Favorite Books/Comics/Graphic Novels/Poetry Thread

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Re: Favorite Books/Comics/Graphic Novels/Poetry Thread

Post by Wizard »

So i've been living in london for the last 3 months, and it seems that i've read 7 of Tom Robbins novels...

He's unbelievably well written, and his language is extremely playful, and his insight is marvelous. If you like Chuck Palanhuik, this guy happens to make him look like a bitch. :p

Here's The List Of Musts!
Even Cowgirls Get The Blues
Jitterbug Pefume
Skinny Legs And All

Also, i managed to get Alan Moore & Kevin O'Neill to sign the new League Of Extraordinary Gentleman for me.... Probably one of the best 1-2 punch combo's to ever live. :cool:

Oh and i've been reading this guy, they call him "Billy" Shakespeare. :joy:
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Re: Favorite Books/Comics/Graphic Novels/Poetry Thread

Post by 1,2,3, Pull Out! »

Wizard wrote:Also, i managed to get Alan Moore & Kevin O'Neill to sign the new League Of Extraordinary Gentleman for me.... Probably one of the best 1-2 punch combo's to ever live. :cool:
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Re: Favorite Books/Comics/Graphic Novels/Poetry Thread

Post by orangeespoom »

x
Last edited by orangeespoom on Sun Oct 14, 2012 7:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Favorite Books/Comics/Graphic Novels/Poetry Thread

Post by Wizard »

orangeespoom wrote:preacher
:hobbes:

:love:

my best friend has the series.. i read it all in one day.. out on my back porch. it was the best fucking day. :)
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Re: Favorite Books/Comics/Graphic Novels/Poetry Thread

Post by laxlover_bill369 »

Book-a cop in the hood, spare parts (buzz williams)
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Re: Favorite Books/Comics/Graphic Novels/Poetry Thread

Post by Mudfuzz »

I just started reading Franken Fran by Kigitsu Katsuhisa, really fun manga :thumb:
Summary
Fran can make anyone into anything, raise the dead, switch heads and bodies and give you those eyes that you've always wanted. But do you actually want them? Is it a good thing to raise the dead? Do the ends justify the means? And does Fran care?
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Re: Favorite Books/Comics/Graphic Novels/Poetry Thread

Post by CBGB »

I am completely entranced by Labyrinths, the collection of stories by Borges. Anyone who can start a story like this...

No one saw him disembark in the unanimous night, no one saw the bamboo canoe sinking into the sacred mud, but within a few days no one was unaware that the silent man came from the South and that his home was one of the infinite villages upstream, on the violent mountainside, where the Zend tongue is not contaminated with Greek and where leprosy is infrequent.

...can do no wrong! His writing is all about esoteric and mystical ideas, labyrinths, books, time, shifting perceptions... stuff like that. Amazing.
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Re: Favorite Books/Comics/Graphic Novels/Poetry Thread

Post by CBGB »

Borges is also one of William Gibson's favourite writers. From his blog:

"Speaking of Borges, here's my totally atemporal reading suggestion for the new year: JLB's Selected Non-Fictions, as edited by Eliot Weinberger for the 1999 Viking edition. Not only can you find things here like Borges' review of the original King Kong, but you can also savor him flipping off Argentina's many Hitler fans, in essays like the exquisite "I, A Jew". When Viking mailed out promotional copies of their great three-volume JLB set, they included one of my favorite bumper-stickers of all time: "HONK IF YOU LOVE BORGES". And I do, I always do."


http://www.williamgibsonbooks.com/blog/2006_01_01_archive.asp
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Re: Favorite Books/Comics/Graphic Novels/Poetry Thread

Post by metalmariachi »

I really like David Drakes work.
I'm also a fan of Piers Anthony, which some times is like verbal Anime.

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Re: Favorite Books/Comics/Graphic Novels/Poetry Thread

Post by daikaiju »

Books: Anything by Charles Bukowski, Breakfast of Champions, Muhammad Ali's autobiography, and, although non-fiction, Paul Mattick is probably the one author I've read the most.
Comics/Manga: Berserk, Sandman
Poetry: Nils-Øivind Haagensen.
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Re: Favorite Books/Comics/Graphic Novels/Poetry Thread

Post by veteransdaypoppy »

I just read The Sun Also Rises by Hemingway..

:cry: so.. good...
well i guess, but i just don't know.

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Re: Favorite Books/Comics/Graphic Novels/Poetry Thread

Post by Antero »

I've been reading Ulysses. A few pages in I told a friend that I was going to move to a monastery and speak only Latin, because motherfucker just did everything humanly possible with the English language. I've been reading it very slowly, and I realize it's not simply because of the density, but because every few lines I have to stop to have a brain-orgasm.
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Re: Favorite Books/Comics/Graphic Novels/Poetry Thread

Post by Drazden »

So good to see love for Borges here! I'm just finishing up a Creative Writing / English Lit sort of program, and I'm always amazed at what people read... or don't, rather.

Other favorites include:
Cormac McCarthy, Marie-Claire Blais, Michael Ondaatje, and Stephen Heighton. The 'canon' authors everyone reads and loves are up there, as well (Chekhov, Hemingway, Rimbaud, Ginsberg, Ginsberg, Ginsberg, and Kerouac) but I think it's more important to push newer, perhaps less well-known writers.

As far as music writing goes, I love Chuck Klosterman's ideas, but his rambling style rubs me the wrong way--particularly in Killing Yourself to Live, I kind of wish he'd stick with his original point instead of writing page after page about his ex-girlfriends.

But has anyone read Fortress of Solitude by Jonathan Lethem? It's a great book about growing up in New York, influenced by the various comings and goings of style and musical taste since the '60s. I read it last year, and I really enjoyed it. There's some GREAT punk rock moments set in the '80s.
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Re: Favorite Books/Comics/Graphic Novels/Poetry Thread

Post by less_cunning »

Drazden wrote:So good to see love for Borges here! I'm just finishing up a Creative Writing / English Lit sort of program, and I'm always amazed at what people read... or don't, rather.

Other favorites include:
Cormac McCarthy, Marie-Claire Blais, Michael Ondaatje, and Stephen Heighton. The 'canon' authors everyone reads and loves are up there, as well (Chekhov, Hemingway, Rimbaud, Ginsberg, Ginsberg, Ginsberg, and Kerouac) but I think it's more important to push newer, perhaps less well-known writers.

As far as music writing goes, I love Chuck Klosterman's ideas, but his rambling style rubs me the wrong way--particularly in Killing Yourself to Live, I kind of wish he'd stick with his original point instead of writing page after page about his ex-girlfriends.

But has anyone read Fortress of Solitude by Jonathan Lethem? It's a great book about growing up in New York, influenced by the various comings and goings of style and musical taste since the '60s. I read it last year, and I really enjoyed it. There's some GREAT punk rock moments set in the '80s.


i have not read Lethem. i think i did see a couple copies of that book at the thrift store last month & did not buy it.

it is good to see both Joyce & Borges here. & Lethem... :stitch:
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