I’ve tried to read Cold Mountain about 3 times. On paper, it’s everything I love in a cook, and yet sticking with it past a few chapters completely eludes me. |
I finished The Goldfinch but the last 2/3 I wanted the pace picked up a bit. At one point, I stopped reading and said aloud, “How many times do I have to read about somebody drinking coffee? Let’s get this albatross up into the air higher and flapping harder!” Tartt is a fantastic writer —few can write as textbook perfect as she can, but writing all that scenery and detail slows down the plot. Some people like that kind of book but I like a faster pace. I think Gaiman struck the right balance between plot speed and detail. I have read Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings about 11 times. It is my favorite story. After six attempts, I gave up trying to read Ulysses by James Joyce. I could not make it past about 80 pages. It was pages and pages of vomit. The effort to read it all would be like trying to force myself to eat a dog turd. The book is that bad. I admit Joyce is highly intelligent and educated but he is not a storyteller. I can tolerate so-so writing if the storytelling is good but I cannot tolerate poor storytelling no matter how great the writing skills of the author. |
|
I bought “Spare” authored by Prince Harry because at the time it came out there was a lot of hype about all the juicy things the book contained.
It was very well-written though I just could not get invested in it. Maybe it was slow?? It wasn’t a juicy tell-all that I had hoped it would be. 😕 |
|
Reread:
Normal People Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow Rules of Civility Catcher in the Rye Abandoned: The Overstory Infinite Jest |
I've heard this from multiple people. I loved The Goldfinch, but it was really long and depressing. |
| I've only recently decided that it is ok to not finish a book, and it was very freeing. I have a few pet peeves with current trends in books -- the main two are telling multiples stories that will eventually tie together a bit, and switching points of view. I got a chapter in to Chain Gang All-Stars recently, and it pushed all my buttons. |
The Goldfinch is one of the only books I didn't finish! I just have a strong "want to know what happens" drive and tend to want to slog through even when a book makes me angry. I thought the book was ok and then when I got 2/3s of the way through, I just couldn't any more. I am in my early 50s and read a lot, too, over 100 books a year. I think I have gotten both less and more selective, but definitely more defined in my taste. I can put up with ok writing and plot twists in some sub-genres but not others. For re-reads, I just love Jane Austen and Dickens. They seem to get better and better for me. On the other hand, I was dismayed to find that I found Jane Eyre to be too melodramatic and maudlin (I know, I know) and that I coudn't even finish Wuthering Heights. I loved these books ferociously when I first read them but I guess I have changed and just don't like Gothic lit anymore. |
|
I’ve reread and loved two stories of family dysfunction:
Hello Beautiful by Ann Napolitano Commonwealth by Ann Patchett (this is the only one of her books that I’ve liked) I’ve also reread and loved two of Curtis Sittenfeld’s novels: Rodham — her fictional Hillary Clinton memoir Eligible — her modern-day riff on Pride and Prejudice, set in Cincinnati Why these books? They all have characters that felt real and stayed with me. They all have happy —or happy enough — endings. |
So many books do the alternating POV chapter thing now. It only works sometimes, and it really only makes sense in some contexts. It feels sort of lazy to me. |
It’s funny how tastes change. I liked Jane Eyre but I absolutely loved Wuthering Heights when I was in my late teens/20s. I think I read Wuthering Heights 5 times. I also loved other gothic novels. Well, I recently reread it (now in my late 30s) and was deeply irritated with everyone— just so maudlin, and Cathy and Heathcliff were such awful people! I wanted everyone to grow up and stop whining and being awful. |