21st Century Literature discussion

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Question of the Week > Which Writer From The Past Would You Bring Back To Right About The Present? (5/25/25)

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message 1: by Marc (new)

Marc (monkeelino) | 3454 comments Mod
If you could bring a writer from the past back to life to write about today's world, which writer would that be?


message 2: by Whitney (new)

Whitney | 2498 comments Mod
I don't have a good answer, but the question made me think of the Ray Bradbury story "Forever and the Earth", which is about using time travel to bring Thomas Wolfe forward to write about space travel, since he's the only one the main character believes can do it justice. As I recall, the idea may have been better than the execution on this one.


message 3: by Stacia (new)

Stacia | 268 comments H. L. Mencken to write about today's US political scene.


message 4: by Bobby (new)

Bobby | 6 comments Oh man, easy. Hunter S. Thompson when he was on top of the game to create something similar to Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail. 🕶️🚬❄️


message 5: by Henk (new)

Henk | 85 comments Ursula K. le Guin comes to mind, she is so thoughtful and humane and engaged with the present through depicting the future so imaginatively. I wonder if she would still depict good winning when using the current times as a basis…


message 6: by Carl (last edited May 26, 2025 02:16AM) (new)

Carl Reads (carlreadsbooks) | 39 comments Oh, since I've just mentioned this author and I truly believe he'd write fantastic novels I would say Jose Saramago. Nobody writes about the human condition as he did.


message 7: by Alwynne (new)

Alwynne | 239 comments I think I'd go for someone who's good at broad sweep narratives like Tolstoy or Dickens or more forensic because of their journalistic background like Vasily Grossman.


message 8: by Brett (new)

Brett Hetherington | 5 comments The most obvious person is George Orwell (and some are saying he's already written about society now!) but I'd also think that James Baldwin would have some penetrating words to hurl.


message 9: by Brett (new)

Brett Hetherington | 5 comments Stacia wrote: "H. L. Mencken to write about today's US political scene."

That's a damn good call.


message 10: by Lesley (new)

Lesley Aird | 128 comments Although I haven’t read any Kafka for decades, I have found myself increasingly thinking “ah, so that’s what he meant” over the past few years.
An absurdist writer for absurdist times.


message 11: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 106 comments Lesley wrote: "Although I haven’t read any Kafka for decades, I have found myself increasingly thinking “ah, so that’s what he meant” over the past few years.
An absurdist writer for absurdist times."


I'm with you, Lesley! I finally got around to reading with Selected Stories. Was able to visit the Kafka museum in Prague and met Mark Harman at the Charleston Literary Festival last fall. Tour guides in Prague called him "strange" but there were appreciative students in attendance at the festival. Kafka Centenary celebrated 2024. Now I look for authors who have been influenced by Kafka, e.g. City of Night Birds, David Lynch films.


message 12: by Lesley (new)

Lesley Aird | 128 comments I’d enjoy reading Jane Austen’s insights on the ubiquity of social media.


message 13: by Hester (new)

Hester (inspiredbygrass) | 141 comments great comments . I'd like to ask Elizabeth Gaskell to come back to Manchester and write about the gig economy .


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