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Anonymous 17531

Who is your favorite writer?
>inb4 this thread gets moved to /media/

Anonymous 17532

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I haven't read enough books to really decide on a favourite author, but so far I've highly enjoyed the works of Daniel Defoe. They're entertaining and have a good writing style.

Anonymous 17533

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Miguel de Cervantes perhaps or Alexandre Dumas père maybe, could be Charlotte Brontë, also Sigrid Undset, i have many and none. I often feel like i'm reading a masterpiece, but forget about it once i pick up the next one.

Anonymous 17534>>17583

>inb4 this thread gets moved to /media/
You predicted it well

Also my favorite writer is Jakub Żulczyk but I don't know if any of his books was translated into English

Anonymous 17539

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Elfriede Jelinek. I like how she writes relatable women and her style in general.

Anonymous 17546

I really like Terry Pratchetts discworld series. He seemed like a really chill guy and the books were all so good.

Anonymous 17551

Daniel Handler wrote some pretty interesting children's literature, some of you might know him by his pen name: Lemony Snicket.

Anonymous 17582

>>17531
I was for somethimg related to Harold Bloom today and this pic appeared. I rememebered I had seen it somewhere and here I find it!

Anonymous 17583

>>17534
Anything more? Which book should I read first? I’ve read some stuff bout him and he seems like a cool guy. You’re not the only Pole here sis :3

Anonymous 21055

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So many to choose from…

Anonymous 34754

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>>17531
BITCH LOOKS LIKE ONGO GABLOGIAN LMFAO

Anonymous 34761

I like Junji Ito's Tomie series

Anonymous 34881

I hate Neil Gaiman especially with the recent allegations, but I grew up reading his children's novels and eventually read the more mature stuff in high school and they stuck with me the most.

Anonymous 34897>>37046

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Richard Adams

Anonymous 37046

>>34897
The Bunnies, the Dogs, or the Bear?

Anonymous 37055>>37056

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Proust

Anonymous 37056>>37078

>>37055
recommend other authors/books you like please, I love Proust too

Anonymous 37078>>37092

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>>37056
it's my pleasure! I think if you're into Proust you should definitely read Flaubert, Stendhal, Sylvie by Gérard de Nerval, and Tender Shoots by Paul Morand. The latter two are very short works and very approachable. If you're into theory, I found Deleuze's Proust and Signs to be worthwhile, as well as Walter Benjamin's essay "The Image of Proust." While not directly about Proust, I've found that Bachelard's Poetics of Space can be a very useful tool not only to think about space in literature but also a way to explore our relation to the material world without having to rely on a heideggerian lens.

If you're into the more psychological aspect of Proust's examination of love and jealousy, maybe check out Colette's The Cat, Unica Zürn's Dark Spring, Barthes' A Lover's Discourse, and Casares' The Invention of Morel. And, maybe this is a stretch, but I found the short story "Woven, Sir" by John Berger to be somewhat reminiscent of Proust in the way he weaves art, life, and memory.

Some of my other favorite works are Niels Lyhne by Jens Peter Jacobsen, Goethe's The Sorrows of Young Werther, anything by Fleur Jaeggy, Memoirs of Hadrian by Marguerite Yourcenar, and Novalis. Recently, I read The Fear of Losing Eurydice by Julieta Campos, which I adored for both it's construction and it's use of literary history. A truly fantastic book. If you check out anything I've mentioned, I'd really encourage it to be either that or Zürn's Dark Spring, which are both incredibly rewarding reads and, in my opinion, very underrated.

In terms of poetry, my favorite is Rilke's Book of Hours. But I'm also really fond of W. H. Auden, Georg Trakl, Elizabeth Bishop and, as of late, Lorine Niedecker. There are a handful of poems from Wallace Stevens that I've found to be continuous to Proust's sense of the material world being shaped by consciousness, although they differ in approach since Wallace tends to be a very clear poet. I haven't gotten to read a lot of his stuff but "Study of Two Pears" and "A Postcard from the Volcano" are, I would argue, in the vein of Proust's sense of how phenomena are turned and transformed by subjectivity and shaped into something only then effable through art.

I've read a couple of poems from Zürn and, while I enjoy it, I haven't spent much time with it, or read enough of it to fully recommend it. Maybe check it out if you're into more experimental, surrealist verse. (Sorry if this is too long).

Anonymous 37092

>>37078
>>37078
Omg nona, we have very similar taste. I've read Flaubert (I love Madame Bovary) and Stendhal, I will look into Nerval and Morand. I've also read Deleuze's Proust and Signs, that's what got me into Deleuze actually because I was a bit intimidated before. I found it very accesible and it made me appreciate Proust so much more. I've also been meaning to read Poetics of Space, I have a copy in Spanish but the edition is too small, I might get one in English that I like more. I like Berger as well (haven't read Women, Sir, I'll send to my kindle now) and I always go back to Barthes.

You're the first person I see mention Fleur Jaeggy, I loved Sweet Days of Discipline sooo much, I keep looking for similar books but haven't found any that hit as hard. The Julieta Campos book sounds amazing so yes, I'm gonna read it for sure.

I recently read some Rilke letters (a collection on grief) and found them very beautiful and touching, I lost my grandma recently and they helped a lot. I haven't been able to get into his poetry much, but maybe I'll be able to appreciate it better now.

Very interesting authors, thank you so much. I'll get back to you in this thread after I read The Fear of Losing Eurydice.



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