The Republic of Heaven

Contemporary ('Adult') Fiction

Talk about other books here

Contemporary ('Adult') Fiction

Postby Max » Wed Oct 04, 2006 6:21 pm

Like any grouping, this one is probably pretty dubious - by it I mean the work of authors like Philip Roth, Ian McEwan, Iain Banks, Zadie Smith, etc. I've recently really got into reading these kinds of novels (Roth especially) - anyone else here read much of this sort of thing?
Image
Max
Guardian of the Thesauri
 
Posts: 3796
Joined: Wed May 12, 2004 2:57 pm
Location: Cambridge, UK

Postby Ian » Wed Oct 04, 2006 6:30 pm

I've read a few (I'm kind at that transition between childhood and adult reading :P). Why not try Corpsing by Toby Litt?
We must build the republic of heaven in our world...

Is this heaven?...No, it's Iowa

I sell discount books, so sue me

Times are tight, and starting a band is good way to kill some time until the economy picks up
User avatar
Ian
The Frog Prince
 
Posts: 4044
Joined: Fri Mar 25, 2005 8:34 pm
Location: The Starlite Club

Postby Laura » Sat Oct 07, 2006 12:39 am

I just finished a fascinating book called Mariette in Ecstasy by Ron Hansen--about a postulate in a convent who may or may not be recieving the stigmata. It was a bit heavy on the Catholic/Christian indoctrination, but a really, really good read--surprisingly!
"I infect the entire Net" ---Hexadecimal
Laura
Gone Nineteen
 
Posts: 3238
Joined: Tue Feb 17, 2004 4:02 am
Location: The old homestead

Postby David F » Sat Oct 07, 2006 2:00 am

Does Dougie Coupland count? Girlfriend In A Coma is still his zenith, but Hey Nostradamus! and Eleanor Rigby are fantastic. The rest of his output is more adolescent/late adolescent/late late adolescent type stuff, but fine all the same.

Two books I re-read in the past year and once more knocked my socks off - The Great Ideas by Suzanne Cleminshaw and The Winter Inside by Christopher Kenworthy. Anything by Michel Faber, but particularly Under The Skin, which was both very creepy and very moving. I'd also recommend Ethan Hawke - The Hottest State and Ash Wednesday make me glad he's ageing poorly.
David F
Witch
 
Posts: 576
Joined: Sun May 02, 2004 12:16 am
Location: Although many of us live in our own personal Wales, I also live in the very real geographic Wales.

Re: Contemporary ('Adult') Fiction

Postby delta10 » Tue Jan 01, 2008 4:19 am

Any fans of James Michener here? Recommendations?

Looking through the topics on this board, I have to say you are all incredibly well read!
delta10
Zalif
 
Posts: 90
Joined: Thu Dec 27, 2007 9:25 pm
Location: Northern California

Re:

Postby jessia » Tue Jan 01, 2008 8:36 am

Does Dougie Coupland count? Girlfriend In A Coma is still his zenith, but Hey Nostradamus! and Eleanor Rigby are fantastic. The rest of his output is more adolescent/late adolescent/late late adolescent type stuff, but fine all the same.
canadians ftw: the cbc is adapting jpod for a television series.

i enjoyed nicole kraus' history of love, the book within the book especially. i've liked what i've read of mcewan and am working my way around getting into grown-up literature and assigned readings (some of which falls under that dubious category of "world fiction").

what sort of contemporary are we speaking of? authors active from the 80s forward? the 21st century? i read milan kundera's the unbearable lightness of being a few months ago (upon the inspiration of sraffie nix, and i believe moony's reading it now too) and it was beautiful writing.
"o stars, isn't it from you that the lover's desire for the face
of his beloved arises? doesn't his secret insight
into her pure features come from the pure constellations?"
- from rainer maria rilke's third elegy


sign up and help edit+create his dark materials wiki articles for bridgetothestars!
http://www.bridgetothestars.net/wiki/index.php

Image Image
User avatar
jessia
Sraffie Queen
 
Posts: 10999
Joined: Sat Feb 08, 2003 5:07 am
Website: http://cuaroninspired.wordpress.com/
Location: the colonies

Re: Contemporary ('Adult') Fiction

Postby Enitharmon » Tue Jan 01, 2008 2:46 pm

Like any grouping, this one is probably pretty dubious - by it I mean the work of authors like Philip Roth, Ian McEwan, Iain Banks, Zadie Smith, etc. I've recently really got into reading these kinds of novels (Roth especially) - anyone else here read much of this sort of thing?
I don't understand - this is mainstream fiction, why wouldn't anybody read it?
Common sense is the collection of prejudices acquired by the age of eighteen (Albert Einstein)
The Book of Enitharmon
Currently reading: Vanity Fair by William M Thackeray
Enitharmon
Ageing Drama Queen
 
Posts: 6220
Joined: Wed Apr 09, 2003 1:13 pm
Yahoo Messenger: swanofkennet
AOL: SwanOfKennet
Location: New Liverpool, town of pie, peas and gravy

Re: Contemporary ('Adult') Fiction

Postby Mockingbird » Tue Jan 01, 2008 4:10 pm

As someone who read only 'classics' of the Dickens/Austen variety for most of her life, I think I know what you mean. Ian McEwan and Zadie Smith are two of my 'contemporary' loves. Here are my others: Jhumpa Lahiri, Michael Cunningham, Michael Ondaatje, Jeffrey Eugenides. Cormac McCarthy is a current author who I admire but don't love, and John Irving is one who I love but don't admire...
Image
User avatar
Mockingbird
A Walking Blade
 
Posts: 2044
Joined: Mon Mar 13, 2006 4:59 am
AOL: distantdeeps
Location: The only city there is

Re: Contemporary ('Adult') Fiction

Postby Laura » Thu Jan 03, 2008 3:25 am

Any fans of James Michener here? Recommendations?

Looking through the topics on this board, I have to say you are all incredibly well read!
I enjoyed Centennial, but it was a bit too long, and I was able to skim the firts four chapters and the last two without missing abything necessary to the plot. Caravans, about pre-Soviet invaded Afghanistan was excellent, though. Don't touch Tales from the South Pacific though, it's not good, and it makes me wonder why a musical was made out of it. :?

Michener is a decent author, though not one of my favorites. Anyone read the newer Mark Haddon book, A Spot of Bother?
"I infect the entire Net" ---Hexadecimal
Laura
Gone Nineteen
 
Posts: 3238
Joined: Tue Feb 17, 2004 4:02 am
Location: The old homestead

Re: Contemporary ('Adult') Fiction

Postby Jaya » Sun Jan 06, 2008 8:32 pm

I have A Spot of Bother on my shelf and hopefully plan to read it at the end of this month. Will get back to you on it :D
"To him whose elastic and vigorous thought keeps pace with the sun, the day is a perpetual morning."
-Henry David Thoreau

Image
Image
ImageImageImageImageImage
User avatar
Jaya
Je ne suis pas une sraffie.
 
Posts: 2357
Joined: Sat Nov 26, 2005 7:41 pm
Location: London

Re: Contemporary ('Adult') Fiction

Postby Aletheia Dolorosa » Wed Jan 09, 2008 11:55 am

I tend to prefer the books that verge more on 'magical realism' from this sub-genre. So, Zadie Smith, Arundhati (sp?) Roy, Salman Rushdie, Isabel Allende, Gabriel García Marquez. However, I read a really brilliant book called The Emperor's Children by Clair Messud which was very good, although it used September 11 as a plot device, which always irritates me. I tend to mainly read fantasy, horror, historical fiction, 'classics', history and biography, though.
Image
'There are few things in this world that couldn't be improved by adding vampires to them.' - Scott Westerfeld
ImageImage
ImageImage
More melodrama/Even more melodrama/Sexiest Female Sraffie, Best Signature, Cam Whore, 2008 Sraffie Awards
Avatar from Scandinavia and the World
User avatar
Aletheia Dolorosa
Wednesday's Child
 
Posts: 4522
Joined: Wed Jul 23, 2003 12:22 am
Website: http://dolorosa12.wordpress.com/
Location: At the top of the Inviolate Tower

Re: Contemporary ('Adult') Fiction

Postby jessia » Wed Jan 09, 2008 3:55 pm

However, I read a really brilliant book called The Emperor's Children by Clair Messud which was very good, although it used September 11 as a plot device, which always irritates me.
to what extent does it use it?
"o stars, isn't it from you that the lover's desire for the face
of his beloved arises? doesn't his secret insight
into her pure features come from the pure constellations?"
- from rainer maria rilke's third elegy


sign up and help edit+create his dark materials wiki articles for bridgetothestars!
http://www.bridgetothestars.net/wiki/index.php

Image Image
User avatar
jessia
Sraffie Queen
 
Posts: 10999
Joined: Sat Feb 08, 2003 5:07 am
Website: http://cuaroninspired.wordpress.com/
Location: the colonies

Re: Contemporary ('Adult') Fiction

Postby Aletheia Dolorosa » Thu Jan 10, 2008 8:16 am

I can't write anything more without it being spoilerish. Read the book if you're interested, apart from the September 11 thing, it was quite good.
Image
'There are few things in this world that couldn't be improved by adding vampires to them.' - Scott Westerfeld
ImageImage
ImageImage
More melodrama/Even more melodrama/Sexiest Female Sraffie, Best Signature, Cam Whore, 2008 Sraffie Awards
Avatar from Scandinavia and the World
User avatar
Aletheia Dolorosa
Wednesday's Child
 
Posts: 4522
Joined: Wed Jul 23, 2003 12:22 am
Website: http://dolorosa12.wordpress.com/
Location: At the top of the Inviolate Tower

Re: Contemporary ('Adult') Fiction

Postby Max » Tue May 13, 2008 8:34 pm

Like any grouping, this one is probably pretty dubious - by it I mean the work of authors like Philip Roth, Ian McEwan, Iain Banks, Zadie Smith, etc. I've recently really got into reading these kinds of novels (Roth especially) - anyone else here read much of this sort of thing?
I don't understand - this is mainstream fiction, why wouldn't anybody read it?
This is a forum for a fantasy novel, so readers of contemporary adult fiction are likely to be in a minority. Plus, the only books that are really 'mainstream' these days are celebrity biographies, memoirs of childhood abuse, and anything that happens to have a Richard & Judie sticker on it. Even high profile authors like those I listed scarcely register on sales charts; McEwan is, I think, the only one to feature in the top 100 of the last couple of years.
Image
Max
Guardian of the Thesauri
 
Posts: 3796
Joined: Wed May 12, 2004 2:57 pm
Location: Cambridge, UK

Re: Contemporary ('Adult') Fiction

Postby Cooroo » Fri May 23, 2008 3:58 pm

The author who has excited me most this year (although his novels have been around longer than that) is David Mitchell. Not the comedian.

Four novels to date:
Ghostwritten - multi voiced tale, set all over the place
Number9Dream - slightly fantastic mystery set mostly in Tokyo
Cloud Atlas - multi voiced set of stories with highly unusual structure!
Black Swan Green - 'coming of age' story of a teenage boy in the 80s

All are really good. His writing just makes me smile, in the way Rushdie's did in the early days.
Cooroo
Grazer
 
Posts: 17
Joined: Tue Apr 29, 2008 10:24 pm


Return to “%s” Other Books

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 29 guests

Content © 2001-2011 BridgeToTheStars.Net.
Images from The Golden Compass movie are © New Line Cinema.
cron