I stumbled upon her "Girl who ..." yeah the one with the long title. She seems interesting. I'll have to check out Palimpsest.Jaime_Wolf said:Palimpsest by Catherynne Valente.
That woman can fucking write.
I hadn't realised how seldom I read books with truly astounding writing just in the sense of diction and word-play. Certainly I read a lot by authors who are great story-tellers, but it's very rare to find people who write with anything even beginning to approach the style of Valente.
She also nails the modern-day fairy tale better than any author I've ever seen, including favourites like Gaiman. There's a description of a myth (the characters in the fairy tale are telling each other fairy tales...) about Japanese trains that will blow your fucking mind within the first few pages. She's the only author I've ever seen that manages to create fairy tales that sound as breathtaking and profound as the best real-world fairy tales always are. And these are not children's fairy tales, they're the good, real-world sort free of child-friendly sanitation. The sort that adults tell to each other and dream about rather than the sort that exist only to instill particular values in children.
(Palimpsest is a word for re-used manuscript pages where the old writing was scraped off or otherwise removed, it isn't some weird sex thing.)
It always helps to remember that books don't necessarily hold their appeal over time and, much more importantly, that a book need not be enjoyable or even good to be important. And knowledge of important works is useful both in understanding where contemporary works and attitudes come from and in making people part of a shared society.Ham_authority95 said:I recently finished To Kill a Mockingbird for school.
It was filled to the brim with irrelevant information that made me almost forget the point of the story. Little plot points and details sprung up from nowhere and stacked up until I wasn't sure which one would actually matter. There was only one part of the book that interested me(it involved a court room), and if the author stuck with it the whole time it could have been an amazing book. Another interesting part was the fact that Scout was so ambiguously gendered, and the author should have touched more upon that, as well.
It's hard to justify it as an "American Classic" when I want to kill myself the next time Scout describes some asshole's life story!
For books that I want to read next, The White Tiger is a big one. I picked it up and it almost made me pissed that I hadn't read a book so good. I only read the first chapter, so I need to buy it.
Suggestion: keep a dictionary handy.CyprisVeil said:I stumbled upon her "Girl who ..." yeah the one with the long title. She seems interesting. I'll have to check out Palimpsest.Jaime_Wolf said:Palimpsest by Catherynne Valente.
That woman can fucking write.
I hadn't realised how seldom I read books with truly astounding writing just in the sense of diction and word-play. Certainly I read a lot by authors who are great story-tellers, but it's very rare to find people who write with anything even beginning to approach the style of Valente.
She also nails the modern-day fairy tale better than any author I've ever seen, including favourites like Gaiman. There's a description of a myth (the characters in the fairy tale are telling each other fairy tales...) about Japanese trains that will blow your fucking mind within the first few pages. She's the only author I've ever seen that manages to create fairy tales that sound as breathtaking and profound as the best real-world fairy tales always are. And these are not children's fairy tales, they're the good, real-world sort free of child-friendly sanitation. The sort that adults tell to each other and dream about rather than the sort that exist only to instill particular values in children.
(Palimpsest is a word for re-used manuscript pages where the old writing was scraped off or otherwise removed, it isn't some weird sex thing.)