Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
KSNAP

KSNAP

Joined November 2019

Probably too into literary fiction for my own good. More book adventures at facebook.com/ksnapreads
reading now icon
The Kraus Project: Essays by Karl Kraus by Jonathan Franzen, Karl Kraus
reading now icon
Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon
review
KSNAP
Rainbow Stories | William T. Vollmann
Pickpick

Highly recommended to poets or anyone who loves experimental fiction. Dark and gritty with a high dose of empathy and sincerity, breathlessly beautiful prose. It's weird. It's amazing. It is strangely easy to read. Took me about a week to finish and I'm so glad I did.

review
KSNAP
Watership Down | Richard Adams
Pickpick

One of the most perfect books of all time. Feels like breathing fresh air. Ending will make you cry.

2 likes1 stack add
review
KSNAP
Strong Motion: A Novel | Jonathan Franzen
Mehso-so

Strong Motion is tough to get through even if you're a massive fan of Franzen. The characters are constantly abrasive, cruel, and unfeeling toward one another. The thriller plot isn't strong enough to hold up the action. The moving parts don't hang together terribly well. Still, it's unique in the Franzen canon, has a some really interesting voices going on, and I really liked the way Renee's written.

review
KSNAP
Mehso-so

This book wastes its potential by dwelling on everything except what's interesting about it. I felt annoyed by the dreamy Cormac McCarthy-lite haze of its prose. It was a decent way to kill an afternoon, but nothing I'd revisit.

review
KSNAP
Calypso | David Sedaris
This post contains spoilers
show me
Pickpick

HE FED HIS TUMOR TO A SNAPPING TURTLE AND I'LL NEVER GET OVER IT

review
KSNAP
Revelation Space | Alastair Reynolds
Pickpick

Revelation Space is possibly the most criminally underrated hard sci-fi book published in the last few decades. The series spans thousands of years, and yet you get to develop deep relationships with several of the characters. It's brilliant and feels less speculative than a lot of sci-fi.

review
KSNAP
Pickpick

David Foster Wallace is my favorite writer.
I like his essays better than his fiction.
This volume contains his greatest essay hits.
Just read it!

review
KSNAP
Purity | Jonathan Franzen
Pickpick

Purity is an incredible hall of mirrors where all characters form a web of commonalities and similarities, and just when the reader thinks she has a handle on all those things, one character comes right out and scoffs at the idea that these coincidences mean anything. Do they or don't they? Franzen does not tip his hand. He's a magician and this book might hold his best illusion yet.

review
KSNAP
Pickpick

This book is horrifying and dark and disturbing and beautiful and perfect. I spent an afternoon wishing I could put it down, and then it was over, and I wanted to recommend it to everybody, knowing they'd all resent me for making them read it.

review
KSNAP
How to Be Alone: Essays | Jonathan Franzen
Pickpick

“How could I have thought that I needed to cure myself in order to fit into the 'real' world? I didn't need curing, and the world didn't, either; the only thing that did need curing was my understanding of my place in it. Without that understanding - without a sense of belonging to the real world - it was impossible to thrive in an imagined one.”

review
KSNAP
Freedom: A Novel | Jonathan Franzen
Pickpick

Have you ever had a relationship with a person who has a victim complex and uses it to manipulate the people around them? Do you believe that depopulation is the best direct environmental action one can take? You're gonna love this book.

review
KSNAP
The Corrections | Jonathan Franzen
Pickpick

This is my favorite book of all time. Mandatory reading if you grew up in the American Midwest, as far as I'm concerned. Read it more than once -- the similarities between children and parents are the emotional backbone of the book and they get more and more pronounced on each reading.

review
KSNAP
Room to Dream | David Lynch, Kristine McKenna
Pickpick

David Lynch is weirdo goals. If you don't have a solid familiarity with his work, this book will probably lose you, but it's indispensable for fans.

review
KSNAP
This post contains spoilers
show me
Pickpick

Jonathan Franzen manages to make St. Louis feel claustrophobic. I love a good “nothing actually mattered“ ending -- so many people have their lives irreversibly damaged through Jammu's conspiracy, and the conspiracy itself fails. Everyone gets screwed! Amazingly gutsy anticlimax. I loved this book.

review
KSNAP
Bossypants | 80% DISCOUNT
Panpan

This is one of the most pointless, ego-driven books I've ever read. I hated almost every page. I've been told that the audiobook is excellent. Maybe choose that instead, if this appeals to you.

review
KSNAP
Infinite Jest | David Foster Wallace
Pickpick

1. Buy a paper copy and keep a pen handy.
2. Two bookmarks (maybe three, after about 250 pages) are helpful.
3. Just read it like any other book. There are dense parts. You'll get through them. Don't force it.
4. The endnotes are important.
5. Te Occidere Possunt Sed Te Edere Non Possunt Nefas Est.

7 likes2 stack adds
review
KSNAP
Mating in Captivity | Esther Perel
Pickpick

Mating in Captivity offers more questions than answers, but the questions are worth asking. On the surface, this book appears to primarily address difficulty with physical intimacy, but underneath that premise, the reader is invited to see eroticism as another language with which to communicate. Perel's a polyglot and her mastery of language adds poetry, making Mating in Captivity a breathless read.

blurb
KSNAP
The Kraus Project: Essays by Karl Kraus | Jonathan Franzen, Karl Kraus

I know I almost exclusively read books in styles that are tough to follow, but keeping track of the essay's thread while following the threads of the footnotes is presenting a challenge I didn't expect.

1 stack add
blurb
KSNAP
Gravity's Rainbow | Thomas Pynchon

Still pissed I couldn't find a fake octopus in time to complete my Slothrop costume for Halloween.

1 stack add
blurb
KSNAP
Rainbow Stories | William T. Vollmann

I've never read a book like this and that makes the experience intoxicating and a little sad.

1 stack add