ITT: we take any given author and post his best work
>pic related, Hemingway
>>7432666
Gaddis?
Frank Herbert?
Arthur Miller?
Emile Zola?
Henry James?
Woolf?
Camus?
Freud?
I don't think I'm qualified to make any claims of value about Gaddis' works, but from those that I've read, The Recognitions was my favorite.
>>7432678
I was writing your answer, then I saw Freud.
Sorry Anon, I can't do it anymore.
>>7432678
>Arthur Miller
nothing
>>7432678
Nothing to literally all of those shit tier shots
>>7433659
lel
>>7432678
Besides Woolf and Zola, please, be trolling.
non-fiction too?
Machado de Assis
>>7433659
How many of them have you read?
>>7432666
Slightly off topic, but I have a newspaper clipping of a review of that book by Faulkner. Would anyone be interested in it?
>>7433847
All of them, why would I comment otherwise?
>>7433898
Oh.
>>7433889
I am
>>7433889
Yes
>>7433889
pls
>>7433908
I'm lying brw
>>7433889
Well sonny boy show us what you've got.
>>7433815
No way.
>>7432666
The Sun Also Rises stands over all of his other work. You could have at least gotten your own thread off to a proper start.
>>7432666
>>7434214
Yes.
>>7434249
What'd you think of it? I actually just finished reading it this week, i found it a bit plodding in the first 1-2 chapters but from there on out it became better and better and -in retrospect- its actually a fantastically structured and made book.
Some great prose in a lot of spots too.
>>7435313
So is it really that good even though it wasn't finished? People always saw DFW really shined in short fiction or non-fiction but hardly talk about any of his full length books besides IJ.
Also this, though it might not be saying too much
>>7435348
The notes Wallace left behind allow us to understand the direction he was taking the novel and the themes surrounding it. It's also largely autobiographical and recollection of his youth.