pilibeen - glad you enjoyed the road. It’s a sparse and intense novel. That it even works is amazing. It’s certainly the best new novel I’ve read in years.
What Have I been reading lately…
Going thru (slowly) Moby Dick (I read it 15 years ago or more, and revisited it on a lark, it’s a tough but very good read if you like emphasis on texture over narrative!)
Currently I’m also reading Douglas Coupland’s The Gum Thief. He uses an interesting structure with this novel which really, really works with his style of writing. Thus far it’s really good, but I’m not sure if this isn’t just a response to JPODs awfulness such that anything would look good. Strike that. It is DAMN good and really funny in that ironic Coupland way (Which if you hate the author is really going to grate on you). As I wrote in the comments section on the main site: “I much prefer Mr. Coupland when he is operating in downbeat Elenor Rigby/Hey Nostradamus/MissWyoming mode than the upbeat mode of JPOD/Microserfs/ShampooPlanet. Apocalyptic meditations on Death and the infinite of the universe thru the aisles of big-box stores told as a gigantic riff on Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Oh Yes. Yummy”
Lined up in the queue is a bit of non-fiction:
Bambi vs. Godzilla - Been meaning to read this David Mamet book/rant on the movie industry for months.
The Shock Doctrine - Naomi Klein is one of Canada’s most readable investigative-journalist/activists out there. Here NO LOGO is a veritable bible of branding-ideology. From Amazon - ”The neo-liberal economic policies—privatization, free trade, slashed social spending—that the Chicago School and the economist Milton Friedman have foisted on the world are catastrophic in two senses, argues this vigorous polemic. Because their results are disastrous—depressions, mass poverty, private corporations looting public wealth, by the author’s accounting—their means must be cataclysmic, dependent on political upheavals and natural disasters as coercive pretexts for free-market reforms the public would normally reject.”