originally posted by VLM:
Seriously
All this erudite discussion makes me feel less evolved than all you smart folks.
I enjoyed Henderson the Rain King and A Bend in the River. And I do find some Garcia Marquez hard to read. But then again, I like Zinfandel.... And if you can't get through Garicia Marquez, well, I don't know what to say. Many of the names I've left off, I just haven't read. Clezio, Fo and Bellow all seem minor talents to me (though I do have a fondness for Augie March)and Naipaul is just impossible.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
Well, Sartre refused the award and Beckett-even cooler to my mind--just told them to send the money, but didn't show up.
originally posted by VS:
I wonder how many really good Spanish-English translators there are around.
You guys are getting me all exited, but I dont think Im allowed to post People trying Saramago should start with The History of the Siege of Lisbon, which is a magnificent book and gets better with multiple readings And what about Sebastian Barry, or is he too, shall we say, easy? But The Whereabouts of Eneas McNulty is pretty good.
originally posted by The Latin Liquidator:
My feeling about this was wonder that they still give out such prizes, considering we live in a post-literate world and every day holding on to any notion of "Literature" seems more and more... Well, fill in the blank. I wonder if they include Don Mario's latest tweets...
Best,
LL
originally posted by Jay Miller:
Eh, people have been predicting the demise of the novel for as long as I've been alive..
Fer goodness sake... most people like competing. I'm sure Eugene O'Neill was secretly delighted to trounce Margaret Mitchell, and they both laughed till spaghetti came out their noses at Walt Edmonds.originally posted by Rahsaan:
That said, I'm not quite sure that I agree with LL that prizes will be unnecessary.
Like this?originally posted by Thor:
Maybe they should install "Like" buttons in opera houses.