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Neijia ([personal profile] nagia) wrote2009-06-15 06:54 pm

The Fifteen Books That Will Stick With Me For Life

Tagged by [personal profile] iamsosmart.


01. Out, Natsuo Kirino.

Perhaps the single most fucked-up thing I've ever read. Suffice to say: highly dystopian, grungy, gritty, dark, violent, and generally astounding. Three women who work in a bento factory help a fourth, who just killed her husband, and then turn cadaver disposal into a business. ALL WHILE BEING STALKED BY A SERIAL KILLER.

And, because it's so fucked up, it will never, ever, ever, ever leave me.

02. Howl's Moving Castle, Diana Wynne Jones

I admit that I saw the movie first (on the night my grandmother died, no less), but I love the book more than the movie. The book is more detailed, is a little harder to approach. It's less a love story and more an actual adventure, and Howl comes across very, very differently. (And, I, for one, prefer Book!Howl.)

03. Night Watch, Terry Pratchett

The first book I ever read by Terry Pratchett. The one I love most. I have owned three copies. The cool thing about it is that every time you read it, you notice something new. And the stable time loop is brain-breaky but awesome.

04. Night, Elie Wiezel

Read this senior year of high school. Have re-read it every single summer since. Will probably continue to do so until the day I die.

05. Neverwhere, by Neil Gaiman

The very first thing by Neil Gaiman that I could get my hands on.

06. The Rose of the Prophet trilogy by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman

Okay, so as a little girl I saw the movie Aladdin. It was apparently a formative experience on my sense of aesthetics.

So was this. It's set on another world, with one of those "all the gods are real and give a shit and are fueled by belief" plots, only the majority of it is set in a legendary Arabia ripoff. But it's cool, and Auda Ibn Jad was just... he's stuck with me, all these years. Even when I'm not recalling things Khardan and Zohra and Matthew (yes, there's a reason one of those names is not like the others) were doing, I've got this memory of Auda in my head and if Bata comes across half as creepily awesome and cool as Auda, I will jizz in my pants, seriously.

07. The Gates of Twilight, by Paula Volsky

It's a fantasy remix of the British colonization of India, with romance, flying scorpions, dimensional travel, and unfathomable gods. Yet another formative influence on my aesthetic sense.

08. The Picture of Dorian Grey, Oscar Wilde

09. House of Leaves, Mark Z. Danielewski

Mostly sticking around because it hurt my brain. I shouldn't even have to tell you what this book contains, you should already know. I will say that it doesn't terrify me as much as it seems to terrify everyone else, but then again, I look at HoL as a challenge and not a book.

10. The Teahouse Fire, Ellis Avery

Fantastically researched. A gorgeous picture of Kyoto in the mid-Meiji era. AND LESBIANS.

11. The Dark Lord of Derkholme, Diana Wynne Jones

12. The Diary of Anne Frank

13. Their Eyes Were Watching God, Zora Neal Hurston

Not sticking around in the good way. There are pages of this book that have been burned into my brain. I will forever hate you for this, $Freshman_Comp_Prof!

14. The Sandman: The Kindly Ones, Neil Gaiman

SHUT UP IT COUNTS. I think why this book would never leave my brain should be self-evident.

15. A Clockwork Orange, Anthony Burgess
novel_machinist: (Default)

[personal profile] novel_machinist 2009-06-15 11:26 pm (UTC)(link)
You may like BLACK NOVEL (WITH ARGENTINES) by Luisa Valenzuela and The Book of Franza by Ingrid Bachmann. :) Based on your reading list. Do you have a goodreads?
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[personal profile] novel_machinist 2009-06-16 04:23 am (UTC)(link)
The Book of Franza made me cry. It's about a woman on her way to Egypt to die. But the way that she ... feels like she isn't a human because of her gender. It really sort of grasps this utter feeling of loneliness, helplessness, and the desire to be heard. It makes it even more potent because it's unfinished (She passed away before finishing it).

Black Novel (With Argentines) Is a little more lively, but not much. It still embraces a nihilistic sort of emotion. Two artists who escape the violence in South America and move to the United States. They try to survive and it's also very touching.

The Book of Franza is German while the other is South American. I studied the period after world war two in both regions in literature and it's amazing how similar they are. While German literature has a finality to it, there's pressure behind the South American.

Yet both are so bleak that it's beautiful.

Of course... I'm a huge literature geek. XD