rih

rih

Member
Aug 23, 2024
17
So I had a spur of the moment idea of creating a place for everyone to be able to post about books, recommend books and just talk about them some. It's a medium that many people can be passionate about and I like the idea of sharing books that made you feel something; anything it could be a negative response or it could have inspired a certain lifestyle or made you come to peace with something. Just something that everyone can enjoy, a little 'in memoriam' if people decide to contribute and leave, I'll do my best at trying to contribute anything I read or remember that has had an impact on me.

Even books that just seem interesting that I haven't gotten around to. Something to look forward to opening and reading through, seeing people's opinions and thoughts, little tidbits on the authors anything and everything to do with relation to books.

Please note the only necessary part of the template will be the title and author, don't feel you have a requirement to input genres or opinion pieces I haven't included things like ISBN/ASIN/Edition/Series as it feels a little too clinical for something to be a warm thread about a common interest. Also don't feel like you need to stick to this template at all, it's just there for formatting.
TITLE:
AUTHOR(S):
GENRE(S):

OPINION:

Please feel free to add any details about an author you like or how you felt reading it specifically as opposed on the opinion directly related to the quality of the book.

Opinions vary a lot from person to person - if you'd like to have a discussion pertaining to someone's opinion on a specific book feel free, please don't be combative, confrontational. Provide sources if necessary and keep in mind someone else's opinion linked is not a source. I want people to inspire different avenue's of thought but if it comes at the direct cost of someone's feelings please think twice.

If you'd like me to include something in the housekeeping please DM or just let me know and i'll do my best.

Please have a cozy stay, listen to some rain and enjoy the reading.
Thank you.
 
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PeaceWanted

PeaceWanted

Unironically biggest r*tard to ever exist
Mar 12, 2023
27
.
 
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rih

rih

Member
Aug 23, 2024
17
TITLE: Norwegian Woods
AUTHOR(S): Haruki Murakami
GENRE(S): Fiction, Romance

OPINION: So I read this back i'd say in my second year of university, it felt so apt. The writing/translation was phenomenal (Credit to Jay Rubin), I felt like starting out my own thread with a little bit a controversial book. This definitely isn't a book for everyone. It gives you such intense reactions, It's probably one of Murakami's most grounded works which he himself is confused as to why it took off so well. He seems to have a lot of opinions on his own writing usually not for the better; I like his critiques but this one felt unjust. The story isn't some earth shattering world ending event (maybe for the character involved it would be). I love how grounded it is, I love how sad it made me; how this simple story seems to pull you into a full investment. I remember tearing up on the train in cold rainy November finishing this. I'm not sure if it's the memory of the book or just how I felt at the time I enjoy more I had a complicated relationship and it just felt right reading this.

I'll end it also with a quote perfect for the start of this thread.

"If you only read the books that everyone else is reading, you can only think what everyone else is thinking."

- Haruki Murakami
 
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Alexei_Kirillov

Alexei_Kirillov

Missed my appointment with Death
Mar 9, 2024
747
TITLE: I Who Have Never Known Men
AUTHOR(S): Jacqueline Harpman
GENRE(S): Fiction

OPINION:
This is fundamentally a story about what happens to a human being in isolation: how much is lost, yet how much is also inexplicably maintained. A human being shrouded from the society of their fellows does not regress to apehood, and this is nowhere more obvious than in their continued propensity to think. To wonder, to be curious, to endeavour to discover even when there's ostensibly nothing to discover. To learn, to improve, to ask -- such is our birthright, and even in a cage, even abandoned and starving, even isolated in a desolate, foreign landscape, there is no one who can take away your ability to think. I would do well to remember this in my moments of despair, that the mere act of thinking can be its own reward, can be enough to buttress yourself against the passage of time.

That is, indeed, my next takeaway from this book: that the years can just fly by, one after the another, until suddenly it's been a decade, then two, then three. Your life can just go on, and on, and on, regardless of whether you're doing anything with it, regardless of whether you're in constant movement or just standing still -- until, of course, you reach your inevitable fate, just like everyone else. Suicide is a recurring theme, but since the protagonist was isolated from childhood and was not inculcated with pro-life values, it isn't portrayed in a negative light. Voluntary death, in this world, is not tragedy, but relief. A final escape from the absurd, a last assertion of dignity in the face of forces that would rather have you suffer. All come from dust, and to dust all return.

SELECTED QUOTE: "It wasn't her body that was giving up, but her spirit, which had grown increasingly weary of animating those muscles, of making that heart beat, of going through all the motions of living, the spirit that nothing had nourished for such a long time [...] I sincerely wanted to say some helpful words that would sustain her, but, to be honest, in this sterile land, in the silence and the solitude, ignorant and sterile myself, what could I give her? Why would she want to live? We were doing nothing, we were going nowhere, we were nobody."
 
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rih

rih

Member
Aug 23, 2024
17
Thank you so much for the addition, been added to my long list of to reads.

Figured i'd add another book.

TITLE: The Temple of the Golden Pavilion
AUTHOR(S): Yukio Mishima
GENRE(S): Fiction

OPINION: I loved this book, the writing keeps you so focused. The way Mishima seems to incapsulate obsession is amazing. The main character I think is meant to go against the grain. Not be like-able. The story is largely based on a real life event too, but how he turns it into this masterpiece is I guess a reason he became such a well-renowned writer. I've said it in a previous thread but as an author Mishima had such a colourful, crazy and strange life. I enjoyed reading about him. I won't go into too much details but i'd definitely recommend anybody that has an interest in his work to read about his life. He inspired me to keep a healthy life style despite my own obsession hence why i'm on this forum.
 
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eden101

eden101

Member
Aug 12, 2024
75
TITLE: Martin Eden
AUTHOR: Jack London
GENRE: novel

opinion: im very tired, just read this book, its great! haha
 
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hot

hot

Mar 3, 2024
169
TITLE: Norwegian Woods
AUTHOR(S): Haruki Murakami
GENRE(S): Fiction, Romance

OPINION: So I read this back i'd say in my second year of university, it felt so apt. The writing/translation was phenomenal (Credit to Jay Rubin), I felt like starting out my own thread with a little bit a controversial book. This definitely isn't a book for everyone. It gives you such intense reactions, It's probably one of Murakami's most grounded works which he himself is confused as to why it took off so well. He seems to have a lot of opinions on his own writing usually not for the better; I like his critiques but this one felt unjust. The story isn't some earth shattering world ending event (maybe for the character involved it would be). I love how grounded it is, I love how sad it made me; how this simple story seems to pull you into a full investment. I remember tearing up on the train in cold rainy November finishing this. I'm not sure if it's the memory of the book or just how I felt at the time I enjoy more I had a complicated relationship and it just felt right reading this.

I'll end it also with a quote perfect for the start of this thread.
TITLE: I Who Have Never Known Men
AUTHOR(S): Jacqueline Harpman
GENRE(S): Fiction

OPINION:
This is fundamentally a story about what happens to a human being in isolation: how much is lost, yet how much is also inexplicably maintained. A human being shrouded from the society of their fellows does not regress to apehood, and this is nowhere more obvious than in their continued propensity to think. To wonder, to be curious, to endeavour to discover even when there's ostensibly nothing to discover. To learn, to improve, to ask -- such is our birthright, and even in a cage, even abandoned and starving, even isolated in a desolate, foreign landscape, there is no one who can take away your ability to think. I would do well to remember this in my moments of despair, that the mere act of thinking can be its own reward, can be enough to buttress yourself against the passage of time.

That is, indeed, my next takeaway from this book: that the years can just fly by, one after the another, until suddenly it's been a decade, then two, then three. Your life can just go on, and on, and on, regardless of whether you're doing anything with it, regardless of whether you're in constant movement or just standing still -- until, of course, you reach your inevitable fate, just like everyone else. Suicide is a recurring theme, but since the protagonist was isolated from childhood and was not inculcated with pro-life values, it isn't portrayed in a negative light. Voluntary death, in this world, is not tragedy, but relief. A final escape from the absurd, a last assertion of dignity in the face of forces that would rather have you suffer. All come from dust, and to dust all return.

SELECTED QUOTE: "It wasn't her body that was giving up, but her spirit, which had grown increasingly weary of animating those muscles, of making that heart beat, of going through all the motions of living, the spirit that nothing had nourished for such a long time [...] I sincerely wanted to say some helpful words that would sustain her, but, to be honest, in this sterile land, in the silence and the solitude, ignorant and sterile myself, what could I give her? Why would she want to live? We were doing nothing, we were going nowhere, we were nobody."
Really interesting, i will start reading books soon.

Good thread idea OP
 
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cryone

cryone

Experienced
Nov 23, 2023
211
TITLE: Norwegian Woods
AUTHOR(S): Haruki Murakami
GENRE(S): Fiction, Romance

OPINION: So I read this back i'd say in my second year of university, it felt so apt. The writing/translation was phenomenal (Credit to Jay Rubin), I felt like starting out my own thread with a little bit a controversial book. This definitely isn't a book for everyone. It gives you such intense reactions, It's probably one of Murakami's most grounded works which he himself is confused as to why it took off so well. He seems to have a lot of opinions on his own writing usually not for the better; I like his critiques but this one felt unjust. The story isn't some earth shattering world ending event (maybe for the character involved it would be). I love how grounded it is, I love how sad it made me; how this simple story seems to pull you into a full investment. I remember tearing up on the train in cold rainy November finishing this. I'm not sure if it's the memory of the book or just how I felt at the time I enjoy more I had a complicated relationship and it just felt right reading this.

I'll end it also with a quote perfect for the start of this thread.

hope its okay to ask questions in the thread. I like the atmosphere of his works, but i find his works are too explicit and sexually disturbing. i had to drop norwegian wood and kafka on the shore bc of it even tho the plots was amazing. do you know which books of his would still have his empty/lonely/dissociative atmosphere but not the overwhelming amount of sex?
 
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rih

rih

Member
Aug 23, 2024
17
hope its okay to ask questions in the thread. I like the atmosphere of his works, but i find his works are too explicit and sexually disturbing. i had to drop norwegian wood and kafka on the shore bc of it even tho the plots was amazing. do you know which books of his would still have his empty/lonely/dissociative atmosphere but not the overwhelming amount of sex?
Please feel free to ask questions!

Sex and Murakami I feel are very intertwined as he uses it quite explicitly for a lot of tone setting / expression, BUT with that said i've read one of his books that I can say for certain didn't have anything too raunchy albeit the narrator giving a few descriptions of someone/one scene but not 'during the act'. Hard Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World was one of my first dips into his surrealism and just general weirdness that is Murakami. I did enjoy it quite a lot too. If you like his writing you'll like this the tones are very similar the plot might not interest you as much but I really enjoyed it.

I hope you find something to enjoy and others recommend you many more!
 
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lamargue

lamargue

concupiscent soul
Jun 5, 2024
338
TITLE: The Man Without Qualities
AUTHOR(S): Robert Musil
GENRE(S): Philosophical Fiction

OPINION: decadence viewed as a mechanical force. sex and desire as physical properties of the world, in which ideas both inhere to them. a grand ensemble of actors in the decline of Viennese society, also known as Kakania in the novel. the reconciliation of the empirico-materialistic view with the undercurrents of German idealism endemic to the time. it's long, but absolutely worth it. i have more to say, but i think i'd be betraying the sheer force with which this novel has by going in blind.
 
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TransilvanianHunger

TransilvanianHunger

Grave with a view...
Jan 22, 2023
349
Title: Sun and Steel: Art, Action and Ritual Death
Author: Yukio Mishima
Genre:
Autobiographical essay, philosophy
Link: Download from Libgen

Opinion:
I might have seen Mishima's name mentioned here or there, and it seems like he's quite well-known in literary circles, but I don't read novels often, so that'll be my excuse. Before reading Sun and Steel this morning, I was not at all familiar with the man.

The main theme of this essay is Mishima's relationship to his own body, and his quest to transform it into a "beautiful" body in the classical Greek sense — tanned, strong, and muscular. He sees a classically aesthetic body as a requirement for a "beautiful", tragic death in — again — the sense of the Greeks. Emulating the Greeks is a recurring theme, as you can see. I understand this essay is quite popular among the vitalist crowd, those folks who are into bodybuilding and sculpting their physique as much as possible. If that is indeed the case, it is quite funny because Mishima's goal for his perfect physique was to kill himself in a tragic and heroic way, and I seriously doubt your average Mishima-loving gym rat has the same aims in mind. While he makes some interesting points, such as the abandonment that often befalls the body when one decides to pursue intellectual matters, and it sort of made me want to get up and go back to doing yoga every now and again, the main thing I found in this essay was a deeply repressed man, who was very clearly not comfortable in his own skin — the whole work is dripping with homosexual desires and masochistic urges, which the author never dares to acknowledge, trying instead to rationalise his feelings by means of philosophy and an admiration for classical Greek culture and aesthetics. In a way, it is a very adolescent philosophy (not at all surprising, if his biography on Wikipedia is to be believed) in a way that often reminded me of Nietzsche. Still, I found it an interesting read, and it's only 70 or so pages long. If you have a couple of hours to kill, give it a read and see what you think.
 
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VeryShy

VeryShy

Disabled due to severe autism, and schizophrenia
Jun 21, 2024
601
I think that @bookie will appreciate this thread, lol.
 
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lamargue

lamargue

concupiscent soul
Jun 5, 2024
338
TITLE: The Lime Twig
AUTHOR(S): John Hawkes
GENRE(S): Fiction, Crime, Thriller

OPINION: i remember first reading this novel and being stunned by the prose. so intricate, yet almost phantasmagorical in nature. each page provides aesthetic value in some way. the elaborate way in which it was constructed engirds the tension that it provides you as well. there are mysterious forces here at work, most of which are outside of the reader's grasp. think the love-child of Nabokov and American Noir conceived in a grimy downtown fleshpot

Hawkes' is truly a masterful prose stylist; on par with someone like Updike, at least in this novel.
 
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