Re: What are you reading?
Posted: Tue Nov 15, 2016 9:28 am
				
				Great book, read through that one really quick.Uncle Grandfather wrote:murakami is the best, finally some free time to sit down with this
Great book, read through that one really quick.Uncle Grandfather wrote:murakami is the best, finally some free time to sit down with this

i really like how his love for music always seems to come through.UglyCasanova wrote:Murakami is hit or miss for me. Kafka on the Shore still has a place in my favorite novels list. The plot pacing is just perfect.

Start Hardboiled woderland ASAPmonkeydancer wrote:I've been meaning to read some of his work for a while, must remember to get round to it..
It's an interesting read, but it's pretty depraved even for Burroughs. He talks about copulating with young boys as much as he talks about ayahuasca. But there is speculation that the letters were fabricated, and it's actually a bizarre novel. Either way, I found Antonin Artaud's The Peyote Dance a lot more insightful when it comes to psychedelic pilgrimages to free oneself of the junk.Chankgeez wrote:Yes, well, with all this talk of ayahuasca lately, I've been meaning to pick up a copy of this:





Yeah, I've read it before and I'd expect nothing less from Burroughs.kaeth wrote:
It's an interesting read, but it's pretty depraved even for Burroughs. He talks about copulating with young boys as much as he talks about ayahuasca. But there is speculation that the letters were fabricated, and it's actually a bizarre novel. Either way, I found Antonin Artaud's The Peyote Dance a lot more insightful when it comes to psychedelic pilgrimages to free oneself of the junk.
 Real or not, it was mildly entertaining at the least. I was interested in this newer edition with the commentary though.
 Real or not, it was mildly entertaining at the least. I was interested in this newer edition with the commentary though.   
 ^That one looks interesting.Invisible Man wrote:
