21st Century Literature discussion
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May Open Pick Nominations


I copied the list that Marc put together of books that have already been read and posted it in the welcome folder to make it easier to find.
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
I realize it's the first book in a trilogy, but I'd be excited to read Gilead by Marilynne Robinson.


Ben -- 'giving up'? Because you perceive difficulty in attracting group interest? Because you have 'given up' on Martin Amis yourself? Because....?
Caroline wrote: "I realize it's the first book in a trilogy, but I'd be excited to read Gilead by Marilynne Robinson."
It's not a traditional trilogy so much as three different vantage points in time and character, which stand alone just wonderfully (I can't speak for Lila as I haven't read that one yet). I think Marilynne Robinson is amazing.
It's not a traditional trilogy so much as three different vantage points in time and character, which stand alone just wonderfully (I can't speak for Lila as I haven't read that one yet). I think Marilynne Robinson is amazing.


Thx for your reply, Ben.
Sidebar (not really a spoiler): (view spoiler)
Do know that persistence sometimes works here. Or maybe you can find another board that is reading ZoI. In any case, if/when you read ZoI without this Board, please do come back and give us a line or two of feedback.

It is not a triology that requires the books to be read in order. Each can be read in and of itself and in any order. In fact, I think the last - Lila - is a good a first as Gilead, as chronologically it takes place before the Gilead. The middle book - Home? - deals with more minor characters from the other two, especially Gilead.
To make up for our sloth last month, we're announcing the May moderator pick early. It is Seiobo There Below by László Krasznahorkai. Krasznahorkai is like no other writer I know of, and I definitely encourage everyone to check out his work. Here's an article from NPR: http://www.npr.org/2013/09/25/2244562...
And, don't worry, announcement will get repeated again in a couple weeks.
And, don't worry, announcement will get repeated again in a couple weeks.

I haven't read any of the trilogy, but I'd be very hesitant about reading any trilogy out of order, even if there isn't a strict chronology. The order in which the author chooses to reveal detail, in a book or in a series, is the order to me more than any chronology.
Thanks for clarifying Marc and Linda about it not being a proper trilogy. I could probably be convinced to read them out of order but am with Terry, where I would much prefer to read Gilead first, even if plot chronology isn't an issue.

Note: I haven't yet read Lila, but I've read, enjoyed and admired all of her other books.

by Michael Pitre (https://www.goodreads.com/author/show...)
Excellent book about a platoon in Iraq and their lives after they return home.
This is my first shot at posting something like this; I don't know how to make hot links.

Note: I haven't yet r..."
Not sure I agree. Gilead, i think, is focused on the son. Reading Lila and Home would make Gilead a somewhat different experience but only on the edges, I think. Personally, I think Gilead is the best of the these three marvelous books. I wonder if Robinson thinks of it as a trilogy or if that is how the publisher is presenting them?

there you go."
Thank you :-)
How do you insert a hyper link?
If you are on a computer, click on the "add book/author" tab above the text window. From there it's pretty self explanatory. If you're on GR from the app, it's a lot more complicated.

I haven't read any of the trilogy, but I'd be very hesitant about reading any trilogy out of order, even if there isn't a strict chronology. The order in which the au..."
I would also like to read Gilead. All three books are sitting on a TBR shelf and I'd welcome a chance to "have" to start the trilogy.


Nominations are closed and the poll is up until the end of the month. You can find it here https://www.goodreads.com/poll/list/5... or from the homepage.
Please remember that if you vote for a book, you are committing to reading it and joining in the discussion should it win.
Please remember that if you vote for a book, you are committing to reading it and joining in the discussion should it win.

Yep, I think it's the kind of novel that would spark a really good discussion, unlike, for example, Euphoria which was simply a straightforward okay novel offering little in the way of stimulating debate. I wish people would vote for novels a little outside their comfort zone instead of simply nominating the novel they most want to read!

Yep, I think it's the kind of novel that would spark a really good discussion, unlike, for example, Euphoria which was simply a straightforwa..."
Ben, If you nominate Zone of Interest next month, I will vote for it! (It was the Audible Daily Deal on Saturdy, so I now have it!)


Re Martin Amis, I had a not very open-minded attitude going for a while, until I read an article in The New Statesman. I suspect there's great compassion motivating the anguished surface of his work.

Ben -- I'm not certain but what Euphoria didn't have the potential to spark much more than we chose to pull out. I know Linda made mention of the book's allusions to issues about integrity in anthropological study. I still have issues about historical integrity, much like the ones widely discussed around Mantel's Wolf Hall. Sometimes we just don't get a group with interest in plunging in. Euphoria can be read superficially, which will help its sales, but it also raised or hinted at a number of troubling issues that we basically just ignored discussing so we could move on to something else.
One of my idiosyncratic questions is whether readers of new literature don't sometimes have as much interest in finding out what a book is about as in probing its contents. Things here seem to get discussed "faster" and end sooner than I have found typical for classics. Is this a group that is largely with limited time for reading, despite high interest, I sometimes ask? That tends to lessen time for peeling those additional layers.
I do applaud Zulfiya's stance in not nominating something unless she has read it and deems it would be a good choice for discussion. On the other hand, voting based on interest seems not unreasonable.

Lily, it seemed like the only lively debate regarding Euphoria was the anthropology element. Some were bothered about the make believe nature of it, some weren't. Personally novels for me are fiction so even if Mantel had completely made up Wolf Hall it'd still be a hundred times more accomplished than a Euphoria without any historical or anthropological errors. In my view.

I agree. Part of why I perceive there might have been a fascinating conversation both on the kinds of issues Wolf Hall/fictionalized biography raises and on Euphoria's status both as a best seller and a Kirkus award selection.


Ben wrote: "Wish I had nominated it this month now! Is it too late to change my nomination Whitney?
Lily, it seemed like the only lively debate regarding Euphoria was the anthropology element. Some were bothe..."
Too late for this month, since several people have already voted, but no reason why you can't nominate it next month. Especially since there seems to be a groundswell of support.
I didn't read Euphoria, so I can't comment on the discussion. It does seem that people have more to say. If you think there are unplumbed depths to the discussion, by all means go bring them up there! (I think I just mixed some metaphors.)
Lily, it seemed like the only lively debate regarding Euphoria was the anthropology element. Some were bothe..."
Too late for this month, since several people have already voted, but no reason why you can't nominate it next month. Especially since there seems to be a groundswell of support.
I didn't read Euphoria, so I can't comment on the discussion. It does seem that people have more to say. If you think there are unplumbed depths to the discussion, by all means go bring them up there! (I think I just mixed some metaphors.)

Violet wrote: "Blame me for Euphoria, Ben! I nominated it. I was duped by the Kirkus prize (though like you had no idea what the Kirkus prize was). I agree it didn't inspire a great discussion because essentially..."
Hey - no book shaming! We select books we think look interesting, and sometimes they turn out to be less so than we hoped (haven't read Euphoria, so no opinion there). Nine people voted for Euphoria, so quite a few people thought it would be a good choice. No one need apologize, even humorously, for a book they chose.
Hey - no book shaming! We select books we think look interesting, and sometimes they turn out to be less so than we hoped (haven't read Euphoria, so no opinion there). Nine people voted for Euphoria, so quite a few people thought it would be a good choice. No one need apologize, even humorously, for a book they chose.

And, a number of us liked it and did not consider it a "conventional novel," whatever that is!


Books mentioned in this topic
My Brilliant Friend (other topics)Gilead (other topics)
Gilead (other topics)
Seiobo There Below (other topics)
All the Light We Cannot See (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Elena Ferrante (other topics)Marilynne Robinson (other topics)
László Krasznahorkai (other topics)
Reif Larsen (other topics)
Michael Pitre (other topics)
More...
Boilerplate: Books must be works of fiction published from 2000-2015. Selections that are overly genre or fail to meet the group standards of literary quality will not be permitted in the final poll. One nomination per customer, please, and if you nominate a book and it wins, you will participate in the discussion.
And remember, coming up in April we have a plethora of fine books: Station Eleven, Astonish Me, and The Three-Body Problem