful movie though

Am currently reading The Stand as mentioned above

Think this is my favorite though !

Book-cover.jpeg
 
MM is a huge fan of Gravity's Rainbow. I've started it once and really enjoyed where I got to but stopped for some reason - think something I had a proper bookboner for turned up and sidetracked me. I can see it from here... perhaps once I've done in my current read (below) it'll be time to have another swing at it.

41PW2KVV4TL._SL500_AA300_.jpg


Really, truly, extremely interesting. An extremely funny chap as well as lots of other things.
 
Am currently reading 'All Hell Let Loose' by Max Hastings.
Great book which is a single volume history that covers every aspect of the Second World War.
Always something new to learn about the 2nd World War.
 
Top