That's completely fair, hence why I find his short stories and a select set of his novels to be ones that I will (re)read and enjoy.
Sometimes he gets a bit too eager to say how nihilist/edgy his characters are (looking at your Rifters book 2), rather than telling an interesting story with about them
The Island and Other Stories is fun because you never dwell on any single existential fuckup for too long to get tiring, Blindsight is always worth rereading (in the same way Desert is always worth rereading), and I enjoyed Rifters 1
But it's definitely not something for everyday consumption, definitely requires the right headspace to get into
That's completely fair, hence why I find his short stories and a select set of his novels to be ones that I will (re)read and enjoy.
Sometimes he gets a bit too eager to say how nihilist/edgy his characters are (looking at your Rifters book 2), rather than telling an interesting story with about them
The Island and Other Stories is fun because you never dwell on any single existential fuckup for too long to get tiring, Blindsight is always worth rereading (in the same way Desert is always worth rereading), and I enjoyed Rifters 1
But it's definitely not something for everyday consumption, definitely requires the right headspace to get into
yeah, makes sense. Blindsight really is an astonishingly creative book.