The Moviegoer - Walker Percy BOOK REVIEW

  Рет қаралды 17,453

Better Than Food

Better Than Food

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 93
@Vibe_Enjoyer
@Vibe_Enjoyer Жыл бұрын
"its not the loss of authenticity, its the loss of our ability to recognize it, that is the fundamental 21st century existential issue" dang dawg coming out swinging.
@captainhardon
@captainhardon Жыл бұрын
"itd be great if ai could recreate old actors" no it really wouldn't.
@coopaloopmex
@coopaloopmex Жыл бұрын
More than just a Southern Writer, Walker Percy was a Catholic Southern Writer and threads this into his works, which heightens this existentialism, especially in The Moviegoer. Not overtly Catholic like Thomas Aquinas, but more like Graham Greene or Evelyn Waugh. I have read and re-read this a few times over the years, and it never gets old (unlike the malaise!)
@christianman73
@christianman73 Жыл бұрын
In college, I took a class on the work of Walker Percy. We covered all of his novels, and some of his philosophical writings, and discussed them at some length. It was a challenging, and for me, truly life-changing, class, and I don't use the word "life-changing" lightly. Many thanks to Dr. Tom Woods for offering that class! Prior to it, I had never even heard of Walker Percy. After it, my view of many things had been forever changed. Percy is incredible!
@reading_fastandslow
@reading_fastandslow 3 ай бұрын
What other works of Percy’s would you recommend?
@christianman73
@christianman73 2 ай бұрын
@@reading_fastandslow Percy's fiction writing is of consistently high quality and thoughtfulness, so at least to me, all of his novels are really worth reading. If you've already read "The Moviegoer," you could move on to his second novel, "The Last Gentleman," or to his great comedic third novel, "Love in the Ruins." The Library of America recently published a nice one-volume hardcover edition of Percy which contains all three of those novels. I also like his philosophically-oriented non-fiction books too, "The Message in the Bottle," and "Lost in the Cosmos," but those are definitely works of philosophy, rather than novels, so they didn't reach as large of an audience as his fiction works. I'm still a fan though. 🙂 I hope this helps!
@Jbirdsprings
@Jbirdsprings Жыл бұрын
In regards to" extreme events to punctures the normality we live in:"caused me to reflect on another southern writer,Percy Sledge. He wrote Helmet for a Pillow but the struggle to write it was most interesting . He fought in the Pacific,came back to the states, obtained his PhD and taught for 20 years. It took him 2 decades to describe the complete and utter horror of war. 20 years of writing notes, talking to old comrades, reading others accounts of the war until he finally wrote his own. Thanks for this profound and insightful view of Percy.
@roastbeefy0weefy
@roastbeefy0weefy Жыл бұрын
13:36 I recommend "Galveston" by Nic Pizzolatto. It's very sensorial and of course is set in the gulf coast
@Chapolin242
@Chapolin242 11 ай бұрын
Punk rock helps with the acknowledge of authenticity
@BCBell-fj2ht
@BCBell-fj2ht Жыл бұрын
"The search!" This man put words to something I've done for years. I must read this one.
@BlueDusk95
@BlueDusk95 Жыл бұрын
Talk about a coincidence: I've just heard of Walker Percy from a quote by Baudrillard, and I'm just beginning to read his 1975 essay called The Message in the Bottle. The Movigoer is on my stack too, but I'm a really slow fiction reader.
@cormacgreene8505
@cormacgreene8505 Жыл бұрын
Father Robert Lauder reviews the book in “the Catholic Novel”. The moviegoer, in my mind talks about the three levels of being Kierkegaard talks about. Binks by the end books moves beyond living a sensualists life, and moves into a state of deeper being, largely because of the death of his brother, and Kate’s wild instability. He evolves, and kind of man’s up
@FlintSL
@FlintSL Жыл бұрын
I always get excited when I see you've uploaded a new video Cliff. Sounds like you really loved this one, Percy sounds like a true wordsmith
@marinellamaccagni6951
@marinellamaccagni6951 Жыл бұрын
I've been having this book sitting on my shelf for years. Maybe it's time to read it! Thanks for your brillant review.
@TheSalMaris
@TheSalMaris Жыл бұрын
Perhaps James Purdy should be on your list of Southern writers to read.
@angelorossowrites
@angelorossowrites Жыл бұрын
Another gem of a review my man.
@nyq9064
@nyq9064 Жыл бұрын
Every book you recommend and I read becomes one of my all time favorite book. Thank you, keep up the good work.
@philtheo
@philtheo Ай бұрын
Walker Percy (1916-1990) Another Southern Catholic writer, more artful than Flannery O'Connor, is Walker Percy. Like O'Connor, he is both moralist and novelist, but more of a novelist - a novelist of ideas. In his later novels (Love in the Ruins; The Thanatos Syndrome), he proves to be a far-sighted critic of technocracy, behaviorism, social engineering, the therapeutic culture and especially the culture of death - where he sees a parallel between Nazi eugenics and modern-day abortion, infanticide, and euthanasia. His books are readable because they're so very interesting to read. He also has, in common with Southern writers generally, an eye for natural beauty, so that his novels are shot through with natural epiphanies. His characters, though, are less lifelike - papier-mâché creations made to voice to his social criticism. This is the debit for being such an analytical author. To some extent he conceals their artificiality by situating them in a highly artificial environment - a fantastic, futuristic, surreal setting, tinged with Southern Gothic grotesquerie. One arresting motif in his novels is the continuing existence of the Jews as a sacramental emblem and omen of God's continuing presence in the world. There is a studied vulgarity in his novels - which may be one reason he has not achieved the saintly status of O'Connor. Steve Hays
@LiterateTexan
@LiterateTexan Жыл бұрын
I loved Stoner, of course, so this will definitely be towards the top of my list. This was a great video. My only complaint is that I never win the drawing.
@jimlivengood3962
@jimlivengood3962 Жыл бұрын
Excellent review as always, CLS. Percy is one of my favorites. I first started with "Thanatos Syndrome" (his last novel) in the 80s and rapidly proceeded to gobble them up. His novels have worn, beaten places of honour on my shelves. "Love in the Ruins" and "Thanatos" feature the same MC, a Dr. Thomas More, psychiatrist. They have more action, along with weighty ponderings and sensorial detail.
@alf5948
@alf5948 19 күн бұрын
Just finished it. Spot on review. You do a fantastic job of exploring all the undertow within a novel and it’s rippling effects. Keep up the great work.🤘👍 (And you name dropped Dexter Gordon and Chet Baker…bonus points!).
@theologywanderer
@theologywanderer Жыл бұрын
Lancelot is another Percy novel I would highly recommend.
@shubhaghosh
@shubhaghosh Жыл бұрын
Thanks. Walker Percy is a hero of mine and The Moviegoer a guidebook, one for the search I guess. Have you done A Confederacy of Dunces? Percy promoted it for publication after O'Toole died.
@BetterThanFoodBookReviews
@BetterThanFoodBookReviews Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for the super support Shubha, no I haven’t done Confederacy yet. It’s in the shelf. Very interesting that Percy promoted it, I’ll check it out, thanks!
@shubhaghosh
@shubhaghosh Жыл бұрын
@@BetterThanFoodBookReviews Fun story about how O’Toole’s mother got Percy to read the manuscript. There is a doc about O’Toole on KZbin worth checking out
@melodymakermark
@melodymakermark 4 күн бұрын
Walker Percy and Shelby Foote were best friends since grade school. Shelby commented that when Walker embraced Catholicism, Shelby told him “you are a mind in full intellectual retreat”, which did not sit well with Walker, although their friendship was strong enough to overcome this and Shelby stated years later that “I was wrong. Walker found exactly what he was looking for in that religion”. I once heard someone commenting on the both of them as writers, and they stated “Walker wasn’t the stylist Shelby was, but at least Walker had something to write about”. I found that interesting. Foote himself stated “I could care less what a story is about; I care how it’s told”. Walker cared what it was about.
@bentilbury2002
@bentilbury2002 Жыл бұрын
Currently reading Stoner (thanks to your recommendation), and enjoying it - so maybe I'll check this out as well 👍
@squishyam
@squishyam Жыл бұрын
i keep encountering these titles in used bookstores right after watching your reviews of them, first the Satyricon, then Graham Greene and now this! looking forward to reading it after finishing the like 5 other books i'm reading rn
@ellelala39
@ellelala39 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for clarifying this novel, Cliff. I didn't get it when I read it.
@andreeadobre3190
@andreeadobre3190 Жыл бұрын
I just got back into reading this month, all thanks to watching your channel, thanks man! Cup of Rage, Agua Viva, Story of the Eye, now Sex & Rage, loving it.
@Vibe_Enjoyer
@Vibe_Enjoyer Жыл бұрын
you can manufacture events of being close to death. its why extreme sports started to manifest in the 2nd half of the last century. I used to skateboard for over 22 years, so I know that it exists. I also know that nothing can replace it and life gets even more dull once you are too old to do your sport.
@joejs7659
@joejs7659 Жыл бұрын
You should check out bitter moon by Pascal Bruckner, a very sordid but also elegant portrayal of marital rot, and also the lust for bringing healthy, well-to-do folk into the pot of suffering where one boils and seeks fellowship in the sweaty mess. Not for everybody, but I really enjoyed it. The movie is also great.
@jamescareyyatesIII
@jamescareyyatesIII Жыл бұрын
Thanatos Syndrome is Percy's best novel. All his novels are excellent.
@RasmusKarlJensen
@RasmusKarlJensen Жыл бұрын
If you don’t speak French, what are you going to do if Anéantir (Houellebecq’s latest novel) never gets translated?
@jacobmatthes3701
@jacobmatthes3701 11 ай бұрын
Picador September 2024
@MorganInForm
@MorganInForm 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for helping articulate what I've been feeling since reading this book.
@basserman
@basserman Жыл бұрын
If you wanna read about Authenticity check out the behemoth “The Recognitions”.
@AleksandarBloom
@AleksandarBloom Жыл бұрын
he did, and it was very unauthentic.
@genevievechaput2552
@genevievechaput2552 Жыл бұрын
Hello, cest le retour de la moustache!!!! Merci pour la vidéo 😊
@AlencarFaulkner
@AlencarFaulkner Жыл бұрын
To quote from one of my favourite films: "I mean, Jesus. What is it with you Catholics?"
@helpyourcattodrive
@helpyourcattodrive Жыл бұрын
0:37 I just listened to this on audible …
@zenape619
@zenape619 Жыл бұрын
Made friends with a lawyer who edited some of Percy's stories. Beautiful writing. He saw where the south was going before I was born.
@MattBaker789
@MattBaker789 3 ай бұрын
14:24 Yep, gaps. The gaps between consciousness and unconsciousness, life and non-life, quantum and classical.
@Cheryl-qx3dd
@Cheryl-qx3dd 7 ай бұрын
Hi, i have only just found your page, and im glad i did. You're so interesting 😊 thankyou
@SabrinaHawk
@SabrinaHawk Жыл бұрын
This novel has germ on my want to buy list for five years- it seems like a polarizing read, I have ten friends on goodreads who have read it and all are 4/5 stars or 1/0 star ratings
@evelynmayton470
@evelynmayton470 Жыл бұрын
Superb book, equally superb review.
@jamiewalkerdine3705
@jamiewalkerdine3705 Жыл бұрын
I read this book during my Kierkegaard phase, I'm going to be honest it never really clicked with me. But I like your review!
@Liisa3139
@Liisa3139 Жыл бұрын
You lost me in the ramblings of the beginning where this and that reminded of this and that book or character X was much like character Y in...I can't handle many characters at the same time. Not even in film, because I'm fairly face blind; handicapped that way and also with a poor short term memory. But then you got on the book itself and on existential search. Cliff, you are getting better and better at this. Maybe the rambling was intentional? To demonstrate the confusion as we do the search? My search began 30 years ago when I read Kierkegaard, John of Cross, orthodox church fathers, Theresa of Avila and other religious thinkers from different eras. I did not grow up in a religious home; I just wanted to find out if religious thinkers were dumb or stupid like claimed atheists seemed to believe they were. I found that the religious searchers were interesting to read (not difficult or boring). Then I wanted to know what prayer is. I mean, what does it mean to pray and how do you do it. I found the idea of so many people praying beautiful, but couldn't personally get what words to use or find a fitting prayer mindset. I wanted to learn to pray. I finally settled with the simplest possible prayer, the Jesus prayer. I also figured that prayer can't be just about the right words, it can be wordless. So, I started practicing prayer - not expecting an answer. To me an answer is not the proof that prayer is "working" or done right. Impossible to explain what I was after - just kind of like that prayer was Prayer, not just some autopilot mumbling or train of thought. After 30 years of practice I'm finally feeling that I'm arriving at real prayer, that I'm really in it. It has become natural and nourishing and meaningful. I have found my way of praying and being in prayer. I'm still not much of a Bible reader (barely read it at all; just a snippet now and then, randomly) and I don't go to church except to light a candle a couple of times a year. But my inner existential life feels very different from when I started my prayer journey. I have a new understanding of things and my compassion for people is growing. Humility does not feel like just giving up before people with stronger will. Existence is deeply fascinating, and terrifying, but also joyful. I guess I have always been more on the joyful side than in terror. Now, as I approach old age, I get the suicidal thinking better. Like if the world turns into a global North Korea run by AI, then I might well choose not to live any more. But at the same time I have more and more strength to observe difficult things happening and choosing to go on observing and trying to handle life however difficult it might be. It may be damn hard, but it is interesting none the less.
@reaganwiles_art
@reaganwiles_art Жыл бұрын
Camus also almost died of TB. A Happy Death, an early novel, is concerned with his invalidism. Great Shelby Foote, historian and novelist, Percy's best friend was recorded by C-Span and others, avail. on You-Tube. Excellent stuff. He speaks frequently of Percy.
@Calcprof
@Calcprof Жыл бұрын
Walker Percy is awesome.
@deanmoriarty5883
@deanmoriarty5883 Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for your excellent reviews. I would love to see a review of Peter Matthiessen’s Shadow Country. Shadow Country is a brilliant southern epic. A semi-fictional work telling the story of Edgar “Bloody” Watson, a devilish sugar cane farmer in the Everglades of Florida at the turn of the twentieth century.
@tomgoodchild4719
@tomgoodchild4719 Жыл бұрын
Nice shot of the Tampa Theater
@00czen00
@00czen00 Жыл бұрын
Hey man, are you going to review new Houellebecq book Annihilate? It is powerful 💫
@shayanhaseeb1185
@shayanhaseeb1185 Жыл бұрын
is nobody gonna talk about the brothers karamazov sitting calmly behind cliff on the top shelf?!
@Longleke.
@Longleke. Жыл бұрын
Great review! And it was surprising, at the end of this video, to even hear the name “Neil Gaiman” leave your mouth. What are the odds we might get an American Gods review someday?? Or maybe Sandman if you wanted to do something really unexpected for the Better Than Food channel. Gaiman’s an interesting case study because his reputation exists in a limbo between “Serious Author for Pretentious Lit Bros Who Self-Consciously Think They’ve Outgrown the Fantasy/SciFi Books of Their Childhood” and “Tumblr Goth Girl Daddy and IP Licensing Cash Cow Who Writes The Occasional Queer Baiting Dr. Who Episode or Some Such Visual Media but Not Novels, No - Anything But Novels”.
@drainel9707
@drainel9707 8 ай бұрын
Repetition is Kierkegaards concept. He wrote a whole book about it
@AshleyGraetz
@AshleyGraetz Жыл бұрын
21st existential problem is that expectations has surpassed need....
@mbiriviri
@mbiriviri 11 ай бұрын
Rereading this book after probably 40 years… Stunning and it was good to find your “review”…. But oh how I wish you would slow down a bit - - it always feels like you’re rushing through as quickly as you can…. (Maybe it’s the coffee :-)) definitely felt jarring in the context of this novel… Oh I see it’s the editing as well… there’s no space between the cuts, not even normal conversational…
@robertgarland3625
@robertgarland3625 Жыл бұрын
Great review, Cliff!
@clivebroadhead4857
@clivebroadhead4857 Жыл бұрын
The suicide question works well in American culture. Having easy access to annihilation does not recommend itself as a pre requisite of living unless that's what gun culture is all about. 'Give me convenience or give death' never rang truer.
@inchjoe
@inchjoe Жыл бұрын
A brilliant review
@ericwatts-et2nl
@ericwatts-et2nl Ай бұрын
Would love to hear your thoughts on "Revolutionary Road" another search, quest novel -- also sad, very sad.
@19AKS58
@19AKS58 Жыл бұрын
As always, a superb review. BTW, Walker Percy is responsible for bringing "A Confederacy of Dunces" to light - a great vignette. Would you be interested in reviewing that book?
@bobcabot
@bobcabot Жыл бұрын
normally i would write this:.............! but i know the connotation can be ambiguous - but i say it anyway in hope you know the way to Fritz: good boy...
@jayarrington240
@jayarrington240 Жыл бұрын
Another fascinating choice. I will check this one out's well. Thanks.
@jamesgwarrior1981
@jamesgwarrior1981 Жыл бұрын
Made mistake of reading this and Djuanna Barnes “Nightwood” at the same time, so now I have to reread…also… 🤔 I may have to repurchase….
@keatonthecretin3080
@keatonthecretin3080 Жыл бұрын
Damn, Cary Grant as Binx Bolling has a sort of Rock Hudson in Seconds vibe that's going to haunt me bc it's actually too good to be true, it isn't. Better than my imagined Herzog Blood Meridian with Kinski as Glanton and Bruno S. as the Kid.
@johnradovich8809
@johnradovich8809 11 ай бұрын
Jeez, this certainly caught my eye!
@ubik2388
@ubik2388 Жыл бұрын
Another excellent review.
@samprentice9454
@samprentice9454 Жыл бұрын
the discussion of illness making writers out of people reminds me of bataille on van gogh
@samprentice9454
@samprentice9454 Жыл бұрын
in both ways
@jimlivengood3962
@jimlivengood3962 Жыл бұрын
Oh, yes, Cary Grant. Brilliant.
@michaelstahlberg9392
@michaelstahlberg9392 Жыл бұрын
Walker Percy was a close friend to Shelby Foote. Check out interview with Foote.
@benp4877
@benp4877 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, that’s mentioned in the video.
@cormacgreene8505
@cormacgreene8505 Жыл бұрын
@@benp4877Shelby and Walker sought out William Faulkner, and hung out with him
@painbow6528
@painbow6528 Жыл бұрын
One of the most profoundly forgettable books I've ever read.
@jldowland
@jldowland Жыл бұрын
just in time for my birthday...
@porondeandajao
@porondeandajao Жыл бұрын
It kind remind me of The Who's Song "The Seeker"
@bugsbunnywearingasmoking801
@bugsbunnywearingasmoking801 4 ай бұрын
Impossible that the guy who wrote the movieGOER has the name walker
@PreacherLevi
@PreacherLevi Жыл бұрын
Was his father william Percy
@kagisomogalagadi3026
@kagisomogalagadi3026 Жыл бұрын
Love your channel cliff...all the way From Africa...read a lot of books you have recommended ie the loser Thomas Bernhard
@bobhopper609
@bobhopper609 Жыл бұрын
15:47 God damnit.
@PatchyTheFox
@PatchyTheFox Жыл бұрын
Are you a fan of RUN DMC?
@jldowland
@jldowland Жыл бұрын
@KanwarAnand
@KanwarAnand Жыл бұрын
two mins in - what is he even talking about?
@AdriaanVanderhasselt
@AdriaanVanderhasselt Жыл бұрын
Love in the ruins is also a true gem. Extremely funny, sad, hopeful and intelligent at the same time.
@MomciloRaicevic
@MomciloRaicevic Жыл бұрын
we would like to see your goodreads account
@troyvinson2655
@troyvinson2655 6 ай бұрын
Ha ha "Casual Racism"
@vincentandlolav5183
@vincentandlolav5183 Жыл бұрын
I'm sorry, but Percy is nowhere near as good an author as Camus. Percy makes the fatal mistake of assuming that his own run-of-the-mill depression is somehow profound and interesting. This book bored me to tears.
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