Yeah Night Film rules. Awesome book, that makes cool use of a companion app on smartphones.Also got Night Film in the mail, I recommend that novel to anyone.
Where yall at?
I'm on page 50 something when a footnote suggest to read from the appendix. I'm so fucking glad I did
I had to get paper and a pen to copy down one of the mothers letters. Shit is crazy I can see why this book is popular. Its a fucking chore though.
I'm about 100 or 200 pages in, but I read them about a year ago. Should I start over?
And what are you guys' tips for the footnotes? I've found it really hard to read because there's just so much there, and reading the footnotes kind of makes the narrative feel disjointed. But I don't want to skip anything, because I feel like I'd be missing crucial information.
I read the footnotes as they come. Little number says 32? I'm a read 32, and then go back to the next sentence from the base text.
Went through the first 230 ish pages today up to XI. It's....hmm. We'll stick with interesting.
I used to live just one block from Zampano's fictional pad on Whitley St. & Franklin St. in Hollywood in the 90s. The book describes the neighborhood to a T.
I never promised it would be something everyone would enjoy![]()
I'm just hoping for some fun conversations!
Not spoiling anything past where you're at:Got through chapter two last night. Man, I'm loving it so far. But can someone quickly explain to me how the introduction ties with the first two chapters? I must've missed the connection.
Not spoiling anything past where you're at:
Everything in Courier font is written by Johnny Truant, the character who is reading The Navidson Record. The introduction is him explaining how he found the book. He presumably wrote the introduction some time after he wrote the footnotes in the first few chapters.
It's both the name of the movie and the name of Zampanó's written critical analysis of the movie.I thought The Navidson Record was a movie?
I read this before a long time ago. It was fun. But I don't think of it as a good narrative novel so much as a really fun literary toy. It's basically an adult version of those children books with lots of gimmicks in them. It's a very impressive book in terms of how it's put together, designed, and arranged. Definitely something that takes full advantage of the physical format of books. I don't think it'll work all that well as an ebook (I don't even know if there is one), but it could probably be adapted pretty easily into an interactive text adventure app of some sort.
The worst part of this book (aka the one thing that kept me up one night) was
the passage about "fingers of blackness" or whatever appearing for a split second before the footage ends. brrrrrrrr.
best use of a monster that only appears in one sentence ever
The tower in Annihilation gave me some serious HoL vibes while I was reading it. If you're like me and adored Annihilation but found Authority and Acceptance way less enticing, House of Leaves might rekindle the magic.I feel like I can't start this until I finish Acceptance, and I'm having a hard time finishing Acceptance. :/
Apparently no one thought it necessary to spell check the German version of that Heidegger quote, lol.
What was the mess up? I've seen a lot of typos and figured they were in some way intentional. I went on a wiki plunge on Picses because Truant's mom said she was torn to pisces instead of pieces in one of her letters.
Has anyone here read S? That'd be fun to do a book club for too. The premise is similar (very similar actually, I knew HoL was an inspiration but didn't realize how much S lifts), you're reading a library copy of a book that was the final novel written by an obscure but influential author.
Has anyone here read S? That'd be fun to do a book club for too. The premise is similar (very similar actually, I knew HoL was an inspiration but didn't realize how much S lifts), you're reading a library copy of a book that was the final novel written by an obscure but influential author. The book is thought to contain clues about his life and death (which may have been faked), and the margins are covered in notes written between a graduate student studying the author and an undergrad who finds the book in the library and gets involved. It has the interesting use of the media that HoL has, but with a more traditional plot.
also everyone that likes this should read if on a winter's night a traveller.