Steven’s
Comments
(group member since Aug 23, 2016)
Steven’s
comments
from the Dalkey Archive Devotees group.
Showing 1-13 of 13

I can't vouch for the oeuvre, but Nelly's Version cracked my Top 50 All-Time Fiction list and is the first book to do that since I read House of Leaves about 8 years ago. Need-to-read, yes, and I don't go beyond ought-to-read very often.


Of these, I have read Chinese Letter, which I enjoyed rea..."
I can't remember what first brought me to Dalkey. I'd probably read several of their books before I started taking note of publishers. I read Tomb for Boris Davidovich a long time ago and don't remember much of it (true of about 80% of what I've read at this point). I'll put Kis back on my readlist - thanks

Basara's Chinese Letter & Inez, Aura, and Adam in Eden by Fuentes - been meaning to revisit Fuentes since his recent death


'touch is the nearest neighbor of the untouchable'
'The past is ever changing,
Only the future stays the same.'
'I am the rapid disintegration of the world.'
Currently reading Vitomil Zupan's Minuet for Guitar and losing patience with it. It's a wry Celine/Joseph Heller-like look at War & Peace & the in-between.
I get the feeling this group is moribund, but I'd love to hear about any new experiences with Dalkey Lit.!


(just realized it's not a Dalkey book, which explains much - Daitch is a Dalkey author)



Which Dalkey Archive books is everyone planning to read next? I currently own eight that I haven't..."
I tend to 'reread' on audio, since there are so few quality audio books I haven't read and so many new books I want to read (when my hands are free) - Joyce's Ulysses audio is amazing, for example

Which Dalkey Archive books is everyone planning to read next? I currently own eight that I haven't read yet:
1..."
I thought Rios' Poundemonium was incomprehensible and didn't care for the Skvorecky I read either - can't ever go wrong with Barth imo - Del Paso coming up next for me
