Thanks - that was a more entertaining review than the novel itself. A good read, with some interesting observations.
KS an Cicada is the same person with different screen names, its obvious.
CG is right its a right load of steamy bollocks. if only Moz would listen to CG perhaps things wouldnt be going straight south for him instead he has steady snapping sam..
Well if I went to Morrissey's School of Literature she'd be summed up as HIS trademark of originality. All are here to represent HIM, they have no other purpose, all poets and artists and beatniks and pre-1979 musicians lived to serve and honor the AWESOMENESS and UNIQUENESS that is Morrissey and MORRISSEY ALONE. His self-obsession knows no bounds.
Marc Bolan would puke.
But Crystal ! Why won't you dance with me in the puckish puke of the mighty elf lord Mr.Feld ?
I must admit... 'The book is a piece of shit written by a blackout drunk who flew too close to the sun '
is... hilarious.
But the rest ? ... Obviously your love for the MAN up there with Benny and the rest outshines
us all.
NOT.
You can actually pinpoint the exact moment CG turned on Morrissey as being when he publicly declared himself vegan while denouncing the evils of dairy. Poor old CG at the time still manfully chomping her way through a tub of cheese had no other choice but to come out swinging![]()
You can actually pinpoint the exact moment CG turned on Morrissey as being when he publicly declared himself vegan while denouncing the evils of dairy. Poor old CG at the time still manfully chomping her way through a tub of cheese had no other choice but to come out swinging![]()
dont waste your time though you might just enjoy playing i guess. shes as phony as anything she claims to rail against or claims to be for. being brave enough to call others cowards takes some cheek though or just some basic nihilism. she reminds me of skinny who hates morrissey, his recent music yet spends time on a board dedicated to him to talk about his concern and dislike over having to frequent with biased fans while he continues to choose to spend his time around them never talking about mozs solo music just his love of the smiths and marr. again theyre as phony as the things they claim to rail against and not really worth the time caring about there posts
The people who think every character in the book is Morrissey might be on to something.
Can anyone picture a woman, any woman, using the term "womb-men"???
You'd have to seriously hate your own kind. That's something only a complete misogynist would say. You can picture Morrissey pursing his lips and disdainfully forming the words...Woooomb-meeen...
And the tupperware repartie after strenuous sex? Like, seriously? Who would bother? Someone employed to verbally entertain? Damos the sparkling Greek domestique, perhaps?
I think Morrissey sees his characters as he sees people in real life. He just sees the purpose of their existence in relation to his. I reckon he does that even with his closest friends.
Nobody believes in his fiction characters, especially females. They're really just his mouthpieces.
People have also wondered why there is no physical description of Eliza: now: that must be because Morrissey thinks he looks fat in a dress.
And he does...Telling it like it is...
But true, there are more important problems.
The people who think every character in the book is Morrissey might be on to something.
Can anyone picture a woman, any woman, using the term "womb-men"???
You'd have to seriously hate your own kind. That's something only a complete misogynist would say. You can picture Morrissey pursing his lips and disdainfully forming the words...Woooomb-meeen...
And the tupperware repartie after strenuous sex? Like, seriously? Who would bother? Someone employed to verbally entertain? Damos the sparkling Greek domestique, perhaps?
I think Morrissey sees his characters as he sees people in real life. He just sees the purpose of their existence in relation to his. I reckon he does that even with his closest friends.
Nobody believes in his fiction characters, especially females. They're really just his mouthpieces.
People have also wondered why there is no physical description of Eliza: now: that must be because Morrissey thinks he looks fat in a dress.
And he does...Telling it like it is...
But true, there are more important problems.
Have you seen M in a 'dress' ?
I think re-posting the last paragraph of the review is important - as for me it sums up a lot of my negative feelings around Morrissey recently.
Have I?
Will I?
Wouldn't YOU like to know.![]()
"But leaving aside the awful dialogue, the terrible plotting, the meaningless nonsense that fills every last polemic in the f***ing thing, the book still leaves you with a nasty, depressing sense of contempt. List of the Lost is a horrifying version of adolescence in which none of the nuance or balance of those years is remembered. There are none of the saving, relatable joys of self-doubt or good humour or even innocence. All we're left with are dead-set pretensions and rigid animosities which have been allowed to calcify into something altogether more sinister; a slanderous, one-note disgust with everyone and everything bar the fit, rippling tummy muscles of some running twats. "
I think re-posting the last paragraph of the review is important - as for me it sums up a lot of my negative feelings around Morrissey recently. A once charming man, who has gradually turned into a one-note, spiteful caricature of himself. Sadly, surrounded by money-hungry toadies, there doesn't seem to be anyone who can intervene, and make him realise just how badly he has gone wrong.
I can't think of anyone else whose work is searched THAT extremely for biographical references. Was Nick Cave attacked as a human being for having that horrible "asshole character" in his novel Bunny Munro? Had he been called names, personally, for views this character held in the book? I can't remember that.
Nick Cave's books contain a little bit of the author's personality, as many books do, but they are not absolutely smothered by it. They contain characters with distinct personalities, thoughts, motivations, and if there are any lessons to be imparted, then it is through the development of the plot and in the interactions between characters instead of through exposition. It is fairly easy to divorce the writer from the work, or at least to read it without thinking every character sounds like Nick Cave. This is not the case with List of the Lost.It's absolutely fascinating for me. I can't think of anyone else whose work is searched THAT extremely for biographical references. Was Nick Cave attacked as a human being for having that horrible "asshole character" in his novel Bunny Munro? Had he been called names, personally, for views this character held in the book? I can't remember that. I remember reading some bad reviews at the time, mostly because it was so full of sex, but I can't remember that they vere vicious or hurtful and I can't remember critics who tried to outdo themselves with their reviews to gain attention. Mmmh ...