Odd books

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orpheus
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Re: Odd books

Post by orpheus » Tue Mar 09, 2010 12:44 pm

Pretty much anything by Alain Robbe-Grillet. I'm particularly fond of La Maison de Rendez-Vous, an intrigue thriller set in Hong Kong, centering on the Lady Ava's "Blue Villa" - in which events recur multiple times, from differnet perspectives, and always slightly different. It subversively fractures spatial and temporal descriptions - and what's really disturbing is that try as you might, the pieces of the puzzle simply don't fit perfectly. You can try to trace a timeline and a map for the whole thing - but there will always be inconsistencies. Plus, the book is very sexy.
:naughty:
I think that language has a lot to do with interfering in our relationship to direct experience. A simple thing like metaphor will allows you to go to a place and say 'this is like that'. Well, this isn't like that. This is like this.

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Re: Odd books

Post by orpheus » Tue Mar 09, 2010 12:59 pm

Imagination Morte Imaginez by Samuel Beckett. SB's first draft of this novel of ran some 300 pages. He edited and edited - and the finished work is four pages long. It was published as a complete novel, because that's what it is. It really does read as the ultra-concentrated distillation of something that was powerful to begin with.

Even more extraordinary is that he made his own English translation (as Imagination Dead Imagine ) that is every bit as good as the original. (He did this with a lot of his works.)

It's rather hard these days to find a copy of the original printing. But it's easily available in collections (such as The Complete Short Prose of Samuel Beckett - a very worthwhile book.

Full text of the English version here.
I think that language has a lot to do with interfering in our relationship to direct experience. A simple thing like metaphor will allows you to go to a place and say 'this is like that'. Well, this isn't like that. This is like this.

—Richard Serra

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Re: Odd books

Post by Pappa » Tue Mar 09, 2010 1:05 pm

Um... not sure how odd it is, depends on your point of view:

Shamanic Snuffs or Entheogenic Errhines by Jonathan Ott
Image

How about this one too...

Tobacco and Shamanism in South America by Johannes Wilbert
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Re: Odd books

Post by CookieJon » Tue Mar 09, 2010 1:19 pm

A surprisingly good read...

Image

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Re: Odd books

Post by JimC » Tue Mar 09, 2010 9:12 pm

CookieJon wrote:
JimC wrote:"In watermelon sugar"
Sombrero Fallout was good too. :tup:
Remind me of the author's name...
CookieJon wrote:A surprisingly good read...

Image
Well I'll be buggered...

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Re: Odd books

Post by CookieJon » Tue Mar 09, 2010 9:49 pm

JimC wrote:
CookieJon wrote:
JimC wrote:"In watermelon sugar"
Sombrero Fallout was good too. :tup:
Remind me of the author's name...
Richard Brautigan (I went through a "phase" when I was a lad and read everything of his I could get my hands on. They're all, well...odd!)

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Re: Odd books

Post by Xamonas Chegwé » Tue Mar 09, 2010 9:58 pm

There is only one truly odd book.

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Re: Odd books

Post by AshtonBlack » Tue Mar 09, 2010 9:59 pm

Anything by Robert Rankin.
Odd, but funny.

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Re: Odd books

Post by JimC » Tue Mar 09, 2010 10:15 pm

CookieJon wrote:
JimC wrote:
CookieJon wrote:
JimC wrote:"In watermelon sugar"
Sombrero Fallout was good too. :tup:
Remind me of the author's name...
Richard Brautigan (I went through a "phase" when I was a lad and read everything of his I could get my hands on. They're all, well...odd!)
Thanks, mate, I should have remembered... :tup:

Definitely odd, and very much an expression of a time...
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Re: Odd books

Post by orpheus » Fri Mar 12, 2010 2:39 am

I think that language has a lot to do with interfering in our relationship to direct experience. A simple thing like metaphor will allows you to go to a place and say 'this is like that'. Well, this isn't like that. This is like this.

—Richard Serra

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Re: Odd books

Post by Gawdzilla Sama » Fri Mar 12, 2010 2:47 am

Image
Image
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Re: Odd books

Post by Reverend Blair » Fri Mar 12, 2010 7:24 pm

I just stumbled across a copy of Hunter S. Thompson's "Screwjack" down at the used bookstore. I was there to pick up a copy of Lono, but it had blood or gravy or something all over the pages, so I didn't want it. The girl behind the counter said, "We got this little book of his too." She held up a pristine copy of Screwjack. It's a weird little book...59 pages of Thompson actually writing instead of musing about inventing new ways to avoid writing.

I'm hanging onto this copy. I loaned the last one out to a fellow fan before I realized that all Hunter Thomspon readers are twisted dope fiends incapable of simply reading a book and then returning it. Bastards.

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Re: Odd books

Post by Bella Fortuna » Fri Mar 12, 2010 7:27 pm

Gawdzilla wrote:Image
I have a copy of that. :tup: (not an original!)
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Re: Odd books

Post by Mr Calavera » Sat Mar 13, 2010 6:53 am

At a book fair I picked up a book called Manners and Rules of Good Society or Solecisms to be Avoided by A Member of the Aristocracy. The edition I found was printed in 1928, but it says it is the 47th edition.

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Re: Odd books

Post by JimC » Sun Mar 14, 2010 12:20 am

Mr Calavera wrote:At a book fair I picked up a book called Manners and Rules of Good Society or Solecisms to be Avoided by A Member of the Aristocracy. The edition I found was printed in 1928, but it says it is the 47th edition.
I trust you will follow its every instruction, old boy... :tea:
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