This is beige prose, smooth, flavourless, and engineered for mass readability. It’s not bad writing, exactly. In fact, that’s the problem. It’s technically correct, but soulfully inert. A style that’s been edited within an inch of meaning. Every sentence feels like it’s been test-marketed, stripped of friction, and dunked in lukewarm relatability.
Tangled Prose is your bookish fix – from viral reads to cult classics. News, reviews, trends, and takes. Old favourites, and new finds. Always books.
Showing posts with label James Baldwin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James Baldwin. Show all posts
Wednesday, 19 November 2025
Why does every bestseller sound the same? A mini manifesto against beige prose
Pick up any recent bestseller and you’ll notice it. The prose is clean. Efficient. Emotionally calibrated within an inch of its life. And, yet, somehow, utterly indistinct.
Monday, 14 July 2025
Why the Classics still cast a spell: reading backwards in the age of the algorithm
Browse through the bookish corners of Instagram or TikTok, and you’ll encounter a familiar pattern: glossy covers, rapid emotional claims, and an endless stream of “must-reads” that promise devastation, catharsis, or shocking twists.
It sometimes feels that the language of the algorithm values sensation over subtlety. Amid this noisy chorus, the quiet, deliberate appeal of the classics becomes harder to hear, yet more essential than ever. It is the reason that we return to them. And while some say it's about nostalgia. It isn't that at all.
Labels:
Bookstagram,
BookTok,
Classics,
Emily Wilson,
Feminist Literature,
George Eliot,
James Baldwin,
Literary Fiction,
Madeline Miller,
Pat Barker,
Reading Culture,
Retellings,
Slow Reading,
TBR
Wednesday, 25 June 2025
Short stories, big hearts: ten collections worth reading
Sometimes, when you’re reading, you want to dip in and out. To read a story from start to finish, savouring the words and the rhythm of the story. There’s something deeply satisfying about finishing a tale in one sitting, especially when it lingers like perfume on skin. Short stories, at their best, are emotional distillations. They open small doors to large truths, inviting empathy, surprise, and sometimes awe. Here are ten collections that do just that.
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