After reading Don Quixote and Ulysses 90% of literature feels like crap to me
Should I read Proust?
>>9884742
i love eating a high-class meal, where the dishes blend fresh ingredients in ways i would not think possible. i also like cheap meals, soaked in fat and loaded with carbs.
if i only ate high-class meals, it would drain me of resources best spent elsewhere. if i only ate cheap meals, i would lose my palette and probably get fat. if i only ate raw vegetables (*cough* scientific journals), i would be healthy, but i would lose my ability to find joy in eating.
you should probably take a break from the high-brow, opie, and read something comfy like wodehouse or tolkien. variety is the spice of life.
>>9884774
>food analogy
>>9884774
>if i only ate raw vegetables (*cough* scientific journals), i would be healthy, but i would lose my ability to find joy in eating.
>Being such a pleb you cant enjoy the deliciousness of vegetables.
Also, your analogy is extremely retarded, if I was able to eat only high-class meals for the rest of my life I'd with no doubt do it.
>>9884742
this is a natural feeling, I feel the same way. Yes, read Proust. Proust, Joyce, Homer, Shakespeare, Dante, Cervantes, Melville, Chekhov, Dostoesvky, Tolstoy, and maybe a handful of others - it's better to dive into these authors with more depth than to waste your time with 99% of the shit out there
>>9884774
>food analogy
fatmerican-tier
I don't get this good analogy meme. They're fine and easily understood by a wide audience.
How 'bout you go wayyyy back and read Gilgamesh?
>>9884742
Yes you should absolutely read Proust. It is one of the best books ever and I've read a lot of books. It take the auto-biography and allows it to perversely blossom into a manifold work of hermetic mysticism, libidinous kunstlerroman, profound psycho-analytical insight, and study on power relations. Seriously. Everyone. Read Proust. I've read Ulysses, I've read Crime & Punishment, I've read Gravity's Rainbow, I've read The Man Without Qualities - if you're going to invest the time to read only one doorstopping masterpiece, make it In Search of Lost Time (although Man Without Qualities does give it a solid run for its money, but ends up with points detracted for too much wish-fulfillment soap opera dramatics, though none of these modernist biographically-formed yarns escape it entirely.
>>9884742
Anne carson said she read proust every morning at breakfast and it took 7 years. Then she described life after proust as a "desert." I think you should do it. It will be a spiritual expedition.
>>9885918
If I took 7 years to read any single book then my life would feel like a desert too.