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Naked Lunch by Burroughs. Great read, but I was slightly put off by it starting off more structured and then spiraling into chaos. Reading My Education now (pretty short, will only take me a few days) and I've requested The Adding Machine and Cities of the Red Night from my school's library.
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# ¿ Nov 16, 2006 02:34 |
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# ¿ Apr 29, 2024 03:25 |
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Cities of the Red Night by William Burroughs. I truly believe that anyone who says Naked Lunch is his masterpiece hasn't read CotRN. The book has two separate storylines: The story of Noah Blake, set in 1702: a gunsmith who registers as a crewman with a shady captain named Opium Jones and becomes involved with a group of pirate revolutionaries who seek to bring down the Spanish armada, and the other storyline features Clem Snide, a present day private detective who is retained by a wealthy family to investigate the disappearance of his son. Things that eventually tie the two storylines together: a radioactive virus, ancient magic rituals, time travel, and a set of six cities said to have existed in the modern day Gobi Desert in the far past. If not for Burroughs' knack for satire and apocalyptic weirdness, this could have easily turned into some lame fantasy/historical fiction novel. The only thing that started to become annoying was the overabundance of constant homosexual depravity (much more so than any of his other books that I've read), but it still stands as one of the best books I've read in a long time.
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# ¿ Nov 30, 2006 05:00 |