Dayvo
just passin' through
- Location
- 59° 50′ 5.55″ N, 10° 47′ 41.89″ E
Lord Jim - Joseph Conrad: the literary equivalent of watching paint dry.
I gave up trying to be a better person after The World According to Garp. I felt an overwhelming sense of relief.
What stamina! Chapeau!I got to within the last 50 or so pages of that book, but. just. could. not. go. on.
Midnight's Children by Salman Rushdie.
Actually anything by Salman Rushdie.
Midnight's Children dissuaded me from reading anything else by Salman Rushdie.
The Name of the Rose by Umberto Ecco. Gave up after 50 pages.
Tolkien...... Tried several times and failed miserably
Shaun
After perusing the books you've reread I remember trying to read a few different books by Stephen King. Just couldn't do it!
I confess to have read and enjoyed all the above, Captain Corelli tooThe Alchemist
My nomination for this thread is Hotel New Hampshire by the aforementioned. Part two in particular, set in Vienna, is drivel. OTOH Cider House Rules is ok.Anything by John Irving.
I read that 45 years ago for my English Lit. O-level and really enjoyed it. I'm not sure what I would make of it now though.Wasn't wildly keen on 1984 either.
What a stinker. Simply ghastly. The very memory of my thumbing its pages makes me faintly queasy.
- The Beastly Beatitudes of Balthazar B (novel) Delacorte Press, New York 1968
One of the things about reading is that, generally, you get used to the author's "voice" as you get into the book. Ulysses is really difficult in that sense, because the "voice" changes throughout. I've only read it once, but enjoyed it, once I'd figured out that I'd be disorientated by the changes in style throughout - the upside, of course, is that if one style doesn't work for you, another will be along pretty soon...Ulysses by Joyce. Couldn't understand a word of it and, as my old 'A' level teacher said to me (about an essay I'd handed in), it's but a small step from not understanding to not caring.
I just love her turns of phrase, and use of language - the plots, I can take or leaveAnything by Jane Austin (sorry!), haven't read a single word.