Hes deadly. Antimemetics is his best, bit of a Grant Morrison vibe off it. Ra and Fine structure are both pretty good as well.there is no antimemetics division, very cool so far, kind of like PKD meets u/_9mother9horse9eyes9
Hes deadly. Antimemetics is his best, bit of a Grant Morrison vibe off it. Ra and Fine structure are both pretty good as well.there is no antimemetics division, very cool so far, kind of like PKD meets u/_9mother9horse9eyes9
I started watching a documentary about him - it made me nostalgic for him. He was one of the first writers I really read everything of in my early twenties. To go back 30 years later is an eye opener. I’m reading them in chronological order - it’s interesting to see certain themes there from the very beginning but like others said about Dick and Ballard - the early stuff is quite derivative and cheap.My dad's been rereading Vonnegut too. Apparently it's been about 40 years since he last read some of them. I didn't know he'd been to see him lecture somewhere in the 80s. He mentioned it on the phone the other night and said he was really funny in person.
I started watching a documentary about him - it made me nostalgic for him.
Yep that’s the one.I think that's what happened with my dad too. Was it on TV recently? He mentioned a documentary that took decades to make because the guy making it was an obsessive superfan or perfectionist or something.
Vonnegut also reminds me of Hermann Hesse in that he is one of the authors you read in your teens, or, at the latest ,in your early twenties, but it feels a bit weird to return to them later in life
Sometimes I agree with this sentiment, but sometimes I feel it's snobbish and dismissive. I'm not a Vonnegut fan and do find him a bit twee and irritating, but he wasn't in his teens and twenties when he wrote the stuff and I don't think he was specifically targeting that age group either, so I dunno that there's anything really wedding him to that particular age bracket.
I dunno if there are any authors I've read around that age and now feel I've grown out of. The only one that comes to mind is Irvine Welsh. I'm not interested in reading Trainspotting again, but I dunno if that's down to it being for younger readers or just because my tastes have changed. I still like Burroughs and I read him around the same time.
i read steppenwolf again not all that long ago it was great
yeah its incredible william kent is wrongThat bit in the magic theatre at the end is something.
Bret Easton Ellis is one I still enjoy that's sometimes considered an author to grow out of. I don't like everything of his though. Just the first three.
Am I correct in assuming that @william_kent @luka @woops and i are the top drunk posters? Presently intoxicated.just the age I read both those guys, i sort of hope I've "progressed" since then, and yeah, I'm hammered and I'm being a snob - #projection