thoughts on naked lunch?
>>7676732
I can think of at least two things wrong with that title.
shit, desu
The quirky adventures of le edgy beat gayman
>>7676732
A fun rompus but does not deserve the praise it gets
does anyone else think the prose in this book is really interesting? the edgelord stuff is kind of annoying (although its passable due to its age imo) but Burroughs can really lay down some diction+syntax
>>7676959
Where do people praise it? I doubt I've ever seen a positive comment here.
I love it shamelessly for all the buttfucking
>>7676732
Loved this book when I was 15, abhorred it at 25.
Fear and Loathing for shitty gay pretentious people
>>7676972
Agreed. Love the writing, not really a fan of anything else.
a lot of what people miss about this book going past the drugs and the homosexuality and the edge is its about systems of power and control. The removal of the other which allows humanity to systemically contribute to unchecked political power systems
Yeh I get why it's important and respect it but I do not gain enjoyment out of reading it.
I read it in 9th grade (for what reason I cannot remember), and it fucking blew my mind in many different ways. I had never come close to experiencing something that obscene and shocking, I couldn't stop reading it.
I think it did a lot for me, reading it when I did. I learned what books can really be, more than just a story laid out in a linear fashion, but something that can disgust you beyond words, but in a way that draws you in.
I can understand people who wouldn't like it, or people who would say it's "edgy", but at the time it was published, it was incredibly important, pushing the boundaries of what our culture would allow, for probably the last time. It really broke through the last barrier of the nonsense morality committees who would ban books. And for me especially, it broke through all of my notions of what a book could do.
>>7676980
>Where do people praise it? I doubt I've ever seen a positive comment here.
You just implied /lit/ is the only place that talks about literature
Get off your computer for a while my man
>>7676972
I think it was pretty shitty in a lot of places
Why do people care about this book when Tropic of Cancer was published more than twenty years before it?
Is it because it's edgier?
what is wrong with edginess?
didnt like it the first time
enjoyed parts of it the second time
trying to see it as an on-the-run narrative and how agent lee fits into each chapter was fun for me, even if it's not the way it's meant to be read
my favorite parts were junkies being portrayed as international spies, and the professional rivalry relations junkies had with dealers and cops
>>7677213
it's cringey
>>7677213
Unpleasant reminder to the meek that they are unremarkable pussies