(urth) If I already like ...
Antonin Scriabin
kierkegaurdian at gmail.com
Tue Apr 17 12:16:46 PDT 2012
Jack Vance and Borges are both on my radar. I actually have 10 or so of
Vance's novels (I grabbed whatever I could find after reading Wolfe's
praise in *The Castle of the Otter*) ... I am just not sure which to pick
up first. I think I have some middle installments of some of his series, I
will have to take inventory soon. Of course I am a big fan of Lewis ([?]),
the Space Trilogy was one of my favorites in my teenage years. Thanks for
the Nabokov recommend; I have never read anything by him, and now I have
all the more reason to!
On Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 3:08 PM, Jerry Friedman <jerry_friedman at yahoo.com>wrote:
> I strongly second the recommendation for Crowley, and I'd start with *Little,
> Big, *although he's never written anything bad since *Beasts*. For some
> reason Crowley put the climax of the Aegypt series in the third book, and
> described the fourth book as an "extended coda", if I remember correctly.
> It's still much better than *The Urth of the New Sun* in my opinion,
> though.
>
> It's not possible that you've read Wolfe, MacDonald, and Tolkien without
> reading C. S. Lewis, right?
>
> You might try Jack Vance, probably starting with "The Moon Moth". My
> reasons for disliking him are similar to my reasons for disliking Lafferty,
> which obviously don't apply for you, and Wolfe admires him greatly. He's
> another writer with an unflagging imagination.
>
> Borges of course. Start with the stories written from 1939 to 1949 (but
> not the Parodi stories).
>
> Which brings me to Nabokov, who as I occasionally say is the most Wolfean
> writer outside sf (or Wolfe is the most Nabokovian sf writer). *Pnin*and
> *Lolita* are his two classics in the literary tradition. *Pale Fire* (my
> favorite) has more fantasy. A fan of Lafferty might especially like *Invitation
> to a Beheading*.* * There were some interesting comments on two
> of Nabokov's short stories, "The Visit to the Museum" and "Details of a
> Sunset", on NABOKV-L today. If anyone here has read either of those, I'd
> be interested in their thoughts.
>
> Jerry Friedman
>
> *From:* Antonin Scriabin kierkegaurdian at gmail.com
> Looks great! I was actually paging through *Little, Big* the other day
> at a bookstore. It seemed interesting, I will definitely try out the
> Aegypt books soon. Wikipedia says it is a tetralogy, the most recent
> published in 2007 ... is it sort of an "Urth of the New Sun" thing, or does
> the fourth book follow right on the other three's heels?
>
> On Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 1:50 PM, Jordon Flato <jordonflatourth at gmail.com>wrote:
>
> John crowley for sure. The aegypt trilogy is top notch
>
> On Apr 17, 2012 10:47 AM, "Antonin Scriabin" <kierkegaurdian at gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
> Wolfe, Lafferty, Powers, MacDonald, and Tolkien, what else will I like?
> This email list has good taste, and I was wondering what other hidden
> authors you guys might enjoy, given preference for those mentioned. I
> initially discovered Lafferty through this list some time ago, for
> example. I know there has to be more!
>
>
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