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I just finished 101 Reykjavik, which... I don't know why I read it, really. I found it in a bargain bin, picked it up because the name rang faint bells in my mind, but basically it was a waste of time. Parts of it were clever, some of it was amusing, but I've spent all the time since I started reading it becoming more and more misanthropic and isolated and dramatic-interior-monolog-ing, which I don't appreciate. Also I hate Hamlet, so the ties to that were not great.
That said, I'd be very interested for someone to do the same thing to Rosencrantz and Guildernstern are Dead, as 101 Reykjavik does to Hamlet. That'd be great.
I've also been reading the Dark Tower series, which is the first King I've ever read, and I'm finding it strangely compelling. I still don't have any interest in his typical horror fare, though.
Next on my list: I've picked up China Mieville's Iron Council, and read the first few pages. I was not gripped (in fact, I found it pretty tedious), but I'll get around to reading it eventually.
I'm also somewhere in the middle of The Third Policeman, which I'm looking forward to getting back to, after being somewhat distracted by other material recently. I'm just at the part where the narrator arrives at the police station. Something about the combination of absurd philosophical/historical footnotes about De Selby and the narrator's innocent-lamb wanderings, and also the thought I have (whether justified or not) that Flann O'Brien was really pushing the envelope for his time, makes this book great(so far). De Selby himself is a fantastic device. |
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