I tried CJ Box last week and now I've read two of his novels and am starting the third.
Make that book #20.
I tried CJ Box last week and now I've read two of his novels and am starting the third.
For balancing purposes, next go on an Ibsen bingeReading lately a lot of the Norwegian anarco-nihilist Jens Bjørneboe;
Jonas
Blåmann
Haiene
Uten en tråd
Under en hårdere himmel
Den onde hyrde
No, by no means do I concur with his political views or agenda. Nevertheless, these are important post war (WW2) opinions on conformism in general.
Iirc I read Hunger when I was 17 or 18. Re-read it a few years ago. But apart from that, and The Blessing of the Soil (or how the title is translated) I haven't read anything else by him - can you suggest something?Hamsun, on the other hand, is perfect for binging.
Iirc I read Hunger when I was 17 or 18. Re-read it a few years ago. But apart from that, and The Blessing of the Soil (or how the title is translated) I haven't read anything else by him - can you suggest something?![]()
Ended A libertarian walks into a bear by Matthew Hongoltz-Hetling
The book is written in humorous way, it is OK, but the author claims that whe will prove that the bear issue in Grafton is related with the libertarians and they fight against taxes. He does not prove nothing. I am ideologically far from liberarians, in the book there are many examples on how absurd they can be, but there is no a single prove that the bear attacks were due to libertarian's policies
Started Nuclear War: A scenario by Annie Jacobsen