Re: What are you reading?

902
Well since I have started writing LGBTQ+ fiction, I decided it was time to be reading some ha ha. So over the summer/fall I have read:

Martyr! - Kaveh Akbar 4.5/5⭐️
Under The Cerulean Sea - TJ Klune 4.0/5⭐️
Bath Haus - PJ Vernon 4.0/5⭐️
We Could Be So Good - Cat Sebastian 3.5/5⭐️
Giovanni’s Room - James Baldwin 5.0+/5⭐️

But now I am switching things up and jumping into Tom’s Crossing by Mark Z. Danielewski. I did like House Of Leaves but IMO it did seem a little too clever/precious for its own good despite its riskiness. I read it ages ago and just now found out about its cult classic status. I am basically going into Tom’s Crossing blind and TBH I realize it is classified as a horror novel which I definitely don’t read a lot of. It is Thick AF so hopefully I will make it through lol.
I am Duncan Gaye.
I am also HOMO/NYMS.

Re: What are you reading?

903
Dave N. wrote: Thu Nov 13, 2025 2:15 pm I loved Stoner so much, I decided to read the other two John Williams books. Butcher’s Crossing was a fun read, a book about buffalo hunters in the time when the buffalo were dwindling. I’m currently reading Augustus, and I’m having a hard time digging in. It’s his book about the life of Caesar Augustus that won the National Book Award in 1971. Going to push through a little while longer in hopes it’ll get me interested.

He wrote a book called Nothing But the Night that came out in 1948, but he wanted no association with the book later in life. I don’t think it’s easy to find.
NYRB was recently printing it. It's a great series actually, IMO.

https://www.nyrb.com/products/nothing-b ... 3699623988
turnbullac wrote: Mon Nov 17, 2025 8:40 am
But now I am switching things up and jumping into Tom’s Crossing by Mark Z. Danielewski. I did like House Of Leaves but IMO it did seem a little too clever/precious for its own good despite its riskiness.
Just heard about this guy but comparisons to DF Wallace are throwing me off.
Records + CDs for sale

Re: What are you reading?

906
Into the Void - Geezer Butlers book on Sabbath
… it’s no literary masterpiece, but is very entertaining. What’s great is the backstory of his childhood and all their pasts in working class Birmingham and their very rapid rise to fame - they were really just clueless young dudes in their early 20s FFS!

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