readers advisory for all discussion
so ask already!!!
>
tao lin and zachary german
date
newest »

message 1:
by
Jasmine
(last edited Aug 20, 2011 09:38AM)
(new)
Aug 20, 2011 09:37AM

reply
|
flag
jasmine - tell me more about what you think is good about them, because i have not read the german and i have only read the tao lin poem about MEEEE, so do your part in this RA relationship, and gimmie something to go on.

they are both very minimalistic (and I'm talking shoplifting from american apparel tao lin not so much Bed). They are both very faced paced and slow paced at he same time. they are doing a lot in the books but nothing they are doing really is anything. So the books cover a large span of time, but they do it without sort of the plot mechanisms of a normal book.
there is an absence of emotional content (especially in german) but I think it works to part of the character development. it isn't that the book is written shallowly it's that the book is written about characters that live in today's shallow world. And in most cases there is a sort of active sort of black hole in the book of what are you doing, what are you thinking.
Basically the books are very dissociated.
as far as the feeling of the books they are on the apathetic side of depressed, and usually very hopeless.
better?


where is greg he's read tao lin and coupland hasn't he?

But good writing.
greg was going to recommend this to you, but then he called out with emergency oral surgery:
Peace, Love & Petrol Bombs
Peace, Love & Petrol Bombs

I was thinking that you might want to try the "n+1" authors, like All the Sad Young Literary Men and Indecision.
Going old school into the minimalist absurd malaise you can try Samuel Beckett. You could probably almost picture Tao Lin as one of the characters in Waiting for Godot or as the man wallowing in pig-shit in Molloy.





Peace, Love & Petrol Bombs"
I want to say I totally forgot about this recommendation but I bought this book yesterday cause I thought it looked like my style.
I shall actually read books in this thread and report back unlike my usual slacking.

I read something that was recommended in one of the other threads, or tried but I didn't like it so I stopped reading it.

I don't see shoplifting from american apparel and eat when you feel sad like that. I think that these contain a conspicuous ambivalence and nihilism. I think with the coupland we are looking at a progression towards or a looking for meaning. But when you read german you are looking at an assumption that there is no meaning there is simply life. It's almost sisyphisian is a camus kind of way, for them it feels like the character is just repeatedly pushing the rock up the mountain everyday and waking up to find it at the bottom again. In coupland it feels more like the "drop out and tune in" culture where they think by the way they act they have achieved something particular and fascinating.
so I'm looking for something with a similar amount of action, but less directionality and belief in progression. Also probably something more urban, but I have no actual proof that would have any effect, I just am not on board with the back to nature.
the other thing about coupland is he inhabits a nostalgia that there is something worthwhile that exists if you could just get it that I don't think you get in german at all.
I think these are examples of the kind of writing I'm looking for here
Amelia gray: http://www.guernicamag.com/fiction/38...
Zachary German:
"Robert looks at his cat. He puts on shoes. He puts on a light sweater. He looks at his apartment. He walks out of his apartment. He walks down the stairs. He walks outside. He walks to a thrift store. He looks at a children’s book about time. He looks at a vintage LaCoste tennis shirt. He touches the shirt. Robert walks outside. He walks to his building. He walks upstairs. He walks into his apartment. Robert walks into his bedroom. He looks out the window. Robert closes the curtains. He lies on his bed. "
Tao Lin:
""what is wrong with us," said Sam. "Should I email Shelia. Or wait until she emails me. I have no car, phone, bike. I'm going to add more people on MySpace." "we are so weird," said Luis. "we met online a year ago. and we are up a year later being weird as shit." "One year" said Sam. "this is weird." "I feel like my chest is going to explode," said Luis."






so you read two of the recs?? you are the most awesome at following through with reading suggestions, by the way.

i'm reading this too right now, i would recommend to all for a really good modern story





She's really good, but she totally annoyed me years ago back when I was really into reading literary journals and she had a story in nearly every single issue of a literary journal that I bought. I was like, "Hey, editors and Joyce Carol Oates! Give another writer a turn!"
oh, god, i hated zombie. which means you will probably like it, jasmine! we are the most different!


jasmine, i forgot all about lyndia davis and trinie dalton. they might be good books for you and minimalism lit
Varieties of Disturbance, davis also has novels.
Dalton i think only has 2 books (i think), this one is great, but disturbed and disturbing,

gary lutz too is a minimalist, so i've heard, but i haven;t read any of his books, yet, Divorcer

I found Gary Lutz's writing challenging. For example, I found it more challenging than all the books that I've read by Faulkner (including Benjy's section in The Sound and the Fury which I guess you classify as minimalist writing if you stretch the definition). Gertrude Stein is also referred to as a minimalist by some people, which I would also disagree about considering the little that I've read by her made no sense whatsoever.
Lydia Davis' books are pretty alright. I checked Varieties of Disturbance out from the library and it had this awesome gimmick cover that had a fly on it. And it looked like a real fly. So anyone who saw the cover of the book, including myself, slapped the cover in a futile attempt to kill the fly (and I made various attempts to do this).
Books mentioned in this topic
Divorcer (other topics)Baby Geisha (other topics)
Wide Eyed (other topics)
Varieties of Disturbance (other topics)
Chilly Scenes of Winter (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Haruki Murakami (other topics)Michel Houellebecq (other topics)
Jean-Philippe Toussaint (other topics)
Samuel Beckett (other topics)