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This reply is mostly empty of thoughts. wahooka Send a noteboard - 16/05/2010 05:37:54 PM
I'm also going to reply later, probably tomorrow. I've just finished writing a school essay. I've been writing it since morning (it's evening here in Prague), and I'm just too worn out right now...

Anyway, I liked the book, it was completely different from the previous two books we discussed in the Russian Book Club, but it was still very interesting.


The book has two names, the book has two divergent story lines, and it is truly in the spirit of Zen Without Zen Masters. Pelevin aspired to write a Buddhist novel (even the last name of the main character, Pustota, means "emptiness", a fundamental principle in the Mahayana tradition as well as a refutation of the ultimate reality of the individual ego) and may not have entirely succeeded. Still, at the same time, the pop-culture novel with its rampant drug use and its intensely interesting description of a seppuku ceremony, reads like what a novelization of "Pulp Fiction" would have looked like had it been thrown into a blender with Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas and Timothy Leary's The Psychedelic Experience.

I'm not sure how many of you read it (and we are really going to have to have reminders or announcements a couple of weeks ahead of time about these book club selections to help encourage interest), but it is a fun book. If you have, we're opening the floor for metaphysical pot-induced discussions, mushroom-influenced visions of reality or just criticism about the major ideas of the book.

So please, if you read it, post your thoughts and get the discussion started. If you're reading it, let us know that you're on the way (and it's really the way, not the destination, that matters).

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Russian Book Club: Chapaev and Pustota or Buddha's Little Finger - 16/05/2010 03:42:07 PM 966 Views
I'll have my full thoughts up in a few hours - 16/05/2010 04:33:54 PM 624 Views
Could you give me a better reference as to where that was in the book? - 17/05/2010 03:09:16 AM 604 Views
It's about halfway into Chapter 5 in my edition *NM* - 17/05/2010 03:12:43 AM 307 Views
Chapter 5, just before Kocurkin appears for the first time. *NM* - 17/05/2010 02:34:30 PM 279 Views
In Russian it says "succubus" became the Russian "suka" or "bitch" *NM* - 17/05/2010 02:49:03 PM 356 Views
Ahh, so the English version is closer. - 17/05/2010 07:38:35 PM 642 Views
Does Czech have a word similar to "suka"? *NM* - 19/05/2010 03:11:10 PM 339 Views
Well, sort of. - 19/05/2010 07:30:38 PM 528 Views
This reply is mostly empty of thoughts. - 16/05/2010 05:37:54 PM 622 Views
OK, here's what I wrote for the OF Blog on this book - 17/05/2010 02:22:18 AM 646 Views
I like the way your review is an un-review. - 17/05/2010 03:08:20 AM 569 Views
That's what I wanted to convey, since it's hard to be definitive with such a work - 17/05/2010 03:16:19 AM 673 Views
I wouldn't term it "fantasy". - 18/05/2010 02:24:40 PM 600 Views
Perhaps - 18/05/2010 02:36:13 PM 660 Views
Psychedelic fiction suits it well. - 19/05/2010 03:12:10 PM 660 Views
By the way, I just finished The Sacred Book of the Werewolf - 18/07/2010 09:14:33 PM 895 Views
My thoughts. - 17/05/2010 02:16:11 PM 645 Views
Pelevin isn't a real Buddhist, he's a superficial pop-culture Buddhist. - 18/05/2010 02:33:37 PM 665 Views
Re: Pelevin isn't a real Buddhist, he's a superficial pop-culture Buddhist. - 18/05/2010 10:37:36 PM 592 Views
Russian TV spits out soap operas almost daily now. - 19/05/2010 03:19:22 PM 631 Views
Re: Russian TV spits out soap operas almost daily now. - 19/05/2010 07:59:05 PM 1057 Views
It is apparently called Clay Machine Gun in the UK. - 17/05/2010 02:41:41 PM 619 Views
It's Čapajev a Prázdnota (Chapaev and Emptiness) in Czech - 17/05/2010 07:46:14 PM 659 Views
In Russian prazdny or prazdnost' would mean "lazy, inactive" *NM* - 18/05/2010 02:21:42 PM 301 Views
And pustota means barrenness or desolateness in Czech. - 18/05/2010 10:51:22 PM 702 Views
Passion used to mean suffering in English, now it means lust. - 19/05/2010 03:21:47 PM 817 Views
Bah. No bookshop in Edinburgh has it. Amazon will have to be my saviour. - 18/05/2010 12:56:28 PM 518 Views
Sure, as long as we're not reading Gogol by then. *NM* - 19/05/2010 03:22:13 PM 291 Views
I like this passage about 10 pages from the end of the book on Russia - 17/05/2010 02:56:49 PM 644 Views
I think the pseudo-Buddhist bit is not as good as the Russian vodka psychology. - 18/05/2010 02:35:07 PM 608 Views
Perhaps - 18/05/2010 02:38:24 PM 560 Views
Re: I think the pseudo-Buddhist bit is not as good as the Russian vodka psychology. - 18/05/2010 11:12:10 PM 662 Views
I'll drink to that! - 19/05/2010 03:34:40 PM 476 Views
Heh, yeah, but I still think there's something to it. *NM* - 19/05/2010 08:04:51 PM 326 Views

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