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/lit/ - Literature


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File: 10 KB, 194x260, cute.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
7892701 No.7892701 [Reply] [Original]

Where should I start with this ugly fuck?

>> No.7892707

>>7892701
just don't

>> No.7892708

Working the shaft.

>> No.7892709
File: 268 KB, 682x1024, Michel_Houellebecq_14936.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
7892709

The Elementary Particles.

>> No.7892711

>>7892701
In chronological order, even he said so, that it's the best to appreciate his work (and more generally any author's work)

>> No.7892714

>>7892707
why not pal? i go to a fervently SJW college and am in need of something edgy and contrarian. not necessarily to agree with, but to be exposed to something else.
>>7892709
i was between that and whatever, thanks for the tip
>>7892708
i always start with the balls.

>> No.7892716

Whatever, Elementary Particles or Soumission.

>> No.7892725

>>7892711
>>7892716
thanks for the tips pals. i'll probably start with whatever, in that case.

>> No.7892734

>>7892725
FYI, the original title is, literally "Extension of the Domain of the Struggle" or perhaps more figuratively, "Widening of the Battleground."

Not sure why the translator is a retard but I don't think his works should lose that much in translation.

>> No.7892750

>>7892701

Anyone here who has read a lot of his work? I've read only Submission and The Map and the Territory, and was fairly underwhelmed by both. Might have been poor translations, might be he just isn't for me. But are some of his other books notably better?

>> No.7892758

I liked "The Possibility of an Island" and "Whatever"

>> No.7892769

>>7892750
Whatever and Elementary Particles are probably his best.

Map and the Territory is okay.

>> No.7892785

>>7892750
Elementary Particles is his best. After that you can give up.

>> No.7892861

Elementary Particles/Whatever: sexual politics stuff
Map and the Territory: Borgesian musings about art, self-parody, and a bizarre police procedural thing
Soumission: Huysmans, European politics, Islam

Take your pick.

>> No.7892904

y'all think I should read Celine first to get a taste of angry French writing?

>> No.7892942

>>7892904
Not a prerequisite in any way, but definitely worth a read.

>> No.7893994

>>7892701
JUSTE

>> No.7894068

>>7892734
>T-Thank you for your time, Mr Houellebecq. -- One last thing: how would you title the book in English?
>Whatever.

>> No.7895378

>>7894068
>french gruffle

>> No.7895423

Haha jeezus looks like a home alone robber after he sprung the traps

>> No.7895817

>>7894068
No, it was literally the translator being "Well, like, the protagonist is, like, apathetic, so I called it 'Whatever.'"

Fucking retard.

>> No.7895925
File: 28 KB, 535x792, where did it all go so wrong.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
7895925

How did he go from this...

to OP?

>> No.7895963
File: 32 KB, 560x345, michel et clément.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
7895963

>>7895925
His dog died.

>> No.7896292

>>7895963
that's a cute dog

>> No.7897061
File: 568 KB, 1296x730, h.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
7897061

>>7896292
>'This is one of the difficulties of fame and travelling,' says Houellebecq. 'It is always hard to abandon him.' Houellebecq reminds me that this is the same breed as the Queen's dogs ('I am more English than the English', he jokes lamely). Then, for a brief moment, he looks genuinely near to tears, raising his doe eyes heavenward. 'The love of a dog is a pure thing,' he says. 'He gives you a trust which is total. You must not betray it.'