Where Do I Find Books?

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  • čas přidán 22. 12. 2017
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Komentáře • 220

  • @LifeLessonsFromBooks
    @LifeLessonsFromBooks Před 4 lety +23

    I love asking people about the books they’re reading. In a world where everyone on commutes are on their phones, when I see someone reading a physical book, it always results in a conversation.

  • @aikoyonamine
    @aikoyonamine Před 4 lety +1

    I agree. Glad I revisited your CZcams channel again. I am missing my books right now. They are packed boxes in my parent's garage. The day I actually get to unpack them and place them in my own bookshelves again, will be another one of those joyous moments.

  • @thefrancophilereader8943
    @thefrancophilereader8943 Před 6 lety +56

    ok. I now want to hear your review of Elementary Particles. I often ask people what they’re reading. What a person reads tells a lot about them, for sure. When I was 13/14 I decided to read Matilda’s reading list (yes, the protagonist of that children’s book). It was the best decision ever. I was introduced to so many great classics at a time when I could barely analyze a text. It helped make me the literature-lover that I am.

  • @9Luna6
    @9Luna6 Před 6 lety +7

    So glad I found you!
    I was so amazed because you are the first "non-spanish-speaker" (as far as I already know :S) who likes latin american literature. I asked myself many times how did you get to know such amazing books! Was "La belleza de pensar" that interview? Thank you for doing such a great work! :)

  • @solovief
    @solovief Před 6 lety +1

    What a great video! Love those suggestions. I can throw two more in the mix, unless they were already there and I missed it. First would be the indexes of great books, often bios, and secondly, college syllabi online. Of course it's good to compare different syllabi from various schools. This will give you both a wide view, but also allow you to note some common titles as well. Enjoy!

  • @Solaria42
    @Solaria42 Před 6 lety +10

    I love asking students what they are reading and if it's good when I'm out on lunch duty. (I'm a teacher) This is why I end up reading a lot of YA but I love the conversation and I get to point them to some older fiction when I can/is appropriate.

  • @jameszyrile2968
    @jameszyrile2968 Před 6 lety +3

    Happy Holidays, man! Awesome video!

  • @MyFakeIronTrees
    @MyFakeIronTrees Před 6 lety +60

    To Cliff and everybody else, I'm looking for some short stories to read. Here are some of my favourites. Please leave me some recommendations!
    - "The Lottery" by Shirley Jackson
    - "A Hunger Artist" by Frans Kafka
    - "In the Penal Colony" by Frans Kafka
    - "A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings" by Gabriel García Márquez
    - "The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World" by Gabriel García Márquez
    - "This Way for the Gas, Ladies and Gentlemen" by Tadeusz Borowski
    - "In A Grove" by Ryūnosuke Akutagawa
    - "A Christmas Tree and a Wedding" by Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    - "Dubliners" by James Joyce (collection)
    - "For Esmé-with Love and Squalor" by J. D. Salinger (collection)

    • @BetterThanFoodBookReviews
      @BetterThanFoodBookReviews  Před 6 lety +12

      The Return - Roberto Bolaño

    • @RxxSTaRz
      @RxxSTaRz Před 6 lety +2

      "Jack, July" by Victor Lodato

    • @briancollins1296
      @briancollins1296 Před 6 lety +3

      As far as beefy and yet concise short story collections go, I'd have to recommend "The Science Fiction Hall of Fame Vol. 1", edited by Rob Silverberg and containing many of the classic sci-fi short stories in that canon (except for "The Lottery", funnily enough, though maybe that lack of overlap will be beneficial to you), with stories that were published between 1929 and 1964. Essential sci-fi anthology.

    • @brandongacer1850
      @brandongacer1850 Před 6 lety +7

      White Nights - Dostoevsky

    • @patrickclamrod9454
      @patrickclamrod9454 Před 6 lety +2

      I'm not familiar with that one unfortunately but I have to recommend Wells Tower's collection called Everything Ravaged, Everything Burned. It was recommended in an interview by Paul Thomas Anderson and it's amazing man.

  • @pessoasombra
    @pessoasombra Před 6 lety +1

    great tips. I especially subscribe looking up people you admire and seeing what their favourite books are, but indeed the most important takeaway is the power books have to bring people together and the opportunities it presents you with if you're getting the recommendations in person.
    another tip that you didn't mention, and often works out well for me, is treating books like music artists. the same way I'm likely to like other artists from a music label that publishes a project I love, the same happens with books. especially when they are small-ish publishing houses, or publish contemporary authors, or poetry, or forgotten cult classics, and so on, so it might also be worth looking into.

  • @edgarivan398
    @edgarivan398 Před 4 lety +21

    I'm from Mexico and I really like to watch your reviews, you inspire me and motivate me. I think that we need more people like you.

  • @theresamongan3479
    @theresamongan3479 Před 9 měsíci

    Hi Cliff, your review of The Willows by Algernon Blackwood was recommended to me yesterday by CZcams. I enjoyed it so much, I subscribed to your channel. I am 66, live in Australia, and have been a reader all my life. I recently semi-retired so I have more reading time. So happy! I love your suggestions in this video as I always love to know what people I admire are reading - authors, filmmakers, musicians etc - I’m always interested in what they read. I’m now enjoying a wide range of booktubers and so glad I can now watch your reviews too. Thank you. Theresa

  • @monsieurhulot8273
    @monsieurhulot8273 Před 3 lety +7

    Man’s Search For Meaning by Frankl changed my life. Don’t really pay mind to the logotherapy half of the book, but the prison camp stories were heart breaking. Specifically on a paragraph where he recounts thinking about his wife, who he was separated from by the Nazi’s, and detailing how even if he could only hold her in his memories that it would be enough for him. Froze me for the rest of the day. Absolutely love that book.

  • @leadbellymidnightangel

    thank you so much for this video man and for the recommendation to look up who your favorite artist, favorite books. I've found so many great books already and found my favorite author even I greatly appreciate it man

  • @libiabrenda3148
    @libiabrenda3148 Před 6 lety +20

    The mug looks great! It reminded me of the Death engravings from the Middle Ages.
    To ask someone about their books is awesome. I used to go to the library and read the titles of the spine, and with no reference or previous knowledge, if the title called me, I took the book home with me, always had great results :D

    • @MrFredstt
      @MrFredstt Před 6 lety +1

      That's I still do it. I go around looking at the names of the books/covers and if it speaks to me, I pick it up and read the first chapter or so to get a feel for it and then decide whether to get it or not.

    • @literarylady1125
      @literarylady1125 Před 5 lety

      This is a cool method. I might try it.

  • @volcanicreality
    @volcanicreality Před 6 lety

    It’s funny you mention Powell’s employees being really knowledgeable - on my second visit a this past summer, I was checking out; Story of the Eye, per your recommendation, and Maldoror, among a few others, and the cashier comments about seeing a theme forming. He said he had finished the Bataille, but hadn’t finished Lautréamont. So yeah, I’d say they know what’s good over there.

  • @juliusaugustino8409
    @juliusaugustino8409 Před 6 lety +3

    Yeah, these are the methods I use too. Thanks for the video man. Also thanks for reminding me to go like your facebook page (spend so little time there so I've totally forgotten that). Also please review Ordinary Men by Christopher Browning. I just read it. It was horrifying and quite enlightning. Also I finally read Story of the Eye :D it was pretty amazing.
    Merry Christmas Cliff!!

  • @FlackooPretty
    @FlackooPretty Před 6 lety +4

    Oh wow!! Can‘t wait for the Houellebecq review!!!!

  • @Hybridman7
    @Hybridman7 Před 6 lety

    Love this! Load of thanks =) I agree with the Goodreads part too!

  • @JeanPierre-tw9pw
    @JeanPierre-tw9pw Před 6 lety

    Thank you so much for the advices! Excelent video :)

  • @r.m.2598
    @r.m.2598 Před 6 lety +38

    This channel is very good for ASMR, your voice very nice to listen.

  • @kinzaahmed3857
    @kinzaahmed3857 Před 6 lety

    I never even considered looking up books people I like have read! Lol. Thank you, so stoked to google all the goodness! 🙏💟

  • @aikolactaotao
    @aikolactaotao Před 6 lety +2

    I’d like to see a review of any Yasunari Kawabata or Blaise Cendrars, pls. Merry Christmas Cliff!

  • @chrishenry409
    @chrishenry409 Před 6 lety +3

    Hey Cliff! Thanks for all the great book recommendations! I figured I would return the favor.
    1) A Scanner Darkly by Phillip K. Dick - This is, in my opinion, Dick's magnum opus. It's a dark philosophical novel about perception and drug addiction which is both deeply entertaining and thought-provoking. It's one of the few novels I've read more than twice.
    2) The Mysterious Stranger by Mark Twain - This short novel is completely dissimilar to Twain's other works. It is, roughly, a reflection on religion. If you're interested, look it up on CZcams to see claymation version of one of the best scenes.
    3) Steppenwolf by Hermann Hesse - Another short drug-related philosophical novel which reminded me somewhat of Notes from Underground.
    4) The October Country by Ray Bradbury - This is a horror short story collection. While not as thought-provoking as the other entries on this list, it's one of the most entertaining books I've ever read. (Admittedly, I probably wouldn't like this as much if I wasn't such a fan of horror literature.) It was so fun it made me want to explore some of Bradbury's other work.
    5) American Splendor by Harvey Pekar - Peker wrote underground comics. His take on life was both dark and insightful.
    And I am always up for recommendations of great entertaining pessimistic literature if anyone has any! Thanks!

  • @mottahead6464
    @mottahead6464 Před 4 lety +17

    One of the things I find most interesting about my reading life is the fact that I'm fluent in three languages : Portuguese, English and French.
    And I find it very interesting to read books in their original language after having read a Portuguese translation. Sometimes it feels like there's changes in tone or that some phrases sound better (or worse) in their original language.
    As an example of that, I would put the Brazilian author Paulo Coelho's international success : his foreign translators must be amazing because his original work in Brazilian Portuguese is garbage.
    It also provides me with choices : I was looking for a copy of Hans Staden's True Story An Account of Cannibal Captivity in Brazil yet I found the English version too expensive. I was able to find a French version titled Nus, Feroces et Anthropophages which cost me less than half the price and which contained amazing illustrative artwork.
    I would have a hard time reading a translation of someone like Albert Camus and believe me, since I read the Portuguese translation, Michel Houellebecq is way funnier in French.
    And of course I am immenselly grateful to books for actually being able to talk, read and write in 3 languages. They definitely played a big part on my fluency development (and if anyone is of the opinion that there's definitely room to grow, I totally agree).
    Get a life. Read a book.

    • @billyb6001
      @billyb6001 Před 2 lety +1

      Ya. When I was learning Spanish. I would put on Spanish versions of my favorite books in english.

    • @JCarpenter1984
      @JCarpenter1984 Před rokem

      Vous avez bien raison, rien de mieux que de lire en version originale.

  • @bartimaeusspirit6269
    @bartimaeusspirit6269 Před 4 lety +5

    I agree absolutely with you on that : talking about books even with total strangers is a shortcut to their soul.

  • @AshInTrees
    @AshInTrees Před 6 lety +1

    Some of my favorites: Brothers Karamazov and Crime and Punishment by Dostoevsky, On the Shortness of Life by Seneca, Mother Night by Vonnegut, White Fang and The Call of the Wild by London, and the Stranger by Camus.

  • @stephenmortland8385
    @stephenmortland8385 Před 4 lety

    Would love to hear a Curzio Malaparte "Kaputt" review, nothing else quite like it. Also, maybe a video on how you organize your books in your home?

  • @Ryan_Ek2
    @Ryan_Ek2 Před 6 lety +3

    Hahaha love the mug. I'm definitely ordering one.

  • @sebastiansmith7591
    @sebastiansmith7591 Před 6 lety +24

    By Pynchon I've only read The Crying of Lot 49 and Inherent Vice, so I still haven't read any of his crazy-ass tomes, but in any case, if you haven't lost all hope for enjoying Pynchon, I would highly recommend Inherent Vice given that it's more accessible than his other stuff (though it's still by all means quite the mind-twister, and it's really funny and the characters are great and bla bla bla. It's a great fucking book in my own humble anonymous opinion)

    • @asderc1
      @asderc1 Před 6 lety

      John Smith Also "the secret interrogation" the last sort story in his "slow learner" collection is an absolute must read if you enjoyed his other stuff, one of his best and only 80 pages or so.

  • @bighardbooks770
    @bighardbooks770 Před 5 lety

    9:18 the famous "Powell's City of Books," here in Portland, ORE!

  • @joshc6569
    @joshc6569 Před 6 lety +1

    Angela Carter's The bloody chamber and other stories was reviewed on better than food. Never heard of her before that review. She's a bloody good find.

  • @breathevideopro
    @breathevideopro Před 6 lety +16

    He's definitely talking about infinite jest at 5:29

    • @BlielPol
      @BlielPol Před 4 lety +3

      His disdain towards Wallace and Infinite Jest (the few times he brings it up) is almost like a meme at this point 😂

  • @titusbramble7403
    @titusbramble7403 Před 5 lety +3

    Something that I have done recently is get all my friends up on Goodreads so we can all see what we are reading and what we all enjoy. I would fully recommend it

  • @franciscprager2425
    @franciscprager2425 Před 6 lety

    love your youtube activity. You should review “Barabbas” by Pär Lagerkvist. It’s a very short novel (100 pages) and it’s really profound. If you indeed read it but have second thougts on reviewing it because it has this religious sort of message you should keep in mind that the author wasn’t a christian but a deist. Anyway keep up the good work man! Happy hollydays!

  • @andreitarkovsky3214
    @andreitarkovsky3214 Před 6 lety +2

    STORY OF THE EYE? ooo i love that book!

  • @EpicAirGuitarist
    @EpicAirGuitarist Před 6 lety +1

    I recommend The Executioner’s Song by Norman Mailer. I think it’s in your area of interests.

  • @thomaskember4628
    @thomaskember4628 Před 4 lety

    Except for Hamlet he didn't mention reading plays. After I gave up trying to be an actor, I still read plays scripts; all of Bernard Shaw and Oscar Wilde and finally came to Chekov. Reading his 4 great plays changed my life; I was bold over. It was years before I saw any of them performed. One production of Three Sisters was was one of the most moving experiences I have had in the theatre, especially the last act., the pathos was overwhelming.

  • @curtjarrell9710
    @curtjarrell9710 Před 2 lety

    There've also been 'people who life and breathe books' working in chain stores. I was one of them until my retirement two years ago.

  • @agrainofmalt
    @agrainofmalt Před 5 lety

    It was an independent bookstore clerk that recommended Houellebecq to me too... Elementary Particles, called Atomised in Australia. Bought a copy and it sat on my shelf for years before I finally got around to reading it. Holy shit. Read a chunk of Houellebecq's work now and love his writing. It's both the most depressing and most amazing shit I've read in years...

  • @UltimateNinjaSrb
    @UltimateNinjaSrb Před 6 lety +6

    The two most requested books are from The Meme Trilogy? Really makes you think.

  • @Crina-LudmilaCristeaAuthor
    @Crina-LudmilaCristeaAuthor Před 6 lety +18

    Have you read 'Call me by your name' by André Aciman? It's a great novel. It is my favourite book so far. It was very hard for me to pick a favourite book but this did it for me. I would love to hear your thoughts on it. There's a movie done too. Can't wait to see how many Oscars is going to get. 😊

  • @roland3011
    @roland3011 Před 6 lety +3

    I'm digging the channel. I was hoping to see the channels you enjoy after watching this video.

  • @gelatinousjoe7979
    @gelatinousjoe7979 Před 6 lety

    This was very useful and relatable. :)

  • @eduardalexandrubruchner1531

    Love the mug

  • @chrisdiboll2256
    @chrisdiboll2256 Před 5 lety +11

    Honestly, I just read everything I’ve heard of in terms of them being great works. Once I run out of those, I’ll worry about getting recommendations haha

    • @matchasketch8224
      @matchasketch8224 Před 4 lety +1

      Chris Diboll Haha same! I still have so many classics to get through! However I’m finding Don Quixote (what I”m currently reading not quite to my taste haha

  • @MichelleLaMay
    @MichelleLaMay Před 3 lety

    As a college student doing work/study in the library, I found many books that people were reading on the shelf floating around of returned books.

    • @MichelleLaMay
      @MichelleLaMay Před 3 lety

      MY FAVORITES IN NO PARTICULAR ORDER
      One Hundred Years of Solitude GG Marquez
      Song of Solomon Toni Morrison
      Death Comes To the Archbishop Willa Cather
      Little Dorritt and Tale of Two Cities Charles Dickens
      Small Island Andrea Levy
      The Godfather Mario Puzo
      Gone With the Wind Margaret Mitch
      War and Peace and Anna Karenina Leo Tolstoy
      *As I Lay Dying, The Sound and the Fury, Absolom, Absolom, The Hamlet, The Town and The Mansion, Go Down Moses William Faulkner
      Red Badge of Courage S Crane
      Life of Pi
      In Search of Lost Time Proust
      East of Eden John Steinbeck
      Midnight's Children Salman Rushdie
      Ulysses James Joyce
      Things Fall Apart Chinua Achebe
      The Complete and Personal Memoirs of Ulysses S Grant

  • @sk69to96
    @sk69to96 Před 6 lety

    luv your vids man. !

  • @noahfranks984
    @noahfranks984 Před 6 lety +1

    Dude. Me and my buddy were talking just the other day about how you would totally be the perfect Dostoevsky fanatic. I know you did a review of Notes from the Underground, but have you read any of his other stuff? So good. Nobody touches Dostoevsky's moral seriousness, or his darkness, or his human concerns.

  • @b506fk7
    @b506fk7 Před 6 lety +14

    Ever read any Thomas Mann? For some reason I think his works would appeal to you. Try 'Dr Faustus'.

    • @TT-zi7hi
      @TT-zi7hi Před 5 lety +6

      or, the Magic Mountain!

  • @claritymall2041
    @claritymall2041 Před 6 lety

    Please review Right mind left mine. I finished it in less than a week and it really had me thinking.

  • @brendan7048
    @brendan7048 Před 6 lety +3

    Have a great Christmas Cliff!

  • @bojanmiletic8240
    @bojanmiletic8240 Před 6 lety +1

    Thank you for this great video. Could you add link towards you goodreads account, so people can follow you?

  • @songdanceman9881
    @songdanceman9881 Před 6 lety

    Can’t recommend highly enough any of Flannery O’Connor’s short stories. Cliff already reviewed A Good Man Is Hard To Find but Good Country People, Revelation and Everything That Rises Must Converge. Hysterical.

  • @ladynottingham89
    @ladynottingham89 Před 6 lety +6

    I live in Florida, not exactly the easiest place to find people who enjoy reading. I need to move or I'm gonna die alone.

  • @TheMrSyoss
    @TheMrSyoss Před 3 lety +1

    Something similar happened to me. I didn't used to read much, then I went to some very small crazy indie bookstore and the owner recommended me Houellebecq. Completely changed my life

  • @johnochiltree1170
    @johnochiltree1170 Před 6 lety

    If you ever get the chance check out ‘the sea came in at midnight’ by Steve Erickson. Amazing book. It opens with the line ‘I want you at the end of your rope. Lashed to the mast of my dreams.’ Fucking beautiful.

  • @shahadadel9944
    @shahadadel9944 Před 6 lety

    Great video
    Instant subscribe 👍🏼

  • @kalew37
    @kalew37 Před 6 lety +1

    Has anyone read Atala/René by Chateaubriand?
    I consider it a gem, as Cliff would say, along with “Stoner” by Williams and “Hunger” by Hamsun. I can’t find anyone who has read it. I know Victor Hugo highly admired Chateaubriand in his younger years.

  • @TheTodsBread
    @TheTodsBread Před 5 lety

    click butter excepted... have you read Hamlet's Mill or reviewed anything from Updike?

  • @marclayne9261
    @marclayne9261 Před 4 lety

    I have been a book worm, since 1960......I have known many great bookstores, most Mom n Pops.....the best in Montana, is,........'A Few Books More'....Billings Montana.....many 1st Editions and Antiquarian finds...

  • @bobxyzp
    @bobxyzp Před 3 lety +1

    a) Some people hate being interrupted when they are reading. They bring a book along so they don’t have to talk to people.
    b) Asking strangers if they like what they are reading may be a good way to make friends (or not, see a)), but going by the average goodreads scores, it’s a terrible way to get book recommendations.
    I would only accept book recommendations from people that I respected intellectually, people who have similar tastes to mine or from lists of books where I already know some of the titles and can gauge the general quality.
    Incidentally, this is my go to CZcams channel for book recommendations! But you don’t like David Foster Wallace?! Oh well, a little difference of taste can be ok...

  • @testcardII
    @testcardII Před 3 lety

    You’re very inspiring ✨

  • @henpines
    @henpines Před 5 lety

    I recommend you La virgen de los sicarios by Fernando Vallejo, but I dont know if it would be as good in english as it is in spanish.

  • @somethinghhh6005
    @somethinghhh6005 Před 6 lety +1

    Review "Good Morning, Midnight" from Jean Rhys?

  • @dashbustour3647
    @dashbustour3647 Před 6 lety +1

    I watched one clip of you years ago reviewing Journey To The End Of The Night by Louis Ferdinand Celine and thought you were an excellent person-hope to communicate with you more!

  • @AnaCarolina-dc6mv
    @AnaCarolina-dc6mv Před 4 lety +7

    Hey, I really would like to translate your videos to portuguese (Brazilian), I want my colleagues at college to be able to watch it too hahaha

  • @calebmitchell-ward1585
    @calebmitchell-ward1585 Před 6 lety +5

    You should review Mortality by Christopher Hitchens

  • @dakotahrivers6640
    @dakotahrivers6640 Před 4 lety +4

    5:30 ...... Infinite Jest much?
    Also, Portland Native. Powell's is my favorite place in the entire world.

    • @isaiahsanchevy9252
      @isaiahsanchevy9252 Před 4 lety

      Powell's is the only reason I go down to Portland (I live in Washington).

  • @IsoMorphix
    @IsoMorphix Před 6 lety +2

    Cliff! (And CZcams)
    I have a catastrophic habit of **not** finishing most books I pick up. This being said, I try to make my reading list really really count.
    Need some recs, but my owns list is scant due to my horrid ADD.
    - Borges, Collected Works (my prized textual possession)
    - Tim O'Brien, The Things They Carried (Read it when I was 17, really affected me. Still does.)
    - Bradbury, Fahrenheit 451 (because I have lungs and a brain, I suppose)
    -Joyce, Ulysses (i've read 35 pages. Ive owned it for 3 years)
    -C.S. Lewis, Till We Have Faces (I rather like this so far)
    -Kalil Gibran, The Prophet. (Makes me weep at times.)
    --Read fragments of Roland Barthes' Mythologies and loved it.
    Back in the day I did all the typical boy reading-- Orwell, Huxley, Herbert, Asimov. Only Bradbury stuck with me the most... He's got the most lyrical heart.
    Also need your recs for Nietzsche and Jung.

  • @billyb6001
    @billyb6001 Před 2 lety

    Jim Morrison was a crazy reader. Had a whole shelf in his early 20s.

  • @allenmahan9393
    @allenmahan9393 Před 5 lety +1

    Thank you, Clifford. I've been following you and a few others on CZcams and I'm going to start my own channel, next month. Have you read, A Confederacy of Dunces? I havent in years. Would love to read it w you, others. Im a Joycean and Faulkner fan and Dante scholar. Well? Dante admirer, lmao! Keep up the Great Work. IMA send you $10 bucks next month. Slainte, mate. BTW I live ind.t. Portland!

  • @MrFadeout53
    @MrFadeout53 Před 6 lety +3

    Great video!

  • @brandongacer1850
    @brandongacer1850 Před 6 lety +4

    Please read WG Sebald and Teju Cole

  • @malloryanderson724
    @malloryanderson724 Před 5 lety

    I just bought several book lots on eBay :) can't always guarantee quality but it's quality of author's to try :)

  • @1m2a3t4t5
    @1m2a3t4t5 Před 6 lety

    One of my favorite musicians has the name of a book tattooed hugely on his forehead, maybe I should go read that one 🤔 lol.

  • @elisenelson5736
    @elisenelson5736 Před 3 lety +2

    Cool you mentioned Jordan Peterson! Recently looked at his book recommendations and excited to start tackling a few of them. This is such a great video, excited to go look for more recs from cool people. Also great to know DavidBowie had a list of books too! Yayayayay.

  • @dashbustour3647
    @dashbustour3647 Před 6 lety +3

    How great is Journey To The End of the Night....! Hypnotic...! Mesmerizing....! Celine...!

    • @fuzzydunlop4513
      @fuzzydunlop4513 Před 2 lety

      A great book!... dreamlike!... compelling I admit!... yet what a downer!... scumbag!... vile lecher!... misogynist... or rather a indiscriminate misanthrope..! Ellipses galore..!

    • @dashbustour3647
      @dashbustour3647 Před 2 lety

      @@fuzzydunlop4513 Last time I read it was years ago. I wonder what it would be like now.

    • @fuzzydunlop4513
      @fuzzydunlop4513 Před 2 lety

      @@dashbustour3647 I just read it a couple weeks ago or months. He's definitely one of the best writers Ive read BUT often I find him to be too pessimistic and in such a way that's one-dimensional. I think part of the end was a little drawn out but still, awesome book, I just know for me I can't take books like that too serious or else it fucks up my head

  • @michellerichmond31
    @michellerichmond31 Před 6 lety

    The Silent Bookclub....on Facebook. Almost as good as CZcams for book discussions and recommendations.

  • @wisewatson
    @wisewatson Před 3 lety

    Cliff ... you know something? You’re the shit. I fucking love you, dude.

  • @LuckyNorwegian
    @LuckyNorwegian Před 6 lety

    Have you read the sharks, by bjorneboe?

  • @MrFredstt
    @MrFredstt Před 6 lety

    Great video

  • @sheamcc2
    @sheamcc2 Před 6 lety +17

    Have you read much into the occult by any chance

    • @burdenonsociety1968
      @burdenonsociety1968 Před 5 lety

      Yeah I know it's an old comment , and you probably won't answer, but I'd love to read about the occult , where should I start?

    • @Zach-bt2ky
      @Zach-bt2ky Před 4 lety

      burden on society Crowley?

  • @bobdobbs7000
    @bobdobbs7000 Před 5 lety

    Bookstores, garage sales and antique stores. Good luck.

  • @i.hold.vertigo2329
    @i.hold.vertigo2329 Před 6 lety

    Has anyone here read Don Delillo's Underworld? I'm close to half-way through and not particularly enjoying it. Was just wondering if there's an angle to approach it at that makes the book a bit easier to take in.

    • @TheMaxman96
      @TheMaxman96 Před 6 lety +1

      Zack Fishley Just power through it. I didn't realize the benefit of reading it until a few months had past and I saw how much it broadened my understanding of what it was like to live in America during the cold war

    • @Ryan_Ek2
      @Ryan_Ek2 Před 6 lety

      I stopped reading half-way through. I think DeLillo's tone-deaf dialogue writing killed it for me.

  • @marcelhidalgo1076
    @marcelhidalgo1076 Před 3 lety

    @17:40...he's eating his words lol

  • @thevintagepoet
    @thevintagepoet Před 2 lety

    You are an awesome dude

  • @MrFadeout53
    @MrFadeout53 Před 6 lety +2

    Have you ever read Bless Me, Ultima: By Rudolfo Anaya
    Check it out.

    • @brandongacer1850
      @brandongacer1850 Před 6 lety +1

      Great book. I really hope Cliff reviews it one day.

  • @pn5721
    @pn5721 Před 6 lety

    Black Swan Green is a really good book by David Mitchell. A young man's coming-of-age story. Here are some quotes (he later wrote Cloud Atlas):
    www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/2166883-black-swan-green

  • @humbertoguimaraes9235
    @humbertoguimaraes9235 Před 3 lety +1

    "Angst" by Graciliano Ramos

  • @dennisfrank6428
    @dennisfrank6428 Před 2 lety

    Check out Art Garfunkel’s reading list.
    INSANE

  • @antoniofranco9631
    @antoniofranco9631 Před 6 lety

    Hi, I love the channel. I would like you to read and make a review of "the king of Havana" or some book of the "dirty trilogy of Havana" by Pedro Juan Gutierrez. He is a Cuban author that I think you will like. Greetings from Mexico.

  • @capitonymical
    @capitonymical Před 2 lety

    This is a beautiful community.

  • @laki74
    @laki74 Před 6 lety +11

    I wonder if Cliff only reads Literary fiction? I'm sure he must have a secret stash of guilty pleasure books. Like an "Airport Novel" type book.

    • @bighardbooks770
      @bighardbooks770 Před 5 lety +1

      laki74 Crime fiction my guilty pleasure . . .

    • @silvasilvasilva
      @silvasilvasilva Před 4 lety

      Don't be so sure. Some people simply don't like airport books, as you call them. No hidden stacks or guilty reads. The same way others don't like literary fiction or poetry.

  • @athenassigil5820
    @athenassigil5820 Před 6 lety

    Blond Rasputin! Keep reading and reviewing!

  • @mielyresina
    @mielyresina Před 4 lety +1

    I do need a life changing book... I am particularly interested on people (complex) personalities right now.. any sugestión over here? 🤔🙄

  • @josegiovanni9310
    @josegiovanni9310 Před 6 lety +3

    American Pastoral by Philip Roth

  • @charmicarmicat2981
    @charmicarmicat2981 Před 4 lety

    Can anyone rec me some books that are similar to Twin peaks? I’ve read all the official books mark frost and Jennifer lynch wrote. I just want something with a similar atmosphere and narrative.

  • @SakariHapponen
    @SakariHapponen Před 4 lety +1

    Go read Leaving Las Vegas By John O'Brien

  • @fuzzydunlop4513
    @fuzzydunlop4513 Před 2 lety

    From here on out I’m making a vow to ask anyone with a book what they’re reading

  • @ryansweeney1258
    @ryansweeney1258 Před 6 lety +10

    I started my descent into literature, particularly American, Modernist, Postmodernist, Women's Literature, because I was sick of having to read stuffy English poets like Larkin and Hughes at school, (which produced some mediocre grades). This led me to Plath, Bukowski, Kerouac, and Ginsberg, then I discovered more based on who name dropped them as influences. Then I discovered more European avant garde work through Cliff and checking out interviews with intellectuals. Now this poor, lazy, average, student is the only person from my school to apply and get an interview at Oxford and is waiting on the results from that to study English Lit with a focus on American Modern/Postmodern lit. Reading fucking changes lives.

    • @joni1405
      @joni1405 Před 5 lety +1

      How on Earth could you find Philip Larkin stuffy? He wrote a poem that starts with the line "They fuck you up, your mom and dad" and started Aubade (which I think is his best poem) with "I sleep all day and get half drunk at night."
      Philip Larkin is essentially the polar opposite of stuffy

    • @joni1405
      @joni1405 Před 5 lety

      Sorry, Aubade actually starts "I work all day and get half drunk at night." It also has half a dozen of all time great lines like "Death is no different whined at than withstood" and referring to death as "the anesthetic from which none come round"