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Hieronymous Alloy
Jan 30, 2009


Why! Why!! Why must you refuse to accept that Dr. Hieronymous Alloy's Genetically Enhanced Cream Corn Is Superior to the Leading Brand on the Market!?!




Morbid Hound
Welcome goonlings to the Awful Book of the Month!
In this thread, we choose one work of literature absolute crap and read/discuss it over a month. If you have any suggestions of books, choose something that will be appreciated by many people, and has many avenues of discussion. We'd also appreciate if it were a work of literature complete drivel that is easily located from a local library or book shop, as opposed to ordering something second hand off the internet and missing out on a week's worth of reading. Better yet, books available on e-readers.

Resources:

Project Gutenberg - http://www.gutenberg.org

- A database of over 17000 books available online. If you can suggest books from here, that'd be the best.

SparkNotes - http://www.sparknotes.com/

- A very helpful Cliffnotes-esque site, but much better, in my opinion. If you happen to come in late and need to catch-up, you can get great character/chapter/plot summaries here.

:siren: For recommendations on future material, suggestions on how to improve the club, or just a general rant, feel free to PM me. :siren:

Past Books of the Month

[for BOTM before 2015, refer to archives]

2015:
January: Italo Calvino -- Invisible Cities
February: Karl Ove Knausgaard -- My Struggle: Book 1.
March: Knut Hamsun -- Hunger
April: Liu Cixin -- 三体 ( The Three-Body Problem)
May: John Steinbeck -- Cannery Row
June: Truman Capote -- In Cold Blood
(Hiatus)
August: Ta-Nehisi Coates -- Between the World and Me
September: Wilkie Collins -- The Moonstone
October:Seth Dickinson -- The Traitor Baru Cormorant
November:Svetlana Alexievich -- Voices from Chernobyl
December: Michael Chabon -- Gentlemen of the Road

2016:
January: Three Men in a Boat (To say nothing of the Dog!) by Jerome K. Jerome
February:The March Up Country (The Anabasis) of Xenophon
March: The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco
April: Plain Tales from the Hills by Rudyard Kipling
May: Temple of the Golden Pavilion by Yukio Mishima
June:The Vegetarian by Han Kang
July:Lud-in-the-Mist by Hope Mirrlees
August: Pale Fire by Vladimir Nabokov
September:Siddhartha by Herman Hesse
October:Right Ho, Jeeves by P.G. Wodehouse
November:Kitchen Confidential by Anthony Bourdain
December: It Can't Happen Here by Sinclair Lewis

2017:
January: Mother Night by Kurt Vonnegut
February: The Plague by Albert Camus
March: The Dispossessed by Ursula K. LeGuin
April: The Conference of the Birds (مقامات الطیور) by Farid ud-Din Attar
May: I, Claudius by Robert Graves
June: Salt: A World History by Mark Kurlansky
July: Ficcionies by Jorge Luis Borges
August: My Life and Hard Times by James Thurber
September: The Peregrine by J.A. Baker
October: Blackwater Vol. I: The Flood by Michael McDowell
November: Aquarium by David Vann
December: Sir Gawaine and the Green Knight [Author Unknown]

2018
January: Njal's Saga [Author Unknown]
February: The Sign of the Four by Arthur Conan Doyle
March: Lincoln in the Bardo by George Saunders

Current:

Twenty Days of Turin by Giorgio de Maria

Book available here:
https://www.amazon.com/Twenty-Days-Turin-Novel-ebook/dp/B01HDSU0QU

About the book:

quote:

Named one of NPR's Best Books of 2017
Written during the height of the 1970s Italian domestic terror, a cult novel, with distinct echoes of Lovecraft and Borges, makes its English-language debut.

In the spare wing of a church-run sanatorium, some zealous youths create "the Library," a space where lonely citizens can read one another’s personal diaries and connect with like-minded souls in "dialogues across the ether." But when their scribblings devolve into the ugliest confessions of the macabre, the Library’s users learn too late that a malicious force has consumed their privacy and their sanity. As the city of Turin suffers a twenty-day "phenomenon of collective psychosis" culminating in nightly massacres that hundreds of witnesses cannot explain, the Library is shut down and erased from history. That is, until a lonely salaryman decides to investigate these mysterious events, which the citizenry of Turin fear to mention. Inevitably drawn into the city’s occult netherworld, he unearths the stuff of modern nightmares: what’s shared can never be unshared.

An allegory inspired by the grisly neo-fascist campaigns of its day, The Twenty Days of Turin has enjoyed a fervent cult following in Italy for forty years. Now, in a fretful new age of "lone-wolf" terrorism fueled by social media, we can find uncanny resonances in Giorgio De Maria’s vision of mass fear: a mute, palpitating dread that seeps into every moment of daily existence. With its stunning anticipation of the Internet—and the apocalyptic repercussions of oversharing—this bleak, prescient story is more disturbingly pertinent than ever.

Brilliantly translated into English for the first time by Ramon Glazov, The Twenty Days of Turin establishes De Maria’s place among the literary ranks of Italo Calvino and beside classic horror masters such as Edgar Allan Poe and H. P. Lovecraft. Hauntingly imaginative, with visceral prose that chills to the marrow, the novel is an eerily clairvoyant magnum opus, long overdue but ever timely.

http://books.wwnorton.com/books/The-Twenty-Days-of-Turin/


chernobyl kinsman posted:

do the twenty days of turin. it's big-dick lit enough to appease most of the child loving thread and it has enough trans-dimensional monsters to satisfy the genre fiction contingent


About the Author

quote:

È stato critico teatrale per L'Unità dal 1958 al 1965.[1] Nel 1958 fondò con Italo Calvino, Sergio Liberovici, Emilio Jona e Michele Straniero il gruppo musicale di avanguardia dei Cantacronache, un palese riferimento alla collaborazione fra il mondo della cultura e quello della canzone (negli stessi anni in Francia si univano personaggi e stili come Jean-Paul Sartre e Jacques Prévert nella generazione degli chansonniers). Il gruppo restò in attività quattro anni, dedicandosi al recupero della canzone politica e della Resistenza, producendo brani della tradizione anarchica, di quella socialista e persino di quella giacobina italiana.[2]. Il suo amore per il sarcasmo fu una delle anime del gruppo.[3]

Nel 1963 scrisse per il teatro Stabile di Torino Apocalisse su misura, una commedia in tre atti.[4].

Negli anni Settanta ha lavorato per la televisione (suo il testo Prova d'appello per Sipario)[5] e al quindicinale Nuova società.

Nel 2017, otto anni dopo la sua morte, fece scalpore la notizia di un'edizione americana del suo romanzo Le 20 giornate di Torino tradotta da Ramon Glazov e pubblicata dalla casa editrice Norton che, prima di allora, aveva pubblicato un solo autore italiano, Primo Levi. Il giornalista australiano era stato impressionato da quel libro il cui stile mescolava Edgar Allan Poe a Lovecraft e che sembrava predire, con quarant'anni di anticipo, la creazione di Facebook. Nel romanzo, infatti, si descriveva la Biblioteca, un luogo nel quale i cittadini potevano portare uno scritto in cui descrivevano sé stessi, e dove potevano andare a leggere le biografie e i desideri lasciati da altri.[6]

https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giorgio_De_Maria


Themes


Pacing

Read as thou wilt is the whole of the law.

Please bookmark the thread to encourage discussion.

References and Further Reading


Final Note:

Thanks, and I hope everyone enjoys the book!

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Cloks
Jan 31, 2013

by Azathoth
I've finished the first five chapters and there's nothing too horrifying yet but it's all vaguely unsettling. It reminds me a lot of Junji Ito's stories.

It also seems to anticipate modern social networks really well, with the idea of anonymous contributors being stalked by anonymous followers, the outpouring of private emotion to a public audience and (what currently seems to be) the pillorying of extremely deviant members.

I don't recommend reading this late at night.

Guy A. Person
May 23, 2003

Went to place a hold on this and someone did literal seconds before me, so I assume that can't be a coincidence and there's another Chicago library using goon in here. In any case I already have a bunch of holds I need to pick up this week so I am not sure - even if this miraculously gets to my library before the end of the month - that I'll actually be able to participate in discussion. But it looks really interesting anyway so I'm going to read it when it's available, and bookmark the thread to come back to it and see if there's any interesting discussion.

MockingQuantum
Jan 20, 2012



Cloks posted:

I've finished the first five chapters and there's nothing too horrifying yet but it's all vaguely unsettling. It reminds me a lot of Junji Ito's stories.

I was already leaning towards participating this month but this is like the most glowing recommendation for me. I'm in for sure.

Minenfeld!
Aug 21, 2012



I bought this on indiebound because it seems cool but it's not even shipped yet. I'm sad.

Asclepius
Mar 20, 2011
Even though I normally only lurk TBB, and very rarely at that, this piqued my interest. I picked it up last night and read maybe 1/3rd or so in complete darkness, by myself. Initially I thought the only truly unsettling thing would be the seemingly forced ragged right margin on the Kindle version, but even getting a short way through, the story itself is definitely stirring something in me. I had probably the worst nightmare I can ever recall once I fell asleep.

I don't know much about literature, or what does or does not make something like this literature, since I'm into trashy genre fiction, but I'm enjoying this a lot. Can't wait to finish it tonight.

chernobyl kinsman
Mar 18, 2007

a friend of the friendly atom

Soiled Meat

Asclepius posted:

Even though I normally only lurk TBB, and very rarely at that, this piqued my interest. I picked it up last night and read maybe 1/3rd or so in complete darkness, by myself. Initially I thought the only truly unsettling thing would be the seemingly forced ragged right margin on the Kindle version, but even getting a short way through, the story itself is definitely stirring something in me. I had probably the worst nightmare I can ever recall once I fell asleep.

I don't know much about literature, or what does or does not make something like this literature, since I'm into trashy genre fiction, but I'm enjoying this a lot. Can't wait to finish it tonight.

welcome, brother

I finished it yesterday and still have a lingering sense of unease. i'll post more about it once i process it a bit, but man, scenes like the voices recorded on tape really conjure nebulous fear and an unsettling atmosphere for me

also i would suggest not reading the introduction until after you read the book, but then definitely reading the introduction. it makes explicit a lot of the allegory.

i haven't read the short stories at the end yet

MockingQuantum
Jan 20, 2012



chernobyl kinsman posted:

also i would suggest not reading the introduction until after you read the book, but then definitely reading the introduction. it makes explicit a lot of the allegory.

Thanks for pointing this out. I tend to wait to read introductions until finishing the book (dear lord, so many reprints/anniversary editions/etc just give away the whole loving plot of a book in the first paragraph) but on some translations especially I worry I won't have enough base context going in.

Idaholy Roller
May 19, 2009
Yeah definitely don’t real the translators’ bit until after.

Mel Mudkiper
Jan 19, 2012

At this point, Mudman abruptly ends the conversation. He usually insists on the last word.
I will order this book despite my intended boycott due to lack of babyfucker out of respect for my comrade in arms chernobyl

OscarDiggs
Jun 1, 2011

Those sure are words on pages which are given in a sequential order!
It finally arrived. I'll probably still go through it pretty slowly though because horror isn't really mt thing.

Minenfeld!
Aug 21, 2012



My copy arrived. I'll finish up my book on the Mexican-American war this weekend and then get started.

Mel Mudkiper
Jan 19, 2012

At this point, Mudman abruptly ends the conversation. He usually insists on the last word.
It's an extremely pedestrian complaint, but I always have an issue with novels where normal people do not at all talk like normal people

For example, this line of dialog from the protagonist.

"You mean, they seemed like premonitions of a battle that wouldn't have men as its protagonists, but other things?"

I feel like that is not something you can lay on the translator because I cannot imagine it came out sounding more natural in its native language.

anilEhilated
Feb 17, 2014

But I say fuck the rain.

Grimey Drawer
I don't know, I feel like it adds to the sense of distortion of the world, makes it feel even more alien.

chernobyl kinsman
Mar 18, 2007

a friend of the friendly atom

Soiled Meat
Yeah most all of the dialogue is stilted and unnatural, I took as a feature instead of a bug

Mel Mudkiper
Jan 19, 2012

At this point, Mudman abruptly ends the conversation. He usually insists on the last word.
Oh I get that its deliberate, its just something of a stylistic turn-off for me.

It makes the characters feel more like messages and less like people.

Tim Burns Effect
Apr 1, 2011

im only like 4 chapters in so far but man there really is a @dril tweet for everything

https://twitter.com/dril/status/942511197215252480

Tim Burns Effect fucked around with this message at 09:27 on Apr 18, 2018

poisonpill
Nov 8, 2009

The only way to get huge fast is to insult a passing witch and hope she curses you with Beast-strength.


https://twitter.com/dril/status/980176932619866112

Red Alert 2 Yuris Revenge
May 8, 2006

"My brain is amazing! It's full of wrinkles, and... Uh... Wait... What am I trying to say?"
I finished this last night, and I'm going to let it stew in my head for a bit.

This book did dredge up a lot of residual anxiety from my former job as an investigator for child protective services in rural Texas. Some of the (more mild) stuff that goes on isn't too far off of what I actually experienced.

Down With People
Oct 31, 2012

The child delights in violence.
Finally started reading this and I know like everyone was talking about how the Library is the Internet but I really wasn't prepared for just how accurate it is.

I can only hope that sometime soon an invisible force will pick me up by the ankles and swing me into a tree, killing me instantly.

fridge corn
Apr 2, 2003

jerkin' my li'l weewee :)
Same

Also i just started reading this as well

Tim Burns Effect
Apr 1, 2011

The satire is pretty on the nose in this but you can tell it wasn't written by an american because it implies that the general populace is actually ashamed of its collective psychosis

tetrapyloctomy
Feb 18, 2003

Okay -- you talk WAY too fast.
Nap Ghost
poo poo, the month flew by. I'm going to try to start this weekend.

Down With People
Oct 31, 2012

The child delights in violence.
Finished it, great book. It's a remarkably prescient novel and not just from the whole 'Library = Twitter' thing. Definitely agree with the comparison to Ito. Related in a big way to the anonymous letter-writer living in the tenement that's just slowly filling with poo poo. Excellent recommendation from chernobyl.

Tim Burns Effect posted:

im only like 4 chapters in so far but man there really is a @dril tweet for everything

https://twitter.com/dril/status/942511197215252480

lmao

fridge corn
Apr 2, 2003

jerkin' my li'l weewee :)
Halfway through and it is real good. Chapter 7 gave me the heebie jeebies

chernobyl kinsman
Mar 18, 2007

a friend of the friendly atom

Soiled Meat

Down With People posted:

Finished it, great book. It's a remarkably prescient novel and not just from the whole 'Library = Twitter' thing.

some of the descriptions of the Library would be ham-handed sendups of social media if the book hadn't been written in 1976

cryptoclastic
Jul 3, 2003

The Jesus
This was a quick read, and very enjoyable. I totally agree with the sense of foreboding that everyone talks about throughout the novel. There was just something off the entire time that made me feel on edge as I read it.

MockingQuantum
Jan 20, 2012



Let's be real: who here hasn't wanted to rub the ointment of their soul all over someone's trousers?

Hieronymous Alloy
Jan 30, 2009


Why! Why!! Why must you refuse to accept that Dr. Hieronymous Alloy's Genetically Enhanced Cream Corn Is Superior to the Leading Brand on the Market!?!




Morbid Hound
Need suggestions for next month. Right now I'm thinking maybe it's time to do nonfiction again, maybe King Leopold's Ghost.

edit: i thought people would know this by now but please post like an actual sentence explaining why with any suggestions

Hieronymous Alloy fucked around with this message at 19:31 on Apr 23, 2018

chernobyl kinsman
Mar 18, 2007

a friend of the friendly atom

Soiled Meat
ready player one

Cloks
Jan 31, 2013

by Azathoth
Heckletooth 3

Berlin Alexanderplatz

City of Glass

I'll finish the current BOTM tonight and share my thoughts on it.

fridge corn
Apr 2, 2003

jerkin' my li'l weewee :)

chernobyl kinsman posted:

ready player one

the original or the fixed version?

UnbearablyBlight
Nov 4, 2009

I wish we had seen more of the contents of the Library, but I guess that's why I came away from the book feeling that I would be one of those dried out people wandering the streets at night. The tape recording scene will stay with me, as will the Millenarists' flyers, which to me were the most recognizable reference to the fascistic terror that the book is recalling (in Italian they warn the reader to take heed and mend their ways, while the Spanish translation commands to leave the city, run for your life, now not later). As I'm not familiar with Italian history, the rest of it didn't become apparent until I finished the book and went back to read the introduction.

The ending was the most Lovecraftian moment in the book, in that it was bad. Or maybe I just didn't get it.

The book also inspired me to try Robert Musil's Posthumous Papers of a Living Author. The little vignette pieces at the beginning were nice to read on a lazy, sunny Sunday, and The Blackbird was a great story. The monument piece is much more playful than it is depicted in the book, but it does invite you to imagine the monuments being frustrated and confused at their frozen state. It was a nice relaxing follow up to Turin, and I'm glad I read it.

Cloks
Jan 31, 2013

by Azathoth
I agree that the ending seemed discordant with the rest of the story - I think it would've been better if the plane hadn't landed and the sense of foreboding doom had been maintained. I am glad that I finished the book today rather than last week, as I just took several plane rides traveling alone.

That said, I really liked how much the last few chapters escalated the story. It really sped up when he started answering the letters and the quasi encounters with the monsters in his house were good.

It's absolutely eerie how well the book captures social media - the idea of being an unwitting pawn in a greater fight and being the casualty, the perverse interest in the mundane, the alienation and hatred of those who don't want to take part.

Is the play within the book a reference to The King in Yellow?

anilEhilated
Feb 17, 2014

But I say fuck the rain.

Grimey Drawer

Cloks posted:

Is the play within the book a reference to The King in Yellow?
That was my impression as well.

fridge corn
Apr 2, 2003

jerkin' my li'l weewee :)
i finished this but i don't really have anything to add that hasn't already been said other than i liked it and was glad it was recommended.

clamcake
Dec 24, 2012
I, too, finished it and enjoyed it. I have no unique comments. I agree with the readers who said it was more an overall eerie and foreboding mood. For me, as well, the story didn't really pick up steam in terms of weird fiction until the final chapters. I'm sure I'll appreciate the overall allegory of the twenty days when I read the translator's intro. Overall, it wasn't what I was expecting, but I'm glad I participated in reading.

thatdarnedbob
Jan 1, 2006
why must this exist?
I'm going to read this book again; earlier in the month I did not appreciate the writing style at all. It felt affectless and academic throughout, a sustained "bleh" of a novel. With a reread I might solidify my thoughts or reevaluate.

Bilirubin
Feb 16, 2014

The sanctioned action is to CHUG


drat sorry I missed this.

I read this book last year on the recommendation of my buddy who is getting me into horror. The scene where the protagonist visits the old dude with the dog still sticks with me. Also the scene of the folks gathered at the airport to see the off. Nice stuff! Its pretty low key but ramps things into an unsettling level well in my opinion.

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chernobyl kinsman
Mar 18, 2007

a friend of the friendly atom

Soiled Meat

Bilirubin posted:

I read this book last year on the recommendation of my buddy who is getting me into horror. The scene where the protagonist visits the old dude with the dog still sticks with me. Also the scene of the folks gathered at the airport to see the off. Nice stuff! Its pretty low key but ramps things into an unsettling level well in my opinion.

yeah the recordings being played from the unexplained egg device is a brilliant scene

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