thegreenhand
Bluelight Crew
flowers for algernon
go for the novel over the short story, though both are phenomenal
go for the novel over the short story, though both are phenomenal
"Hunger" is a great choice, short and very modern in style.Henry Miller - Tropic of Cancer
Knut Hamsun - Hunger
Herman Hesse - Steppenwolf
Jean-Paul Sartre - Nausea
Tom Wolfe - The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test
Denis Johnson - Jesus' Son
Hubert Selby Jr - Last Exit to Brooklyn
Oh, I will definitely check it out."Hunger" is a great choice, short and very modern in style.
Anyone who likes Henry Miller, or Charles Bukowski for that matter, should read Louis-Ferdinand Céline since he was a huge influence on them, as well as the Beats. (Ginsberg and Burroughs made a pilgrimage to his house outside Paris in 1958 to meet him.)
Céline is probably my favorite fiction author, though I should probably note that he was also a notorious anti-semite and accused Nazi collaborator (like Knut Hamsun, actually). I love all his books, but definitely recommend starting with his first novel, Journey to the End of the Night, a true modern classic.
Loved The Stand (M-O-O-N, that spells "The Stand")
Wasn't a huge fan of The Gunslinger, but really liked most of those books (I persevered as someone described The Gunslinger as more of as a prologue to the other Dark Tower books, and I would say that's accurate). I actually really liked the ending of the series, too (apparently, a lot of people did not).
I agree.. but I showed some lovefeeling personally offended by the lack of love for cormac mccarthy in this thread!! mans a genius. though will admit most of his books that i've read are the sort i have to get through as quick as possible because they are so painful i just need them to be over.
After a long time I love it’s ending as well. Lol.. and King has got to be one of least gifted closers of all time.. but then it’s hard to accept , let alone appreciate, any end to a long love. I wonder what the experience was like for King.
I still remember where I was when I finished reading The Dark Tower series. Initially I was really disappointed.. but looking back I think that had allot to do with such an amazing tale having to end.
Maybe that’s why he brought it full circle
The man in black fled across the desert and the gunslinger followed
He is truly great. I don't know why I didn't mention "Blood Meridian". I love that book. I guess I just don't consider it a classic, although it certainly is.feeling personally offended by the lack of love for cormac mccarthy in this thread!! mans a genius. though will admit most of his books that i've read are the sort i have to get through as quick as possible because they are so painful i just need them to be over.
feeling personally offended by the lack of love for cormac mccarthy in this thread!! mans a genius. though will admit most of his books that i've read are the sort i have to get through as quick as possible because they are so painful i just need them to be over.
i haven't read that!! not sure i can cope with screenplays but might be worth a try.He is truly great. I don't know why I didn't mention "Blood Meridian". I love that book. I guess I just don't consider it a classic, although it certainly is.
My favorite is "Sunset Limited" though - I know it's a screenplay, but it's so damn good. Sometimes I pick it up and just read a few random pages in it. There's not a bad line in that entire thing.
the road was horrifying, but yes, awesome.The Road was awesome!
I also have Blood Meridian but haven't read it yet. Is it as good?
i haven't read that!! not sure i can cope with screenplays but might be worth a try.
the road was horrifying, but yes, awesome.
i like blood meridian better. the writing is just amazing, i don't think i've ever read anything like it. about half way through i realised it wasn't the book i thought it was at all, possibly i'm just slow on the uptake, i was in rehab when i read it so brain wasn't in the best of conditions. i must reread it.
i haven't read that!! not sure i can cope with screenplays but might be worth a try.
the road was horrifying, but yes, awesome.
i like blood meridian better. the writing is just amazing, i don't think i've ever read anything like it. about half way through i realised it wasn't the book i thought it was at all, possibly i'm just slow on the uptake, i was in rehab when i read it so brain wasn't in the best of conditions. i must reread it.
in rehab they didn't monitor what we read though one of the psychologists, when she realised i was reading blood meridian, commented that they probably shouldn't be letting me read that. they let me read requiem for a dream too, i didn't do that to trigger myself though i did it to put myself off and it worked pretty well.Did they monitor what you read in Rehab? I've have twice had books taken off me against my will (they gave them back when I left) when in rehab or sectioned. A nurse saw I was reading Prozac Nation by Elizabeth Wurtzel when I was on the Acute Mental Health Ward for Psychotic Depression. I didn't even get told anything, she said "I think not" and took it off me. Apparently, they have a list of "triggering" books they won't let you have. Stuff like The Bell Jar etc.
no idea what i was allowed or not allowed in residential ED wards. again my memory of those times is just really bad cos i had such low blood sugar all the time. i know i took in loads of my textbooks cos i was so stressed about how much uni i was missing. despite being given the year off to concentrate on my recovery. i don't know why they let me have those, you shouldn't be trying to study in IP.When I was an inpatient on the Eating Disorder ward, when they were watching me unpack (just like they do in rehab in case you smuggle in drugs, they have to there because people sneak in laxatives, emetics, Ephedrine, etc), I had a copy of Marya Hornbachers Wasted and - even though Marya says she wrote it to try and dissuade people from it or to encourage them to get help and recover - they told me the staff at ALL ED places HATE that book and it's banned.
in rehab they didn't monitor what we read though one of the psychologists, when she realised i was reading blood meridian, commented that they probably shouldn't be letting me read that. they let me read requiem for a dream too, i didn't do that to trigger myself though i did it to put myself off and it worked pretty well.
i've been on an acute mental health ward and tbh i don't remember anything about being admitted at all so i have no idea what i even brought with me and whether anything was taken away. but when i had stabilised enough to have visitors a friend brought me some books including the happy death by camus which i'm not sure is that suitable for someone in a psychiatric crisis. they also didn't monitor me eating- i was severely anorexic at the time but that's not how i ended up on the ward, though they forced me to stay longer than i wanted cos i was in the 'immediate risk of death' BMI category- and said friend ate a lot of my food. he apologised for that a few weeks back, it was over a decade ago and has apparently being eating him up the whole time. poor guy.
no idea what i was allowed or not allowed in residential ED wards. again my memory of those times is just really bad cos i had such low blood sugar all the time. i know i took in loads of my textbooks cos i was so stressed about how much uni i was missing. despite being given the year off to concentrate on my recovery. i don't know why they let me have those, you shouldn't be trying to study in IP.