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logan williams

logan@bookwyrm.social

Joined 2 years, 2 months ago

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The Morning Star (Hardcover, 2021, Penguin Press) 4 stars

It's a normal night in August. Literature professor Arne and artist Tove are with their …

flawed but satisfying

4 stars

he's a controversial author, but as a work of fiction, i think this one escapes some of the ethical concerns of "my struggle". the writing and characterization is 100% him though, all engaging if samey trainwrecks.

i really loved the middle of the book, and that's where most of the stars come from -- all half-stories half-finished, half-deaths and half-light, half-tied together -- but ultimately only a half-assed attempt at richard powers as the pieces never quite fit. (arguably an artistic choice, but a lazy one for a novel.) and finally, it ends with a tedious and sophomoric "essay on death." okay, diagetically it's written by a washed-up failson wannabe-philosopher, but it's given such an important place in the book that one cannot help but feel it is something knaussgard is saying himself, and it doesn't come across well.

worth it if you like knausgaard's prose and characterization, 4 stars …

Norwegian Wood (2011, Penguin Random House) 5 stars

isn't it good

4 stars

as his first book to go "mainstream," i had always heard it described as one of his most bildungsroman/young man stumbles through sexuality themed, but i think this rather undersells it. it's definitely the most straightforward of his fiction i've read (and the earliest) but it had a lot to say (to me at least) about mental health and the struggle to bridge incomprehensibly different internal worlds. sex, wells, spiritual blockers, cats, music (more pop than jazz in this one), and food of course all play a feature role.

The Ministry for the Future (Paperback, 2021, Orbit) 4 stars

Established in 2025, the purpose of the new organization was simple: To advocate for the …

A book worth starting

3 stars

The first 1/3 landed really well, but it started falling apart quickly after that. First KSR I've read, and I had "hard scifi" expectations for characterization, but there was still some corny stuff.

But despite the awkward anonymous first person chapters and uncomfortable Switzerland fetishization I think it succeeds at its primary goal: envisioning a collaborative utopian approach to realistic climate change impacts.