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Re: A few more (only my own opinion) IndigoAjah Send a noteboard - 01/05/2012 01:35:11 PM
China Mieville's The City and The City- glorious, like a slightly ambiguously sci-fi Crime and Punishment but somehow real

Neil Gaiman's The Sandman- is there any piece of literature quite like the mythology with a Shakespearean feel that Gaiman creates in this of all media. The key is how much Neil only alludes to, in my opinion, which gives us the impression of getting a brief look into a reality he has fully created and the unanswered questions add just as much as the answered ones.

Peake's Gorgemhast- the story where the setting is the main character
I'm sure I'll think of others- mostly reading "New Weird" at the moment



I disagree with a couple of yours- Atlas Shrugged was very thought-provoking if flawed but no more so than other doorstoppers, and Dune probably was special but I read it after homages like WoT which probably detracted from it a little



The Sandman, yes. The only thing that's comparable is the spin-off, Lucifer, and while I prefer that series in many respects, it doesn't have the density and rich allusions of Sandman. I've only read the first book of the Gormenghast trilogy, and enjoyed it.

It's interesting that you disagree with the works you do, I wasn't sure about them. But I think the sheer violent, humorless intensity of the tone and characterization, married to Rand's philosophy, creates a sort of hyper-pulp I haven't come across anywhere else (excepting, perhaps, the Sword of Truth series, fittingly enough). And while the surface elements of Dune are derivative, and have been emulated in later works, his vision of the übermensch and how it manifests and affects the plot strikes me as something unique. Again, though, the choices are entirely personal.

What New Weird books are you reading? It's a contentious label, but the books generally included are among my favourites, like Miévilles Bas-Lag novels, City of saints and Madmen by Jeff Vandermeer, and The Etched City by K. J. Bishop. Novels of mutations and transformations, and the pervading influence of the city.


Apparently can't get any book titles right at the moment :<img class=' />.

I started on Mieville's Bas-Lag Novels (read Perdido Street Station, then the Iron Council, not read the middle one yet) then looked at Kafka on the Shore and bought Finch by VanderMeer but I haven't started it yet. I'm enjoying the genre so far, reminds me a lot of Gaiman's Novels in some ways and I am a Gaiman fanboy
Does the Devil ever struggle to be good again, or if so is he not a devil?

What difference does it make after all? Anonymity in the world of men is better than fame in heaven, for what's heaven? What's Earth? All in the mind.
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Rare and unique books - 21/04/2012 07:12:20 PM 1670 Views
Two off the top of my head... - 21/04/2012 07:55:46 PM 839 Views
I would have to think for more but... - 21/04/2012 09:56:03 PM 816 Views
Interesting, but hard to envision - 21/04/2012 11:12:23 PM 807 Views
It is hard to envision - 22/04/2012 04:12:18 PM 1002 Views
A few off your list - 21/04/2012 11:06:15 PM 773 Views
I thought of Borges - 21/04/2012 11:16:34 PM 683 Views
House of Leaves is a rare book? - 22/04/2012 08:01:32 AM 790 Views
Re: Rare and unique books - 29/04/2012 06:35:49 PM 852 Views
Re: Rare and unique books - 30/04/2012 10:11:42 PM 829 Views
A few more (only my own opinion) - 29/04/2012 07:27:18 PM 1542 Views
Re: A few more (only my own opinion) - 30/04/2012 10:44:09 PM 885 Views
Re: A few more (only my own opinion) - 01/05/2012 01:35:11 PM 1005 Views
Murakami as New Weird? *NM* - 02/05/2012 04:08:31 PM 355 Views
Finch is quite good, but it's really the third book in a sequence - 02/05/2012 09:23:01 PM 624 Views

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