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#im due for a re-read of the classic novel but
betasuppe · 2 years
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(Same anon from yesterday that said Ram was baby.)
I thought they were going to revive him somehow, too! I kept waiting for there to be a moment where they stumble across Ram’s data somewhere and bring him back while looking for Tron after they think he’d died. I feel robbed.
Do you know what we should have gotten? We should have gotten resistance fighters Yori and Ram, fighting against Clu and looking for ways to either get Tron back from under his control, or for Flynn’s location. Or they could already be working with Flynn to keep him in the loop about Clu’s plans! No one can tell me Yori wouldn’t have adored Quorra! Why didn’t we get this!? OR WHAT ABOUT CORRUPTED YORI AS ONE OF THE SIRENS THAT DRESSES SAM IN THE ARMORY?! Double agent Ram with a new name, working in Castor’s bar and helping to keep Flynn and Quorra safe! I have so many people to bite for not giving us any of this.
We were cheated out of Grid Ram and Grid Yori and I am MAD about it!
-Ram anon
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Ram anon, I feel equal parts very glad you must've seen my message before I deleted it for being to rambly, but also part embaressed as hell for doing so in the first place at that! x000000
But yes YES you & I are on the same wavelength! I was so hopeful we'd see copy/transferred versions of Ram & Yori both appear in Uprising or Legacy & it's still such a huge L that they never brought either of these beautiful programs back into the fray 😭😭😭
Like god damn, just imagining them as secret agents working undercover in Flynn's name as two of his closest allies during the fight against the MCP. Why did we not get this, I seriously do not understand!!!! By all means, Tron should've convinced Flynn to rezz Ram back to life & transfer him & Yori over because also????
Tron leaving his beloved behind???? Even if he's a copy or a clone, I don't care!!! Yori meant the world to him & it still kills me that they were otherwise completely forgotten.
But listen, for you & when I get some free time lol, I'm drawing both Grid Ram & Yori hugging the hell out of Rinzler, whether he likes it or not [hint: he doooooo...]. Because this is a hill I've been standing on for years & I will GLADLY join side by side with you in making it our own canon 😤😤😤😤😤
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quidfree · 11 months
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Hello!!! so I love your story Sober II… I was re-reading it back to back with TSH and the way you wrote them felt so true to Tartt’s characterization of them I was absolutely floored to how you captured the essence of the characters in your writing and your extension to their dynamic.
I have a question about your own personal head-canons between the two because I also read your spin off fic of sober II and found myself wondering who you think is the more physically affectionate of the two? I get the feeling that both your Francis and Richard kind of shy away from showing the other affection, or at least quite hesitant in doing so. From what you’ve written I feel like it’s Francis because of little moments like him placing his feet on Richards legs when they’re both on the couch… but in my re-read it’s Richard usually reaching for Francis, or Richard keeping Francis’ hands on him out of instinct. And that bit where they’re in their 40s and Richard suddenly becomes paranoid about how close they were in front of his students. Anyway, sorry for the tangent but I’m simply curious about who you think is the more affectionate of the two!
Also, don’t laugh at me but when you mentioned Anne Carson in your story I fell into a spiral of purchasing a few of her novels and translations and now I’m obsessed. She’s pretty popular but she’s never really be on my own personal radar, so thanks for that!
ahh thanks so much anon- and what, i’m delighted you discovered anne carson through me, not laughable at all!
that’s an interesting question and your analysis is good haha- made me sit and think about my subconscious choices in writing them. i think you’re right that i don’t necessarily see them as affectionate with each other from jump, due to all of richard’s sexuality hangups and francis’ weird relationship to physical affection.
in my head francis is definitely more touchy but it’s like, following a specific set of rules- he’s flirtatiously touchy (see: initiating all his hookups), and casual with the touches if you’re an unthreatening figure in his life (his mother, camilla, etc), but i feel like bc richard is a bit of a complicated situation as of post-canon he’s more withdrawn with him than he might otherwise be (and might have been back in early hampden when he gave less of a shit about richard and also was prodding at him to see if his gaydar was right). he has a lot of walls in place mixed in w his sexual traumas (childhood and otherwise). altho he does tend towards softer than richard, what with the blanket coverings and such.
richard’s thing is 1) he’s the outsider, so he’s more yearning for other people to bring him in than secure in reaching out 2) Men are not for Touching. hes so happy to be part of the pile of limbs in the backseat or get his hair ruffled or hand held or whatever but even in hampden i don’t recall him initiating that very often except when his emotions just overpower him (see the camilla kisses). that said, to your point, i think especially w the benefit of their history and also the traumatic losses they suffered, richard is very reachy- the whole sober ii thing is like. the kind of panicked / instinctive motion to keep what’s left of his hampden days with him. and how that melts into holding onto francis specifically.
anyway they both have that going on. richard is probably more classically touch-starved? but they’re both more comfortable with sex than other touch from what we see- like, it is kind of ironic that the day francis comes to hook up with richard seeking that connection to distract from murder hell is Literally on the heels of richard seeking out a random girl to do the same thing with. they are soo.
they grow into it tho. francis starts it off bc hes like oh right this is someone im hooking up w now so i can do x y and z. but richard’s probably first to go sort of, ah, romantic about it, which then sends francis skittering back a bit. i have a lot of Thoughts abt their physical scars & how those play in.
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sampagnereads · 7 years
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twenty-seventeen was a great reading year for me. as far as i can remember, it’s the year within which i read, not only the most books, but also the most books i thoroughly enjoyed. through the year, my reading was pretty consistent, except for the month of november, when i read... zero books. anyhow, i read a lot of great books this year, so i thought i’d do a lil top 17! hope you folks enjoy this, and that you’ll find some book recommendations through this list! below the cut, you can find my top 17 books of 2017!
17. just kids, by patti smith.
just kids is patti smith’s memoir, but also her first book of prose. it talks about patti smith’s relationship with robert mapplethorpe, and explores new york city and the chelsea hotel within the late sixties and seventies.
this book is the first book i read in 2017, and i feel like it was the perfect way to start the year. not only was patti smith’s writing gorgeous, but this book also made me feel things that i’m not used to feeling. it motivated me to read and write again and, without it, i doubt i would have had such a good reading year.
16. wild beauty, by anna-marie mclemore.
wild beauty is a tale of magical realism about the nomeovildes women, who have the ability to grow flowers from the earth, as they tend the gardens of la pradera. the problem? they can’t leave the gardens, and whenever they fall in love with someone, said person ends up disappearing. then, one day, a strange boy suddenly appears in the gardens.
going into this book, i had extremely high expectations, and you’ll understand why as you finish reading this list. still, though i didn’t enjoy this book as much as the other book i read from anna-marie mclemore, i thoroughly enjoyed it. it was purely magical and whimsical and wonderful. honestly, i’d willingly read a grocery list if anna-marie mclemore wrote it. because her writing? wow.
15. little and lion, by brandy colbert. 
little and lion tells the story of suzette, a black, jewish, bisexual girl, as she comes home from boarding school, where she was sent after her brother was diagnosed with bipolar disorder. this book doesn’t shy away from showing things such as racism, micro-agressions, mental health problems and discovering one’s sexuality. 
i’m not usually the biggest contemporary fan, but this book simply blew me away. i completely adored the writing style, and fell in love with suzette as early as the first chapter. i also loved loved loved the fact that this book showed that real family doesn’t mean biological family, and that though suzette’s father and brother were technically her stepfather and stepbrother, they were as much family to her as her biological mother was. this book was beautiful, and i can’t recommend it enough. 
14. the handmaid’s tale, by margaret atwood. 
this book is a hard one to explain, but i’ll do my best any way. the handmaid’s tale is set in a much too realistic dystopian world in which people have very specific roles, especially women. in the story, we follow a woman whose main role is to give a rich couple a baby.
i had heard a lot about margaret atwood in the past, especially being a canadian, but i never thought i’d enjoy her writing as much as i did. whilst this wasn’t an easy read, it was an important one, and felt a little too realistic to my taste. it might be a dystopian novel, but it also has a very strong feminist message that is quite important, especially considering the state of the world right now. really, i 100% recommend reading this book.
13. the secret history, by donna tartt. 
another one that’s hard to explain without giving too much away. basically, this book is about a group of classics students who get a bit too wild and have to deal with the consequences.
i’m going to be honest here: i expected to adore this book, but i ended up only loving it. i think my expectations might have been too high for it, and i ended up being a bit disappointed. still, i thoroughly enjoyed it, even though i wasn’t the biggest fan of the protagonist. the writing’s gorgeous, and the characters are simply fascinating.
12. vicious, by v. e. schwab. 
vicious tells the story of two men at two different points in their lives. the first one, when they’re in university and working on a thesis about how to gain superpowers. the second one, ten years later when one of them gets out of jail to go after the other one. 
i read the shades of magic series by v. e. schwab earlier this year, and though i loved it, i wasn’t as impressed as some people were. therefore, i didn’t have the highest expectations going into vicious. and oh boy, was i wrong. thing is, i adored this book. i love stories about heroes and villains, especially when powers are involved, which is exactly what this book is about. the exploration of good vs evil is simply fascinating within this novel, and i absolutely can’t wait to read its sequel.
11. three dark crowns & one dark throne, by kendare blake. 
i know i’m kind of cheating by putting in two books, but they’re in the same series, so it’s okay. i won’t summarize the second book to avoid spoiling anything, but here’s the summary of the first one: on a matriarchal island where magic exists, every queen gives birth to triplets, and is then sent away. those triplets are raised on different parts of the island, with different abilities, and are expected to fight each other to the death when they turn sixteen to determine who will become the next queen.
i had heard not so good things about three dark crowns, and was therefore hesitant to go into it, but i’m oh so glad that i gave it a shot. i loved how slow-paced and character driven the first book was, and though the second book was a little more action-packed, i liked it just as much. i loved all the characters and how different they were, and the politics system within the island simply fascinated me. i honestly can’t wait for the next book in this series, and i recommend it to everyone who likes character-driven fantasy.
10. illuminae & gemina, by amie kaufman & jay kristoff. 
the illuminae files is a series of science-fiction books set in space, where a big corporation went against a small planet. it’s told in a mixed-media format filled with files, ims and emails, and follows different characters in each book.
to be fair, illuminae was mainly a cover buy for me, and i’m oh so glad the cover drew me in because wow. i couldn’t put these books down when i picked them up, and i thoroughly fell in love with the characters and the story. it took me a little while to get into the original format, but once i did, i thoroughly enjoyed it. if you like science-fiction, i definitely recommend you read those books. 
09. more than this, by patrick ness.
more than this tells the story of a boy who dies, and then wakes up naked in the abandoned town he spent his first few years in. i can’t tell you more without spoiling anything, and i recommend going into this book with as little information as possible. 
this was my first patrick ness book, and though i haven’t picked up anything else by him ever since, it’s a necessity that i do so sometime soon. i went into this book not expecting anything, and it blew my mind. though it could have been boring due to the story, it was thoroughly interesting, and i never saw any of the plot twists coming. it was one of the first books i read in 2017, and i’m very very glad i read it.
08. we are the ants, by shaun david hutchinson.
we are the ants tells the story of a teenage boy who has it pretty tough. his boyfriend killed himself the year before, he has a difficulty family life, and he keeps on getting abducted by aliens. then, these aliens give him the option of either saving the earth or letting it die, and we follow him as he makes that decision and then deals with it.
this book. this book! it made me laugh, it made me cry, it made me feel. i read it in two sittings, which almost never happens to me, and i’ll most probably re-read it eventually, which i also almost never do. though it’s far more contemporary than it is sci-fi, the sci-fi twist makes it stand out from other contemporaries, and i can’t recommend it enough. 
07. graceling realm, by kristin cashore.
graceling, the first book in the graceling realm, is set in a world where people with different coloured eyes have special abilities, and we follow a teenage girl with the ability to kill. the next two books are companion novels that follow different characters.
i picked this book up because it’s one of the few books my library owns in english. i didn’t pick it up expecting to dislike it, but i had very low expectations. good thing i was very very wrong. i devoured the first book, and absolutely couldn’t wait to get my hands on the next two. these stories got me back into high fantasy, and i’ll never stop being thankful for that.
06. saga volumes 1 to 7, by brian k vaughan & fiona staples. 
saga is a graphic novel series that follows two people from opposing sides of a war who fall in love and have a baby, and are then pursued by assassins as they weren’t supposed to do so.
this was so hyped on booktube that i believed it’d never meet my expectations. once again, i was wrong. i completely fell in love with this story and its characters as soon as i started reading the first volume in the series, and i then got my hands on the other ones because i simply couldn’t wait to find out what would happen. i simply adore these graphic novels, and i can’t recommend them enough.
05. crazy rich asians & china rich girlfriend, by kevin kwan. 
crazy rich asians follows rachel chu, a chinese-american economics professor, as she agrees to go on a summer long trip to singapore with her boyfriend, both to attend his best friend’s wedding and to meet his family. problem is, rachel has no clue that her boyfriend’s family is one of the richest ones in singapore, and that some of them definitely don’t approve of her.
i read crazy rich asians at the beach, and honestly? it was the perfect summer, beach-y read. these books read like amazing romcoms, and i devoured them like candy. seriously, they’re like candy. the characters are so fun to read about, and though their problems may seem silly at first, they’re still quite deep. 
04. before the devil breaks you, by libba bray.
before the devil breaks you is the third book in the diviners series, a book series about ghosts, murderers, and teens who have special abilities in 1920s new york city.
the social commentary in this book? amazing. the diversity? amazing. the story? amazing. the characters? amazing. everything about this book? amazing. libba bray is my favourite author, so i knew i’d love this book, but that didn’t stop me from being blown away by it. i laughed, i cried, and i never wanted it to end. this might be my favourite libba bray book yet, and that’s saying a lot since i’ve adored all that she’s written.
03. language of thorns, by leigh bardugo. 
language of thorns is a collection of illustrated, dark fairy tales from the grisha verse.
let’s be fair; this is leigh bardugo, so i knew i’d love it. however, i didn’t expect to love it even half as much as i did. once i picked this book up, i didn’t want to put it back down again. i love fairy tales, and this book definitely didn’t disappoint. even if you haven’t read anything else by leigh bardugo, i recommend reading this book, as i personally believe that it’s her best work yet.
02. homegoing, by yaa gyasi. 
homegoing follows the story of two sisters in ghana, one who’s sold into the slave trade, and the other one who marries a white man who works on the slave trade. we follow them at first, and then we follow their descendants, both in ghana and the united states. it explores the repercussions of slavery and racism.
this book wasn’t an easy read, but it was an important one. it was extremely well written, and thoroughly beautiful. i honestly don’t know what else to say, except that everyone and their mother needs to read this book because wow. just wow.
01. when the moon was ours, by anna-marie mclemore. 
when the moon was ours is a magical realism story about miel, a girl who grows roses out of her wrist, and sam, a boy who hangs up moons around town. there are also three sisters who people believe to be witches, a pumpkin patch where the pumpkins are turning into glass, and a glass coffin.
this was my favourite book of the year, and so far, my favourite book of all time. anna-marie mclemore’s writing is lush, beautiful and descriptive, and i can’t have enough of it. on top of that, the characters were loveable, and the plot was original. i just... i loved this book with all my heart, and i need everyone in the world to read it.
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10 inspiring female writers you need to read
New Post has been published on https://writingguideto.com/must-see/10-inspiring-female-writers-you-need-to-read/
10 inspiring female writers you need to read
As a response to Gay Taleses failure to name any inspirational female writers, we asked our readers to explain why and how these authors changed their lives
It is hard to believe that this piece is still necessary. We long for the day when we dont have to single out authors or anyone of any walk of life, for that matter for their gender, but here we are again. Last weekend, author and New Journalism father Gay Talese was asked to name women writers who had inspired him at a Boston University event, to which he answered: None. He reportedly went on to say that educated women dont want to hang out with anti-social people, according to what journalist Amy Littlefield, who was in the audience, told the Washington Post.
Undoubtedly, the hashtag #womengaytaleseshouldread started bubbling on Twitter, and plenty of suggestions were made here is a tiny selection from authors:
Neil Gaiman (@neilhimself) April 5, 2016
Women writers who inspired me: Enid Blyton, Richmal Crompton, PL Travers, Margaret Storey, Ursula LeGuin, Baroness Orczy, Diana Wynne Jones
Neil Gaiman (@neilhimself) April 5, 2016
More women writers who inspired me: Wilmar Shiras, Shirley Jackson, Lisa Tuttle, Mary Shelley, Anne Rice, Scheherazade, Judith Merrill…
Neil Gaiman (@neilhimself) April 5, 2016
Even More Women Writers Who Inspired Me: Joanna Russ, Hope Mirrlees, Joy Chant, Angela Carter, Madeleine LEngle, James Tiptree Jr, Kit Reed
John Scalzi (@scalzi) April 4, 2016
And Now, An Incomplete List of Women Writers Who Inspire Me: https://t.co/mxrYOFFE5r pic.twitter.com/7H8JaWgTgQ
roxane gay (@rgay) April 2, 2016
I hope no one expected Talese, who doesn’t wear jeans, to think well of women. IDGAF about his opinions.
We have celebrated female authors on the Books site before, but we contacted some of our readers and asked them to tell us which female writers shaped their lives. Here are 10 of the most mentioned authors, in no particular order, and what our readers had to say about them:
1. Doris Lessing (1919 – 2013)
Doris Lessing working at a typewriter, circa 1950. Photograph: Paul Popper/Popperfoto/Getty Images
In my twenties, I was a foreigner in London. Reading Lessings subtly brilliant short story Out of the Fountain, I had that Keatsian feeling of a new world coming into view. As I read my way into the books of this fellow exile, her range and depth emerged from psychological portraits in granular detail, to vast explorations of cataclysm and survival. Class, sex, old age, childhood, the inner workings of politics, the wilder shores of the psyche she embraced complexity and got under the skin of the human condition with piercing acuity. This was writing from the frontiers of experience and utterly mind-stretching.
The two landmarks, for me, are Shikasta, her monumental portrait of humanity, and The Four-Gated City (part of the Children of Violence series), Lessings visionary mapping of London and the no-mans-land between psychosis and sanity this book opened doors for me. Her understanding of resilience and transformation in the midst of upheaval is profound. In our obfuscating times, we continue to need that eye. barbkay.
Start with: The Golden Notebook Hailed as one of the key texts of the womens movement of the 1960s, this study of a divorced single mothers search for personal and political identity remains a defiant, ambitious tour de force, wrote Robert McCrum.
Further reading:
I was the cuckoo in the nest Writer Jenny Diski tells the story of how she lived with Lessing as a teenager
My hero: Doris Lessing by Margaret Drabble Doris would invite herself to lunch with me in Hampstead, when the mood took her. I never dared to say no
Doris Lessing in her own words on the Guardian books podcast
She helped change the way women are perceived, and perceive themselves by Guardian Review editor Lisa Allardice
2. Toni Morrison (born 1931)
Toni Morrison in a 1982 image. Photograph: Reg Innell/Toronto Public Library
When we asked readers for their favourite books by women, many replied with anything and everything written by Toni Morrison. Here are but a few.
Toni Morrisons Beloved is the best book I have ever read. A horror story in every sense. I re-read it as soon as I had finished it. Chilling, difficult, painful, but absolutely brilliant. afiercebadrabbit
Beloved. Its odd reading a book at which you are simultaneously repulsed at how you feel and yet you understand exactly why you feel that way. Shes a terrific writer. getebi
I love every word shes written, with Beloved at the top of my list. Im also sad to see few writers from non-Anglo Saxon cultures listed as there are so many superb writers from other traditions. The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy is my favourite book of all time, and I also adore Elif Shafak, whose fiction and essays as well as her talks are outstandingly fresh and insightful. Read The Flea Palace and The Bastard of Istanbul. spraos
Start with: Beloved If Beloved represents the terrible pain and suffering of a people whose very mother-love is warped by torture into murder, she is no thin allegory or shrill tract. This is a huge, generous, humane and gripping novel, wrote A S Byatt
Further reading:
Im writing for black people I dont have to apologise interview by Hermione Hoby
Tea with Toni Morrison, by SL Bridglal
Toni Morrison on her novels: I think goodness is more interesting
Her 1993 Nobel lecture
3. Ursula K Le Guin (born 1929)
The Earthsea trilogy is absolutely magnificent: poetry, wisdom, sadness, satisfaction, fantasy, realism. Far better dragons than Tolkiens or George RR Martins, far better written the whole shebang, except for humour. But then, Tolstoy didnt go in for jokes much either. She taught me that there is nothing wrong with life or with death: the one is to be delighted in, the other accepted Daniel Mccormick in Coatbridge, Scotland
The Earthsea books by Ursula K Le Guin, which as an adult I find have greater moral depth than Tolkien and are better written and more focused than George RR Martins. QuesoManchego
The Earthsea Trilogy by Ursula Le Guin has been something of a personal bible since I was a child. punkmonkey
Ursula Le Guin during an interview in San Francisco in 1985. Photograph: M. Klimek/Bettmann/CORBIS
Start with: The Earthsea series or The Left Hand of Darkness they are some of the very few titles which I would be confident enough to name as true classics, novels that will endure well beyond our lifetimes, wrote Alison Flood
Further reading:
My inspiration: SF Said on Ursula Le Guin
Ursula Le Guin: Wizardry is artistry
Gentlemen, I just dont belong here her fantastic 1987 letter, responding to a request asking her to write a blurb for a science fiction anthology that contained no female voices
4. Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)
To the Lighthouse, The Waves, Orlando, Jacobs Room. Virginia Woolf. Because you can taste every word. Lope82
Mrs Dalloway, elegant and lyrical stream of consciousness that I prefer to Joyce. alloleo
Virginia Woolf. Photograph: George C. Beresford/Getty Images
I would like to put in a word for Virginia Woolf, and especially for the under-appreciated Orlando, where the long-lived protagonist starts out as a young nobleman before becoming a wife and mother. The book runs from Elizabethan England to 1928 and says a lot about the position of women while being both clever and funny. Perhaps Woolf is a bit too literary for some tastes, but Mrs Dalloway, To the Lighthouse , The Waves and A Room of Ones Own must surely speak to many. I think (hope) she will come to be recognised as one of the greatest writers of the 20th century. JackSchofield
To The Lighthouse, it had a huge impact on me when I first read it. It really made me consider and reconsider how I think and find direction. I loved Lily Briscoe and that devastatingly matter-of-fact middle chapter/section that splits the novel. There are so many books by women that I love, but TTL is my favourite. daveportivo
Pretty much all of Woolf, whom I read voraciously during the late 90s and still dip into now and then for a quick dose of writerly inspiration. Hard to pick any one favorite, fiction or non-fiction. But A Room of Ones Own changed my life.Jenny Bhatt
Start with: Mrs DallowayWoolfs great novel makes a day of party preparations the canvas for themes of lost love, life choices and mental illness, wrote Robert McCrum
Further reading:
Portraits of Virginia Woolf: here, the true face of the modern writer
Virginia Woolf should live on, but not because of her death, by Holly Williams
Woolf it down: on how the Bloomsbury set shows they were almost as obsessed with eating as with art
5. Clarice Lispector (1920 – 1977)
If a writer such as Clarice Lispector is to be considered significant from a feminist point of view, then it would probably be due to the absence of anything in her work or life which could be said to resemble the stereotype of the Lady Novelist. As well as living like a sort of secular hermit, her writing is elusive and mystical, being much less concerned with plot and character than with abstract ideas, such as The Apple in the Darks consideration of the nature of artistic creation or Agua Vivas obsessive focus on trying to isolate single moments in time. Although she could write movingly about womens experiences (especially in The Hour of the Star), her almost stubborn unworldliness otherwise gives the lie to the awful old clich that women are somehow deficient in considering the abstract, and shows that women are as unrestricted in subject matter as men. She really is one of the oddest and most individual writers Ive read.Jacob Howarth in Oxford
Clarice Lispector. Photograph: Courtesy Paulo Gurgel Valente
I heard of her just a month ago, from a Korean American friend. All I can say about her at this stage is that she knows me better than I do. I am reading The Complete Stories published 2015, which is full of lovely and shocking surprises. I finish one of her stories with a huge grin that lasts all day, another story may leave me arguing with myself … each one is having an profound impact on me.
She inspires me more than any other author in this second half of my life. Her uniquely fluid style reveals a mind so perspicacious, so permissively poetic and utterly radical. As a feisty feminist, I find peace in Lispectors reveries; she defies convention at every level by writing from deep within her psyche, embracing human flaws and foibles as perfectly natural. Her trademark self-acceptance is so refreshingly robust that I have found myself at times interrupting my reading with whoops of awe and admiration for her freedom of thought and spirit. Mars Drum
Start with: The Hour of the Star all the Brazillian authors talents and eccentricities come together in her most famous, final novella about a poor typist in Rio, says Colm Tibn
Further reading:
A brief survey of the short story, part 56: This darkly addictive Brazilian writer is more concerned with perceptions of objects than conventional plot structures, wrote Chris Power
The True Glamour of Clarice Lispector, by Benjamin Moser for the New Yorker
Brazils Virginia Woolf, by Brenda Cronin for the Wall Street Journal
6. Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie (born 1977)
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichies Americanah has moved me like no other in recent memory. I would describe it as transformational because it provided an insight into the reality of what it means to be a young, ambitious, highly intelligent, sometimes single black woman in contemporary America. Its an honest book about race, identity and the constant longing and nostalgia one feels for this metaphorical place called home. I was also moved by the story because it touchingly describes the loving relationship between the two central characters, showcasing that neither space nor time can erase love.
We usually go back to the same desires and preferences we had as 15-year-olds, and Americanah captures this sentiment. Moreover, it is a transformational book because it portrays Nigeria as a place that is mythical, marvellous, chaotic and slightly dangerous, yet also wildly fascinating, with a magnetic power to attract its brightest emigrs back to its shores. Reading this has made me realise that some of the most powerful narratives in contemporary fiction have been written by young, highly educated female African writers, who are tired of the old clichs frequently bandied around about Africa. Ngozi Adichie is a new, powerful and incredibly talented voice; her novel Americanah is the expression of a different African tale, of a continent and its people that have many more magnetic stories to tell, as well as critiques to raise about the so-called enlightened West. beograd
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, photographed in 2007. Photograph: Felix Clay for the Guardian
Start with: Americanah a superb dissection of race in the UK and the USA, wrote Elizabeth Day
Further reading:
I decided to call myself a Happy Feminist her world-famous TED talk
Dont we all write about love? When men do it, its a political comment. When women do it, its just a love story interview by Emma Brockes
Every 16-year-old in Sweden will receive copy of We Should All Be Feminists
7. Margaret Atwood (born 1939)
The Handmaids Tale by Margaret Atwood. She predicted all that is happening today in that book. shofmann
Everything about it is scarily easy to imagine. Her descriptions of how women began to be punished for abortions reminds me of legislation happening right now in the USA, for example. getebi
Start with: The Handmaids Tale Atwoods chilling tale of a concubine in an oppressive future America is more vital than ever, wrote Charlotte Newman
Further reading:
Haunted by The Handmaids Tale – Atwood on the legacy of her iconic novel
Margaret Atwood webchat her answers to your questions
I set myself a schedule of three to five pages a day Atwood on writing
8. Zadie Smith (born 1975)
White Teeth, by Zadie Smith. Could read it over and over again. Sarah Hassam
Zadie Smith, photographed at the Edinburgh books festival in 2001. Photograph: Murdo Macleod for the Guardian
On Beauty by Zadie Smith is absolutely brilliant. Smith is often categorized first by race and gender and thus is never considered the peer of other modern literary fiction writers like Franzen and Rushdie, but she easily beats them at their own style. emason1121
Start with: White Teeth, a novel on the lives of various multicultural families living in London; an audaciously assured contribution to this process of staring into the mirror, wrote Caryl Philipps
Further reading:
Fail better: What makes a good writer? Is writing an expression of self, or, as TS Eliot argued, an escape from personality? Thanks to Jenny Bhatt and MildGloster for pointing us towards this 2007 essay.
Windows on the Will: Smiths essay about watching the new Charlie Kaufman film Anomalisa, and Arthur Schopenhauer, was recently published on the New York Review of Books. I went to see Anomalisa, largely because of how interesting Smith made it seem, shared MildGloster.
9. Elena Ferrante (born 1943)
Of the many beautifully wrought themes explored in Elena Ferrantes masterful Neapolitan series, one that especially speaks to me, as a woman, is the question of what it means to attain presence versus what it means to disappear. Lila and Len, the central characters, each struggles to not disappear, despite the forces of class, history, and violence conspiring against them as women. Each tries to avoid what Lila loathingly describes as the problem of dissolving margins, when the outlines of people and things suddenly dissolved, disappeared. Reading Ferrante has led me to wonder: How many times have I, as a woman, faced being erased in relationships, in career, in the larger social order? How many far less-privileged women, in hostile corners of the world, face the threat of vanishing completely, dissolving into the boundaries of others without a trace? Veronica Majerol, New York, NY
Start with: The Days of Abandonment, a short novel Ferrante wrote before her famous Neapolitan series a great taster, and brilliant in its own right.
Further reading:
Elena Ferrante: the global literary sensation nobody knows
Elena Ferrante: Anonymity lets me concentrate exclusively on writing an interview by Deborah Orr
10. Angela Carter (1940 – 1992)
When I was at university I saw someone give a paper on Angela Carters dystopian masterpiece The Passion of New Eve. It was probably another year or so before I got my hands on a copy but I was not disappointed.
The premise alone a man captured by radical feminists and surgically transformed into a woman so that he may bear the messiah was enough to pique my interest, but it was Carters hallucinatory prose and rich symbolism that made this novel unforgettable. elbartonfink
Start with: Nights at the Circus the story of winged circus performer Sophie Fevverss travels through 19th-century Europe, that was named the best-ever winner of Britains oldest literary prize, the James Tait Black award.
English novelist Angela Carter sitting on a park bench in Paris in 1988. Photograph: Sophie Bassouls/Corbis
Further reading:
Angela Carter: a portrait in postcards
A brief survey of the short story: Angela Carter, by Chris Power
Femme fatale: Angela Carters subversive take on traditional fairy stories in The Bloody Chamber is as shocking today as when the collection first appeared in 1979, wrote Helen Simpson
We are painfully aware that this list could go forever. So, please, add more authors to the conversation by leaving your thoughts in the comments.
Read more: http://www.theguardian.com/us
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