the 'Send a Writer to Devil's Island' thread

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dellzeqq

pre-talced and mighty
Location
SW2
the thread on Twitter exposed a rich vein of misery. You shudder when you recall your English A-level, GCSE and (in my case) 'O' level set books.

Well, CCpeeps, it's revenge time. You get to send your least fave author to Devils Island for ten years. It doesn't matter if they're already dead - this is a literary thread, and Shaun's budget can stretch to the occasional conceit.

I'll start the ball rolling with the man I suspect may well win our all-expenses and lashings of lashings first prize. Thomas 'miserable woman-hating-git' Hardy.

Take it away.
 
Location
Salford
Thomas Hardy for Far From The Madding Crowd (O-level set text)

What a pile of tripe
 

betty swollocks

large member
Had you originated this thread in 1974, when I was revising for my Eng Lit A level and having to suffer 'Mansfield Park', unreservedly I'd nominate Jane Austen. However, now I'm not so spotty and feckless (at least I don't think so)...and I think she's rather great, I'll go with the mind-boggling tedium of Hardy too. I avoid Dorset because of him.
George Eliot runs him a close second though. 'Daniel Deronda' - what was she thinking!!
 
A slightly controversial one maybe but can we send Haruki Murakami? Thing is, I love his writing, his stories are excellent until.... he can't finish a story to save his life. I think I must have tried 6 or 7 times with him now and every time I've loved it until the last 30 pages or so and everything just crumbles - so frustrating.
 
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User169

Guest
Flora Thompson. Can't imagine why it was considered a good idea to make children read this.

(I'll stick up for Hardy on the basis of his poetry)
 

Rickshaw Phil

Overconfidentii Vulgaris
Moderator
I'd like to nominate Robert C. O'Brien (AKA Robert Leslie Conly), author of "Z for Zacharia" and Robert E. Swindells, author of "Brother in the Land".

10 years on Devils Island isn't enough for these guys.
 

mangaman

Guest
Both great authors, but not heard of either of those!

Agreed - I'd have to rescue Flaubert for Madame Bovary and Mann for The Magic Mountain.

I find Dickens overrated but not detestable, although he nearly goes.

I'd send Dostoyevsky, for being rubbish but appealing to gloomy teenagers and students - The Brothers Karamazov was a crime against the reading public
 

RaRa

Well-Known Member
Location
Dorset
Tess of the d'Urbervilles - Thomas Hardy. So very very depressing.
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight - I can't remember who wrote it but it made my eyes bleed,
 
OP
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dellzeqq

dellzeqq

pre-talced and mighty
Location
SW2
Just to broaden things out a bit, I nominate Thomas Mann for Auschwitz and Gustave Flaubert for exile on Elba.
gasp! Thomas Mann. Well, I grant you that he can only occupy two pages with table manners, when, as Proust has conclusively demonstrated, twenty pages would be scarcely sufficient, but when it comes to keeping a metaphor going for five hundred closely packed leaves - he's the daddy!
 
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dellzeqq

dellzeqq

pre-talced and mighty
Location
SW2
A slightly controversial one maybe but can we send Haruki Murakami? Thing is, I love his writing, his stories are excellent until.... he can't finish a story to save his life. I think I must have tried 6 or 7 times with him now and every time I've loved it until the last 30 pages or so and everything just crumbles - so frustrating.
yes. But bear in mind that being seen reading this sap's work is babe-magnetic. It's better than getting gooey over Gainsboroughs.

Oh.... you knew that!
 
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