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Thread: Reading Advice from Redszone

  1. #16
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    Re: Reading Advice from Redszone

    Quote Originally Posted by Falls City Beer View Post
    2. Absalom, Absalom by William Faulkner
    Faulkner.

    <shudder>

    I swore off of him after The Sound and the Fury.
    We'll burn that bridge when we get to it.


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  3. #17
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    Re: Reading Advice from Redszone

    Quote Originally Posted by registerthis View Post
    Faulkner.

    <shudder>

    I swore off of him after The Sound and the Fury.
    While I like The Sound and the Fury, I do see why someone might be put off by the wankiness of the structure (Faulkner had plans to "color code" the time shifts in the book--yikes!).

    Absalom on the other hand is just irrefutable genius. One of the great explorations of race that this country has ever produced. On a par with Huck Finn, IMO. Has the greatest final exclamation of any novel I've ever read.
    “And when finally they sense that some position cannot be sustained, they do not re-examine their ideas. Instead, they simply change the subject.” Jamie Galbraith

  4. #18
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    Re: Reading Advice from Redszone

    Quote Originally Posted by Reds Freak View Post
    I like the advice, especially the quote from your theater instructor. I find myself at times, especially graduating from college in the next year, trying to "plan my entire life". I like structure I have found but sometimes I feel it works against me. I feel I need to go with the flow more often and be spontaneous. I am torn between finding a job and working my way up after graduation or doing something radical like hiking the Appalachian Trail for a year or pack up and moving to some islands for a while after I graduate. I don't know if that makes any sense or not.

    Anyway, the only reason I asked both questions was for the assignment. We have to have two libraries. One library of books that challenges one to think about those deeper life issues and another library of books about a particular hobby or interest.
    Consider yourself lucky--it's much easier to break loose from structure than it is to turn around a structureless life.

    You have plenty of time to become world-weary and disaffected. Just find the great project that drives you forward each day (even blindly). Maybe it's a lover. Maybe it's a book. Maybe it's traveling. Talk to your inner demons a while.
    “And when finally they sense that some position cannot be sustained, they do not re-examine their ideas. Instead, they simply change the subject.” Jamie Galbraith

  5. #19
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    Re: Reading Advice from Redszone

    Quote Originally Posted by Falls City Beer View Post
    Consider yourself lucky--it's much easier to break loose from structure than it is to turn around a structureless life.

    You have plenty of time to become world-weary and disaffected. Just find the great project that drives you forward each day (even blindly). Maybe it's a lover. Maybe it's a book. Maybe it's traveling. Talk to your inner demons a while.
    That's some good advice FCB.
    School's out. What did you expect?

  6. #20
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    Re: Reading Advice from Redszone

    As for books I'd recommend..

    Ball Four, Summer of '49 (baseball books)

    Cloudsplitter - Russell Banks (about abolitionist John Brown)
    School's out. What did you expect?

  7. #21
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    Re: Reading Advice from Redszone

    Quote Originally Posted by Falls City Beer View Post
    Consider yourself lucky--it's much easier to break loose from structure than it is to turn around a structureless life.

    You have plenty of time to become world-weary and disaffected. Just find the great project that drives you forward each day (even blindly). Maybe it's a lover. Maybe it's a book. Maybe it's traveling. Talk to your inner demons a while.
    If you follow your bliss, you put yourself on a kind of track that has been there all the while, waiting for you, and the life that you ought to be living is the one you are living. Wherever you are -- if you are following your bliss, you are enjoying that refreshment, that life within you, all the time.

    JOSEPH CAMPBELL

  8. #22
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    Re: Reading Advice from Redszone

    Quote Originally Posted by Falls City Beer View Post
    While I like The Sound and the Fury, I do see why someone might be put off by the wankiness of the structure (Faulkner had plans to "color code" the time shifts in the book--yikes!).

    Absalom on the other hand is just irrefutable genius. One of the great explorations of race that this country has ever produced. On a par with Huck Finn, IMO. Has the greatest final exclamation of any novel I've ever read.
    I had a lit teacher in college who was a big fan of both Absalom and A Light in August. If I am able to get over my experience with Sound/Fury, I might be inclined to give Absalom a go.

    Color coding Fury...I can't imagine.
    We'll burn that bridge when we get to it.

  9. #23
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    Re: Reading Advice from Redszone

    1. The physics of baseball
    2. When I was a teenager, I was given Montaigne's essays and Marcus Aurelius' meditations. They are very useful books for life, then and now.

    from "meditations":
    "If it is not right do not do it; if it is not true do not say it."

  10. #24
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    Re: Reading Advice from Redszone

    1. Field of Dreams - I love the movie but I think I might enjoy the book even more.

    Non-baseball:
    1) Long Days Journey Into Night
    2) The Demon by Hubert Selby Jr. - has anyone read this book or read any Hubert Selby Jr.? - Trust me - READ THIS BOOK - It IS WILD - Also read "Last Exit to Brooklyn" - Selby's style is incredibly unique. Should be required American Literature reading, IMO. His most important work might, however, be "Requiem for a Dream" - MUCH better than the movie, which I did like, btw.
    3) Walden by Henry David Thoreau - prolly the book that resonates with me the most in terms of describing my idea of heaven and what man should ideally ascribe to achieve with his life; very thought-provoking
    4) Native Son - FCB I'd say that this book is just as good as anything Faulkner wrote in terms of highlighting the history of race and what it meant to be black in this country - awesome book
    5) American Psycho by Brett Easton Ellis; actually anything by Ellis is an interesting portrayal of the 80s (Less Than Zero; Rules of Attraction)
    Last edited by WMR; 05-17-2007 at 07:08 PM.

  11. #25
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    Re: Reading Advice from Redszone

    Quote Originally Posted by WilyMoROCKS View Post
    1. Field of Dreams - I love the movie but I think I might enjoy the book even more.

    Non-baseball:
    1) Long Days Journey Into Night
    2) The Demon by Hubert Selby Jr. - has anyone read this book or read any Hubert Selby Jr.? - Trust me - READ THIS BOOK - It IS WILD - Also read "Last Exit to Brooklyn" - Selby's style is incredibly unique. Should be required American Literature reading, IMO. His most important work might, however, be "Requiem for a Dream" - MUCH better than the movie, which I did like, btw.
    3) Walden by Henry David Thoreau - prolly the book that resonates with me the most in terms of describing my idea of heaven and what man should ideally ascribe to achieve with his life; very thought-provoking
    4) Native Son - FCB I'd say that this book is just as good as anything Faulkner wrote in terms of highlighting the history of race and what it meant to be black in this country - awesome book
    5) American Psycho by Brett Easton Ellis; actually anything by Ellis is an interesting portrayal of the 80s (Less Than Zero; Rules of Attraction)
    Funny you mention Native Son; I just got finished reading it again. It is a marvelous book and certainly it too stands alongside Huck Finn and Absalom. Though I think as a work of art Native Son doesn't quite pack the same punch as many of the scenes in Absalom (or Ellison's Invisible Man for that matter--IM may have one of the greatest opening scenes in all of American writing).

    I guess I'm just differentiating cognition/understanding/explication and affect. Absalom and Invisible Man just strike something beyond my understanding of race relations and racial histories in this country.
    Last edited by Falls City Beer; 05-17-2007 at 07:22 PM.
    “And when finally they sense that some position cannot be sustained, they do not re-examine their ideas. Instead, they simply change the subject.” Jamie Galbraith

  12. #26
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    Re: Reading Advice from Redszone

    Have you read any Hubert Selby Jr.?

  13. #27
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    Re: Reading Advice from Redszone

    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product//07...750820-9197718

    Here's a Amazon link to "The Demon." I heartily encourage anyone not adverse to some dark, but incredibly well-written and poignant literature to check it out.

  14. #28
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    Re: Reading Advice from Redszone

    edit
    Last edited by WMR; 05-17-2007 at 07:40 PM.

  15. #29
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    Re: Reading Advice from Redszone

    Quote Originally Posted by WilyMoROCKS View Post
    Have you read any Hubert Selby Jr.?
    I've not. My reading schedule has kicked in to high gear for the summer. I've charted my reading for the first two months (yeah, I'm that schmuck), but I'll see where I am in August.

    I like the O'Neill selection too btw. I think Moon for the Misbegotten is one of the most underheralded of his works--it's masterful. (Hey, vaticanplum. Ever done any O'Neill?)
    “And when finally they sense that some position cannot be sustained, they do not re-examine their ideas. Instead, they simply change the subject.” Jamie Galbraith

  16. #30
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    Re: Reading Advice from Redszone

    Oh please, FCB, you must. It's actually a REALLY quick read. (you could probably read the 3 that I mentioned in a couple days at most)

    They're the sort of books where the pages really fly once you get cranking, not onerous reading at all.


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