goddamn that cover is unbelievable. im puttin that on my list.
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Originally posted by Real Real View Posthttp://www.bibliomania.com/
"A Good Man Is Hard to Find"!
Garden of Forking Paths http://courses.essex.ac.uk/lt/lt204/forking_paths.htm
Extricating Young Gussie
OJOL77 merupakan provider server Thailand yang selalu bisa mengantarkan kemenangan kepada seluruh membernya baik yang di kota maupun daerah seluruh Indonesia
(and a lot more Wodehouse, all pure gold: http://www.readbookonline.net/stories/Wodehouse/103/)
Hadji Murad http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/t/tolstoy/leo/t65h/
I could swear Miss Lonelyhearts was online somewhere, but I can't find it. Hadji Murad and Miss Lonelyhearts are novellas, though, I guess.
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Originally posted by Fade to Black View Postdoes anyone know of any good online resources with a vast collection of good short stories readily available in text form? I like reading em, but got no idea where to start...i managed to find The Swimmer by John Cheever during a random google search, most other searches have been futile.Fashion is a form of ugliness so intolerable that we have to alter it every six months - Oscar Wilde
StyleZeitgeist Magazine
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Originally posted by Faust View PostIt will be hard to find anything that is within the copyright realm. But for classics, there is the Gutenberg project. And, well, if you were Russian... hurray for disregarding copyright laws!
Yeah I don't think us, your southern neighbors, care much for copyright laws, or laws in general either...problem is my grasp of simplified Chinese isn't too great.
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fade---i am not very well versed in short stories (they don't fit into my life very well; i strongly believe they should be read in one sitting and i have to read in fits and starts [i typically only read on the train, or before going to sleep at night]) but some indispensable short story writers, in my opinion, are donald barthelme, flannery o'conner, and jorge borges. i see someone has already linked you to a couple of those writers.broken mirror, white terror
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À la recherche du temps perdu: Du côté de chez Swann Marcel Proust
It has started again ...
By the way, anyone with a desire for Proust should
pick up this little book:
Proust Et Les Signes Gilles DeleuzeAre you afraid of women, Doctor?
Of course.
www.becomingmads.com
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^ You reading it in French? If so, I am jealous.
I read the first two books of Remembrance of Things Past. Once I'm done with this Dylan Chronicles (which is a breeze) I think I may resume with Guermante's Way next.broken mirror, white terror
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^No unfortunately, my french is not good enough!
I'm reading a danish translation, the title probably wouldn't
have made much sense to any of you.Are you afraid of women, Doctor?
Of course.
www.becomingmads.com
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there is a book just came out "paintings in proust"---or something like that....for big proust fans...
i had 1922 proust in russian with lunacharski introduction that i smuggled to us....bitch took it....anybody feels my pain ?but what started out as business has quickley turned to pleasure
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Fade: how did you feel about The Road? It's odd, it felt someone formulaic at the time I read it but has actually gained power in the months after. I can still visualize most of the key scenes in my mind without resorting to a personal memory or movie scenes, which is extremely rare.
Also, I would suggest finding a cheap copy of the original Grimm's Fairy Tales. It's great subway reading as they're usually no more than 5-6 pages long and very simple. But it's fun to speculate on the values (or bizarre lack thereof) in each story.
I'll be picking up Venus in Furs at the end of the week.
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yeah it's formulaic, but what makes the book for me are the flashing glimpses of lyrical brilliance in the prose, some of which really captures strong feelings for me. I like how the author looks at his characters with a very human and empathetic eye, then again from what I've read, this is the book most personal to Cormac. It's the first McCarthy I've read, I can't say I was as blown away by it as some of the reviews listed on the book have been, but it's a good read and I like his writing style.
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Originally posted by Schadenfreude View Post
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