tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3961112.post8300429944521180078..comments2023-09-18T03:52:15.235-07:00Comments on Fatshadow: My Reading ListTishhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16387565302124813118noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3961112.post-35382491009910718632018-01-17T11:35:39.902-08:002018-01-17T11:35:39.902-08:00Oh man. As always you expand my book list.
Oh man. As always you expand my book list. <br />Tishhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16387565302124813118noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3961112.post-42682896359533809682018-01-16T16:35:38.462-08:002018-01-16T16:35:38.462-08:00And another thing, don't get me started on Fla...And another thing, don't get me started on Flannery O'Connor. That woman is dark as f#ck and yet she's considered a Catholic writer, who describes men burning out their own eyes by spooning lye into them. (!!!!!!!) Not exactly bedtime reading, but who can forget that?? <br /><br />On a more light-filled, less creepy loop, Annie Dillard is the writer who remains camped out in my brain,Kristinanoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3961112.post-23239564733217468822018-01-16T16:24:01.153-08:002018-01-16T16:24:01.153-08:00Ha! But it's a good kind of loopy. If one is e...Ha! But it's a good kind of loopy. If one is ever going to be loopy about something, going back and forth about the positives and negatives, or just reconsiderations of an author or an author's work is a good place to loop. I think it was the yammering that may have put me off Pamuk. Never had the time to go back and read other works of his. <br /><br />There are books that, while not Kristinanoreply@blogger.com