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Know of any cutting-edge and shocking NEW writers?

SFG75

Well-Known Member
I've enjoyed the writings of Max Barry and Chuck Palahniuk. What other "edgy" writers are out there? I'm talking about folks whose writing is thought provoking and/or unsettles you? I've heard Alan Moore mentioned by some on another forum, just curious what folks here think.
 
I have recently begun to read Heart-Shaped Box by Joe Hill. Whether or not he fits this criteria remains to be seen, but the sypnosis of the novel where an aging rock star purchases a ghost on the Internet was enough to pique my interest. Ok, so I like weird things!
 
I have recently begun to read Heart-Shaped Box by Joe Hill. Whether or not he fits this criteria remains to be seen, but the sypnosis of the novel where an aging rock star purchases a ghost on the Internet was enough to pique my interest. Ok, so I like weird things!

Weird is a good qualification!.

Yes, Palahniuk and Moore aren't new, I guess I should've stated the thread title along the lines of authors who are *like* them in shock-appeal and being *edgy.*
 
You could try A.M. Homes (Music for Torching, The End of Alice). She's not a "new" author either, but I think her work could be considered edgy.
 
Mo Hayder is definitely shocking- her writing is shocking more in a gory, violent way, rather than a weird, twisted way, though. But I think that one Hayder book in particular, The Devil of Nanking, might be right up your alley:

From Publishers Weekly
From its start in 1937, as the Japanese overrun the Chinese port of Nanking and massacre hundreds of thousands, to its narrative core in 1990, as a disturbed young British woman who calls herself Grey searches for the hidden truths that made her the mentally fragile person she is, Hayder's third book (after 2002's The Treatment) is a thriller of rare art and gripping excitement. Hayder, one of the rising stars of British crime fiction, teaches at a university in Bath and has worked as a hostess in a Tokyo nightclub. Both experiences add to her book's unusually rich atmosphere. Grey, who lives on the fringes of the academic world, tries to find out in Tokyo whether a piece of 16mm film taken during the Nanking atrocities actually exists--and whether it will ease her pain. When an elderly Chinese professor, a survivor of Nanking, at first refuses to help her, she drifts into a well-paying job as a night club hostess. (Russian twin sisters Irina and Svetlana teach her the tricks of the trade. "You gotta look sophisticated," Svetlana tells her earnestly. "You wanna wear my belt, eh? My belt is gold. Black and gold nice!") Eventually, the story becomes a beautifully paced, three-way duel among an aged Japanese gangster who wants to live forever; the Chinese professor, with secrets too horrible to hide any longer; and Grey, a courageous young woman unlike any other heroine you're likely to find
 
Not new, but how about Irvine Welsh? Some of his books are extremely weird (try his short stories and novellas), and very different. You just have to try to put up with a written Scottish accent. :rolleyes:

On the thread of Scottish authors you might want to try something by Iain Banks if you haven't before. His Wasp Factory is quite popular with teenagers because of it's weirdness. ;)
 
I have recently begun to read Heart-Shaped Box by Joe Hill. Whether or not he fits this criteria remains to be seen, but the sypnosis of the novel where an aging rock star purchases a ghost on the Internet was enough to pique my interest. Ok, so I like weird things!
I was shocked the other day to read that Joe Hill is Stephen King's son.
 
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