Childhood is idolizing Hemingway

Childhood is idolizing Hemingway
Adulthood is realizing Faulkner was right all along

True

Childhood is idolizing Plato
Adulthood is realizing Nietzsche was right all along

Nabakov is a bad joke.

That's actually true. Women always talk to me about Hemingway, but never have anything to say beyond "I like him because he's concise and straightforward xd". They don't actually know why Hemingway is good. And they certainly have no idea why Faulkner is in a different league entirely.

When you realize novellas are the pinnacle of prose fiction.

They were actually quite friendly towards each other personally despite their rivalry. Faulkner wrote a very praiseworthy review of The Old Man and The Sea, and his original comment towards Hemingway which started all of it was never intended to be an insult. Hemingway was just a babby and took it as one. I agree though, as a teen Hemingway is the more popular of the two before delving into Faulkner's work. I like both authors but I believe Faulkner is in another league in comparison to Hemingway.

Thanks for the trivia fuckwad

don't be mean

Or what

Childhood is liking corncobby chronicles
Adulthood is realizing Nabokov was right all along.

Hemingway, Ernest. A writer of books for boys. Certainly better than Conrad. Has at least a voice of his own. Nothing I would care to have written myself. In mentality and emotion, hopelessly juvenile. Loathe his works about bells, balls, and bulls.
The Killers. Delightful, highly artistic. Admirable.
The Old Man and the Sea. Wonderful. The description of the iridescent fish and rhythmic urination is superb.

Faulkner, William. Dislike him. Writer of corncobby chronicles. To consider them masterpieces is an absurd delusion. A nonentity, means absolutely nothing to me.

Childhood is idolizing Pynchon
Adulthood I'm still working on

which of his did you not like?

what are you trying to say, you wretched wretch

>Elderhood is returning to Plato
like poetry

Why is Hemingway good?

I like this

This post. Nabokov's words, paraphrased.

It's a good way to mess with people,
,
but 'corncobby' left as the sole critique of Faulkner remains impossibly juvenile. From Nabokov or user.

Childhood is idolising Marx
Adulthood is realising Hegel was right all along

what did he mean by this?

It's a very interesting question which will survive the test of time -- which will be read 100 years from now, or 300 years from now. Perhaps neither. It seems unlikely that both will be.

If I had to bet, I'd put my money on Faulkner, but I wouldn't be terribly confident about that bet. Nor of course will I (or you) be around to see which horse, if either, is still running when the clock hits 2100.

Hans.

Get the corncob.

Humans won't be alive 300 years from now retard

I don't think that it's unreasonable for some of us to survive to 2100, when considering how rapidly medicine is advancing. I'll place my bets on Faulkner surviving the longest. There's something very timeless and unique about his writing.

>when considering how rapidly medicine is advancing

Kek yeah and let's just arbitrarily assume it'll keep "advancing" for all eternity

Silly user we are talking about Robot Academia