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Running Dog by Don DeLillo REVIEW 

TheBookchemist
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History is true.
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UK readers, buy it on Blackwell's (also an affiliate):
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Опубликовано:

 

8 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 30   
@Mlovesfashion62
@Mlovesfashion62 5 лет назад
I really like the fact that you don't use so many cuts in your videos, It just flows so naturally.
@mikkelandersen6242
@mikkelandersen6242 5 лет назад
I love Delillo, it's like a feverdream, i just get lost in the way he writes, he's use of words is so compelling, it's like every sentence is constructed with some kind of aesthetic in mind.
@bighardbooks770
@bighardbooks770 5 лет назад
Are you planning an _Against the Day_ read-a-long this year, still? Hope so 😁
@TheBookchemist
@TheBookchemist 5 лет назад
Unfortunately I'm afraid that's been delayed to a less busy time :( I'm sorry to disappoint, I know some of you were looking forward to it!
@cameronlamoureux2975
@cameronlamoureux2975 5 лет назад
Another great video. Might have to start with Running Dog before White Noise now that I know about it. Thanks!
@jam-nc8ut
@jam-nc8ut 4 года назад
I loved Running Dog, too. Like you, I think, I had quite modest expectations for the book. I've read Delillo over many years, but only reached this one this year. It doesn't get much attention whenever you read or hear about Delillo, it is rarely seen in book shops, and the premise seems faintly ridiculous. However, what you get is actually classic Delillo. Not quite as sharply observed, or as funny as White Noise, certainly not as epic as Underworld (though only a few books ever written are), but Running Dog deserves much more attention than it gets (I would say the same about 'Players' too). Great to see your review of this worthy book here, and hope to find more Don Delillo reviews on your channel...I shall search now!
@psychedelicsoldier
@psychedelicsoldier 4 года назад
Running Dog is next on my list of DeLillo novels. I have read White Noise, Libra, Underworld, The Body Artist, Falling Man, Endzone, Ratners Star, and just finished Players today. I gotta say, I thought Players was terrible, I’m trying to figure out if it was as big a disappointment as The Body Artist. With Players, the two main character were existentially bored in their lives and decided to go their own ways and do something different to get out of that. The book came off boring to me and it was tough to get through with the last chapter being of much interest to me. I’m curious what your thoughts are on it though since you think it is overlooked. What did I overlook?
@timkjazz
@timkjazz 5 лет назад
'Running Dog' is brilliant, great choice to read and critique, another book to check out is Steve Erickson's 'Tours of the Black Clock', a novel dealing with Banning Jainlight, a Pennsylvania lad who happens to be Hitler's private pornographer. To say any more would perhaps spoil the dreamy, imaginative tale that follows, one of sexual obsession, time and the absolutes of evil. If you haven't read Steve Erickson, a favorite of Thomas Pynchon, author of 'Days Between Stations', 'Rubicon Beach', Arc d'X', 'Shadowbahn', 'Our Ecstatic Days', 'Amnesiascope', 'The Sea Came In at Midnight', 'Zeroville', 'These Dreams of You' and 2 works of non-fiction political campaign books, you are really in for a treat.
@warlockofwordsreturnsrb4358
@warlockofwordsreturnsrb4358 5 лет назад
Interesting comparison to Conrad's Kurtz!
@paololatini4996
@paololatini4996 5 лет назад
Slightly off-topic: Check out “Amazons,” the one DeLillo wrote under the pseudonym Cleo Birdwell. I think Amazons is one of his best novel, at least his most accessible and funny. Also a favorite by Jonathan Lethem and Rachel Kushner.
@k.e.1760
@k.e.1760 5 лет назад
Do you plan on reading any of Burroughs' works this year?
@TheBookchemist
@TheBookchemist 5 лет назад
I do, but then again, I've been planning to do that since 2012, so who am I kidding :)?
@12HHoo
@12HHoo 3 года назад
I also enjoyed Running Dog. However, I'm a bigger fan of Players. Any chance of reviewing Players?
@TheBookchemist
@TheBookchemist 3 года назад
Eventually, yes! I still have to read that one :)
@omarelric
@omarelric 5 лет назад
Hey man, I’ve been following your channel from a couple of months by now, I feel that it stands out from the others, I don’t have an academic background but i enjoyed some of Pynchon, DFW and Borges works, what can I read that goes deeper into the meta fiction thing and philosophic themes like Borges’s library of Babel?
@omarelric
@omarelric 5 лет назад
Boaz Groenendaal cool, I’ll check it out, thank you man, preciate it !
@TheBookchemist
@TheBookchemist 5 лет назад
Thanks for the comment :D a few metafictional classics would include If on a Winter's Night a Traveler by Calvino, One Hundred Years of Solitude by Marquez, The Name of the Rose by Eco, and the urtext of it all, Cervantes' Don Quixote. Name of the Rose in particular carries on some very Borges-ian philosophical reflections on the nature of texts as related to the world (as do Eco's other novels).
@omarelric
@omarelric 5 лет назад
The_Bookchemist thanks man, now that you mention umberto eco, have you read jean Baudrilliard? I know these guys wrote about hiperrealism and things like that, check out this analysis of American psycho: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-RJfurfb5_kw.html
@robertcmcdermott
@robertcmcdermott 5 лет назад
Thank you for all your work, I really enjoy your reviews; best on YT. Have you read or plan on reading any Thomas Bernhard? His style is very unique.
@TheBookchemist
@TheBookchemist 5 лет назад
He's been recommended to me plenty of times, but I'm still to read any of his novels! They all look quite intimidating ^^! (Thanks for the comment by the way :D)
@robertcmcdermott
@robertcmcdermott 5 лет назад
@@TheBookchemist Just like CoL49 is a good entry point into TP (it has the flavor and it's short), Thomas Bernhard's "Yes" is about the same size, but much easier to read. I was in the middle of Gravity's Rainbow and took a badly needed mental break by reading "Yes". The contrast was dramatic. "Yes" only has four characters and you only learn the name of one of them. While the canvas of GR is the world, "Yes" takes place in the mind of a single unnamed narrator.
@potaconplays8634
@potaconplays8634 5 лет назад
Terrific novel
@yassinebouzid3665
@yassinebouzid3665 5 лет назад
Don't you think that Ratner's Star is delillo's most pynchonian novel ? I think i read on wikipédia that it was Delillo's favorite novel in his œuvre
@TheBookchemist
@TheBookchemist 5 лет назад
I haven't read that one yet, although it always sounded fascinating!
@MarcNash
@MarcNash 5 лет назад
I have to say this is my least favourite Dellilo (I've read them all except Libra & Ratner's Star)> It just struck me as a far less mature work than what he went on to write - maybe it wasn't best served by being one of his last books for me to get to. But in the light of what you felt, maybe I should give it another look.
@TheBookchemist
@TheBookchemist 5 лет назад
One thing I noticed about DeLillo is that different fans tend to like very different novels. Most everyone agrees on Underworld's greatness, and I don't think I've heard many complaints about White Noise, but that said, I recently spoke with a DeLillo scholar who really really liked Mao II, which was a good but rather lukewarm experience for me. And the late novels are even more divisive!
@MarcNash
@MarcNash 5 лет назад
@@TheBookchemist Ha that's probably fair! I love Mao II. I think my favourite though, perhaps surprisingly, is Cosmopolis. BTW have you had the chance to read Lethem's Feral Detective yet? I loved it, another really strong female character which he seems to be getting better & better at.
@GeorgeMillerUSA
@GeorgeMillerUSA 5 лет назад
Off-topic, but do you subvocalize/move your lips when you read? This is the reason why it took me so long to a read a book, even a shorter one.
@TheBookchemist
@TheBookchemist 5 лет назад
I don't! Sometimes when I really like what I'm reading I read a couple of pages out loud; I find that it helps slowing down and enjoying the language more.
@linksid92
@linksid92 5 лет назад
Do you name your plants?
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