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| The Rough Guide to Cult Fiction (Rough Guides Reference Titles) | 
enlarge | Creator: Michaela Bushell, Helen Rodiss Paul Simpson Publisher: Rough Guides Category: Book
List Price: $12.99 Buy New: $10.39 You Save: $2.60 (20%)
New (3) Used (9) from $10.35
Avg. Customer Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 356662
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 363 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 6.1 x 4.5 x 0.7
ISBN: 1843533871 Dewey Decimal Number: 823.009 EAN: 9781843533870 ASIN: 1843533871
Publication Date: May 16, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 2 to 3 weeks
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Product Description This new Rough Guide will make you a literary buff in the time it takes to say Jack Kerouac. Even if you already know your Hunter S Thompson from your Jim Thompson, you''ll still find it hard to resist a book which tells you which cult novel has been implicated in assassinations, which world famous novelist offered to throw himself off a train to prove his devotion to his literary idol and which cult poet and prose stylist inspired a Broadway musical and the Velvet Underground. There''s a critical guide to over 150 cult authors - from Kathy Acker to Yevgeny Zamyatin, including potted biographies, their must reads, and their surprising influences. Reviews of 100 cult novels - seminal works by authors who never quite achieved cult status themselves but still produced one classic work. Finally, there''s a cult collection - a feast of literary trivia which categorises writers by the diseases they suffered for their art, reveals 12 literary giants who wrote standing up, and pores over the little known fictional epics of Sarah Bernhardt and Benito Mussolini.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 1 more reviews...
Fun to Read June 8, 2005 15 out of 16 found this review helpful
I picked this up on a recent vacation to Minnapolis and found I couldn't put it down. I do think the book does omit some key cult writers but the ones who are included are handled by writers who obviously know their subjects. This guide includes a lot of my favorite writers (Jonathan Coe, Italo Calvino, Jasper Fforde, Borges, etc.) and I was pleased to find out some things about their lives and work that I didn't know before. The guide points out the writers' essential works and suggests what a particular writer might have in common with another writer. The book is often funny without being mean-spirited.
Excellent Place to Find Your New Favorite Novel June 13, 2005 13 out of 14 found this review helpful
First, a word about the term cult fiction, and its implications. When I first saw the title of this little book, I assumed it would be full of strung-out wreckages like Burroughs and Dick. While the Rough Guide does contain them (as it should), its scope is far greater than writers of that type. In here you'll find a wind range of novelists reviewed, including Graham Greene, John Fowles, even Zane Grey. Bottom line: an excellent resource for readers.
An invaluable, indispensable, illuminating, invigorating gem! June 28, 2006 12 out of 12 found this review helpful
When I first picked up this book I was immediately reminded of the 'AMOK 4th Dispatch' catalogue. Back in 1989 the AMOK bookstore out of L.A. released a sourcebook for the extremes of information in print. The book was an unbelievable find, a real jewel in the pre-internet age. Virtually every author who appeared in the 'PULPS' section of that catalogue has found themselves listed in this new ROUGH GUIDE. For anyone who is tired of the bestseller lists and is looking for something different to read, this guidebook is indispensable! It features all the offbeat, wonderful authors who can lay claim to breaking new ground in literature. Some are well known bestselling authors (Vonnegut, Camus, Tolkien, Ellroy, Palahniuk, Pynchon), others are celebrated more for their lifestyles than their actual work (the infinitely emulated Kerouac, Bukowski and Henry Miller), still others are infamous (Selby, de Sade, Burroughs, Beirce) while many, many others have been either criminally ignored, forgotten or just faded with time (Crews, Himes, Mishima, Bowles, Dick, Willeford, Trocchi, Gysin et al.) All have devoted (some would say slavish) readerships that have allowed for their works to remain in print one way or the other over the years. I have many of the writers in this collection but the real treasures are to be found with some of the other entries in the guide. You're bound to discover several new writers in this collection which, along with some extra facts that you may not have known about some of your favourite authors, makes it well worth buying. Some of you who haven't yet delved into the literary underworld are in for a real treat. I envy your upcoming voyage of discovery. The guide is set up simply and efficiently. It covers over 200 novelists but also branches out to include classic cult books by authors who never became cult figures themselves, as well as graphic novels, beloved characters, non-fiction faves and even some trivia. I know about most of the authors mentioned in the book but there were still quite a few surprises as well as some illuminating facts, bios and recommended reads that made it well worth buying. I highly, highly recommend this guide for people who are ready to branch out from the bestsellers, the old classics and mainstream pulp. A whole new world of ideas awaits...
Small But A Great Guide January 21, 2007 5 out of 6 found this review helpful
This book will fool most. It covers far more than simple "cult fiction." The author presents short biographies on many authors, some well known and some obscure. They include writers such as Joyce, not exactly a "cult" writer, so that gives an example of the range of writers cover in this guide. The authors cover hundreds of writers. It is a great buy and worth the investment.
In addition to the short biographies, they have selected the best works of each author. For someone like Dorothy Sayers or a similar writer, that is a great aid for a reader seeking guidance.
Based on their book I came up with a reading list as follows, i.e.:
BOOKS FOR A LONG SEA VOYAGE (taken mostly from the guide's suggestions):
1. Dorothy Sayers: Gaudy Night
2. Gertrude Stein: Three Lives
3. Hunter S. Thompson: Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
4. Oscar Wilde: The Picture of Dorian Grey
5. Heinrich Boll: Last Honour of Katharina Blum
6. Charles Bukowski: Post office
7. Mikhail Bulgakov: The Master and the Margarita
8. Albert Camus: The Outsider
9. Gabriel Garcia Marguez: One Hundred Years of solitude
10. Tadeusz Konwicki: A Minor Apocolypse
11. and 12. Nabokov: Pale Fire and Pnin (two books)
13. Proust; Vol. I, In Search of lost Time.
Great book. 5 stars.
Enjoyable For Browsing Through February 28, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
"The Rough Guide To Cult Fiction" is one of those books you can pick up and open at random and spend a couple of hours skipping around in, making notes about which book described you would like to read next. It's a lot of fun, and it's useful too. The largest section, "Authors", is an encyclopedic listing nicely blended between cult authors you know of but haven't got around to yet (Raymond Carver, James Ellroy, Milan Kundera, Martin Amis) and those you've never heard of but sound interesting (Weldon Kees? Victor Pelevin? John Fante? Anna Kavan?) There's also a large section devoted to "one-hit wonders" ("A Clockwork Orange", "A Confederacy Of Dunces", "Little Big Man", "All The King's Men"). There's a section devoted to cult characters (Sherlock Holmes, Holden Caulfield.) There's a section for graphic novels (Neil Gaiman, Harvey Pekar) and a section of readable cult non-fiction ("Dispatches", "A Heartbreaking Work Of Staggering Genius"). Most of the entries are witty and informative. Some are maybe a little too opinionated (it gets tiring always being told how transgressive and rule-breaking all these writers are. Sometimes there's too much conformity in being so non-conformist.) Even so, this is a very worthwhile little reference book, to be kept beside your bedside.
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