what's most /fa/ novelist or poet?
Rambo
Poet.
>>8468397
>implying these faggots read
Camus.
>>8468424
Fuck yes
will.i.am
>not bukowski
>top pleb
>>8468834
Bukowski was a shit stain
>>8468839
FUCK YOU! Charles Bukowski was the greatest novelist ever, the only one who didnt need to boost his ego by using big words while people who read other poets jerk off over the fact that they are able to understand those big words, he connects with the reader on a much deeper more human level. He writes stories he actually experienced and not some stupid fictionary shit while still being humorous and down to earth.
Fuck you your opinion is wrong and I am right.
>>8468853
>not ever having read Arthur Rimbaud
>not being able to understand the will of the human spirit
>caring about pretentiousness when bukowski is an edgelord faggit
>>8468853
fans of shit things like CB can only express themselves in ironic memetalk
Emile Zola.
Jack Kerouac
>>8468977
his writing is shit tho
>>8468986
Otherfag here
It is.
>>8468996
Why?
>So edgy to hate Kerouac
Charles Dodgson
>>8469025
this
>>8468996
otherfag here,
it isn't.
>>8468853
>being afraid of "big words"
top pleb bucko
I don't know shit about literature
It depends on what you're good at. Both can be /fa/ as fuck or cringe worthy.
T.S. Eliot
Does /fa/ simply equal good in this case?
Can a novelist/poet be a great writer but also un/fa/?
Are there mediocre or bad writers that are /fa/?
Oscar Wilde?
'hem
Gil Scott Heron
J.D. Salinger is really handsome. He knew how to live too.
charles bukowski
Forgot pic
>>8468397
I know he's basically "babby's first literature," but I personally love Hemingway. And if you've read A Farewell to Arms and The Sun Also Rises, you'll see he's effay as fuck.
>living in Paris going to parties and getting drunk
>going to Pamplona to see the running of the bulls and fly fishing
>all that self loathing
and
>expatriate living in Italy
>spending time with qts
>running away from the war
Well, either him or Camus in my opinion.
>>8468765
Some of us do
>>8468774
very good candidate
>>8468834
Bukowski is alright in that "idgaf" kind of attitude, have you seen "Barfly?"
>>8468896
Haven't read anything by him except in lit class, so I can't speak to that. Need to get on it though.
>>8468977
Another solid candidate, really any of the Beatniks, imo.
>>8469412
All of Modernism is pretty /fa/
>>8469456
Not necessarily "good," but more like a lifestyle and swagger about the writer themself and their content (thought literary fiction is normally character-driven, not plot-driven).
are we talking strictly looks or what
>>8470483
That looks like jgl when he's like 50.
Just look at that jawline.
>>8470496
>>8470593
Melville must've looked good as fuck
>>8468977
I had a writing lab class in which he was the teacher.
I feel old now
>>8468853
>shaming "elitism"
A large vocabulary doesn't only play with the ego. The meanings of those words are not always the exact same as their layman counterparts. And they sound amazing.
>>8468397
>>8470496
FUN FACT OF THE DAY
Joseph Conrad was dirty slav, he was from Poland.
check it
>>8468834
>>8468853
>>8468853
i like Bukowski but jesus christ you are biggest tool ever
>>8468829
>about to post Burroughs
>see this
Muh nigga
>>8468984
gr8 b8 m8 I r8 it 8/8
Stanis?aw Ignacy Witkiewicz "Witkacy"
Rold Dahl please
>>8469456
i'd say Haruki Murakami is pretty /fa/, but not anywhere near the best writers and close to mediocre
i still enjoy some of his novels though, Sputnik Sweetheart probably being my favorite
>most /fa/ writer
>not posting our lord and savior
>>8468853
b8/10
>>8473968
What a leftist piece of shit.
>>8474112
>most writers
>not liberal
>>8473968
white teenage girl detected
Hemingway is the most /fa/ novelist
James Joyce is cool too, just in a different way
>inb4 Ulysses, so avant-garde! :^)
>>8474344
>James Joyce
Finnegans Wake, so avant-garde! :^)
raymond carver
Kafka, please
>>8469456
my favorite writer of all time, nabokov, was a prissy, upper-class elitist with a silly voice so I would say he is not particularly fashionable
I would probably say pushkin or something for most /fa/ but rimbaud is an excellent candidate as well
If your answer is anything other than Ernest Hemingway, you're wrong. He is a force of Man.
mayakovsky probably
>>8472696
AWWWW YEUH
>>8474722
Oh, and, F Scott Fitzgerald and his wife, Zelda were pretty /fa/ in their time.
Strong contemporary candidate: Rachel Kushner.
>>8468853
I don't remember Bukowski being as bad as people make him out to be, but then I hardly remember him.
Either way: oh, wow, another /fa/ novelist related.
>>8468424
a-are you me?
>>8471644
/thread
>has sex with men
>writes in fashion magasine
>wears tiny tight pants
Oscar WIlde is epitome of /fa/
Wittgenstein, no discuss.
Isn't the OP asking which literary pursuit is more /fa/ and not which individual poet or novelist is most /fa/?
>/fa/ in charge of reading comprehension
>still shit up a thread with irrelevant opinions when none of them can read
>>8474236
I love the summer
>>8476469
you (and/or OP) is a stupid whoreson
why?
cause comma
>>8476445
manlet tho :/
he was a poet but yeah, he's the most /fa/ for me
>>8474589
This right here. Based Mishima. /fa/ and /fit/ all rolled up into one.
>>8468853
I didn't know a walking TV dinner browsed /fa/. Go to bed, Mr Franco.
>>8468853
>He writes stories he actually experienced and not some stupid fictionary shit while still being humorous and down to earth.
While I get what you are saying, I don't think Buko ever worked as a mail man and raped a woman for not signing for a package.
>>8477209
He actually was a mailman though
I don't think he's overly /fa/, but I find my summer fits are getting rather reminiscent of Hunter S Thompson. Especially after the passing trend of bucket hats.
When I have fears that I may cease to be
Before my pen has glean’d my teeming brain,
Before high piled books, in charact’ry,
Hold like rich garners the full-ripen’d grain;
When I behold, upon the night’s starr’d face,
Huge cloudy symbols of a high romance,
And think that I may never live to trace
Their shadows, with the magic hand of chance;
And when I feel, fair creature of an hour!
That I shall never look upon thee more,
Never have relish in the faery power
Of unreflecting love! - then on the shore
Of the wide world I stand alone, and think
Till Love and Fame to nothingness do sink
W.B. Yeats
>>8470475
yeah, my vote would be for Hemingway. The man lead any incredibly /fa/ lifestyle.
>>8474765
Fitzgerald couldn't hold his liquor tho.
>>8470458
this needs more attention