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Rudy Wurlitzer

    January 3, 1937

    This author is celebrated for his literary works that delve into the complexities of the human psyche, often exploring themes of isolation and the search for meaning. His style is marked by a raw honesty and a keen observation of human nature. He crafts characters who are as fragile as they are resilient, placing them in settings that mirror their internal struggles. His writing offers a distinctive perspective on the lives of society's castaways and outsiders.

    Little Buddha
    Zebulon
    Nirvana-Motel
    Nog
    Slow Fade
    • 2012

      Slow Fade

      • 200 pages
      • 7 hours of reading

      With a geography as diverse as the streets of Beverly Hills and the charnel grounds of India, a Mexican beach resort and the Russian Tea Room in New York City, this is a spare, eloquent, and deeply informed novel about the world of the movies. It is a profound and utterly convincing portrait of a man whose career and life has been devoted to the manipulation of images--on the screen and at the conference table, with actors and technicians--and the story of how, at the age of 71, he tries to divest himself of illusions and make peace with his demons and his past.

      Slow Fade
    • 2009

      Nog

      • 168 pages
      • 6 hours of reading
      3.5(128)Add rating

      Originally published in 1968, Nog became a universally revered novel and part of the countercultural movement. Now, 42 years later, it is back in print with a brand new introduction. In Wurlitzer's signature haunting and hypnotic voice, Nog tells the tale of a lone man adrift in the American West, armed with nothing but his own pencil-thin memories and an octopus in a bathysphere. After releasing the fake octopus into the ocean, Nog meanders up the Californian coast, repeatedly tracing his memories and making lists.

      Nog