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Thread 24614366

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Anonymous No.24614366 [Report] >>24614368 >>24614459 >>24614483 >>24615635 >>24616417 >>24616438 >>24616910 >>24617834 >>24618929
Which book has stayed with you the most?
Anonymous No.24614368 [Report] >>24614378 >>24614415 >>24617815
>>24614366 (OP)
okay, this board is turning me from dosto appreciator to fuming hater. someone post the pasta
Anonymous No.24614378 [Report] >>24614423
>>24614368
Why do you want to be contrarian so much?
Anonymous No.24614415 [Report] >>24614423
>>24614368
It's alright dostoanon. You can want 2+2=4 not to be the case as much as you like. I won't bore you with Dosto's popularity since his death, you're existential discovery of him will always have meaning to you, and while it's true Dosto never signed on for eternal recurrence he did make it clear life contains repetition. Spread your wings and fly dostoanon, get some fresh air and return to dosto to relive your first readings of him.
Anonymous No.24614423 [Report] >>24614431
>>24614378
how am i contrarian? do you people enjoy seeing the same one sentence low effort threads over and over again? If that makes me a contrarian then i like being a contrarian because i dont like low effort retards that devalue and denegrate everything they touch by their low effort slide threads
>>24614415
I love dosto but its hard to stop psychological responses to association
Anonymous No.24614431 [Report] >>24614436
>>24614423
I mean why would you hate an author because people keep posting about him?
Anonymous No.24614436 [Report] >>24614442
>>24614431
its not a post about anything its a low effort one sentence engagement farm
Anonymous No.24614437 [Report]
A Hero of our Time
Temple of the Golden Pavilion
Patriotism
Notes from Underground
Le Colonel Chabert
Anonymous No.24614442 [Report] >>24614455
>>24614436
But why would you hate an author because of it?
Anonymous No.24614455 [Report]
>>24614442
I dont actually just seething, okay????? I'm sorry.
Anonymous No.24614459 [Report]
>>24614366 (OP)
Cows
Anonymous No.24614483 [Report]
>>24614366 (OP)
While I've read better books since, this was one of the first adult books I read back when I was in my teens and the rape scene(what would become a trend similar to Outlander in this series) stuck with me. Made me genuinely angry and I had to put the book down for the day.
Anonymous No.24614491 [Report]
Slavic psychosis ghastly rigmarole
Anonymous No.24615635 [Report]
>>24614366 (OP)
Saya no Uta
Anonymous No.24616411 [Report]
Saturday Night and Sunday Morning
Anonymous No.24616416 [Report]
Suttree
Siddhartha
The Sound and The Fury
Anonymous No.24616417 [Report] >>24616442
>>24614366 (OP)
The Perfume by Suskind, beautiful writing and murder is always cool to read about.
Anonymous No.24616418 [Report]
I need to figure out how to filter videos and images with phone aspect ratios.
Anonymous No.24616438 [Report]
>>24614366 (OP)
If you are alluding to Dostoevsky’s worst novels, then, indeed, I dislike intensely The Brothers Karamazov and the ghastly Crime and Punishment rigamarole. No, I do not object to soul-searching and self-revelation, but in those books the soul, and the sins, and the sentimentality, and the journalese, hardly warrant the tedious and muddled search. Dostoyevsky’s lack of taste, his monotonous dealings with persons suffering with pre-Freudian complexes, the way he has of wallowing in the tragic misadventures of human dignity – all this is difficult to admire. I do not like this trick his characters have of ”sinning their way to Jesus” or, as a Russian author, Ivan Bunin, put it more bluntly, ”spilling Jesus all over the place." Crime and Punishment’s plot did not seem as incredibly banal in 1866 when the book was written as it does now when noble prostitutes are apt to be received a little cynically by experienced readers. Dostoyevsky never really got over the influence which the European mystery novel and the sentimental novel made upon him. The sentimental influence implied that kind of conflict he liked—placing virtuous people in pathetic situations and then extracting from these situations the last ounce of pathos. Non-Russian readers do not realize two things: that not all Russians love Dostoevsky as much as Americans do, and that most of those Russians who do, venerate him as a mystic and not as an artist. He was a prophet, a claptrap journalist and a slapdash comedian. I admit that some of his scenes, some of his tremendous farcical rows are extraordinarily amusing. But his sensitive murderers and soulful prostitutes are not to be endured for one moment—by this reader anyway. Dostoyevsky seems to have been chosen by the destiny of Russian letters to become Russia’s greatest playwright, but he took the wrong turning and wrote novels.
Anonymous No.24616442 [Report] >>24616751 >>24617770
>>24616417
The prose that good? It's a fairly popular book.
Anonymous No.24616508 [Report]
Probably the Apology. Narcissus and Goldmund is second.
Anonymous No.24616751 [Report]
>>24616442
No, not at all. Maybe it's just the translation but it reads like a clumsy and unsubtle rip off of a 19th c. French classic. The concept is interesting but executed rather poorly.
Anonymous No.24616899 [Report]
probably the bible. not even religious
Anonymous No.24616910 [Report] >>24617766 >>24617808
>>24614366 (OP)
Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World by Haruki Murakami

It represents for me the point when reading fiction finally clicked. I initially decided to pick it up due to its association with the anime Haibane Renmei; The Town from the novel being one of its main influences for the setting and atmosphere. Everything in the book from the psychological sf concepts explored, to the themes of alienation, right down to the vague unsettling ending still makes this novel one the most haunting reads I've ever come across, and probably the most uncanny piece of media out there as far as I'm concerned. One of the most genius things about the novel is how, due to its alternating chapters, the reader is keeping tabs on two seemingly unrelated narratives. This means one of them becomes subconscious when the other is being read, and anyone who knows what the story is about will see the relevance in this.
Anonymous No.24617766 [Report]
>>24616910
i agree, too bad every single other one of his novels is about some fag teenager and his faggy lovelife
Anonymous No.24617770 [Report]
>>24616442
I read it in the original many years ago (I'm German) and as far as I remember the prose was beautiful for the first part but then dropped off. The contrast was so stark that I still remember it. I'm now wondering if it was on purpose, maybe to accentuate the ugliness of his murders or something or if it really was just a skill issue.
Anonymous No.24617808 [Report]
>>24616910
Still find it hard to believe that Murakami of all modern authors in that work in particular somehow came closest to the vibe I had when reading Kafka without having to mention muh bureaucracy even once. He out Kafkaed himself even when compared to his book that actually had Kafka in the title
Anonymous No.24617815 [Report]
>>24614368
>noooo other people enjoy the things I do!!!
>this isn't allowed!!!!
Anonymous No.24617834 [Report]
>>24614366 (OP)
Aldous Huxley - Brave New World
Anonymous No.24618929 [Report]
>>24614366 (OP)
I'm all for teasing and anticipation but these fucking ticktock videos showing the side of a book 30 seconds only to reveal a dogshit book infuriate me