28 notes &
More and more, I read in pieces. So do you. Digital media, in all its forms, is fragmentary. Even the longest stretches of text online are broken up with hyperlinks or other interactive elements (or even ads). This is neither a good nor bad thing, necessarily — it is simply a part of modern reading. And because of that, works that deal with fragmentation, that eschew not only a traditional narrative structure but the very idea of a work comprising a single, linear whole — take on a special kind of relevance. Fragmentary writing is (or at least feels) like the one avant-garde literary approach that best fits our particular moment. It’s not that it’s the only form of writing that matters of course, just that it captures the tension between “digital” and “analog” reading better than anything else out there. And that tension, in many ways, is the defining feature of the contemporary reading experience.
— Fragmentary: Writing in a Digital Age by Guy Patrick Cunningham (via millionsmillions)
Want to see if what he’s saying is right, if you agree that novels written in a fragmentary form are somehow easier to read these days, feel more readable? Then just ask us for some suggestions of such novels and books when you come in to visit us at Unicorn Tree Books, Lincoln Central Market.
Or you can ask us on tumblr, email, tweet us or Facebook us and we’ll send you a link to a suggested book back :D