Joyce Carol Oates discussion
What was the Oates novel you first read that inspired you to want to read more of her work?
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Lucinda
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Sep 28, 2012 01:24PM

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I don't use a Kindle, and the few times that I've tried it, I kept trying to treat the Kindle as if it was a book. It was really strange for me. Think I'll always be a book person, as long as my eyes hold out.

My husband bought me a kindle for Mother's Day about 3 years ago and I got hooked. I love it. I take it to the gym and nail salon - its so easy. We have a whole library of hard and soft covers - we are both book people - so we have a lot of books. We made our family room into a library!

Mine was 'Middle Age: A Romance' then 'We Were the Mulvaneys.' Her writing does read like a stream of poetry. Beautiful, sometimes-so-wretched-I-feel-like-throwing-up-in-sadness stuff.


Love the way you describe JCO - Claudine!







I love that about her too. It's a challenge I enjoy to get hold of all her books.




It just makes me happy to read how engaged we are with her works, each work a different engagement. I read TWO OR THREE THINGS I FORGOT TO TELL YOU and LITTLE BIRD OF HEAVEN last year. Looking forward to THE FALLS and another 1-2 more this year. Happy reading, guys!

That is one of her best I think, enjoy




That's very helpful, thanks.


I've read part of her first Journal, to be rejoined soon.
It was difficult to find a copy of her first novel With Shuddering Fall, but I was able to secure a copy through interlibrary loan. When I think how young she was when she wrote that first novel…
I’ve begun reading the Wonderland Quartet, just completing the first novel A Garden of Earthly Delights. The more I read of her work, the more I want to read. Expensive People and Wonderland will be found under the Christmas tree this year. You may understand when I say Christmas can’t come quickly enough. I’ve read the first chapter of Expensive People online. Three times. It is haunting. And wickedly good.
JCO, of whom it is said with mind numbing regularity, is a prolific writer, but she truly is, has also written poetry, essays and critical works. And for that I am grateful.

Just finished 'Middle Age: a Romance' - about a well to do community called Salthill-on-Hudson full of local groups with pretentious titles dedicated to preserving the ‘historical character’ of the area. Like most of her books it’s savagely funny in places, especially about some of the residents’ awful, ungrateful children. Including one of her funniest 'one-liners' at the top of p.336. One of those novels one is really sad to finish - I just loved it.
I'm just grateful she's so prolific . I'm now on #23 'Son of the Morning' and thankfully, not yet half way through! And even if I do manage to 'outpace' her production of new titles I'm looking forward to re-reading my favourites.

I don't think she's the only author to inspire the completionist game though - I for once feel that way with John Irving too. The difference is that he has written about 15 novels I think and JCO has written roughly a billion...!
She's amazing!

I'm convinced that JCO is and will be next to the GIANTS in literature history.
Until now, my favourite is "black girl/white girl"