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"Hemingwrite" edition

Previous: >>24931322

/wg/ AUTHORS & FLASH FICTION: https://pastebin.com/ruwQj7xQ
RESOURCES & RECOMMENDATIONS: https://pastebin.com/nFxdiQvC

Please limit excerpts to one post.
Give advice as much as you receive it to the best of your ability.
Follow prompts made below and discuss written works for practice; contribute and you shall receive.
If you have not performed a cursory proofread, do not expect to be treated kindly. Edit your work for spelling and grammar before posting.
Violent shills, relentless shill-spammers, and grounds keeping prose, should be ignored and reported.
(And maybe double-space your WIPs to allow edits if you want 'em.)

Simple guides on writing:

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>>24946624
Answer stands
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A story where someone important to the story doesn't die cannot be said to have good stakes.
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>>24947011
>Give me ideas guys
Why? You aren't creative enough to steal them anyway.
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>>24947011
The story of your mom fucking every man in the town without getting caught.
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>>24947079
>Victoria is the funniest thing to come out of /lit/ in years
Scathing indictment, anon. I agree, the quality here has been horrendous.

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In a world where 90% of the internet traffic is online video streaming, to detriment of the environment and our minds, why aren't you rejecting modernity and going to the library? The library is literally free and fun for all ages. It is the most environmentally and civic minded thing you can do. Instead of being in a haze of pleasure, living in a digital cocoon of reels and streams, why aren't you forging the future of humanity? The weight of the world is on your shoulders and only you can make a better world.
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My library is very, very bad. The downtown branch. I should start taking the bus to the branch in the nicer part of town. The main downtown location is literally full of hobos, drug addicts and literal African immigrants with schizophrenia. It's more like a social services center than a library.
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>>24944042
The world dragon has many worshippers of its many forms.
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>>24944403
This desu.
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>>24945090
>written by generic rich person
ghostwritten. rich people don't write books.
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>>24943918
my library system is goated. Can take out up to 50 books at time for 3 weeks each, if you go over 3 weeks they auto-renew, and you can do that up to 15 times, at which point it just stops you from taking out new books until you return them or pay for it. No late fees ever. 81 branches in the system and they'll ship your holds to your local branch which you can do online. Only ever have to interact w/ the front desk to grab your holds which takes 5 seconds, 10 minute walk from me.
Only downside is they close at 5pm most days.
Honestly I'm surprised the USA still has this shit, pretty much the only good deal I've ever heard of

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What did I think?
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>>24946201
>Rhyming a word with a nonsense word you made up.
All words are made up. Some were just made up more recently than others.
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>>24945310
Wow you better take it easy the rest of the day buddy!
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>>24946211
It's still winter by the end of the book
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>>24946431
Not in his heart.
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>>24946201
Can you name any examples of these supposed "nonsense" words? (You can't.)

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It is NOT a literary masterpiece. It is, in basically just an overdressed YA novel. Let me, someone who has actually understood the text, break this down for you:

>The core plot
A brooding, special teenager, Hal Incandenza, with parent issues lives in a rigid, hierarchical system, namely the Enfield Tennis Academy. A mysterious, charismatic rebel figure, be it His ghost or the Entertainment itself, threatens the order. A ragtag group of teens, Hal, Orin, Pemulis, must navigate a corrupt adult world to uncover a dark secret that could destroy society. This is essentially Divergent, no?

>Ham fisted Allegory
"O.N.A.N.," "The Concavity/Convexity," "Subsidized Time." These are not subtle political commentaries. They are the same heavy handed, brand name dystopian devices as "Panem" or "The Capitol." It is a cartoony, exaggerated backdrop for teen angst, not a serious philosophical inquiry. DFW merely replaced the Hunger Games with a tennis tournament and a lethal film cartridge.

>The teen protaganist
Hal is the archetypal YA hero. He is unnaturally gifted, emotionally stunted, misunderstood by every adult, and on a quest for identity in a world he did not make. His internal torment is just advanced teen angst. His inability to communicate is peak adolescent alienation dressed up in pseudo intellectual jargon. He is a Holden Caulfield who can quote Wittgenstein.

>The threat
The samizdat is a MacGuffin of pure destruction. "It is so pleasurable it kills you."
This is a YA villain: a single, addictive, monolithic Evil that the adults cannot handle, so the youth must. It is the same as a magic system or a corrupt government, a simple problem with a fantastical, technological cause.


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>>24945045
>you were actually reading a hyper verbose, structurally bloated teen novel.

You can infer much from a person's deportment and appearance. Pynchon only got away with it for so long by avoiding interviews.

>It is NOT a literary masterpiece. It is, in basically just an overdressed YA novel

This should be the most obvious thing in the literary world and the 'secret' to why he offed himself. Just look at that faggot bandana. He's ready to blow you. He's staring into your soul, looking for his father's cock. And he got upstaged by a genre fiction take on the Found Footage film genre in House of Leaves of all things.

>>24946570
>my friend recommended it in college and I played JV tennis in high school.

This is not the Tennis novel. Waiting for Godot, and Walter Abish's In The Future Perfect are.
>>
I've read the first two chapters and it does have a certain charm to it though seems to suffer from a lack of focus and inconsistent tone. I resent when authors go for certain broad effects rather than specific, earned moments of inspiration
>>
It's just a book. Maybe you people should read more books instead of talking about the same books over and over, it's so fucking boring.
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>>24946920
Thanks for the Walter Abish rec anon, I'll check it out.
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>>24945045
bait/10. I will respond in good faith anyways.

>Hal, Orin, Pemulis, must navigate a corrupt adult world to uncover a dark secret that could destroy society.
What dark secret are they trying to uncover?
>Ham fisted Allegory
I don't think you know what allegory is. Your examples are simple hyperbole, extending the real world to an absurd extreme. You completely missed the political content which is about people who build their identity around a political party.
>He is unnaturally gifted
He isn't, he myopically fixated on two things, the OED and tennis. We find out he is terrible at the sciences and if the examples we get of his work in the humanities are any evidence, he is not very good there either, he just plays word games to hide the fact he says nothing. The implication here being that like Gately, Hal is being carried through school by others.
>MacGuffin
lol. Explain the entertainment.
>"Entertainment as dystopia?"
If you wanted to take that sort of view it is that entertainment for the sake of entertainment is a result of dystopia; which is closer to the point but still reductive. Dystopia does not play into it, this is likely a result of your conflating allegory and hyperbole.
>"Addiction?"
To stick with the above bit of reductionism, addiction is entertainment for the sake of entertainment. Once we go beyond literal entertainment and addiction you start seeing why this phrasing is reductive, the book is filled with examples of things which are just as destructive but are not addiction or entertainment and obviously need to be reconciled.

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Just ordered this
What am I getting into?
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>>24947327
isn't everything after the gospels, maybe aside from revelation, just expository teachings OF the gospels?
>>
Been reading the KJV cover to cover for a couple months. Working through the Pauline stuff right now. I can't imagine it not being deeply enriching for almost anyone but there are bound to be chunks that are boring or tedious no matter what your primary interests are.
>>
>>24946147
A bunch of fables written by a canannite tribe that much like their Carthagian cousins, used to sacrifice their children to demons to the side of genocide and foreskin collecting
>>
>>24947336
A little bit but it's not exactly detailed. It mostly comes from Paul, who never met Jesus and was speaking to a different audience, so he emphasized different things (e.g. faith vs. observance of the law)
>>
remember that god loves you but don't piss him off or he floods the planet and kills 99% of us.

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What does /lit/ think of the Enders game sequels?
>>
>>24946899
Manchild core.
>>
Children soldiers is a sicker idea than regular aged young men. Wars are fought for the enrichment of old bastards, but they get them young so they can screw with their minds.
I don't think Card ever explores this horror. Am I wrong?
>>
>>24947010
IIRC Battle School was infamous for its brutal bullying. Doesn't another kid try to rape Ender at some point?
>>
>>24946899
Think the first four books in the series are sitting on my shelf, unread, like they have since I got them. Look fun though.

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Who's up for a good ol' fashioned stack/recent cops thread?
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>>24946902
Peake and Canticle for Lebowitz are both eye-rollingly pseudish. Get better taste fast.
>>
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>>24946906
I literally just picked these up out of interest. How can I have already developed a taste for these authors if I haven't even read them?
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>>24946918
Doesn't matter. The fact that you picked up both strongly suggests that you haven't developed a discerning intuitive sense of quality and/or a proper filter for recommendations, both being necessary components of taste.
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>>24946935
Yeah bro, I don't actively browse this board everyday unlike you.
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Stack for december/january...I won't actually read GR it's there just to show I'm really cool

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Why yes, half page descriptions of lamps and countertops with the occasional interjection of brain dead criminals speaking futuristic ebonics. It certainly deserves all the praise. Were people really that bored in the 80s to enjoy this?
I'm not finishing it. I feel my neurons dying in real time. I was right for putting it off for so many years.
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>>24946610
manchildren are not going to like this
>>
he simply perfectly described the world we're living in, 60 years ago.
>>
>>24947046
lol no he didn't
>>
>>24946610
you sound filtered
>>
>>24947487
By taste, which is perfectly reasonable. You really should have a filter against poor taste.

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>completely dismantles leftism in your path
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>>24947129
>Capitalist refusing the left a place on the left
Puke.
>>
>>24944150
>sade is a conceptual starting point for leftism
I can tell already that it's retarded
>>
>>24944150

Do rightoids even have a leg to stand on anymore? I mean how do they even explain or justify their position to anyone else. Like do they just go, "hurr sure muh tribe hurr durr muh hierarchy" ?
>>
>>24947458
What is a woman?
>>
>>24944150
i would eradicate the binary wingism from our minds if i could

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>The red thread of fate (Chinese: 姻緣紅線; pinyin: Yīnyuán hóngxiàn), also referred to as the red thread of marriage, the invisible string theory and other variants, is an East Asian belief originating from Chinese mythology. It is commonly thought of as an invisible red cord around the finger of those that are destined to meet one another in a certain situation, as they are "their one true love".

>According to Chinese legend, the deity in charge of "the red thread" is believed to be Yuè Xià Lǎorén (月下老人), often abbreviated to Yuè Lǎo (月老), the old lunar matchmaker god, who is in charge of marriages. In the original Chinese myth, the thread is tied around both parties' ankles, while in Japanese culture it is bound from a male's thumb to a female's little finger. In modern times, though, it is common across both these cultures to depict the thread being tied around the fingers, often the little finger. The color red in Chinese culture symbolises happiness and it is also prominently featured during Chinese weddings.

>The two people connected by the red thread are destined lovers, regardless of place, time, or circumstances. This magical cord may stretch or tangle, but never break.

Any novels or poems cover this?
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>>24944807
Almost every romance anime has this.
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>>24946079
too late, I had a child with a puerto rican woman
really fucked up there desu
>>
>>24945880
What are you telling me for? I didn't get one.
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>>24944807
There are more than two billion indians and chinese. Meaning that your true love is likely to be mapped to one of them which makes this a shit theory
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>>24944807
does the chinese tradition actually have our notion of romantic, chivalrous love and courtship, or is this a modern reimagining?

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will it be even better than schattenfroh (the greatest translated work of the 20th century)?
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>>24947419
We know you’re the fucking “Helno” guy in the salon, dude. Fuck off. LIMF told all of us
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>>24947426
Well “helno” to you too, specialberry. quite neat that dissertation of yours is available to edu accounts
>>
>>24947319
Speaking of which, where's my hoodie, code monkey?
>>
>>24947319
It was so beautiful you sent a hoodie to me in Israel and did not ask for any $$$
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>>24947432
That mangina exploring gender bullshit was such a disappointment. What a faggot.

Overreading makes you retarded.
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Haha yeah we need to take it easy, we are doing crazy levels of reading, guys
>>
the only reason to be polite is when you want something from someone
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>>24947172
I love being retarded!
>>
>>24947361
>Kant: "imagine if everyone were a misanthrope at Christmas."

>Hegel: "you're on the wrong side of history. *unintelligible*."

>Nietzsche: "charity is actually a sign of strength."
>>
>>24947453
Stirner's philosophy is right but it's also psychopathic.

Is this kino?

I have to pick between it and shadow ticket at my bookstore.
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>>24944790
>kino
Considering your vernacular I say go for this one. Capeshit does seem like your speed
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>>24944836
Faggot.
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>>24944790
no, it's shit
>>
>>24946437
In what way?
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>>24946656
There's a chapter that purposes to imitate Finnegans Wake. Of course, the chapter resembles Joyce's masterpiece in none of its beauty or greatness. And this is because Alan Moore's goal wasn't beauty or greatness, it was imitation.

Recent revert to Islam is this a good book ? Some brothers recommended it to me
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>>24947134
I haven't read it, but he spawned an entirely new sect called Wahabbis, who basically attack Muslims only instead of talking about Israel or anything else.

>If you don't have the right (my) version of Tawheed, you're basically a kaffir
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>>24947168
Saudi Arabia was very anti Israel when the rulers were religious. In the 1970's they launched an oil embargo against any country supporting Israel, including America
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>>24947165
Ty

JZK
>>
Bump
>>
Read some of Ibn al-qayyims short books

Inner dimension of prayer
Heartfelt advice to a friend

And his longer book
The disease and the cure

I’d skip muhammad ibn abdul wahhab. His books are super boring and you are better off just reading from the Quran translation because he basically just copy pastes without meaningful commentary

2025 is almost over. What's the best book you read this year?
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I kinda forgot what I read this year.
Will never forget this one though. Incredible how he managed to turn a book in which he says kike or nigger in most sentences into a work of art.
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the alexandria quartet by laurence durrell
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>>24947281
You've all read the best book to be released in 2025 haven't you?
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Read through Animal Farm. Short and sweet, but I really enjoyed it. Beats you over the head with its moral, but, through a purely technical lens, I really enjoyed seeing Orwell epitomize what a novel should be.

Also read Dune and I felt similarly about it. It was the first book I read after getting through nearly all of Moorcock's Elric, though, so maybe I was just relieved to break the monotony.
>>
wiseguy
wuthering heights
solaris
faust (part one)
come as you are: the story of nirvana
no country for old men
crime and punishment


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