Books of Some Substance
Books of Some Substance
  • Видео 126
  • Просмотров 190 249
108 - Control, Revisited: Six Novels of Power, Freedom, and Surrender
In this episode, David and Nathan look back over season two, tracing the connections, marking the distinctions, and reframing their understanding/awareness of how control works in each and every book discussed this season.
Revisiting: The Hour of the Star by Clarice Lispector, Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon, Waiting for the Barbarians by J.M. Coetzee, Malina by Ingeborg Bachmann, The Sheltering Sky by Paul Bowles, and Tropic of Cancer by Henry Miller.
Enjoy. And please don't forget to give us a nice rating on Apple Podcasts, or leave a note here on the RUclips channel. We appreciate you all. Happy Reading!
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Просмотров: 259

Видео

107 - Tropic of Cancer by Henry Miller
Просмотров 665Месяц назад
In this episode, David and Nathan delve into Henry Miller's controversial and groundbreaking novel "Tropic of Cancer." Published in 1934, this semi-autobiographical work was banned in the US and the UK upon its release due to its explicit content. Despite-and perhaps in part because of-its ban, "Tropic of Cancer" has endured as a provocative and essential piece of literature. Discussed on this ...
106 - The Sheltering Sky by Paul Bowles
Просмотров 7145 месяцев назад
Come explore existential despair, the hell of isolation, and the mad dash into oblivion with Nathan and David. On this episode, your hosts have an in-depth discussion on Paul Bowles' 1949 novel The Sheltering Sky - a novel of stark prose and philosophical depth that follows Port and Kit Moresby, an American couple traveling in post-WWII North Africa. Nathan and David delve into the themes of fi...
105 - Malina by Ingeborg Bachmann
Просмотров 8138 месяцев назад
Welcome to our episode on the novel Malina by Ingeborg Bachmann. David and Nathan wind their conversation through the disorienting pages of this incredible novel. We explore its unique form and style, ponder its structure, and discuss how these creative decisions add to the overarching sense of strangeness and mystery that permeates the narrative. In this episode, we contemplate and ponder: - I...
104 - Waiting for the Barbarians by J.M. Coetzee
Просмотров 47011 месяцев назад
Nathan and David continue their exploration of control with Waiting for Barbarians, a 1980 novel by South African writer J.M. Coetzee. Empire! Torture! Manipulation! Control! Quite the book, and quite the episode. * * * For more Books of Some Substance: Twitter: BooksOSubstance Instagram: booksosubstance Our brand-new website: www.booksofsomesubstance.com/
103 - Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon (2/2)
Просмотров 2,4 тыс.Год назад
103 - Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon (2/2)
102 - Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon (1/2)
Просмотров 8 тыс.Год назад
102 - Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon (1/2)
101 - The Hour of the Star by Clarice Lispector
Просмотров 3,8 тыс.Год назад
101 - The Hour of the Star by Clarice Lispector
Season 2 Books Announcement
Просмотров 764Год назад
Season 2 Books Announcement
100 - End of an Era
Просмотров 224Год назад
100 - End of an Era
99 - László Krasznahorkai's Baron Wenckheim's Homecoming (Guest: Derek Maine)
Просмотров 515Год назад
99 - László Krasznahorkai's Baron Wenckheim's Homecoming (Guest: Derek Maine)
98 - Jon Fosse's Melancholy I-II
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98 - Jon Fosse's Melancholy I-II
97 - Franz Kafka's Diaries (Guest: Ross Benjamin)
Просмотров 720Год назад
97 - Franz Kafka's Diaries (Guest: Ross Benjamin)
96 - Marcel Proust's Time Regained (In Search of Lost Time #6)
Просмотров 766Год назад
96 - Marcel Proust's Time Regained (In Search of Lost Time #6)
95 - Henri Lefebvre's The Missing Pieces (Guest: Tom Comitta)
Просмотров 320Год назад
95 - Henri Lefebvre's The Missing Pieces (Guest: Tom Comitta)
94 - Anton Chekhov's Difficult People (Guest: Bob Blaisdell)
Просмотров 303Год назад
94 - Anton Chekhov's Difficult People (Guest: Bob Blaisdell)
93 - Marcel Proust's The Captive & The Fugitive (In Search of Lost Time #5)
Просмотров 541Год назад
93 - Marcel Proust's The Captive & The Fugitive (In Search of Lost Time #5)
92 - Han Kang's The Vegetarian
Просмотров 7 тыс.2 года назад
92 - Han Kang's The Vegetarian
91 - Marcel Proust's Sodom and Gomorrah (In Search of Lost Time #4)
Просмотров 8412 года назад
91 - Marcel Proust's Sodom and Gomorrah (In Search of Lost Time #4)
90 - Thomas Pynchon's The Crying of Lot 49 (Guest: Seth of WASTE Mailing List)
Просмотров 2,3 тыс.2 года назад
90 - Thomas Pynchon's The Crying of Lot 49 (Guest: Seth of WASTE Mailing List)
89 - Marcel Proust's The Guermantes Way (In Search of Lost Time #3)
Просмотров 6362 года назад
89 - Marcel Proust's The Guermantes Way (In Search of Lost Time #3)
88 - Alexander Theroux's Fables (Guest: George Salis)
Просмотров 3502 года назад
88 - Alexander Theroux's Fables (Guest: George Salis)
87 - Shirley Jackson's We Have Always Lived in the Castle
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.2 года назад
87 - Shirley Jackson's We Have Always Lived in the Castle
86 - Marcel Proust's Within a Budding Grove (In Search of Lost Time #2)
Просмотров 6532 года назад
86 - Marcel Proust's Within a Budding Grove (In Search of Lost Time #2)
85 - Franz Kafka's Short Stories (The Judgment, A Country Doctor, In the Penal Colony)
Просмотров 6352 года назад
85 - Franz Kafka's Short Stories (The Judgment, A Country Doctor, In the Penal Colony)
84 - Marcel Proust's Swann's Way (In Search of Lost Time #1)
Просмотров 8262 года назад
84 - Marcel Proust's Swann's Way (In Search of Lost Time #1)
83 - Bohumil Hrabal's Closely Watched Trains
Просмотров 6272 года назад
83 - Bohumil Hrabal's Closely Watched Trains
82 - Jorge Luis Borges: The Garden of Forking Paths and Other Stories
Просмотров 8592 года назад
82 - Jorge Luis Borges: The Garden of Forking Paths and Other Stories
81 - Renata Adler's Speedboat
Просмотров 5372 года назад
81 - Renata Adler's Speedboat
80 - W.G. Sebald's The Emigrants
Просмотров 1,4 тыс.2 года назад
80 - W.G. Sebald's The Emigrants

Комментарии

  • @____uncompetative
    @____uncompetative 7 дней назад

    Have you tried reading it in ascending page number order? Usually works for me.

  • @Withintheflame
    @Withintheflame 8 дней назад

    In my opinion, the book is about giving app on the book. It's about having the courage to see the tangled. Nest of scrambled and unfixable mess and throw up your hands and realize that Zampano was driven mad by his blindness is hyper, real memories and thoughts. Created by a light so bright, only the blind could see it. He struggled to vomit these manic. Manifestations on to the page like leaves scribbled with unintelligible madness and Johnny, so vulnerable. The perfect victim for this tangled up spaghetti, Venus flytrap This cognito hazard of pseudo complexity, this examination of a fictitious tragic parade of the hero's journey with taint of love, thin obvious underlying metaphor only to find that the story in the hand of Johnny and his Mother are The Only Stories that truly Matter. The navason report is fiction zampanos ramblings are the busy work of madness? But Johnny's anguish and his desire to bring order to this recurrent chaos was simply his desire for meaning and purpose in a postmodern world. Wear all theories. Must I have a conspiracy? Even if the theory is all you need is love. After all, that philosophy does have its martyrs r I p john lennon

  • @duncan_xyz
    @duncan_xyz 10 дней назад

    Is that a Daniel Eatock print that I see 👀

    • @booksosubstance
      @booksosubstance 10 дней назад

      It is indeed! Good eye.

    • @duncan_xyz
      @duncan_xyz 10 дней назад

      @@booksosubstance He visited Kansas City Art Institute my senior year there. He's a very eccentric individual. Some other students and I went to lunch with him and he asked me to run to the restaurant with him instead of driving. We ran five miles to a taco restaurant. I couldn't believe it. I have a photo of us running together that one of my friends took from their car. Eatock loves running lol.

  • @jozepedro27
    @jozepedro27 18 дней назад

    I loved this book. How contemplative it is, reading it felt like meditating with someone else. Fascinating stuff.

  • @sonicdv3953
    @sonicdv3953 19 дней назад

    Amazing work, do you all have any links to Pynchon's early articles for Boeing? I'd love to read Hydrazine Tank Cartridge Replacement in particular.

    • @booksosubstance
      @booksosubstance 12 дней назад

      Thanks for listening. We'll have to ask Seth: @wastemailinglist726. Any help?

  • @iiling7
    @iiling7 29 дней назад

    Truly enjoyed this discussion. I'm sold, thus a definite read. Thank you for what you do. You are definitely one of the best booktubers out there.

    • @booksosubstance
      @booksosubstance 21 день назад

      Thanks a lot! I’m glad you enjoyed it. Let us know what you think of the book once you’ve read it.

  • @AnnoyingStalking
    @AnnoyingStalking Месяц назад

    You guys review the best books!

  • @Hedonismbot26
    @Hedonismbot26 Месяц назад

    This is enormously comforting. I'm on my second reading and I still feel a bit overwhelmed. I loved Austerlitz and Emigrants too!

  • @Aleblanco1987
    @Aleblanco1987 Месяц назад

    This podcast is a jewel, it made me realize I hadn't pieced together some aspects of the stories. Ps: I recommend "The Book of Fantasy". It's an anthology of fantastic short stories compiled by Borges, Bioy Casares and Silvina Ocampo published in 1940 for the first time.

    • @booksosubstance
      @booksosubstance 12 дней назад

      Thank you so much. Will definitely check that out! Appreciate a good rec and we are glad you found us. Happy reading and happy listening!

  • @kieranforster4815
    @kieranforster4815 Месяц назад

    Interesting dialogue to paint to, believe it or not! One question from a pleb : I don’t understand why Seth disidenties your interpretative discussion with “quasi-academic readings”specifically the Orphic point ? Surely this isn’t necessary as your whole discussion is fundamentally quasi-academic. Thankfully it’s not a discussion within the impoverished intellectual limits of the university system. What makes the discussion worthwhile is that it’s following thoughts down rabbit holes. I get the low brow stuff as not typically academic but I wdnt imply a reference to mythic figures or historical references means it’s merely quasi academic. The whole thing is interesting to the extent it remains quasi-academic as it’s an obviously intellectual talk not within the academy. ‘Quasi academic’ is everything here… maybe embrace it as you guys drop German words, an extremely close reading of history and paint the chaotic allusions in the book, the 780 page prose poem. Quasi academic means freedom from the hackneyed readings of the Academy, whether it’s literature, philosophy or psychiatry.

    • @booksosubstance
      @booksosubstance 12 дней назад

      Hear hear! Quasi-academic embraced. And agree, the hackneyed readings that come out of the academy nowadays in particular are of no interest to us. Thank you for listening. What are you painting?

  • @ihilgert
    @ihilgert Месяц назад

    This was great content! Love your bits on the book you're discussing! I now definitely have Miller on my (future) reading list. Much appreciated!

    • @booksosubstance
      @booksosubstance 21 день назад

      Thank you! Hope you enjoy reading Miller. His prose can be quite intoxicating. We’d love to hear what you think once you’ve read him yourself.

  • @markeggins890
    @markeggins890 Месяц назад

    Another great ep!

  • @susanburgess820
    @susanburgess820 Месяц назад

    Thank you hon. Just discovered your channel. Blessings from cold chicago❤

  • @dammiholbourne4093
    @dammiholbourne4093 Месяц назад

    I am Buddhist , your story does not tally with mine.

  • @yazanasad7811
    @yazanasad7811 Месяц назад

    Shaggy dog story - not about finding the answer, this allows to focus on systematic issues. Slothrop being made aware of pain and destruction as opposed to Predicting rockets Failure of system in 60s. Only expression is left: Only way to stop their systems of order is to use their systems of chaos. (??) Wagner - ring cycle power is bad itself, not just one person. Control is wanted by the gods too.

  • @ademarbenitezaranjo8299
    @ademarbenitezaranjo8299 Месяц назад

    I saw there is a movie about this book. I can't help by wonder why Anna Wintour wasn't cast as Coronell Joll, instead it was Johnny Depp.

  • @helloworldfromchina4018
    @helloworldfromchina4018 Месяц назад

    Great episodes! Thank you for the good work!

  • @helloworldfromchina4018
    @helloworldfromchina4018 Месяц назад

    Great episodes!

  • @KanekiKen-os6yy
    @KanekiKen-os6yy Месяц назад

    Is it the complete book?

  • @amanreadeth
    @amanreadeth 2 месяца назад

    Awesome 😎🤘

  • @realnoid
    @realnoid 2 месяца назад

    Nixon to DJT: how did we end up here? Quartermaster Bodine in several Pynchon novels might have been the same q’master on Wm M Wood 1966-68 during my navy years.

  • @realnoid
    @realnoid 2 месяца назад

    Paraphrasing a Biden razor: capitalism is the worst system, except for all the other systems.

  • @mahebert10
    @mahebert10 2 месяца назад

    Watching this vid today - the convo about convention subversion has it occur to me that “A Thousand Plateaus” by Deleuze and Guattari could not have been written nor culturally invested without GR’s precedence. I read GR around 1974 shortly after its release amid a severe paucity of correspondence or adequate commentary. Thanks for the YT!

    • @booksosubstance
      @booksosubstance Месяц назад

      Interesting connection! We'll have to look into that further.

  • @AnnoyingStalking
    @AnnoyingStalking 2 месяца назад

    Marvellous episode and channel! Keep it up guys!

  • @itswagon
    @itswagon 2 месяца назад

    I grew up favoring non-fiction over fiction except for John Steinbeck because what I read of his rang true and believable. He demonstrated an exceptional ability to perceive details about characters and events that made them real. By my mid twenties, I was well into an independent study of Swiss Psychiatrist, Carl G. Jung. I was beginning to wonder if Steinbeck was also influenced by Jung. It seemed to me that Steinbeck’s story lines and characters, and events evidenced some concepts and theories from Jung’s analytical psychology. This was confirmed later by biographies and in the non-fiction “The Log From The Sea of Cortez” written by Steinbeck and his marine biologist friend Edward F. Ricketts. Later in my life I became interested in Steinbeck, the writer. I wanted to know what gifts, attributes, and resources he possessed that attracted me to his publications. I concluded that an outstanding journalist must be able to faithfully, without passion or prejudice transfer his or her observations to the journal, that is, objectively without subjective influence. The one mature functional type that would qualify best, namely one with Sensation (a perceptive function) and Thinking to convert the perception logically into words. Steinbeck’s functional type was a level four Introverted SENSATION/Thinking. I know I mentioned “objective” and Steinbeck’s default attitude was “introverted” which is subjective. Steinbeck’s fiction was driven by his subjective mission or his wish to positively influence the reader. The Cannery Row books, as a result, portrayed the Row better than it was in reality. Even his essay, “About Ed Ricketts” found in later issues of “The Log From The Sea of Cortez” described his friend more honestly than the “Doc” character in Cannery Row and Sweet Thursday. Please forgive the poor editing. Please see the following: www.steinbecknow.com/author/wesley-stillwagon/

    • @booksosubstance
      @booksosubstance Месяц назад

      Thanks for listening and for the feedback and suggested reading. Appreciate it.

  • @armenifedor
    @armenifedor 2 месяца назад

    guys, this conversation is terrific!

  • @annetehodgins7153
    @annetehodgins7153 2 месяца назад

    You make your self sound so stupid, is this moron so stupid read crock of gold by James Stevenson or of course the ginger man i mean we don't even have to go into the classic look at Cormac mc cartay blood you know the one, it's know wonder you are classes as one of the most stupid people in the world, i mean how the f..k did this so called interview get on the net,just a Harry chrisnaa I've read the book in Justin in two days and i love it

  • @HanKangofficial
    @HanKangofficial 2 месяца назад

    원더풀 독자 여러분, 제 작업에 대한 여러분의 성원과 열정에 진심으로 감사의 말씀을 전하고 싶습니다. 여러분의 말과 격려가 매일 저에게 영감을 줍니다. 저와 함께 이 여정에 동참해 주셔서 감사합니다. 이렇게 열정적인 독자들이 있다는 것에 진심으로 감사드립니다. 진심으로 감사드립니다, 한강

    • @booksosubstance
      @booksosubstance Месяц назад

      Hello Han Kang, Thank you so much for your kind message. It means a lot for you to reach out this way. We are big fans of yours. We look forward to reading more of your work. David is learning Korean now, so hopefully one day he will be able to read your work in Korean. - 안녕하세요 한강님, 친절한 메시지에 진심으로 감사드립니다. 이런 식으로 접근하는 것은 당신에게 많은 의미가 있습니다. 우리는 당신의 열렬한 팬입니다. 우리는 당신의 작품을 더 많이 읽을 수 있기를 기대합니다. David는 지금 한국어를 배우고 있으니 언젠가는 당신의 작품을 한국어로 읽을 수 있기를 바랍니다.

  • @laurenross5371
    @laurenross5371 2 месяца назад

    This is so good - I can't believe other people exist that talk about this haha - I have been a huge fan of Sebald for years and never looked into the authenticity of pictures or anything like that and I am having a re-awakening over here haha. So glad I found this podcast.

  • @geordiejones5618
    @geordiejones5618 3 месяца назад

    Is there any credibility to Pynchon being invovled with the CIA as either an asset or part of an ongoing psy-op? I think it wouldn't be surprising if definitive evidence came out that he was contracted to both criticize the empire but also showcase its pillars, that true awe of balancing an appreciation of craft with the terror of content. Perfect propaganda, because the best lies are 99% true.

  • @dantescave1
    @dantescave1 3 месяца назад

    We are so far from the world that existed we doubt every single manifestation of happiness, every idea collective goodwill, geniality and cringe at the possibility this idealistic’ sentimentality existed in reality, or could be authentic. My mother, a serious person, said she missed the days when men of all neighborhoods were heard greeting one another arriving home after work with a hiya Joe, back and forth .something simply unimaginable to us today. It’s impossible for us to believe this could be a reality, and we only see Mickey Rooney cinematically overacting young naive positivity…but as corrupt as systems were… there was a lot more of goodwill in general and subscription to ideals that have been bankrupted and discredited in some form or another. We should question ourselves as well that we have excised and strangled any idea they can be a happy endings, or success without exploitation, love without angst… Harold bloom pronounced that Cormac McCarthy’s novels are the end point of our human literary evolution. The end story and there is nowhere to go from this point. Have we talked ourselves out of every belief in goodness- individual and collective? Can we only see the collective possibility of ourselves as mass shooters, or victims of…in perpetuity?

  • @edelweiss4314
    @edelweiss4314 3 месяца назад

    You two guys are terrific reviews. Thank you for the good analogy.

  • @jayitadas5453
    @jayitadas5453 3 месяца назад

    Raw movie by Julia Ducournau but Make it Vegan

  • @PeaceLoveWorld-om4zx
    @PeaceLoveWorld-om4zx 3 месяца назад

    Han gang!!❤

  • @yaobikuni1349
    @yaobikuni1349 3 месяца назад

    Interesting discussion. I wanted to discuss my thoughts on why this novel was structured in 3 parts and why the different perspectives were selected. To me, it seemed very natural for Yeong-Hye to not have an actual voice in her own story. I felt it most acutely when In-Hye comments later that even in regards to our own bodies we don't truly exercise the autonomy we imagine we should. Thus, it only feels "right" that we only ever hear Yeong-hye's thoughts via observations or select quotes from those in her familial circle. I personally did get a true sense of who Yeong-hye was and why she rebelled in her own quiet but powerful way in contrast to those who actively speak for her. I also find it interesting that you felt so much compassion for In-hye and for Mr. Cheong to a certain extent, but none for In-hye's husband. While I would argue that he did in fact use Yeong-hye, I felt he was the closest in spirit to her as well since he too was being slowly suffocated and just as doomed as Yeong-hye.

    • @booksosubstance
      @booksosubstance Месяц назад

      Well put. Han Kang seems to be a very deliberate writer in her choice of character, voice, and perspective.

    • @yaobikuni1349
      @yaobikuni1349 Месяц назад

      @booksosubstance Indeed. I am very excited to read more of her works because the Vegetarian was excellent. An instantly memorable book.

  • @cooljeansguy
    @cooljeansguy 3 месяца назад

    Great foresight by reviewers in predicting the October 10, 2024 literary event. These guys have great radars.

  • @yazanasad7811
    @yazanasad7811 3 месяца назад

    Book as trying to elongate time through memory, change time, make it longer Swanns way not objective narrator Book as focussing on ideas, not matter. Even swanns love. Memories etc. as real as matter Interesting, his technique seems to be go back in time, recount something in vivid description and detail, lovely, and then to include a 'universal' comment on what is happening when it comes to human actions. E.g. imagine past where wear hoodie, explain road, explain clothes, explain person moving away to other side of road, and then write extensively about how humans are wont to stay away from the unfamiliar and the dangerous, and yet to pretend they aren't moving away, to lie to themselves

  • @Brian_Longo
    @Brian_Longo 3 месяца назад

    Thanks for this. Just finished reading and happy I found you.

  • @yazanasad7811
    @yazanasad7811 3 месяца назад

    True to oneself, not one way, following voice and listening to what it has to say. Don't follow me, follow yourself Gauvinda followed Buddha all his life but not 100pcent happy with it Nobody finds salvation through teaching. Only life experience Unitarian - below dogma, practices there are mystics who had these similar ground experiences Ground of reality not found in human made constructs like tech, like language.this means even the book itself is to be taken with scepticism, not to just believe the philosophy/rhetoric developed Spinoza: good as leading to higher state of being, but don't know what is higher being, break leg, feels bad but then exposed to philosophy. Who knows. Can lose the voice completely, or it changes Life experience means it doesn't come from a book necessarily. It's yours, not to follow

  • @andreacvecic
    @andreacvecic 3 месяца назад

    His 'Monterrey stories' were mighty popular in Jugoslavija: pocket editions, congenial traductions, a few renditions were available in the late seventies. At school 'twas "East of Eden".

  • @Aureatori
    @Aureatori 4 месяца назад

    Hearing the three differing opinions you expressed at the beginning about the book, summed up how it felt to read this book.

  • @stevegoodson9022
    @stevegoodson9022 4 месяца назад

    If there is a centre, I don't think it's going to hold

  • @puddingdragon9484
    @puddingdragon9484 4 месяца назад

    I find this discussion very interesting, particularly as someone who loved the book. There are too many points to go over, but I did love the play of it - it really felt playful to me. That it is so deliberate and so carefully constructed to seem improvisational and spontaneous doesn't make it just a dry facsimile of something 'genuinely soulful,' but rather that craft *is* its mode of expression and that very much reached me, as Zampano's writing reached Johnny. It feels to me like the book's relationship with the act of interpretation is very direct, in that like the House, its reality is shaped by those moving through it, experiencing it. But then, I suppose an inherent problem of that is that you might always shape an uninteresting or unenjoyable path, depending on how you engage with it. I, for one, was very grateful for my compelling journey through the House of Leaves. Good talk, at any rate!

  • @donnabert
    @donnabert 5 месяцев назад

    Mary Cat kills because her parents are getting in the way of her relationship with Constance.

  • @donnabert
    @donnabert 5 месяцев назад

    Also her first paragraph is considered "quotable" and is listed along with "Haunting of Hill House" in the "best first paragraphs" list. I mean, do you know who Richard Plantagenet (Richard III of England) is? He was a king accused of killing his family members. This stuff is gold. "My name is Mary Katherine Blackwood. I am eighteen years old, and I live with my sister Constance. I have often thought that with any luck at all I could have been born a werewolf, because the two middle fingers on both my hands are the same length, but I have had to be content with what I had. I dislike washing myself, and dogs, and noise. I like my sister Constance, and Richard Plantagenet , and Amanita phalloides, the death-cup mushroom. Everyone else in my family is dead." Steven King loves Shirley Jackson btw. I found Jacksons stuff and a teenager in the "teen" section of the library when I was 14, where she was put, because she was a female writing about other females and men deciding where to put her "didn't get it." ALL of her books were there. Might be still. It's a shame there were no women on your panel. Let me know if you do another SJ book, I'll talk about it. I have no literary background but I do have degrees in philosophy, economics and law.

  • @donnabert
    @donnabert 5 месяцев назад

    I wrote a paper on her, she is my favorite author. She wrote about women for women. This book is about sisters. I wrote in my paper that the all the men in her stories are all either "diseased, disabled or dead." Read "My Life With R. H. Macy," it's great, no men in it though. Great xmas time short story, in her funny view of earth. The movie of "Castle" is absolutely true to the story. Nothing about the father locking them in. I was also worried that it would be horror, but it wasn't, therefore its lack of success with the millennials and zoomers, who only seem to enjoy movies that give them the feeling of rollercoasters.

  • @KingBoopert
    @KingBoopert 5 месяцев назад

    I loved the book. It is my favorite book (for right now), and my interpretation of it is how we cope with the unknown and trauma. Johnny is not a great person, and his many vices are the only way he could escape his past and to escape the affect the book had on him. He tried to escape, run, and face everything that has happened and is happening to him. It's hard to relate to him, especially through all his rants and his experiences, yet I found a overall meaning of it. Johnny's story is about sinking to rock bottom, and through facing his own past and current troubles, he made a small step forward. He's not as well off as he was at the very beginning of the story, but he has stepped up from rock bottom and the story ends with him going forward and facing the unknown madness that spoils his mind. Navidson was different. Instead of avoiding the unknown and the trauma of being close to death, he puts everything to the side in order to explore what he doesn't know. While hesitant, at least at the start, he was willing to lose a lot (if not all) of what he had in life in order to explore the unknown and to triumph. He is seen by the people around him as a person that has to be the hero, that he desires to be the one at the front of every grand event in order to cope with the sacrifice made along the way. That was until he actually started to lose everything, and it broke him. Eventually when he sees himself as a man with nothing to lose, he went to adventure the house with a reckless abandon. Even when he was saved, he was permanently scared. He learned what was at the bottom and understood at the very end that by looking too deep, he can lose everything. I see the two stories of these characters as separate lessons about the same topic. One that says you can lose everything if you venture to deep into the unknown by using adventuring as a way to cope with one's past and to avoid dealing with other matters at hand. The other lesson is that when you can also lose everything by distracting yourself about what really matters with vices that cause such self destructive habits. And when the need to avoid the problems in life by looking for distractions, a person can hit rock bottom without even realizing that they have started to plummet in the first place. And such things can be avoided if you stop trying to cope and face these problems head on, even though the solution is still unknown. It's just two different stories around the same principal on facing the unknown and one's past trauma and mistakes.

  • @kimberlygriffin6285
    @kimberlygriffin6285 5 месяцев назад

    I think im just stupid. I read it and was like "okay. Im finished. I dont know why this book was considered to be such a big deal." And so now im watching all these videos on it, and now i feel so dumb. 😂

  • @Jake106
    @Jake106 5 месяцев назад

    Whats the music in the intro?

    • @booksosubstance
      @booksosubstance 5 месяцев назад

      That's David messing around and mixing some audio from the great Japanese group Geinoh Yamashirogumi! Check out their album Ecophony Rinne or their soundtrack to the Akira film.

    • @Jake106
      @Jake106 5 месяцев назад

      @@booksosubstance Thank you! Great stuff