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BOOKS I HAVE READ OVER THE PAST YEAR OR SO (sorry) Books I have read over the past year or so

FBI parte due

Folces Weard
Secret Rendezvous by Kobo Abe - Man's wife (Japanese man!) is spirited away by ambulance in the middle of the night. He spends a long time trying to track her down in a hospital ridden with bureaucratic and sexual hijinks. Presumably some very biting and acrid commentary on Japanese society in the 50s. I don't know, I was never in Japan in the 50s. Feels like a stress dream to read. Excellent. 9/10

The Ruined Map by Kobo Abe - actually read this several months before Secret Rendezvous. Femme fatale hires detective to find her missing husband. He spends the whole book looking for the guy, doesn't find him. In the end he gets confused and starts thinking, maybe he's the husband! Definitely not smart enough for this book, read it if you're smarter than I am. 8/10

Invisible Cities by Italo Calvino - I love Italo Calvino. I picked this and The Baron in the Trees up at a library book sale, paid like a dollar each, had never read any Calvino before. Wonderful. Fantastic. Also in the more obscure senses of both the preceding words! A series of one- or two-page-long descriptions of imaginary cities, each one stranger than the last. Like Borges if Borges could stick to one topic for more than 20 pages. 10/10

The Baron in the Trees - Much less of a bombardment of bizarre ideas than Invisible Cities. Kind of reminiscent of Baudolino in how it tries to capture the intellectual zeitgeist of an era far removed from our own, but better because Calvino is a more compelling writer and less of a giant dork than Umberto Eco. The Englishman in the book is named Sir Osbert Castlefight. 8/10

THE PINCH RUNNER MEMORANDUM by Kenzaburo Oe - What a hot mess. Difficult to summarize. Compelling, definitely kept me reading all the way to the end. 7/10

An Echo of Heaven, also Oe - Depressing. Cracked this open a few months after The Pinch Runnder, couldn't finish it, decided to read something less depressing instead. I get the feeling that Kenzaburo Oe is one of those writers who has spent his entire career writing and rewriting the same semi-autobiographical novel and publishing it under different titles. Still intend to come back to it some day, I still like him and Flannery O'Connor, one of my favorite authors, apparently features heavily throughout.

Evaristo Carriego by Jorge Luis Borges - picked this up instead. More worth reading for Borges' passionate descriptions of Buenos Aires than his eulogizing of his friend. Read this if you're really into Borges. 6/10

Ada, or Ardor: A Family Chronicle by Vladimir Nabokov - Still haven't read Lolita, still 100% sure this is his best book by any measure. A baklava of literary delights. Probably my favorite book I've read in the past 5 years. Read it.
 
Kanley Stubrick by Mike Kleine - definitely the least amount of written words I've ever spent fifteen dollars on. His writing is compelling and hard to look away from, like a car crash. Definitely a book I find myself coming back to and rereading every few months. Bought and read Mount Arafat by the same author and felt a little gypped because I felt like it was basically the same book but with an ensemble cast. Hard to rate because I don't have much I can compare it to.
 
I watched three episodes and loved it, then fell off. I was watching it with other people. I think I need to just commit to sitting down and watching it by myself over the course of a few evenings.

I liked the bits in the Black Lodge that I saw. They were terrifying and dreamlike.
 
I am currently reading one called the Lion Boy which is not horrible, Interesting premise but the execution is lacking. About a poor African kid who is trying to rescue his kidnapped parents who are secret scientists, but due to some freak spiritual spiderman-style encounter with a cheetah cub as a toddler, can talk in the language of cats.

I like the cat bits, they are entertaining. But the story of the parents is a distraction and I simply do not care about them. May or may not finish it.
 
Infinite Jest - I have a copy of this sitting on my desk unread that I got for $2 used. I hear it's massively overrated, but the only thing I've read of David Foster Wallace's is the article he wrote for the Atlantic about John Ziegler, which I quite liked.
 
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I watched three episodes and loved it, then fell off. I was watching it with other people. I think I need to just commit to sitting down and watching it by myself over the course of a few evenings.

I liked the bits in the Black Lodge that I saw. They were terrifying and dreamlike.

You should watch it all in one day like the 18 hour movie Lynch intended!
 
https://deadspin.com/ex-wweer-on-announcer-jbls-bullying-this-stuff-is-enc-1794126676

Backstage tales of Layfield’s hazing and bullying have long been legion among hardcore wrestling fans. At one point, even WWE wasn’t shy about it: One infamous story comes from Adam “Edge” Copeland in his WWE-published memoir. When Copeland first started with the promotion, he was taking a shower when Layfield, wearing his cowboy hat no less, entered the stall and began, Copeland wrote, “soaping my ass.” In a parenthetical, he makes sure to note that “there was no insertion and no disappearing knuckles, if ya know what I mean.”

Kind of!
 
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