02-18-2014, 02:33 AM | #16 | |
Wizard
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Quote:
There are two protagonists - the man and the boy. No names. They travel through completely destroyed country. Everything is gray and black after some un-specified catastrophe that destroyed everything organic. Everything is covered in ash. They are meeting various groups of people. Usually *very* uncivilized and hostile. They are tired, cold, wet, hungry, thirsty, miserable, scared, and hopeless. Their dialogs are very repetitive, terse and short, usually dealing with the fact that they are tired, cold, wet, hungry, thirsty, miserable, scared, and hopeless. There is no punctuation in the text, no quote marks for dialogs. I am very surprised the writer did use capital letters for the beginning of the sentences - he discarded everything else, so why stop at capital letters. I think that if he wasn't already very famous before submitting the manuscript, his book would have ended up in the garbage bin before the publisher finished reading the first page. |
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02-18-2014, 02:55 AM | #17 |
Witcher
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The Trial. Kafka.
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02-18-2014, 10:25 AM | #18 |
Hiding with an ereader
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I really liked The Road. It's a great suggestion for someone asking for depressing.
A couple of standout books that have real depth and fit the "depressing" bill are A Perfect Night to go to China by David Gilmour (Governor General's award winner) and The Time in Between by David Bergen. The Gilmour book has about the most depressing and yet satisfying ending of any book I've ever read. |
02-18-2014, 10:45 AM | #19 | |
Are you gonna eat that?
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The House on the Borderland by William Hope Hodgson. It's a thoroughly bleak little novel.
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02-18-2014, 11:51 AM | #20 |
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Orwell's 1984. A depressing story set in a drepressing world.
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02-18-2014, 02:12 PM | #21 |
Wizard
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I'll second The Road as tremendously depressing. Some of Cormac's other books also made me frown.
And another big shout out for Peter Watts. His Rifters trilogy was brilliant and depressing. |
02-18-2014, 02:19 PM | #22 |
affordable chipmunk
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try reading twitter or 4chan posts
the very best from our current illiterate caveman culture |
02-18-2014, 02:50 PM | #23 |
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02-18-2014, 03:14 PM | #24 | |
affordable chipmunk
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02-18-2014, 03:50 PM | #25 |
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I was sure I had commented already but apparently not... Anyway, I agree with The Roadand, also, On The Beach. You might also consider Never Let Me Go or Atonement. Children of Men, for more dystopia.
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02-18-2014, 06:54 PM | #26 |
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Leaving Las Vegas by John O'Brien, which I believe was his last novel before he committed suicide. If you have a heart, the ending will break it ... snap it like a twig, in fact.
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02-19-2014, 07:10 AM | #27 |
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It's been a long time since I read it, perhaps I should reread it before recommending it, but I remember Jean-Paul Sartre's Nausea being depressing but very good too.
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02-19-2014, 12:59 PM | #28 |
Dark Lord of the Sith
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Harlan Ellison
Nobody mentioned Harlan Ellison yet - pretty much most of his short stories qualify. A good example is "I have no mouth and I must scream". Doesn't that paint a cheerful picture?
IIRC, one of his collections, Deathbird Stories, even has a disclaimer not to read it if you're depressed, although I could be confusing it with some other Ellison book. Ellison also penned the famous Star Trek (original series) episode called City on the Edge of Forever. The Road is still pretty much #1 on my bleak and depressing list though. |
02-19-2014, 07:04 PM | #29 |
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Another vote for both "The Stand" and "The Road".
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02-20-2014, 06:48 AM | #30 |
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catcher in the rye, crime and punishment, depressing, elliott smith, suggest |
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