Carl Jung and Projection
13:38
2 ай бұрын
Alchemy
34:51
4 ай бұрын
HUGE Book Haul
37:14
5 ай бұрын
I was Wrong about Licorice Pizza
10:01
Goethe's Faust
8:12
9 ай бұрын
New Year Update
8:47
Жыл бұрын
6. Down - Danny Backer
5:06
2 жыл бұрын
5. Destroy Me - Danny Backer
2:58
2 жыл бұрын
4. Up - Danny Backer
3:00
2 жыл бұрын
3. Me and My Shadow - Danny Backer
2:03
2. Baked - Danny Backer
2:56
2 жыл бұрын
1. Pop Into View - Danny Backer
5:15
Пікірлер
@BRAVEHEARTGaMeRz
@BRAVEHEARTGaMeRz 15 күн бұрын
‘A testament to the moons tearing free…’ i think he’s referring to the idea that the moon is thought to be formed after an asteroid hit the earth and broke pieces off, those peaces coalescences into the moon. Its like pieces of ground forcibly dislodged from the earth have formed nee celestial body, that is forced to orbit the place it used to inhabit. In exile. I think the ocean is like a footprint for the moon, a shadow earth, just as oedipa is tracking the footsteps of the trestero I apologise for applying human traits to inanimate objects, but i hear poets have been at this for centuries…
@purpledeflector904
@purpledeflector904 15 күн бұрын
I found this book oddly comforting to read - like spending time with my gran. The narrative voice very skewed into relation to the plot (they don’t seem to go together at all), but in a way that I found enjoyable.
@realnoid
@realnoid 20 күн бұрын
Pynchon’s V (muh middle initial) meets Yorkville Manhattan (where auh lived) meets TP/ PTA Inherent Vice’s Mikey Wolfmann aka Roland Arnall (The Monster) meets The Master, L Ron Hubbard and Scibots.
@borisluzin2664
@borisluzin2664 23 күн бұрын
Thank you for this great video! What I find hilarious about this book is that everyone who is trying to interpret it is put into Oedipa's position: you might be onto something, you might be wrong, or you might be completely insane. There is no better way to blow a punch at the heart of Meaning than to create a book which resists any interpretation. Another example - Philipp Dick's Ubik.
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 23 күн бұрын
@@borisluzin2664 I love Ubik! Yes, Pynchon has a talent for baffling the reading while keeping them interested, it keeps me coming back. Thanks for watching!
@mikescott4195
@mikescott4195 25 күн бұрын
I also agree the main theme is about what inspires future generations and the people who want to gatekeep and call those inspired to progess as fakes or contrived. The no true scotsmen fallacy is utilized often here
@seangodsey
@seangodsey Ай бұрын
This is a good shirt Danny
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 Ай бұрын
@@seangodsey haha thanks Sean
@ypaisley
@ypaisley Ай бұрын
Your videos are always a pleasure! I had the additional pleasure of reading Lionel Lancet a while back, it was very entertaining. Menippean Satire in the Pynchonesque tradition, we might call it? ;) Indeed, I had the feeling you were directly invoking Lot 49 in the first page, especially when you used the word "crier"-I underlined that, ha ha! Whereas, Lionel himself gave me strong Ignatius Reilly vibes-have you ever read Confederacy of Dunces? If not, I think you’ll love it. (Everyone loves it.) John Kennedy Toole was the author. Anyway, congratulations on your book, it's a beaut! I look forward to the Liminal Spaces project, I really enjoyed your video about your creative process. I’m commenting because I love when you go down the alchemical / mystical / seeker path in your videos. That always perks my ears up! My new fiction collection Divine In Essence treads a similar thematic path, and I think you might find it worth your time. I’m not saying I’m Goethe, but I’m THIS CLOSE. I don't make a practice of shoving my book in everyone's face, but I think what makes me want to recommend it to you is your advanced Negative Capability. It’s such a rare quality in our culture… You seem able to entertain multiple perspectives in your head at once, without judging or condemning any of them, which is exactly the kind of reader I’m looking for! Divine In Essence will be released at the end of the month, but you can check it out and preorder it from the publisher if it clicks with you here: whiskeytit.com/product/divine-in-essence/
@viniciusacmauro
@viniciusacmauro Ай бұрын
Great analysis. Still didn't enjoy reading it though...
@alexanderfuchs8742
@alexanderfuchs8742 Ай бұрын
apparently pynchon liked the master so much he gave pta his blessing to do inherent vice so i definetly think youre on to something :) and inherent vice might feel less "pynchonian" than the heads would like but i still think its a groovy and underrated film thats very rewarding on multiple viewings... full of discontinuous edits and hilarious throw-away lines worthy of pynchon ... film has a tendency towards realism and coherence of action so that pychons style cant be replicated in a visual narrative ... but pynchon himself praised the film and im excited to see pta try again with vineland ❤ (great essay btw!)
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 Ай бұрын
Same, I am beyond excited for PTA's next film. I didn't know Pynchon saw the Master, but I would love to be a fly on the wall during the conversation between him and PTA! Inherent Vice really rubbed me the wrong way when I first saw it, but it has since become a favorite, and while it doesn't capture all of Pynchon, I think it nailed the humor and paranoia. Thanks for Watching!
@mikescott4195
@mikescott4195 Ай бұрын
I am guilty of always being excited when Pugnax appeared in AtD. Particularly when he asked his Italian dog friend to come aboard the airship as his guest of honor lol In AtD I saw all of the Chums of Chance as being an aspect of Pynchons pyche. Darby in particular was a knod to his more playful and immature voice that was pretty restrained in this novel imo compared to GR
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 Ай бұрын
@@mikescott4195 ahaha yes! I love that Pugnax got a companion. That’s a good point. I also love that Miles is a mystic as well as a hedonist. Seems to fit.
@mikescott4195
@mikescott4195 Ай бұрын
@offthewallnovels1292 Absolutely! And Chick is a math wiz and scientist, and Lindsay is the ultimate Grammer nazi
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 Ай бұрын
@@mikescott4195 Thank you for this! I never put that together.
@yazanasad7811
@yazanasad7811 Ай бұрын
Lake invarerity, casino - trump tower. As a contrast to the ocean This is Oedipa's and humans inclination to think of transcendent moreness. Wealthy people influencing negatively, even potentially causing paranoia
@iwouldprefernotto4381
@iwouldprefernotto4381 Ай бұрын
This was great, V is possibly still my all-time fave novel.
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 Ай бұрын
@@iwouldprefernotto4381 thank you for watching!
@Soli-in-the-wild
@Soli-in-the-wild Ай бұрын
My goodness! What is this gem of a channel??? Where has it been all my life??? You're brilliant!!!
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 Ай бұрын
thanks so much for watching! :)
@CruelSpirit
@CruelSpirit Ай бұрын
Berlin Alexanderplatz is my personal favorite of German Literature and one of my all time favorites. Like you mentioned the world of Weimar Berlin no longer exists and ceased to exist pretty quickly after this was published. While the story itself is incredible, this concept as well as all of the experimentation in storytelling really make this book so great.
@marcelhidalgo1076
@marcelhidalgo1076 Ай бұрын
Have you read Michael Kohlhaas and Simplicius yet?
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 Ай бұрын
@@marcelhidalgo1076 I’ve got MK in my Amazon cart!
@ana-anatomiadolivro-2244
@ana-anatomiadolivro-2244 Ай бұрын
There is Fassbinder’s movie also, it is like twelve hours. I have never watched.
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 Ай бұрын
@@ana-anatomiadolivro-2244 maybe one day! But I need to preserve my image of this book, it’s amazing.
@lesryglrhfohser
@lesryglrhfohser Ай бұрын
Infinite Jest is my fav book & Beau is Afraid is my fav movie ❤️
@JudsonPicco
@JudsonPicco 2 ай бұрын
If you're gonna skip some of The Recognitions, yeah skip Part III
@harrisonmccartney4878
@harrisonmccartney4878 2 ай бұрын
The book reminds me a lot of Larry McMurtry. It definitely has that plainspoken, dry-as-the-desert cadence to the prose, but it's the actual drama, and how enormous you realize the implications of that drama are in terms of what it says about civilization and how stuff like law and order are just what we make of it, that make it impactful. The characters are a brilliant mix between symbolic exaggerations and realistic depictions, giving them all a larger-than-life place in the novel, while also leaving enough room for all of them to fit together.
@thomasascuderi9489
@thomasascuderi9489 2 ай бұрын
Awesome essay. I love V so much.
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 2 ай бұрын
@@thomasascuderi9489 thanks for watching!
@domovoi_0
@domovoi_0 2 ай бұрын
Yep. Good stuff. Spiritualism is all scientific, just doesn't connect to THE science of today. A great work on seeing yourself in the other is the manga "homonculus", do check it out! Love and blessings!
@B1bLioPhil3
@B1bLioPhil3 2 ай бұрын
15 minutes I'll never get back. Horrible review. He isn't well read in philosophy or history. He can't even pronounce Plotinous correctly... bless his heart.
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 2 ай бұрын
@@B1bLioPhil3 I feel sorry for you.
@maryberry6067
@maryberry6067 2 ай бұрын
Very interesting. Brings me to listening to a Course in Miracles with Keith.
@jonathonkelley3774
@jonathonkelley3774 2 ай бұрын
My year old kitten 🍎 named Apple is also existential daily lol, I hope Pringle has a pool to play in. I've never been near musical equipment like what's above your piano. It reminds me of the school electrical room at my father's elementary school (both parents language teachers) You have good draw, I only remember names not quotes from books I read. Reading books from the past is so peaceful. If you need a movie to watch while bored watch Babette's Feast 1987 it's my favorite movie because of the soundtrack and it's about making a French dinner for old people. And I just gifted some elderflower lemonade to a new friend try some it's the best drink besides yuzu fruit juice! Stay hydrated don't buy 7$ coffee try new drinks instead of you know where to shop. Gr8 video.
@sonnycorleone9557
@sonnycorleone9557 2 ай бұрын
I think what makes me so interested but frustrated and confused about writing the novel I’m writing is that I have no idea what I’m doing, but have undertaken an incredible amount as I do it which honestly feels like it’s helping me understand conflict and development as I try to understand and configure the ideas I want to portray and explore. I remember starting seemed so bleak, but as you described it, I just needed to get into the mud and throw myself into it.
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 2 ай бұрын
@@sonnycorleone9557 Forward is the only way! It’s fun and humbling to do it yourself. Sometimes reading gives me the impression that I can do it just as well as whoever I’m reading, and then the blank page slaps me in the face. Sometimes it’s helpful to put the blinders on and just take it one step at a time.
@marcelhidalgo1076
@marcelhidalgo1076 2 ай бұрын
Sounds exciting, man!
@jonathonkelley3774
@jonathonkelley3774 2 ай бұрын
I think the more people you reach and meet the more your old albums will be streamed. My musician friend feels like a failure even with lots of followers so I hear that. Pringle is such a cute name, jaidensanimations has two green parrots😮 the only job I want is to work at a clothing store, I hated college. Your shirt is so Halloween coded. If you teach young kids read them some Shel Silverstein next year there's a new book from 2017 from his archive. I've never heard the word piffy before lol Great video! 🪺🦜Coffee is so good, but I get anxious in coffee shops, without a mask that is.. your never wasting your time... Don't catch covid, the mask makes people less likely to bother you.
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 2 ай бұрын
@@jonathonkelley3774 thanks for watching! I did a bunch of Shel Silverstein last year, and it was a hit, so I’ll have to look up the one you mentioned. Art is a great mirror, so it’s always interesting to hear how people think of their success at every level. Thanks again!
@nicocarrera5363
@nicocarrera5363 2 ай бұрын
Very frustrating, I found it hard to understand a single word
@TyroneSlothropEatsBananas
@TyroneSlothropEatsBananas 2 ай бұрын
Excellent video, Daniel. I want to first say, don't feel too bad for not finishing The Recognitions. It's a difficult novel, and I think (and I'm pretty positive there is a quote or article somewhere to back this up) that Gaddis intentionally made it not very reader-friendly. Ignoring Franzen's essay "Mr. Difficult," which sort of introduced me to this novel originally, it is a difficult novel regardless. The allusions, references, style, and syntax, along with Wyatt's sort of disintegration into the text, making it even harder to identify who and when is speaking, make The Recognitions a very disorienting read. However, I have found immense joy in the art of rereading it, as masochistic as that may sound, and have come to consider this novel a great friend of mine. The ambiguities and the references I might not always get, and I don't think it's the point to understand every piece of religious symbolism or archaic phrase. The enjoyment I get from reading it comes from reading a master of prose and style and letting the language wash over me. I came into contact with this novel at a pretty young age, and honestly, the first time I read it, I didn't get much out of it. Since reading more books considered "difficult," I would still rank this novel up there among difficult books. But then there lies a more fundamental question. Should a book be read or finished if it is considered too difficult, or if the reading experience gets to a point, like for you, where it does not become pleasurable anymore and pursuing further along in the story would only entail displeasure? I think you have every right to put the book down when it becomes arduous and just plain not fun anymore, and honestly, I don't blame you. As for disliking the characters and not being able to connect with them, except for your interest in Esther and Wyatt, that's a gripe I have with the works of Gaddis I have read. Even more so with JR. Especially JR. His characters in JR are, I think, even more dislikable and harder to connect with than those in The Recognitions, so much so that I feel that Gaddis was purging some major inner demons during the process of writing that novel (not to deter you from checking out JR, though). The party scenes in The Recognitions with the New York Yuppies I have always found entertaining, and I let Gaddis carry me along the scenes, following the decadence of the characters as they inevitably all collapse into utter disarray in the final sections of the novel. Truly depressing and heartbreaking on the highest of levels. If you ever do decide to finish the book or to restart down the line, I hope you see what I mean, as it does become even more metaphorical, metaphysical, and dare I say entropic. Thanks again for your video, as this comment was fueled by passion for the novel and caffeine, lol.
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 2 ай бұрын
@@TyroneSlothropEatsBananas thanks for watching, and for your comment! I’ve decided I’ll probably pick it up again at the end of the summer. This video and deciding not to finish was a very emotional decision, and I didn’t even consider that taking a break was an option haha. I think part of it as well is that in working on my next novel, the question “what should a novel be?” Has been forefront in my mind, and I found myself simultaneously frustrated and intimidated by The Recognitions’ answer to that question. Comparison is the thief of joy! And I sometimes fall into thinking that if this book is difficult and opaque at times, then it must also mean it is higher quality or elite in some sense. That’s the fun part of art but also the downside, but I need to remind myself that no one is expecting me to be Gaddis, so I can forgive myself for not being him. I saw a video on tiktok of Billy Joel talking about how another musician taught him that he should forgive himself for not being Beethoven. It’s wild to see how even huge multigenerational talents deal with that as well. Anyway, thanks for the comment! I’ll be off social media for a while, but I’ll probably still check the comments here in that time.
@oliverbranch777
@oliverbranch777 2 ай бұрын
This is fire bro
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 2 ай бұрын
@@oliverbranch777 thanks so much! The new album and new novel are coming out on Christmas!
@NoahC-
@NoahC- 2 ай бұрын
The Recognitions is decidedly not a fun book but, a psychotic one. At any future point you may pick it up and experience the end/climax 😝 I think Gaddis and Wallace are in the same vein more because of the scathing satire. The art scene in New York is actually fake plastic monsters 😝 good on you for following your reading heart!
@BooksYouHaventRead
@BooksYouHaventRead 2 ай бұрын
I had a not too dissimilar experience with this book. I did end up finishing it but only because I was ruthlessly determined to. Similiarly felt that the first 300 pages were beautiful and really hit a wall as I kept going. I blame some of it on the fact that I was unemployed at the time so I both had time to read it but it's not necessarily a cheerful book if you're an aspiring artist looking for employment. It's a tough book to rate in my mind because I can recognize it's brilliance and I think readers like me should absolutely give it a try, but I ended up getting a lot more enjoyment out of his other novels.
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 2 ай бұрын
That's the thing! The ideas were amazing, but I just realized, this is not fun. I would definitely try JR at some point, but I need a break. Thanks for commenting!
@tonywords6713
@tonywords6713 2 ай бұрын
Love it man
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 2 ай бұрын
@@tonywords6713 thanks!!!
@tonywords6713
@tonywords6713 2 ай бұрын
❤❤❤
@Jimdunne_
@Jimdunne_ 3 ай бұрын
Thanks for this. I’ve got an interest in novels about false identities and deception. This seems quite different from the talented mr ripley and the great gatsby. I knew this was about forgery but it seems to go deeper into cultural history- from Ireland 🇮🇪
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 3 ай бұрын
@@Jimdunne_ yes! The references are overwhelming, but I’m finding the story of the characters is still fantastic on their own, and often the references inform the erudition of the character more than the expectation that the reader understand every one. Thanks for the comment!
@gregory_bloomfield
@gregory_bloomfield 3 ай бұрын
I know this is from 3 years ago, but I’m just now reading this book. I must say that I am enjoying the read but I have no idea what is going on most of the time. Your video has clarified some but I’m still lost. lol! I bought this book because it basically called to me. I’ve never had a book do that before. I was on another channel and the dude was reviewing it, and suddenly I felt the need to order this book, and, so I did.
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 3 ай бұрын
@@gregory_bloomfield glad to hear! It is hard to completely understand on one read, so I’d suggest just enjoying the style and the cool moments along the way that speak to you.
@gregory_bloomfield
@gregory_bloomfield 3 ай бұрын
@@offthewallnovels1292 thank you for the advice.
@johnnyflynn6278
@johnnyflynn6278 3 ай бұрын
Fascinating
@zamiadams4343
@zamiadams4343 3 ай бұрын
I'm going to read it after I finish "Gravity's Rainbow" which I am absolutely loving.
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 3 ай бұрын
Glad to hear! GR is so amazing, I need to do another read soon.
@SophieGalleymoreBird
@SophieGalleymoreBird 3 ай бұрын
So, I'm v late to the party but isn't there a convention in crime writing of the unreliable narrator - because they don't see or don't understand some events (child's POV for instance), or they're withholding information. This book reminds me most of Agatha Christie's Murder of Roger Ackroyd (in this withholding/POV element only). Once one knows, thinking back there are passages where she describes herself being overtaken by a divine Anger, where she loses her sense of herself, and I pegged these as the times she decides to kill the hunters. So it didn't feel too contrived to me. It's more of gradual dawning in the reader, too, than a last page confession, which I would have struggled with.
@Tyler12905
@Tyler12905 4 ай бұрын
are you on tiktok by chance? you seem familiar
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 4 ай бұрын
Yes, (at) danielbackerauthor
@Ferrari1504
@Ferrari1504 4 ай бұрын
Yep, a fantastic book! Thanks for posting this. Your enthusiasm is lovely to hear and makes me want to reread the book immediately! For me the idea that it's totally about fakery is close to correct, but it certainly doesn't call for a return to authenticity. What's authentic for someone is certainly not a forgery, but, like Paris, it isn't entirely original either. It also strikes me as distinctly American, which might be worth thinking more about on reread.
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 4 ай бұрын
I think that’s why The Age of Innocence prompted my interest in the recognitions, it does feel very American. I’m just relieved to find something so addicting, I want to just quit my job and read this full time. And while I’m reading it very quickly, the prose style is still a mystery too me, like I don’t see the strings at all, I’m completely immersed in the puppet show. Thanks for watching!
@Lucy-gc4js
@Lucy-gc4js 4 ай бұрын
I just started it and now it makes this book already so great!!!
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 4 ай бұрын
Enjoy!!!!
@naisammon4986
@naisammon4986 4 ай бұрын
Yeah yeah, it’s pronounced Crowley like “holy”/“unholy”, you don’t need some poindexter berating you over of it. Cool to hear a fella who doesn’t consider himself a Thelemite come in cold and lay down some opinions just on the work, very cool. Also, I enjoy your Garsonesque soundtrack to the vid, appropriate and good stuff . Keep doin what your doing both with the channel and musically, dig into more esoteric authors or subjects if it suits ya, it’s always interesting to get takes from the “uninitiated”, the context free hyper grounded take away is refreshing in a sea of “MagicK Men” arguing every point and bickering with each other over minutia. Dig dig DIG!
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 4 ай бұрын
Haha thanks! I have gotten more into the occult since I posted this a few years ago, and I regret using the term “BS meter” because I wasn’t trying to be dismissive. I thinks there’s a lot of great insight in the book. Thanks for watching!
@flamephlegm
@flamephlegm 4 ай бұрын
Is LLatRV on kindle?
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 4 ай бұрын
Not yet! But I’ll do a e-book release this summer.
@narcoticundertow
@narcoticundertow 4 ай бұрын
I have also made a switch towards the Occult as a form of truth-seeking, it's something I've made a long-term partial effort to study and it has massively shaped my current writing project. Will make the effort to read some of these reccomendations
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 4 ай бұрын
Awesome! Glad to hear you’re on a similar path. It’s such a deep field of study, so we won’t run out of material any time soon.
@Herpetile
@Herpetile 4 ай бұрын
Super cool man. I think spirituality is supposed to be silly and not taken seriously , personally. One of humans greatest failures is organized religions - rejection of each other and taking life much to seriously
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 4 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@ypaisley
@ypaisley 4 ай бұрын
I recommend checking out the Weird Studies podcast, from JF Martel and Phil Ford. Fair warning, you’ll need a wheelbarrow to fill up that Amazon cart after just one episode.
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 4 ай бұрын
I just followed it! Yeah, I have a problem, I can’t stop buying books. And I’m mostly okay with that. Thanks for the recommendation!
@Ukucrazy
@Ukucrazy 4 ай бұрын
Always great to hear your thoughts. I want to read up on occultism now too. A lot of what you were talking about with gold and the Faustian stuff reminded me of The Recognitions by William Gaddis. Have you read that?
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 4 ай бұрын
It's been burning a hole on my shelf for about a year. I feel i'm not ready for it, but I plan to read it when the time is right.
@Ukucrazy
@Ukucrazy 4 ай бұрын
People overhype the difficulty. I had more trouble with Gravity's Rainbow, The Besieged City, and lots of pre-1800s stuff. But it's long and arduous and best read when calling to you for sure. I'd also recommend first reading Walter Benjamin's Illuminations and Henry James's The Turn of the Screw if you haven't already. What you talked about re: representation and ideals is a huge through-line for the whole book. The masks at carnival specifically is a scene right from the start of the book.
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 4 ай бұрын
@@Ukucrazy aggghh! There’s so much to read haha. I am drowning in amazing art right now.
@kewl0210
@kewl0210 4 ай бұрын
Ah that sounds like a fun project. Good luck!
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 4 ай бұрын
Thanks so much!
@NoahC-
@NoahC- 4 ай бұрын
An awesome exploration here! Happy to follow your approach and (induction?) to these topics from literature! Well on your way brother! Symbology and correspondences are of never-ending process. Don't let me catch you with your nose in a grimoire or correspondence tables! 😝😝 Intuitive flow is a path you a following well!
@offthewallnovels1292
@offthewallnovels1292 4 ай бұрын
I'm so glad you watched! We've got to do another chat soon, lots of new books on my mind, and I need to hear what you've been up to! And trust me, the grimoires are only for research... which as you know is best done by trying everything out for yourself 😈