Suicide

What novels have suicide in them? How do different authors deal with the topic? What's your favourite way the topic is dealt with?

the quintessential suicide novel would probably be Werther

It really depends on what you're looking for. If you're just beginning to look into the subject, I think you should start by reading the book Notes on Suicide by Simon Critchley because he explains a number of different perspectives on suicide ranging from Christian to Buddhist to Philosophical and everything in between and lays out each of their arguments thoroughly so you can come to a conclusion on your own.

Personally, I like the writing of Camus on the subject, starting with Myth of Sisyphus and then reading his novels (especially The Fall and The Outsider). Quite a few great writers on suicide are in pic related and I definitely suggest reading Cioran, Miller, and Williams.

I love Frobisher in Cloud Atlas. I am a big fan of Cloud Atlas and I herald it as a masterpiece.

too bad goethe didn't emulate the protagonist

too bad you don't emulate goethe

nobody heralds anymore. heartwarming to see

I am trying to rejuvenate the act for our postmodern culture. One heralded literary work at a time.

Is The Virgin Suicides good? I want post-postmodern literature.

It was okay, nothing amazing.

It is good but Middlesex is so much better.

The Sound and the Fury
Mysteries
Pan
The Devils
Jude the Obscure
Lie Down in Darkness
Another Country
Anna Karenina
Madame Bovary

Can a Christian committing suicide be considered him saying fuck you to God? Or does it not have to be like that in different cases?

The Pale King

There's a suicide as soon as the novel picks up pace.

Whoops I forgot The Name of the Rose

Did Jesus commit suicide?

Coming Through Slaughter
Unbearable Lightness of Being
Fahrenheit 451
Things Fall Apart

The question popped up when I heard of a summary of a retelling of the book of Job. The story's Job character is told by his friends to curse god and commit suicide. And in the book of Job it is said that it is God's choice to take a life away, not the one who has the life. But does it have to be that case in every instance of suicide?

Sorry, is committing suicide is a form of cursing god in every instance of suicide.

Were Mersault's choices an act of suicide?

I loved it. but I totally identified with the group of boys. I was always secretly in love with some girl.

The general, reasonable stance on this within the faith is that it (usually) reflects internal torment or mental illness and not an act of sin/rebellion against God. This is how I've always heard the discussion lead in a fairly conservative Christian body, and more moderate bodies would lean this way even moreso.

Yeah the reasonable stance is something like "Wow, they must have really been in pain to want to end their existence" rather than the doctrinaire "Lol... they sinned against hope... unforgivable sin (according to my theories at least)"

wow fuckin spoiler alert

What's wrong with Goethe?

The concept was really good, with the point of view being spying neighbors. The execution was pretty bland.

Suicide by Rabbi/Roman.

Wuthering Heights
Bleak House

Decent, but nothing more.

Demons - Dosto
Kokoro - Soseki
Thousand Cranes - Kawabata
The Secret History - Tartt
Suicide - Leve

I've been drunk in Jeffrey Eugenides' house.
lol

Did you meet him?