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I adore Vineland as well (despite how unwieldy it feels at points, and seeming protagonist Zoyd disappearing for such a vast chunk). Mason & Dixon is the only one I prefer. Bleeding Edge was also treated rather unfairly on release I felt, I expect that to grow in esteem as well, very much of the Vineland/Inherent Vice mold in that it doesn't scream masterwork but is still better than most everything else getting published.

 

That moment in Pynchon's Vineland where Zoyd Wheeler is bleakly night driving and singing mournfully along to Take It To the Limit always gets me. Some of Pynchon's musical references you never forget, and that song changed for me forever after Vineland.

 

As mentioned, I still haven't touched the initial phase stuff like Gravity's Rainbow, V and Lot49.

Edited by Roo
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Read Taleb’s Black Swan and liked the half of what he was saying I could understand. If anything the book makes me want to read the news less, because it becomes clear that it’s a waste of time, but overall I can’t help think of NNT as an asshole.

 

Then needed something lighter. Read Woman in the Window in a day. Well done - novelist made it seem effortless.

 

On to Murakami’s What I Talk About When I Talk About Running. Short read so far and I like this personal slice of introspection from him.

 

Need something sci-fi next.

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David Mitchell is great, his first couple of books are good too, but mostly Murakami rip-offs (which I think he admitted himself), Cloud Atlas is great but I really like The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet too. Black Swan Green wasn't amazing, and the two recent ones were enjoyable enough, but his plots are getting a bit silly, would be nice if his next thing was more reality-based, he's always had weird shit, but more grounded in reality than in those two, which are quite childlike in their fantasy.

 

 

Read Taleb’s Black Swan and liked the half of what he was saying I could understand. If anything the book makes me want to read the news less, because it becomes clear that it’s a waste of time, but overall I can’t help think of NNT as an asshole.

 

His books are great, mostly all repeating the same idea, but it's a good idea. The man is one of the biggest assholes on the planet though, and having one good idea doesn't make you an expert on everything else. You should check out his twitter, it's pretty funny.

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David Mitchell is great, his first couple of books are good too, but mostly Murakami rip-offs (which I think he admitted himself), Cloud Atlas is great but I really like The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet too. Black Swan Green wasn't amazing, and the two recent ones were enjoyable enough, but his plots are getting a bit silly, would be nice if his next thing was more reality-based, he's always had weird shit, but more grounded in reality than in those two, which are quite childlike in their fantasy.

 

 

Read Taleb’s Black Swan and liked the half of what he was saying I could understand. If anything the book makes me want to read the news less, because it becomes clear that it’s a waste of time, but overall I can’t help think of NNT as an asshole.

His books are great, mostly all repeating the same idea, but it's a good idea. The man is one of the biggest assholes on the planet though, and having one good idea doesn't make you an expert on everything else. You should check out his twitter, it's pretty funny.

Exactly. He’s got so many good points.

On to Cloud Atlas!

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Cloud Atlas was good.

Usagi, you haven’t read any William Gibson? Neal Stephenson? Both contemporary writers that are pretty enjoyable. Maybe you meant just fiction, and not SF, and I misunderstood, in which case ignore me.

 

Currently reading Italo Calvino “The Baron in the Trees”. Hasn’t quite grabbed me the way “Invisible Cities” and “If on a winter’s night a traveller” did.

 

Recently finish McMafia, which is miles better than the fictional TV series.

 

Next up is a re-read of “ flow my tears”...such a great book.

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Usagi, you haven’t read any William Gibson? Neal Stephenson? Both contemporary writers that are pretty enjoyable. Maybe you meant just fiction, and not SF, and I misunderstood, in which case ignore me.

 

yes I have pretty much every Gibson book except for the last one, yes I've read Snow Crash and Cryptonomicon and am not inclined to read Anathem or anything later than that, and also yes that I generally meant non-SF (though SF is also welcome).

 

what I'm really looking for is contemporary writing that captures the "now", the zeitgeist, to use such a wanky word. I want to read stuff that, through the mirror of fiction, expounds on the world we're living in right now, especially people's inner lives and their thoughts and feelings. that's what I'm looking for, and I have no idea where to start. who out there is writing good stories about the present social, psychological, political and technological state of the world, in fiction? who are the new names who will be remembered the way, say, Fitzgerald was remembered for capturing his time?

 

I will read Pynchon/Gravity's Rainbow but that's from 1973 still.

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I'm still slogging through Mona Lisa Overdrive at like less than a chapter a week. I'll read like 4 paragraphs on the shitter every other morning. I'm so sick of 80s Gibson but I gotta finish it.

 

Then I want to re-read The Pale King. I'm really feeling that mood right now. If anyone has suggestions for similar existential white collar desperation that's not too high brow, I'd appreciate it. DFW is kind of his own thing though, isn't he.

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I'm still slogging through Mona Lisa Overdrive at like less than a chapter a week. I'll read like 4 paragraphs on the shitter every other morning. I'm so sick of 80s Gibson but I gotta finish it.

 

Then I want to re-read The Pale King. I'm really feeling that mood right now. If anyone has suggestions for similar existential white collar desperation that's not too high brow, I'd appreciate it. DFW is kind of his own thing though, isn't he.

 

 

i slogged through mona lisa overdrive as well.. so dated feeling for me.. and this was years ago.  his modern spy stuff sorta bored me too. wasn't too into it.. but i loved some of his other stuff "the Peripheral" is one i liked a lot. more recent and weird and still fun. i need to re-read "pattern Recognition". enjoyed that one and it made me feel really weird. jetlagged or something. i don't know. 

 

i haven't reread the Pale King. i have mixed feelings about that one. reread everything else by DFW though. Nicola Barker's Darkmans was really good but not really like DFW.. very different but seemed like there was something similar feeling there. can't put my finger on it but i liked it a lot. 

 

for pure smarts and density and craft and fun and big ideas... Neal Stephenson is always good. absorbing. 

 

but for DFW type american post modern or whatever the fuck people call it.. i don't know. people say Eggers but i read heartbreaking work of blah blah blah and after a while it's just a rant that loses its edge and i became un interested and not dazzled by the pace of it or the capturing of that moment etc and was more annoyed than i was pleased.  that book is the literary equivalent of whiskey dick.

 

Don DeLillo is good. Whitenoise might fit for a chunk of americana modern edge but more washed out or bleached.  the problems in the book seem related to DFW material to me. i've like all the DeLillo stuff i've read. 

 

some of Paul Auster's stuff i really like. Moon Palace is particulary good if memory serves. i should re-read that one. 

 

currently i'm reading Jerusalem by Alan Moore. only about 70ish pages into it but i like it. it's weird, the characters are good and once i got into his flow story telling and detail i find it sticking to me. 

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I'm still slogging through Mona Lisa Overdrive at like less than a chapter a week. I'll read like 4 paragraphs on the shitter every other morning. I'm so sick of 80s Gibson but I gotta finish it.

 

Then I want to re-read The Pale King. I'm really feeling that mood right now. If anyone has suggestions for similar existential white collar desperation that's not too high brow, I'd appreciate it. DFW is kind of his own thing though, isn't he.

i slogged through mona lisa overdrive as well.. so dated feeling for me.. and this was years ago.  his modern spy stuff sorta bored me too. wasn't too into it.. but i loved some of his other stuff "the Peripheral" is one i liked a lot. more recent and weird and still fun. i need to re-read "pattern Recognition". enjoyed that one and it made me feel really weird. jetlagged or something. i don't know. 

 

i haven't reread the Pale King. i have mixed feelings about that one. reread everything else by DFW though. Nicola Barker's Darkmans was really good but not really like DFW.. very different but seemed like there was something similar feeling there. can't put my finger on it but i liked it a lot. 

 

for pure smarts and density and craft and fun and big ideas... Neal Stephenson is always good. absorbing. 

 

but for DFW type american post modern or whatever the fuck people call it.. i don't know. people say Eggers but i read heartbreaking work of blah blah blah and after a while it's just a rant that loses its edge and i became un interested and not dazzled by the pace of it or the capturing of that moment etc and was more annoyed than i was pleased.  that book is the literary equivalent of whiskey dick.

 

Don DeLillo is good. Whitenoise might fit for a chunk of americana modern edge but more washed out or bleached.  the problems in the book seem related to DFW material to me. i've like all the DeLillo stuff i've read. 

 

some of Paul Auster's stuff i really like. Moon Palace is particulary good if memory serves. i should re-read that one. 

 

currently i'm reading Jerusalem by Alan Moore. only about 70ish pages into it but i like it. it's weird, the characters are good and once i got into his flow story telling and detail i find it sticking to me.

 

Yeah, MLO is kind of a dumb thing to read in 2019, isn't it? I just wanted to finish the trilogy because it's something I always wanted to read, I guess. Some of the action scenes are kind of entertaining in this smug cringey Baby Boomer kind of a way. There was one chapter where the assassin woman (whom I think of as the main character even the book is in that cheesy multiple story lines style) talks to the digital ghost in the alley and I really enjoyed that, it was almost worth the read just for that. But I could pretty much do without the rest of it. I also enjoyed "Pattern Recognition" very much; there was definitely a weariness to it. I think it will be worth re-reading since it's been 10+ years and now I've read his legendary trilogy, which frankly I was not that into. 

 

I haven't dived all that deep into DFW. I'm the cliche guy who's had a copy of Infinite Jest for 10+ years and still hasn't finished it. Sometimes he hits the spot though. But yeah, I loved Pale King. Or, at least, I remember loving it. Like it's bland or even banal but unsettling... almost Lynchian but with a different kind of dread? There was something special about it to me, even if it was unfinished and imperfectly compiled and doomed. Like perfect afternoon sunshine on a building that's so dreary it's surreal. I'm probably projecting something onto it that isn't really there.

 

Thanks for the recommendations. I usually read whatever PKD I haven't read yet... started getting into Jeff Vandermeer a bit last year but right now I'm not feeling the sci-fi/speculative thing as much. I'm in the mood for something that's imaginative without being escapist or fantastical or purple or overly clever, if that makes sense. 

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what I'm really looking for is contemporary writing that captures the "now", the zeitgeist, to use such a wanky word. I want to read stuff that, through the mirror of fiction, expounds on the world we're living in right now, especially people's inner lives and their thoughts and feelings. that's what I'm looking for, and I have no idea where to start. who out there is writing good stories about the present social, psychological, political and technological state of the world, in fiction?

Feeling this... minus the technological, though. I wouldn't mind something that kind of ignored cell phones, for example. I'm so tired of cell phones both in reality and in media. Maybe I do want to escape a bit, but in a way that makes me feel more compelled to live more meaningfully, instead of being the literary equivalent of Doritos.

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edit: ^ the problem is that the technological aspect has an intense influence of everything else, especially socially. I don't think it can realistically be ignored if you want to capture the times.

 

Pattern Recognition is great. I like that whole arc.

Edited by usagi
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A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara was an interesting contemporary depiction, in that contextual references to period were totally excised, just vaguely somewhere in the 20th/21st century despite over several hundred pages.

 

The characters seem to use things like computers and phones throughout their adult lives, but such particulars are treated with such disinterest that they don't give anything away.

 

The book has some flaws, a little overlong and repetitive, but the treatment of the central characterisation is entirely absorbing and makes it a must-read.

Edited by Roo
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edit: ^ the problem is that the technological aspect has an intense influence of everything else, especially socially. I don't think it can realistically be ignored if you want to capture the times.

Right, that's a hard point to refute. But maybe I'd rather examine the relevant aspects of it in a more abstract way? Kind of like what Black Mirror does I guess.
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reading 'the invisible book' by sergei dovlatov. I usually avoid reading translations when the prose or style is a big part of the appeal such as in this case (apparently he wrote so that no two words in a given sentence started with the same letter), but I'll make exceptions. Also I doubt I'm never going to learn russian, so if i've to choose between reading a translation or not reading it at all, and I'm interested enough, i'm getting the translation. Still can't shake the feeling I'm reading an interpretation (which I am) and not the real thing.

 

On that same note I got a collection of edgar allan poe's short stories translated by Cortazar (Hopscotch, etc) and it's really fun reading comparing his translation to the originals

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what I'm really looking for is contemporary writing that captures the "now", the zeitgeist, to use such a wanky word. I want to read stuff that, through the mirror of fiction, expounds on the world we're living in right now, especially people's inner lives and their thoughts and feelings. that's what I'm looking for, and I have no idea where to start.

read ready player one to get a feeling of the cultural hellscape the average western man lives in

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Usagi, you haven’t read any William Gibson? Neal Stephenson? Both contemporary writers that are pretty enjoyable. Maybe you meant just fiction, and not SF, and I misunderstood, in which case ignore me.

yes I have pretty much every Gibson book except for the last one, yes I've read Snow Crash and Cryptonomicon and am not inclined to read Anathem or anything later than that, and also yes that I generally meant non-SF (though SF is also welcome).

 

what I'm really looking for is contemporary writing that captures the "now", the zeitgeist, to use such a wanky word. I want to read stuff that, through the mirror of fiction, expounds on the world we're living in right now, especially people's inner lives and their thoughts and feelings. that's what I'm looking for, and I have no idea where to start. who out there is writing good stories about the present social, psychological, political and technological state of the world, in fiction? who are the new names who will be remembered the way, say, Fitzgerald was remembered for capturing his time?

 

I will read Pynchon/Gravity's Rainbow but that's from 1973 still.

Ah gotcha. Will say that both Gibson’s The Peripheral and Stephenson’s Seveneve and Reamde are all worth the time.

 

As for the type of stuff you’re looking for, try r/books

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what I'm really looking for is contemporary writing that captures the "now", the zeitgeist, to use such a wanky word. I want to read stuff that, through the mirror of fiction, expounds on the world we're living in right now, especially people's inner lives and their thoughts and feelings. that's what I'm looking for, and I have no idea where to start. who out there is writing good stories about the present social, psychological, political and technological state of the world, in fiction? who are the new names who will be remembered the way, say, Fitzgerald was remembered for capturing his time?

 

You could check out Book of Numbers by Joshua Cohen. It's a blisteringly modern book which pretty much has the "now" infused into every sentence. He has quite a similar style to DFW with that hyper-analytical detail and the ability to drop incredibly niche references to a massive variety of fields.

 

I should say though, I really hated it. I can't quite place what it was that turned me off so much, but by the end I just felt pissed off and relieved to be done. Still though, that could just be personal preference and it might fit your description pretty well.

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what I'm really looking for is contemporary writing that captures the "now", the zeitgeist, to use such a wanky word. I want to read stuff that, through the mirror of fiction, expounds on the world we're living in right now, especially people's inner lives and their thoughts and feelings. that's what I'm looking for, and I have no idea where to start. who out there is writing good stories about the present social, psychological, political and technological state of the world, in fiction?

Feeling this... minus the technological, though. I wouldn't mind something that kind of ignored cell phones, for example. I'm so tired of cell phones both in reality and in media. Maybe I do want to escape a bit, but in a way that makes me feel more compelled to live more meaningfully, instead of being the literary equivalent of Doritos.

Maybe this is bleedingly obvious, but ... Houellebecq?

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what I'm really looking for is contemporary writing that captures the "now", the zeitgeist, to use such a wanky word. I want to read stuff that, through the mirror of fiction, expounds on the world we're living in right now, especially people's inner lives and their thoughts and feelings. that's what I'm looking for, and I have no idea where to start. who out there is writing good stories about the present social, psychological, political and technological state of the world, in fiction?

Feeling this... minus the technological, though. I wouldn't mind something that kind of ignored cell phones, for example. I'm so tired of cell phones both in reality and in media. Maybe I do want to escape a bit, but in a way that makes me feel more compelled to live more meaningfully, instead of being the literary equivalent of Doritos.
Maybe this is bleedingly obvious, but ... Houellebecq?
Not bleedingly obvious; you're overestimating how well-read I am ;) The Possibility of an Island looks really interesting, thanks!
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