Anonymous37 wrote: Fri Nov 12, 2021 2:54 pmSuzanna Clarke,
Piranesi. Actually, I just finished reading it.
It's really fucking good.
I might check this out.
I'm trying to get into the habit as far as fiction goes. So on the one hand I have a list of things I want to read, and on the other I just pick random things from the library shelf that look interesting.
I the second category there is right now a book called
Canada by Richard Ford. It's about a family where the dad is a retired army guy and the mom is an educated big city girl who doesn't at all feel at home in the small town environments they shack up in (they live in North Dakota iirc, they have been moving around a lot), and a kind of general dissatisfaction is implied. Dad is involved in some illegal cattle business on the side which gets them into trouble later on. It's an easy read and it has short chapters, this I like.
I also chose one called
Underground Time by Delphine de Vigan. It has a rather generic middle-class-woman's-midlife-crisis feel about it, we'll see how it turns out.
In the first category I'm exploring East Bloc/Soviet dissident writers. I read
The Axe by Ludvík Vaculík a while back. The story has different time perspectives weaving together unexpectedly - often not entirely certain where the scene described is actually taking place. This reminded me of the novel
Wretchedness by czech-swedish writer Andrzej Tichý (a rather taxing read but very evocative). There's a tense feeling of forfeited opportunity which is suggested but never fully dealt with, kind of like how it would be from the perspective of the people involved.
I'm thinking of going Kundera next and then Zamyatin.
Other than that I always have Phillip K. Dick by my side. These I can always rely on. Soon finishing
Time Out of Joint.