So english is not my native language and these books are not translated to mine and I’ve been thinking if Im’m even gonna be able to read them. My level of english is not bad, I’d be able to communcicate with anyone I guess, I know some slang language around the world. But are these books filled with very hard language or syntax that will be very tough to get through?

(Also, I’m not sure if this post belongs in this sub, so feel free to point that out, and if you’re familiar with any other subreddit that I could turn to, I’d be thankful!)

  • BaginaJon@alien.topB
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    10 months ago

    American psycho is very dense, with long sentences and paragraphs. Wouldn’t necessarily call it “hard” like gravity’s rainbow or something, but it is definitely more dense than Stork.

  • ohcharmingostrichwhy@alien.topB
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    10 months ago

    I’m reading American Psycho right now. It’s not super difficult to read, but because it’s a depiction of materialism, there are sometimes very long sentences filled with arbitrary details that can take a second to parse through. But it’s part of the experience.

  • iamarock82@alien.topB
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    10 months ago

    I think you’re in the correct subreddit, there’s often queries about English-language books from non-native speakers.

    As for those two, I’ve read American Psycho and it doesn’t have too difficult a vocabulary for a non-native speaker. However, there are a few sections where the character is high on/coming down from drugs and can ramble incoherently. But these don’t take away from the enjoyment and comprehension of the story I feel.

  • Practical_Arrival696@alien.topB
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    10 months ago

    It’s been a while since I read Marabou Stork Nightmares, but I just skimmed through the Kindle edition and the language is generally straightforward throughout. However, some of the dialogue is in Scots slang, though it doesn’t look to be as prevalent as in e.g. Trainspotting.

    I think you’d be fine with it, though I would recommend some of Irvine Welsh’s more popular books first, if you’ve not read them. Trainspotting, Porno, Filth, Glue are better IMO… they do have more Scots slang in them though.

  • Bauhausfrau@alien.topB
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    10 months ago

    I’ve read both and you are correct, the verbiage is difficult for different reasons.

    Maribou Stork Nightmares- Most of the book is in a Scottish dialect. You get a feel for it after awhile and it becomes easier to understand. I forget if it was this one or Trainspotting that has a glossary at the end. I suggest checking out the sub scottishpeopletwitter to see a lot of easier examples. Irvine Welsh switches between dialect often for different characters

    American Psycho- Many of the passages require a knowledge of not only American popular culture but also RICH American culture, in the 1980’s. Brett Easton Ellis’ work focuses on the upper class and says real names of clothing designers, restaurants, cosmetics, music, if it was a status symbol in that time period it is in there. Importantly this suggests the conformity of the characters. I would suggest doing an internet search on the unfamiliar stuff. I think it paints a bigger picture to know what these things looked like, what they were, whatever it was. His last book The Shards had so many music references, often he uses them to say something implied in the characters or the story. Or it was a red herring. You never know with him, he does make a few things up. I made a playlist of all the music references in his last book The Shards and it was huge. I liked checking out what was popular in the world of those characters that I was unfamiliar with, and the places they were at in the novel gave a little more illumination on the vibe. I’m not saying you need to deep dive everything in there but probably looking something up once in awhile will give you some extra insight

    This brings us to: both novels have the Unreliable Narrator. Do you believe the things they say? Are there contradictions showing up? Are they the hero? Are they the villain? Checking out online literary sites should have good examples of this Unreliable Narrator trope

    My favorite Irvine Welsh is Maribou Stork Nightmares. I think the story wove together in such an interesting way. My favorite Brett Easton Ellis is Lunar Park, and American Psycho is further down the list despite how well known it is. He casts himself as a character in Lunar Park and it plays out like a horror movie. I met him once and said that to him, and he told me that was everyone’s favorite lol. Like it wasn’t cool that was mine. 10/10, exactly the interaction I thought it would be