the most promising young american author is TAO LIN

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how has there not been a thread on this guy yet? TAIPEI is brilliant.

i also enjoy in line skateing (spazzmatazz), Thursday, 20 June 2013 17:44 (ten years ago) link

I make an "indifferent face" about Tao Lin.

lols lane (Eazy), Thursday, 20 June 2013 17:54 (ten years ago) link

Taipei is great. Here's my review http://www.tottenvillereview.com/vontinuing-ahead-tao-lins-taipei/

Treeship, Thursday, 20 June 2013 17:56 (ten years ago) link

i like it; brilliant is a bit far, ill go as far as 'clever' or 'well-observered'. if anything, hes evolving a hearty drug tolerance

johnny crunch, Thursday, 20 June 2013 17:57 (ten years ago) link

i think it was all here: HIPSTER RUNOFF BLOG OF THE MOMENT

i'm a little curious about Tai Pei but i don't think reading it would be good for my state of mind.

precious bonsai children of new york (Jordan), Thursday, 20 June 2013 17:57 (ten years ago) link

guys I am tao lin and I don't even know who tao lin is

― dayo, Thursday, July 7, 2011 11:31 AM (1 year ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

who is tao lin

― dayo, Thursday, July 7, 2011 11:31 AM (1 year ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

johnny crunch, Thursday, 20 June 2013 18:31 (ten years ago) link

He's the Allen Ginsberg of his generation--really good at PR, not so great at writing.

copter (waterface), Thursday, 20 June 2013 18:38 (ten years ago) link

reading taipei he struck me as similar to warhol

johnny crunch, Thursday, 20 June 2013 18:40 (ten years ago) link

I've seen poems of his before and not been wowed, but I just read a very negative review of Taipei that made it sound pretty good

Guayaquil (eephus!), Thursday, 20 June 2013 18:41 (ten years ago) link

i don't think there has ever been a particular lack of attention for tao lin

ty based gay dead computer god (zachlyon), Thursday, 20 June 2013 19:18 (ten years ago) link

my personal favorite by him might still be eeee eee eeeee which, while not as mature an artistic achievement as the work he's done in the past few years up to and including taipei, is hilarious and at times touching and also sort of charmingly iconoclastic, in a suburban teen punk kind of way. the playful imaginitive flights in that book -- there's a part where the president of the usa (never identified, but bush i guess) crashes this literary party and is a jerk to people who admit to never reading fernando pessoa -- are juxtaposed with these very realistic, very well-rendered descriptions of adolescence, loneliness, and depression.

Treeship, Thursday, 20 June 2013 21:23 (ten years ago) link

i was trying to push past my kneejerk distaste for this dude and the whole gross relentless self-promotion thing that you young people do that i find so displeasing and gross so i bought this book and i sat down to read it and are you fucking kidding me

adam, Tuesday, 2 July 2013 02:44 (ten years ago) link

gross

adam, Tuesday, 2 July 2013 02:44 (ten years ago) link

wait it's bad?

Guayaquil (eephus!), Tuesday, 2 July 2013 02:46 (ten years ago) link

so bad

adam, Tuesday, 2 July 2013 02:55 (ten years ago) link

but it's a trap, right, if you bitch about dude's shitty precious repetitive prose b/c it's ironic or whatever. bret easton ellis blurb v telling. i would have just walked away until i saw that the ny times, arbiter of good taste for all america, jump on board. people need to know the truth

adam, Tuesday, 2 July 2013 02:58 (ten years ago) link

ugh

Stately, plump Buck Mulligan came from the (Treeship), Tuesday, 2 July 2013 02:59 (ten years ago) link

suck it young person

adam, Tuesday, 2 July 2013 03:01 (ten years ago) link

look: his writing has different aims than most "literary" prose. it is aiming to achieve an effect of deadness, which is the best way to represent the kind of experience he is writing about. some people identify strongly -- often too strongly -- with his writing because the world he describes is very familiar to them. you can like it or not like it, but his success is not the product of some hype machine. this book is not a con.

Stately, plump Buck Mulligan came from the (Treeship), Tuesday, 2 July 2013 03:02 (ten years ago) link

also, i am 83 years old.

Stately, plump Buck Mulligan came from the (Treeship), Tuesday, 2 July 2013 03:02 (ten years ago) link

JT Leroy

JT Leroy is no joke perpetrated by anyone, he's BRILLIANT.

adam, Tuesday, 2 July 2013 03:05 (ten years ago) link

idk, i mean, the hype and also his band of sycophants annoy me too, but not enough for me to not like his work. he writes humanely and honestly about unglamorous characters and also he is very funny.

Stately, plump Buck Mulligan came from the (Treeship), Tuesday, 2 July 2013 03:08 (ten years ago) link

that review actually makes a great case for the book because it clearly made a major impression on the reviewer. it mirrored aspects of our culture she doesn't like, and which she hadn't encountered before in literature, and that's why she interpreted it as hostile, not dismissible. it reminded me of jung's review of ulysses.

Stately, plump Buck Mulligan came from the (Treeship), Tuesday, 2 July 2013 03:10 (ten years ago) link

that review actually makes a great case for the book because it clearly made a major impression on the reviewer

c'mon now

mookieproof, Tuesday, 2 July 2013 03:16 (ten years ago) link

The excerpts in the review sound like they were written by Carles.

something of an astrological coup (tipsy mothra), Tuesday, 2 July 2013 03:19 (ten years ago) link

yea mooks. her response wasn't "this sucks" but "literature shouldn't be like this!" this doesn't mean it's good, but it means it's interesting at least. i think it's good as well as interesting.

Stately, plump Buck Mulligan came from the (Treeship), Tuesday, 2 July 2013 03:19 (ten years ago) link

the writing is really boring. do most ppl read it straight through? i love naked lunch but i don't think i've ever read it straight through. there are still sections i find that i never read before and it's a delight. maybe it's like that but instead of it being a delight it's soul crushingly mundane.

Mordy , Tuesday, 2 July 2013 03:25 (ten years ago) link

if i take a shit on your face, it is likely to make a strong impression. as a reviewer you may choose to view my shitting on your face through a variety of perspectives from de sade to foucault to the farrelly brothers. none of this necessarily makes my shitting on your face a work of art

tao lin may or may not be a good writer, but his ability to make reviewers hate his work is not a sign of greatness

mookieproof, Tuesday, 2 July 2013 03:31 (ten years ago) link

or even interestingness

mookieproof, Tuesday, 2 July 2013 03:32 (ten years ago) link

xp to mordy. i read it in like, one day, and then i read it again. the writing is tonally flat, but often really beautiful, especially during the more digressive, metaphorical passages. also, it might be tough -- because it is so dry yet convoluted -- for readers new to his work. i really loved his other books already though, especially eeee eee eeeee which he published when he was 23. maybe you had to have been severely depressed in high school to get it.

Stately, plump Buck Mulligan came from the (Treeship), Tuesday, 2 July 2013 03:32 (ten years ago) link

that review actually makes a great case for the book

This is the negative review I referred to above that made me want to read it! I thought the excerpts sounded good.

Guayaquil (eephus!), Tuesday, 2 July 2013 03:41 (ten years ago) link

xp to mookie, fair enough but that's not really what i said. it wasn't just a "strong impression" -- her reaction was similar to what you get when people encounter things they find threatening, or truly new. she even says something like it seems like he "hates language"... like, lin's prose style clearly constitutes a modernist "attack" on literary language in some way, as it is not sufficient to his purposes, and the reviewer picks up on that even though she resists the direction of his experimentation. so i think her review makes the book sound interesting even though it is a negative review.

Stately, plump Buck Mulligan came from the (Treeship), Tuesday, 2 July 2013 03:41 (ten years ago) link

maybe you had to have been severely depressed in high school to get it.

the new genre fiction; squares needn't bother

mookieproof, Tuesday, 2 July 2013 03:42 (ten years ago) link

god forbid someone connects with an author's autobiographical account of his social anxiety and relationship with his parents.

Stately, plump Buck Mulligan came from the (Treeship), Tuesday, 2 July 2013 03:45 (ten years ago) link

i think people have an incorrect impression of what this book is like. it's bleak, and written in a flat tone, and about drugs, and "hip" in that young people like it, but it is actually very earnest and moving and sad. lin's sensibility is nothing like bret easton ellis's. it's not cynical or satirical at all.

Stately, plump Buck Mulligan came from the (Treeship), Tuesday, 2 July 2013 03:50 (ten years ago) link

weve had this exact argument in some other thread already right?

Lamp, Tuesday, 2 July 2013 03:50 (ten years ago) link

i don't remember. before my time maybe.

Stately, plump Buck Mulligan came from the (Treeship), Tuesday, 2 July 2013 03:51 (ten years ago) link

"like carles" is a compliment, right?

also BEE can be "actually very earnest and moving and sad" and i don't see how cynical and satirical mean anything about not being earnest or moving or sad.

stefon taylor swiftboat (s.clover), Tuesday, 2 July 2013 03:58 (ten years ago) link

i've probably read like 10 paragraphs total of this guys work but i liked it and i support him in principle

乒乓, Tuesday, 2 July 2013 04:02 (ten years ago) link

fair enough, s. clover. carles is actually a good example of a satirical writer who often allows true desperation to peek through in his work, especially regarding "carles'" fragile self-concept, and his insecurity with his "alt" identity.

maybe i should have just said that taipei is different than like, less than zero. the characters aren't cool and indifferent at all -- not even in how they present themselves. they are insecure and earnest, for the most part. when tao lin or his fictional analogues advocate numbness or detachment as a mindset, it is pretty transparently a coping mechanism for the pain that comes from attachment to the world, as in, the characters themselves think of it that way. there is a strong buddhist strain in his work, which goes along with the absurdism.

basically, i think tao lin is a very empathetic novelist, attuned to the difficulty of life in the world, and he doesn't have scorn for any of his characters, and i don't think this is necessarily a thing people associate with him when they make a big deal of his youth, or drug use, or "numbness", etc.

Treeship, Tuesday, 2 July 2013 04:08 (ten years ago) link

i liked 'richard yates' the novel by tao lin, i had some ideas about that i've posted to ilx before, i think its very hard to feel things in novels by tao lin

Lamp, Tuesday, 2 July 2013 04:10 (ten years ago) link

oh ok the thread where we argued about the merits of tao lin is linked upthread this is a post i'm very proud of from that thread:

henri lebesgue and jonbenét ramsey take a weekend vacation in charleston. they go swimming in the hotel pool and eat brunch and go to a party her college roommate is throwing. they also spend a lot of time driving around and arguing about sex or television or something. its called 'the null set'.

― ((( (Lamp), Thursday, July 7, 2011 11:51 PM (1 year ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

i need to find more things to do in the evenings

Lamp, Tuesday, 2 July 2013 04:11 (ten years ago) link

this is a pretty good article about the role of "detachment" in lin's aesthetic. http://htmlgiant.com/author-spotlight/buddhism-and-shoplifting-a-few-notes-on-tao-lins-early-prose-style/ xposts i guess

Treeship, Tuesday, 2 July 2013 04:12 (ten years ago) link

i think people have an incorrect impression of what this book is like. it's bleak, and written in a flat tone, and about drugs, and "hip" in that young people like it, but it is actually very earnest and moving and sad. lin's sensibility is nothing like bret easton ellis's. it's not cynical or satirical at all.

― Stately, plump Buck Mulligan came from the (Treeship), Monday, July 1, 2013 11:50 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

the problem might be that you're comparing him to B.E.E. when "bleak, flat but actually very earnest and moving and sad" sometimes feels like the only book anyone ever writes anymore

ty based gay dead computer god (zachlyon), Tuesday, 2 July 2013 04:15 (ten years ago) link

“Would I be crazy to say that sometimes the style and the strategies involved in Shoplifting from American Apparel strike me as trying to look at Buddhism as a prose style?” (KCRW interview). Lin replies that this is indeed accurate and he believes that his “detachment is more …trying to advocate to himself a way of living life that is kind of pre-language – just like kind of experiencing things directly, whereas most people view the detachment in this book as him just being numb.”...Shoplifting doesn’t portray characters who are free from suffering nor ones who accept it; it portrays characters who mask suffering with detachment. I think it’s important to point out, however, that I believe it is the failures of Shoplifting from American Apparel that make it such a strong/interesting book; specifically, its failures in attempting a kind of Buddhist detachment through both prose style and characterization.

Treeship, Tuesday, 2 July 2013 04:19 (ten years ago) link

sorry, the quoted text is from the htmlgiant article i liked above.

xp interesting. i don't think lin's fiction is like most contemporary fiction i read, in that he imposes lots of contraints on himself, whether it be the concrete realist style of shoplifting or the convoluted, infinitely regressive style of taipei, which is hyperattuned to its representational limitations. in terms of most (literary) fiction being both bleak and sad, it's hard for me to imagine a work of realist fiction seeming honest and not being sad at least in parts. genre fiction isn't always bleak. i am biased toward sad literature though, probably. there has to be at least a tragic undercurrent for me to be interested, usually.

Treeship, Tuesday, 2 July 2013 04:25 (ten years ago) link

i wrote a multiparagraph reinforcement of a few of the ideas i liked from your review and then deleted them when i got to the part where you get baited in the comment section.

dylannn, Tuesday, 2 July 2013 05:25 (ten years ago) link

He's the Allen Ginsberg of his generation--really good at PR, not so great at writing.

from what i've read of this dude i really doubt he has a 'kaddish' let alone a 'supermarket in california' in him.

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Tuesday, 2 July 2013 05:33 (ten years ago) link

i guess my feelings toward tao lin are closer to treeship's than anyone else here. i think if you read any amount of contemporary literary fiction, like serious or frivolous print journals or things mentioned on htmlgiant, tao lin reads like a satire of a lot of it and at the same time a sincere reworking of a lot of the themes and forms of alt-lit or writing as writing is done by people under 30 in 2013, if that makes sense. there are a lot of people trying to write to describe the experience he writes about and most of that writing is fucking garbage. i'm not sure how to say this in a way that doesn't sound really obvious but the thing with, like, taipei or richard yates is not just appreciating it as solely as a piece of literature but looking at what it does beyond just being a piece of literature, it becomes more interesting for its reception and interpretations and what it means against the backdrop of contemporary literature and culture.... that's why i appreciate tao lin the character curated by the actual tao lin-- i like that he's obnoxious and provocative in a dull cuntish internet celebrity way.

dylannn, Tuesday, 2 July 2013 05:45 (ten years ago) link

rate the following ideologies: stalinism, pitchforkism

Mordy, Monday, 4 December 2017 21:04 (six years ago) link

order as in post imo

mark s, Monday, 4 December 2017 21:07 (six years ago) link

anyway. lol:

I've lost ~500 followers since tweeting my vaccine-info email to my brother

— Tao Lin (@tao_lin) December 2, 2017

flappy bird, Tuesday, 5 December 2017 02:40 (six years ago) link

haha

.oO (silby), Tuesday, 5 December 2017 03:30 (six years ago) link

When I need medical advice, I always get it from my local hipster novelist

Zelda Zonk, Tuesday, 5 December 2017 03:34 (six years ago) link

Losing 500 followers is nothing like the sting of getting dropped from Vintage, just you wait kid.

fields of salmon, Tuesday, 5 December 2017 14:37 (six years ago) link

He posted a pic of the galley for Trip on his IG. Review copies go out 1/1.

Yelploaf, Sunday, 17 December 2017 17:23 (six years ago) link

I’m surprised it was only 500.

Allen (etaeoe), Sunday, 17 December 2017 18:12 (six years ago) link

scientific accuracy not his forte

j., Sunday, 17 December 2017 18:13 (six years ago) link

i liked the working title Beyond Existentialism, Trip is bleeghh

flappy bird, Monday, 18 December 2017 18:58 (six years ago) link

I wonder if vintage would send me a galley for old time’s sake because I reviewed Taipei for a journal that has since shut down.

treeship 2, Tuesday, 19 December 2017 01:27 (six years ago) link

two weeks pass...

To the right audience, I feel I could do 9/11-related stand-up comedy

— Tao Lin (@tao_lin) January 6, 2018

lmao

flappy bird, Saturday, 6 January 2018 08:14 (six years ago) link

He isn’t good and his time is over

circa1916, Saturday, 6 January 2018 08:38 (six years ago) link

Taipei had like three interesting paragraphs though

circa1916, Saturday, 6 January 2018 08:41 (six years ago) link

nah im psyched for these next 2 books

flappy bird, Saturday, 6 January 2018 22:23 (six years ago) link

the "mystical turn" he seems to have made is interesting but also super troubling

treeship 2, Saturday, 6 January 2018 22:28 (six years ago) link

Go on

flappy bird, Saturday, 6 January 2018 22:28 (six years ago) link

Lin’s turn toward psychedelia, mysticism, and conspiracy theories is obviously a performance, but I think it’s also “real.” He’s living out a false solution for the philosophical and spiritual dead end he conjured in Taipei. Like, the “self” in that book was a prison. Now he’s decided that it was this way for social and political reasons, I guess. The original title of his upcoming book was “Leave Society.” It’s all kind of predictable — he turns from existentialism to the most narcissistic form of politics, an obsession with liberating himself from his own so-called false consciousness, and doing so in part by obsessively regulating his own body, purging himself of “toxins.” If this helps him to stay alive then I guess it is good but it seems like it will be shallow fodder for a novel.

I still think Taipei is an extraordinary book—an uncompromising document of our cultural moment. But everyone who’s mentioned that this is a bad person we are talking about is righ. I feel very weird recommending Taipei to people nowadays even though it’s an important book to me.

― treeship 2, Sunday, November 26, 2017 8:35 PM (one month ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

treeship 2, Saturday, 6 January 2018 22:41 (six years ago) link

damn treeship there is some complicated algebra in that post. eating healthy & quitting hard/prescription drugs is the most narcissistic form of politics? "so-called false consciousness"... that's what Taipei was all about. a complete alienation and disconnection from one's body and environment. shallow fodder? we have no idea what Leave Society will be about.

flappy bird, Saturday, 6 January 2018 22:44 (six years ago) link

tl;dr, the malaise depicted in taipei was something that was socially relevant. it was about living a life without expectations, adrift from the social norms that used to give at least a gloss of meaning to experience (his parents were on a different continent, he was only a "writer" by default, seeming to have no serious passion for his creative work, etc.) i think the "solution" he is trying to move toward -- you know, 'rejecting society,' freeing one's mind with psychedelics -- is false and dangerous. despair curdling into paranoia.

treeship 2, Saturday, 6 January 2018 22:48 (six years ago) link

i mean, i am going to read the book, but i don't think terrence mckenna has the answers, and i think his eagerness to spread stuff like 9/11 conspiracy theories, anti-vaccine stuff, is evidence of a mind that is just kind of railing against the world in all directions.

as an artist, he isn't required to propose a "way out" of the "dead end" of his novel, but he is kind of trying to do that, and in a way that doesn't seem super hopeful.

treeship 2, Saturday, 6 January 2018 22:51 (six years ago) link

I don't know about that... he's just living & eating in a more healthy way. Whether it's as socially relevant is immaterial to me. I'd rather him stay alive and maybe write more mediocre work than keep burrowing into pills and hard drugs and becoming Bret Easton Ellis. I don't know how you can find what he's doing "dangerous" or especially "false" - what's your opinion of Terrence McKenna? I don't think he has all the answers either but he wasn't a charlatan. Tao seems happier now, and not really "pushy" w/r/t/ how other people should be.

flappy bird, Saturday, 6 January 2018 22:52 (six years ago) link

what he is doing isn't actually dangerous. but i don't think organic foods and psychedelics are enough to break through the knot of meaninglessness that has always been his subject. i think that would require some sort of ethical orientation toward the world based on responsibility (what "existentialism" said, which his original title said he moved "beyond"), not the liberation of consciousness through drugs.

treeship 2, Saturday, 6 January 2018 22:59 (six years ago) link

i don't have answers either i just am skeptical of new age "free your mind" stuff, especially when it has to do with conspiracies

treeship 2, Saturday, 6 January 2018 23:02 (six years ago) link

I would argue against spreading anti-vax beliefs and other pseudoscience is in fact dangerous

k3vin k., Saturday, 6 January 2018 23:05 (six years ago) link

xp also i don't want him to keep doing drugs for the sake of "authenticity." i, boringly, hate all drugs.

treeship 2, Saturday, 6 January 2018 23:06 (six years ago) link

err: argue against....being not dangerous

k3vin k., Saturday, 6 January 2018 23:06 (six years ago) link

no, you're right. i think 9/11 conspiracy stuff is "dangerous" too in the vague sense that it's putting more nonsense and confusion into the public sphere. but i don't think tao lin has a following -- he's becoming like one of these new age contrarians.

treeship 2, Saturday, 6 January 2018 23:09 (six years ago) link

anti-vax stuff is easily one of the most dangerous conspiracy theories in existence. 9/11 nonsense is comparatively harmless unless you're stuck talking to one of those ppl at a party or something.

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Sunday, 7 January 2018 00:51 (six years ago) link

i don't think it does much good for the civic health of society tho

treeship 2, Sunday, 7 January 2018 00:52 (six years ago) link

that's true, but but i sort of see it as coming from a different place than anti-vax conspiracies. tbh i've always felt it was kind of an inevitable response to bush and cheney's mendacious use of their own 9/11 conspiracy theory (that saddam was involved) to start a war. it's misguided but i don't really hear truther talk much anymore, except on twitter (where you can find p much every kind of talk going on at all times).

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Sunday, 7 January 2018 01:08 (six years ago) link

I disagree about 9/11 conspiracy theories. 1) it's a form of coping, people trying to 'figure out' something beyond comprehension, and 2) im not a truther but do you believe 100% of the official story? finding mohammad atta's passport on the **street**!! but not the plane's black box?? one example... mostly harmless, unlike anti-vax or pizzagate. to say 9/11 discussion is bad for civic health of society is completely wrong imo, and scares me. it's a valid topic of discussion. why that and not JFK? or pick yr poison...

flappy bird, Sunday, 7 January 2018 01:23 (six years ago) link

jfk and 9/11 conspiracy theories are both significant drains on the US GDP imo

smart people could be doing much better things with their time, like inventing whatever the pretzel version of the epi-baguette is

El Tomboto, Sunday, 7 January 2018 01:29 (six years ago) link

Insane hyperbole, I mean come on... Xbox is a drain on the GDP.

flappy bird, Sunday, 7 January 2018 01:31 (six years ago) link

i don't like that argument. i support unprofitable activities if they are personally enriching.

treeship 2, Sunday, 7 January 2018 01:36 (six years ago) link

right. like 9/11 speculation

flappy bird, Sunday, 7 January 2018 01:37 (six years ago) link

flappy i really just mean the "jet fuel can't melt steel beams" crowd, or the ppl who think that the towers were vaporized from space or something. i think there are most likely legitimate issues w/ the 9/11 commission report (the example you note does sound strange to me, and i've read accounts of cheney's actions that day that seem weird) but the noise of the truthers has sort of made it difficult to look at w/o looking like an idiot, which has probably discouraged serious ppl from paying attention. which is a problem!

jfk is a different story tho, fuck the warren commission and everything else allen dulles ever got his evil mitts on.

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Sunday, 7 January 2018 01:55 (six years ago) link

Right, also we're getting to the point where kids born after 9/11 are making jet fuel can't melt steel beams jokes & arguments. I have friends that were just barely too young to have any memory of the day, which is insane to me. So the silliness of the meme blots out serious consideration. Noise of the truthers is not hard to block out, although I agree bringing it up in casual conversation is fucking stupid. it's weird, JFK hasn't been memed in the same way, that's the only conspiracy theory that's acceptable to believe in the mainstream in America.

flappy bird, Sunday, 7 January 2018 03:25 (six years ago) link

Not weird at all. When JFK was shot, there was no internet, and no meme culture/meme communication.

https://media.giphy.com/media/UH6KH5JebAb5e/200.gif

♫ very clever with maracas.jpg ♫ (Le Bateau Ivre), Sunday, 7 January 2018 03:46 (six years ago) link

What does that have to do with it being acceptable to question the warren report? there are plenty of other contemporary conspiracy theories that are not widely accepted or known

flappy bird, Sunday, 7 January 2018 03:48 (six years ago) link

Just saying I'm p sure 9/11 will be the same re: most people questioning the official story

flappy bird, Sunday, 7 January 2018 03:50 (six years ago) link

Guys wtf I left you alone for hours where is the goddamn pretzel baguette hybrid that’s going to disrupt my lunch forever

El Tomboto, Sunday, 7 January 2018 05:06 (six years ago) link

will my aunt in law someday eschew david "avocado" wolfe memes in favor of tao lin memes?

Scatperson (ski-ba-bop-ba-dop-whore.) (Sufjan Grafton), Monday, 8 January 2018 04:10 (six years ago) link

four months pass...

I just finished Trip, it was really good. Definitely my favorite book of his and probably his best work. I like that it was non-fiction and functioned almost as a companion piece/semi-sequel to Taipei, as that book (like almost all of his work) is very thinly veiled autobiography/memoir. I appreciated the fact that it's not a judgmental book, there's no anti-vaxxer stuff in it, and it's not gloomy or soul-crushing. One can find and access happiness without going off the grid and living in the woods or the jungle drinking ayahuasca. I think it works best as a book about addiction and recovery, and I found the whole journey and particularly the ending very moving. Probably won't sway anyone that doesn't like him or his writing, but who knows. It's certainly the most unfettered and least pretentious of his books by a long shot.

flappy bird, Wednesday, 9 May 2018 19:38 (five years ago) link

five months pass...

Attn: flappy bird. I take back the stuff I said before. The drug book is good.

Trϵϵship, Tuesday, 30 October 2018 01:36 (five years ago) link

It’s not making me into a terrence mckenna supporter but as a work of nonfiction literature—part memoir, part biography, part speculative philosophy book but structured according to his own journey back from nihilism— it’s very good. Every formal choice comes from a place of authenticity, just like taipei

Trϵϵship, Tuesday, 30 October 2018 01:41 (five years ago) link

yeah I loved how the book is really about recovery. glad you got around to it and stuck with it.

flappy bird, Tuesday, 30 October 2018 02:38 (five years ago) link

have read everything of his but could not go to bat for him until Trip. thankfully he's become a writer beyond his disaffected early style. it's a beautiful, sincere book. related; anyone reading Liveblog by megan o'boyle?

Yelploaf, Tuesday, 30 October 2018 04:07 (five years ago) link

Didn't know it was finally out. Will check out asap

flappy bird, Tuesday, 30 October 2018 04:37 (five years ago) link

I wonder how pissed/sad he is when he sees Virgil Abloh “doing” “scare quotes” as an “aesthetic.”

... (Eazy), Tuesday, 30 October 2018 04:54 (five years ago) link


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