jessicathehun
jessicathehun t1_j6js26o wrote
Reply to After 2 years, my wife finished the mural on our fence made completely of recycled plastic lids. by houseofbacon
Wow, that’s some talent!
jessicathehun t1_j6iqxrr wrote
Reply to comment by mmillington in Have you ever felt this when reading a book? by RVG990104
You might need to beef up your rhetorical skills, friend. Come back when you’re interested in having a good faith debate! Until then, seriously, you can just move on with your day; this thread is a conversational dead end.
jessicathehun t1_j6inhed wrote
Reply to comment by mmillington in Have you ever felt this when reading a book? by RVG990104
Man, you’re taking this really personal.
jessicathehun t1_j6il7yo wrote
Reply to comment by mmillington in Have you ever felt this when reading a book? by RVG990104
I can’t be the first person to point out the preponderance of overeducated & overconfident white guys who got published in the 20th century, can I? Downvoting my opinion and implying I’m somehow unwell to hold it is a bit disrespectful. If you don’t agree, move on then.
jessicathehun t1_j6iikgt wrote
Reply to comment by mmillington in Have you ever felt this when reading a book? by RVG990104
Yeah, maybe I should have been more specific: “upper middle class 20th century white guy who had the privilege to gain a huge vocabulary and the opportunity to be paid to bang on and show off all the words he knows whether anyone wants to read them or not”
jessicathehun t1_j6e7loz wrote
Reply to comment by The_Red_Curtain in Have you ever felt this when reading a book? by RVG990104
I definitely see that point of view, but I was shocked at how much more fun it was when I shifted to the immersive experience. It was something about the vocabulary and structure, where it seemed every word and phrase was intended to make you feel something rather than think it. It helped that I had the lexicon to be able to capture the nuances without getting lost in analysis, too.
jessicathehun t1_j6e6p5g wrote
Reply to comment by RVG990104 in Have you ever felt this when reading a book? by RVG990104
I’ve known for a long time that this is an unpopular opinion! People hold these authors in very high esteem, probably explicitly due to how challenging it is to read their work.
I read a lot of classics and various styles of literature, and for me there’s a stark difference between an author who’s able to move me with a powerful story vs. one who seems to be writing mostly for themselves. I’m glad literature seems to have mostly gotten over that style. It was an interesting trend but thankfully an ephemeral one.
jessicathehun t1_j6b96rj wrote
Reply to comment by jessicathehun in Have you ever felt this when reading a book? by RVG990104
Oh, and I’ll echo someone else’s comment that this style of writing is also just kind of bad. I consider it sort of abusive to the reader. After Pynchon, I decided I never again needed to read some white guy banging on and showing off all the words he knows (sorry David Foster Wallace)
Edit: lol I forgot a basic rule: never tell book people you don’t like DFW
jessicathehun t1_j6b8mfd wrote
Yes, absolutely. I went through this reading Pynchon as well as James Joyce. The first time it happened was while reading Ulysses. I was struggling through it, trying hard to parse out the meanings and references… and then I just let go, stopped trying, and allowed the text to become like a sea of words I was floating on. I guess I believe that style of writing is meant to be instinctive and evocative, to make you feel, to activate your deeper instincts less so than your processing and analysis functions.
Could I tell you the plot of these books? No. Am I one of the few people I know who actually read them and didn’t give up in agony? Yes.
No idea what the authors would think of this approach, but it is truly a lovely experience! Glad you found your own way to connect and enjoy a very experimental text. Congratulations.
jessicathehun t1_j2jcoyy wrote
Reply to comment by slimreaper27 in Hoodoos at Chiricahua National Monument, Arizona [OC, Michael Kwok] (4032x2268) by CommonLurker2
Thank you!!!
jessicathehun t1_j2j6nzv wrote
Reply to Hoodoos at Chiricahua National Monument, Arizona [OC, Michael Kwok] (4032x2268) by CommonLurker2
What’s the difference between a hoodoo and a tufa?
jessicathehun t1_j0pdtwo wrote
Why is 40 the same color as 90? What does it mean when a location is brown?
jessicathehun t1_j6l2kdx wrote
Reply to comment by mmillington in Have you ever felt this when reading a book? by RVG990104
Bless your heart