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4.8
34 reviews
Dr. Neema Parvini ("Academic Agent")'s collection of prose written while he was at school. This text showcases the childhood roots of the various neuroses displayed in his livestreams & spergy Twitter poasting.
"In 2003, I completed The Problem with David Hawkins, a novella
which aimed to be a turn-of-the-millennium update of The Catcher in the
Rye (1951).
The central character is David Hawkins; despite claims to the
contrary he is not an autobiographical cipher. His “problem” is that he seems
to hate everyone: he hates people who try to stand out to be individuals and
he hates people who are straightforwardly conformist.
The novella chiefly
concerns his obsessive analysis of the social order of the school yard, and
then his own attempts cynically to “game” its rules like a modern Machiavelli."
"After finishing the novella, I wanted to write an epic poem – or at the
very least a rather long one. The result was A Falling Soul completed in
2004, which sees me playing with many different forms both traditional and
modern. In the mix of influences one can detect both the traditional English
canon of poetry as well as Bob Dylan and rap music. There is much mixing
of esoteric symbols with pop culture references in a vaguely medieval
setting. Influenced by Ezra Pound, I produced a somewhat pretentious
“annotated version” which had over one-hundred footnotes to the various
references that are made throughout. This was my self-conscious homage to
the Cantos (1970)."
"In 2005, I spent much time grappling with philosophy around the
question of freedom versus determinism. As a kind of Socratic exercise, I
wrote Freedom to try to think through the determinist position more fully. The
line “Here is your life back, spend it wisely” is taken from A Falling Soul. I
was much taken with the idea that all my works are taking place in the same
internal universe, a little like Quentin Tarantino’s films."