IdleRich

IdleRich
I guess that when you look at the amount of drugs the youth of Britain takes it's hard to argue that more people aren't inspired by the cyclists than by footballers.
 
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Benny Bunter

Well-known member
Interviewer: ‘When do you take drugs?’
Fausto Coppi: ‘Whenever it is necessary.’
Interviewer: ‘And when is it necessary?’
Fausto Coppi: ‘Almost always.’
 

slim jenkins

El Hombre Invisible
A friend lent me their copy of Dispatches by Michael Herr. Some of it's a bit waffley but I'm enjoying it. HST-esque romp through Vietnam.

Reminds me of Catch-22 at times. The young marine who's received his orders to go home but keeps running back to the camp / bunker when he's about to leave, in particular.

Great book, that. Really captures the attitude of 'grunts'. And the whole madness of the war.
 

slim jenkins

El Hombre Invisible
The Beetle - Richard Marsh > late-Victorian horror which, for the first book, is amazing in it's depiction of the grotesque scenario, but Book Two settles into a more normal, but quiet enjoyable, adventure.
 

woops

is not like other people
ended up reading Queer today. strange, little book. caught me off guard.

after reading the soft machine, naked lunch and various other bits & pieces I had this image of burroughs as this borderline mythical, impervious, mutant, junkie, priest type thing but the burroughs (or Lee, as the case may be) in Queer comes across as a very vulnerable, lonely man.

interesting how it almost feels like a live transition between junky and naked lunch. starts fairly coherently but begins to disintegrate as it progresses.

basically agree but not with the transition bit. Queer is so unlike Junky which shows signs of all the warped and drugged out humour and madness to come. Queer is very different, a lot more personal and not really a 'Burroughsian' (?) book. That is far from a criticism by the way.
 

slim jenkins

El Hombre Invisible
Burroughsian in the sense that as a multi-dimensional author who constantly fed his own life experience and world view into even the most fantastical scenarios it's an early chapter in a life that formed the whole ever-evolving Book of Burroughs. Probably.
 

IdleRich

IdleRich
Very nice, thanks for that. I went on a guided walk inspired by Machen round Finsbury a year or two ago but while it was interesting and the guide showed us a lot of stuff that we wouldn't otherwise have seen, it has to be said that not much of it was to do with Machen.
 

Mr. Tea

Let's Talk About Ceps
I wrote a thing about Arthur Machen ages ago, which went up today, if anyone's interested: http://thequietus.com/articles/08758-leave-the-capitol-the-weird-tales-of-arthur-machen

(I've finally abandoned the ambitious series about books I'd intended it to kick off - too much work for 0p a word, sadly.)

This is great timing, I've just re-read The Great God Pan and there's loads of Machen talk right now on a Lovecraft forum I post on. Lovely article, especially your focus on London's peculiar aptness as a setting for weird fiction.

I haven't read The Red Hand but loved this passage:

As Dyson and Phillipps, that evening, 'passed along a flaring causeway they could hear at intervals between the clamour of the children and triumphant Gloria played on a piano-organ the long deep hum and roll of the traffic in Holborn, a sound so persistent that it echoed like the turning of everlasting wheels.'

reminds me of:

"There rolls the deep where grew the tree;
O Earth, what changes hast thou seen!
There where the long street roars, hath been
The stillness of the central Sea."
 
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Thanks for the kind words all. It's nice being able to write about tales you can link directly to for free, actually, cause books time tends to be quite slow normally.

Idlerich - hah, you've hit on a thing about Machen there. People who write/talk about him soon drift away from the subject to ride their hobby horse instead. Occultists call him an occult writer, then ignore his tales to talk about Aleister Crowley instead. Psychoegeography types big him up as a London detail man, then sort of talk about local history instead (the locations in his tales actually tend to be either vague and fictional, or major and central like the British Museum or Oxford Street). Horror fans tend to mention him and then talk about Lovecraft instead.
 

empty mirror

remember the jackalope
Moby Dick is amazing. Wish I was reading it now.

I am reading Dead Zone. I've only ever read one other book of King's before. Enjoying this one a lot. Took me a long time to get over myself to try reading him.

I tried reading World War Z but it is so poorly written. And (un)dead boring.
 

viktorvaughn

Well-known member
I'm loving Alan Hollinghurst at the mo.

The Line of Beauty was great an am not enjoying The Strangers Child - little echoes of Brideshead Revisited, Atonement and also reminding my of Downton Abbey strangely having watched that at Xmas with the fammo.

I love his minutely observed ebbs and flows of human emotion most I think, very acute. Some of the touches are almost too heavy in plotting, eg in TLOB the main character is called Nick Guest, like er i get the fact he's a 'guest' throughout the entire book and doesn't quite fit in.. both the observations and prose are fantastic.
 

baboon2004

Darned cockwombles.
I am reading Dead Zone. I've only ever read one other book of King's before. Enjoying this one a lot. Took me a long time to get over myself to try reading him.

The film is classic too, chronically underrated - one of Cronenburg's best, if (because?) comparatively unweird.

Reading Marie Darrieussecq's Pig Tales - fun and easily digestible. Concurrently starting Lolita for the first time, and finding it difficult going.
 
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viktorvaughn

Well-known member
The film is classic too, chronically underrated - one of Cronenburg's best, if (because?) comparatively unweird.

Reading Marie Darrieussecq's Pig Tales - fun and easily digestible. Concurrently starting Lolita for the first time, and finding it difficult going.

Lolita is stylistically mind-bending but i found the bit where they go on the road trip a bit boring/hard going. All the run up to going away in the car I loved tho...
 

Corpsey

bandz ahoy
Lolita is exhaustingly brilliant.

I failed to read Moby Dick :( Just couldn't keep it up, I was really enjoying it too.

This is becoming a real concern for me now, this inability to get any reading done. I probably should start restricting my access to a computer, it distracts me too much.

I'm reading 'The Mountains Of Madness' on the train to/from work, having read 'The Haunter In The Dark' recently (and the Holleubecq (sic) book on Lovecraft). I think Lovecraft is almost starting to click for me now as a stylist - was reading a paragraph today about a mirage of a city hovering above the mountains and all the hammy anti-romanticism that usually makes me roll my eyes actually carried me away. I was almost luxuriating in it, as absurd as it is. I love the way the main scientists have just happened to have read 'the Necronomican'! There's certainly something fascinating about Lovecraft's stuff - I suppose the fact that he situates horror in the scientific world, on a truly universal and unfathomable scale, and suggests that 'nature' is not something to be worshipped by the thinking man but to be recoiled from in cowed horror.

Which is how we all feel now, post-Christianity, on a Monday morning.
 
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