Completists' Club discussion
Braggadocio



Carla, the only Spark I've read was The Driver's Seat which I love (likewise the weird Italian film version) but what else should I check of hers next?
Would you consider ranking your top 10 or something?



1. Cloud Atlas
2. Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet
3. Black Swan Green
4. Ghostwritten
5. number9dream

I've completionized every damn book published under the name Alexander Theroux.
Gaddis completionizing will move forward shortly.

I have now claim to having read every damn book by William Gaddis. Next up for Gaddis is a biography being written by Joseph Tabbi (possible 2014/15 publication?). I also have a book of Gaddis interpretation which I'll linger on eventually.

My Family Resemblance photo, I intend to completionize all of 'em except maybe for Powers about whom I'm still undecided.

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Congrats!

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Well, shit fire, that's mighty fine.

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Well done!

Need to read Joyce's plays and poems for that credit.
Vollmann, that bastard, is the ultimate completist mission.
I better read Gaddis' essays so I can drop another brag.

Oh scratch that DFW, I forgot about the philosophical thesis and the book about infinity or was it zero. I shan't be reading those.

Need to read Joyce's plays and poems for that credit.
Vollmann, that bastard, is the ultimate completist mission.
I better read..."
Vollmann is nothing if not prolific!
Congrats on the brags!

Congrats to those who polished off McCarthy. I'm a screenplay and a play away from joining you in that accomplishment.


hi, i am new to this group but not this way of reading, though it as rarely been just to complete an author i have read. the ones i have read include: Alice Munro, José Saramago, J.M.G. Le Clézio, Yasunari Kawabata , Alain Robbe-Grillet, Ross Macdonald, Italo Calvino , Jorge Amado, Philip K. Dick, Paul Auster, Ursula K. Le Guin... then some specialized nonfiction- philosophy: Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Jean-Paul Sartre, Henri Bergson
i do not know how to get them all on here, do not want to do it all over: just a question, do you think we read each work as a kind of gestalt and some become foregrounds and others recede to background? does it matter if we read it in order? do we read it even if we do not like it, just to complete, really, or is there something we get from contrast/comparison/resemblance in even the least of an author we like?
actually, of the above, i guess i call them complete when i basically have run out of interest in searching for more, though i will read one if it shows up, which might be cheating, but some are complete in the sense of all i have been able to find- in that case it is Munro, Saramago, Robbe-Grillet...

Maybe we continue to read to see where, if anywhere, the author might go with the story. If s/he ultimately takes us nowhere, then at the least, we have the contrast for books which really do take us deep/far/elsewhere.
Occasionally, I do stop reading a book if there is some kind of event or sticking point that I find personally insulting or ridiculous. At that point, the writer has lost my confidence, and I put the book down.

If you've read Sartre's thing on dialectical reason and his thing on Flaubert, color me impressed!!

fanfreakintasticradulations!


James Joyce (including letters and critical writings, poems etc.) , Emile Zola, Gustave Flaubert, Jane Austen, the 3 Brontes, Elizabeth Gaskell, Arthur Miller, Harold Pinter & William Shakespeare. Oh, and I think I read the entire set of "Jean Plaidy" historical novels in my teens, too.

James Joyce (including letters and critical writings, poems etc.) , Emile Zola, Gustave Flaubert, Jane Austen, the 3 Brontes, Eli..."
Well done!

!!!!!

!!!
This kind of one=upmanship is absolutely (yes!) endorsed in our Braggadocio!(!!!)


I think maybe our Snobbish Originator of Our Sacred Order of Completionism has for one reason or another ban'd the genre's. Or, in the Words of the Rules :: "No populists like Jodi Picoult, Steven King, Dan Brown, etc shall be mentioned herein." I'm not saying anything either way. ; )


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Huge congratulations!!
All that's left for you now is to have Bill's love-child.....

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Well done! If one were to dip one's toe in the Vollmann waters, which to choose, and, just as importantly, why?

That contract has already been signed!!

I had great luck myself beginning with The Ice-Shirt. It's the first volume of his projected seven volume Dreams of American Landscapes project and that for which I believe he will be longest remembered. It's also fantastic!
Unfortunately, I'm not convinced that a dipping is possible ; it's usually either a high dive into the deep end or one gets totally shut out. Seems to be.

Ok, put on my "wish list". Are there supposed to be seven titles in the Seven Dreams series?

There will be. Volume the Fifth is scheduled for next summer :: The Dying Grass. Nor were they written in order.




I would argue very strongly that you need to read all of the novels in sequence. Diving straight into Divine Days means you are going to miss out on a whole bunch of cross-pollination.
I would also recommend reading his essays before DD too, just to get a better sense of his aims.
But my god the man could write.
Books mentioned in this topic
Conversations with Leon Forrest (other topics)The Dying Grass (other topics)
Cloud Atlas (other topics)
The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet (other topics)
Black Swan Green (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Philip M. Parker (other topics)David Mitchell (other topics)
I have read every book published by JOHN BARTH. Finished just earlier this week with his latest book Every Third Thought: A Novel in Five Seasons.