Re: What are you currently reading?
Posted: Thu October 24, 2024 6:53 pm
Just started Brothers by Alex Van Halen.
Nice...All the Pretty Horses is sublime. I wasn't crazy about the next two, but not opposed to re-reading.dad wrote:Lenny, you’ve inspired me to pick up and start my copy of The Border Trilogy that was gifted to me last Christmas. I’ve only ever read The Road, but it was so long ago.
I’m about 50 pages into All the Pretty Horses, and I’m enjoying things so far.

Steve Albini wrote:Whenever there's active promotion on the part of somebody else, whenever I see somebody all dolled up for a fancy photograph and someone's handing out flyers or whenever there's active promotion for something like that, as an imposition on my day, I hate all those people and I want them to fail. I have a visceral reaction to advertising and promotion. There's just something about salesmanship that grates on me on a very base level and I react very negatively towards it. I want those people to suffer and I want their enterprises to fail.

This turned out to be pretty great, even though the Glanton gang doesn't show up until the last thirty pages or so, and he quit writing soon after. The writer's voice is great.BurtReynolds wrote:Speaking of, last year I was looking for the book Blood Meridian was inspired by but it wasn't in print. Now it is!
I'll probably thumb through it. Might read it if it's interesting. It's a lot thicker than I thought it would be.
If human morphology, upright posture, and the possibility of language are the ramified accidents of natural history, then psychic ailments are ultimately afflictions of the spine, which itself is a scale model of biogenetic trauma, a portable map of the catastrophic events that shaped that atrocity exhibition of evolutionary traumata, the sick orthograde talking mammal.
Steve Albini wrote:Whenever there's active promotion on the part of somebody else, whenever I see somebody all dolled up for a fancy photograph and someone's handing out flyers or whenever there's active promotion for something like that, as an imposition on my day, I hate all those people and I want them to fail. I have a visceral reaction to advertising and promotion. There's just something about salesmanship that grates on me on a very base level and I react very negatively towards it. I want those people to suffer and I want their enterprises to fail.

I can't remember if it was good.Bi_3 wrote:I dont remember why, but this was on my nightstand


Steve Albini wrote:Whenever there's active promotion on the part of somebody else, whenever I see somebody all dolled up for a fancy photograph and someone's handing out flyers or whenever there's active promotion for something like that, as an imposition on my day, I hate all those people and I want them to fail. I have a visceral reaction to advertising and promotion. There's just something about salesmanship that grates on me on a very base level and I react very negatively towards it. I want those people to suffer and I want their enterprises to fail.
Listening to this now.Happy that it's narrated by the man himself.contamination wrote:Just finished this
It really is. Scared the shit out of me.epilogue wrote:Salem's Lot is an incredible book. Super excited for you.