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what to read after watching ‘I Saw The TV Glow’— LitHub reading list!
Hosted by shane_the_reading_rat
7 participants, 6 books
You can start and finish this challenge whenever you like!
ashamedly, i have not yet watched I Saw The TV Glow (even though it looks extremely up-my-alley and ive had the soundtrack on repeat for a week now). so until I do, may as well read the books that LitHub suggested :D
original article!!~ https://lithub.com/what-to-read-after-watching-i-saw-the-tv-glow/
original article!!~ https://lithub.com/what-to-read-after-watching-i-saw-the-tv-glow/
Challenge Books
1
Magic for Beginners
Kelly Link
LitHub blurb~ “The whole time I was watching the movie, I kept thinking about Kelly Link. I Saw the TV Glow isn’t an adaptation of a Link story but I mean it as the highest of compliments to say that it often feels like one. The title story from Magic for Beginners is an obvious touchpoint with its teen protagonists and their love for a strange TV series, but something about the way that Link writes into the emotional core of her main characters will absolutely make you think about Owen and Maddy and your own teen years. See also: Link’s The Book of Love, which also features teens, death, strange art, and blurred realities.”
2
Little Blue Encyclopedia (for Vivian)
Hazel Jane Plante
LitHub blurb~ “Schoenbrun has been open about how their work directly addresses gender dysphoria and trans identity, and Hazel Jane Plante’s novel of queer grief and TV-based friendship is a perfect companion piece for this film. It’s a fast read but, like the film, it’ll stick in your mind for a long time after you’ve finished. It’s structured as an encyclopedia of a single-season Lynchian TV show called Little Blue but the queer trans woman writing the encyclopedia is using it to process her grief (and unrequited love) for her straight trans friend who recently died.”
3
You Too Can Have a Body Like Mine
Alexandra Kleeman
LitHub blurb~ “Kleeman is an unabashed Twin Peaks fan and all of her work shares some fundamental DNA with Lynch’s pioneering strangeness even as it stakes its own claim in the vast expanse of the uncanny. Her debut novel is one of my favorite books of all time and its ending also left me shaken, needing to re-experience the whole thing immediately. Much of the world-building in YTCHABLM could easily slide over into The Pink Opaque, I Saw the TV Glow‘s in-universe series, and several of the series’s monsters (especially The Ice Cream Man) feel like they might’ve stepped right out of a Kleeman story.
4
In Universes
Emet North
LitHub blurb~ “A practicing physicist before they were a novelist, North wrote their thesis on the many-worlds theory of quantum mechanics(!) and their debut blends great storytelling with serious contemplation of what the many-worlds theory could mean for questions of identity, life, death, and more. The main character, Raffi, is constantly changing across the different worlds of this novel’s stories and the characters around them are, too—changing gender, changing name, changing relationships, all in pursuit of honest truth about themselves. Read this when you need a bit of hope and uplift after you’re done crying from the movie.”
5
Universal Harvester
John Darnielle
LitHub blurb~ “The frontman of The Mountain Goats is no stranger to stories of alienated youths, dead-end small towns, and the desire to be seen by someone, anyone. Universal Harvester, his second novel, is set in the same VHS era as the bulk of I Saw the TV Glow and it carries the same constant sense of unease, that same ever-present sadness that you might feel driving down a lonely winter highway. It also includes one of the most jarring (in a good way) pronoun-related twists in all of literature.”
6
Some Strange Music Draws Me In
Griffin Hansbury
LitHub blurb~ “The last book on the list also happens to be the one I finished just before heading to the movies, the sort of serendipity I long for. Hansbury’s novel is the story of a teen girl named Mel who meets a trans woman in her small suburban Massachusetts town in 1984… and who returns to that town as a man named Max some thirty-five years later to sell his mother’s house after her passing. The novel’s depiction of teenage passions and confusions is a more hopeful story than that of the film (I longed for Owen to find something like Max’s surety in himself) but really that just makes it the flip side of a similar coin: you can either open yourself up and change, or suffocate under the weight of a heavy life.”
7
(bonus)
The Book of Love
Kelly Link
*technically* not on the list, but as it was mentioned in the first book’s blurb i decided to include it too!!