The baseball bit at the beginning was very good but I had to throw this shit out after the first few pages of the boomer blowhard homosexualry that followed. I'd rather read Harry Potter
From The Names to Underworld he didn’t miss. From those, at a minimum I would read White Noise since it’s so well known, but Libra is my personal favorite.
Didn’t particularly care for it when reading but with time I learned to appreciate it as one of DeLillo’s finest. I’ll say that if you go in expecting the same brand of maximalist postmodern onanism as Pynchon or DFW you’ll be sorely disappointed.
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998373900
Unfortunately it isn’t.
how so
>nonlinear unboxing thread
op never existed, he is a creation of DeLillo
elaborate on that
You will just have to wait and read the thread like everyone else.
Underworld?.... more like underwear
unlike your "vegana", as a natural born male, my penis and testicles require aeration and space
The baseball bit at the beginning was very good but I had to throw this shit out after the first few pages of the boomer blowhard homosexualry that followed. I'd rather read Harry Potter
was it really full on boomerism bordering on preachy?
Pleb opinion. The prologue is great, but the rest of the book is even better. Especially parts three and four.
did anyone else for the longest time think it was delilo and not delillo
i think de-lie-lo sounds better than de-lil-lo
its actually dee-lee-loh
It's extremely good. I haven't read any of his other books, but I couldn't put Underworld down.
The way the story is told, the way he writes dialogue, the bleakness. It was all kino
From The Names to Underworld he didn’t miss. From those, at a minimum I would read White Noise since it’s so well known, but Libra is my personal favorite.
>dude consumerland is so oppressing! That's why I'm going to bore you and oppress you!
This sort of American writing makes me so frustrated.
It’s mediocre bullshit, don’t waste your time. Read something BASED instead pls
Don't expect a fast pace, but yes it's my favorite book of his by a wide margin.
Just watch the movie, bro. It's got Kate Beckinsale in a catsuit.
Didn’t particularly care for it when reading but with time I learned to appreciate it as one of DeLillo’s finest. I’ll say that if you go in expecting the same brand of maximalist postmodern onanism as Pynchon or DFW you’ll be sorely disappointed.