martes, 4 de noviembre de 2008

Diary. A novel - Chuck Palahniuk

Ok, I tell you what it happens.

I was quite tired so I decided to go to sleep. It was early, not even 24:00, so I thought that I could read one or two chapters from Chuck Palahniuk's "Diary. A novel". Two hours later I have finished the book, I'm totally awaken and my brain is full of an angst that is difficult to describe. Palahniuk probably would be proud of how bad I felt while I was reading this book.
Don't get me wrong, I don't like to suffer and if I continued reading this book was because:
  • Some of the thoughts about Art on the book were interesting.
  • The psychological horror that defines this novel gets you almost right from the beginning. And even when reading it becomes a hard work and the atmosphere is so oppressive that you are damning Palahniuk for being so twisted, you have to continue.
Do I recommend the story of Misty Wilmot, a once-promising young artist currently working as a waitress in a hotel. Her husband, a contractor, is in a coma after a suicide attempt. According to the description on the back of Diary: A Novel, Misty "soon finds herself a pawn in a larger conspiracy that threatens to cost hundreds of lives."? Well, I'm sure that I won't read it again but some of the elements that are inside the novel moved me to a reflection exercise about what means to be an artist.

Lately, seems like all books that I'm reading are not exactly cheerful... Now this book, before it "Si esto es un hombre" ("If this a human being", I guess would be the English title) the biographical history of a Italian Jew that survived from Auswitch that my friend Eduardo gave me before I left Spain. And the books that I bought with "Diary" seems to be similar: Rant, also from Palahniuk and Hannibal Rising. Luckily, I also bought "The merchant of Venice".

5 comentarios:

yas dijo...
Este comentario ha sido eliminado por el autor.
yas dijo...

First I read "Ghosts", that amused me, I liked it thought it showed me those kind of things that most people doesn't want to imagine; and it was such an introduction to Palahniuk's style.

But it was while reading "Asphyxia" on the bus, that I felt no one should know how much I was enjoying it, because maybe that fact ment I am not so pure as I am supposed to be...

En resumen: me he tirado 15 minutos para escribir esta mierda porque mi inglés en sí es una mierda y tengo menos soltura que Pinocho en el Prospekto un viernes a las 3 de la mañana. Pero vamos, que a mí el libro de los dos que me he leído de este tipo que me encantó fue "Asfixia"; me inquietaba y me corrompía, pero me flipaba. Ahora bien, si esto es lo que Palahniuk decide verter en el papel y publicar, ¿qué será lo que no se atreve a sacar de su cabeza, qué es lo que se autocensurará?

Alvaro dijo...

Es jodido, ¿eh? Yo también me tiro la de dios para intentar no utilizar 4 palabras y que no suene a "castellano traducido a ingles" pero aún así...

Tu comentario muy interesante. Por lo que he leido en entrevistas y visto en videos sobre Chuck, creo que no se autocensura en absoluto... Si lees un poco su biografia, veras que su vida tambien ha sido bastante particular.

Javier González de Prado Salas dijo...

No tengo ni idea de quien es Palahniuk! pero tampoco me parece que el Mercader de Venecia sea el libro más optimista...

yas dijo...

Javi, Palahniuk es el autor de "El club de la lucha", afamada novela merced a la peli.