I mean many existing laureates have written screenplays. Hell, I think the best work of Handke I've ever encountered is his script for Wings of Desire. Faulkner also wrote numerous screenplays, George Bernard Shaw won an Oscar for his script for Pygmalion in 1938.
Inherent Vice is very good and one of his more accessible (and shorter) works. If you liked Lot 49 good chance you'll enjoy it, it's another detective story.
I've heard the trick with Gravity's Rainbow is to just not fight it. Don't worry about understanding every little bit, just keep moving ahead with it. I've also been felled by it before but intending to do the whole thing soon.
Israel feels like a possible can of worms politically at the moment they may opt to avoid (btw, who are the frontrunners from there?) but I think Middle East could be ripe for another laureate. Also agree it's downright insane how few Latin and South American laureates there are for how rich the...
Same as how there's no clockwork orange in A Clockwork Orange.
Philip Roth only was never going to win in hindsight now that he's dead, so we can only say that with certainty now. I mean, you're probably correct, but who the hell knows? This whole thread is about trying to pick the needle out...
Dylan also had the luck of not just being born an American and a native English speaker, but of being born in time to rise up during the 1960s. Just like there will never be another band on the sheer level of popularity as The Beatles, the way media functions today it's impossible to imagine a...
It's an interesting issue with music translation. Often times, as the author of that blog post points out, there's little effort made to capture the meaning of original lyrics when taking a song from one country to the other. In fact, there used to be an entire business model built on taking...
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