Anonymous wrote:Anna Karenina
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My unpopular opinion: The Goldfinch
I’m there with you. I’m surprised by how many people didn’t like this one.
Me. I hated it, and would have cut out whole storylines.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My unpopular opinion: The Goldfinch
I’m there with you. I’m surprised by how many people didn’t like this one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cutting for Stone was excellent.
Have you tried his new book?
I'm a DP and while it was good, The Covenant of Water pales in comparison to Cutting for Stone.
But both fall into the longish-but-worth-reading category for me.
I absolutely hated the Covenant of Water. Felt like trauma porn after a while.
I replied to the first mention of CofW. I ended up enjoying the book, but I have to agree it did feel like trauma porn. Almost gratuitous at time. A Little Life (which I also mentioned) is far more traumatic than CofW, but it felt real and a natural progression.
That said, I did want to know how it ended.
I agree with this review of CofW. I also think it was unnecessary long. After reading 500 pages I switched to audiobook (which actually seemed longer to listen to than read) and then read the final 75 pages.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cutting for Stone was excellent.
Have you tried his new book?
I'm a DP and while it was good, The Covenant of Water pales in comparison to Cutting for Stone.
But both fall into the longish-but-worth-reading category for me.
I absolutely hated the Covenant of Water. Felt like trauma porn after a while.
I replied to the first mention of CofW. I ended up enjoying the book, but I have to agree it did feel like trauma porn. Almost gratuitous at time. A Little Life (which I also mentioned) is far more traumatic than CofW, but it felt real and a natural progression.
That said, I did want to know how it ended.
Thanks for this strategy. Am just starting CofW but have also downloaded the audiobook.
I agree with this review of CofW. I also think it was unnecessary long. After reading 500 pages I switched to audiobook (which actually seemed longer to listen to than read) and then read the final 75 pages.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh, and Middlemarch by George Eliot
I read that as a teen. The only storyline from it that I can remember is Dorothea's. It was kind of horrible and heartbreaking and emotionally impactful. Nothing about the rest of the book can I remember 40 years later, other than the fact it was a massive slog to get through.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cutting for Stone was excellent.
Have you tried his new book?
I'm a DP and while it was good, The Covenant of Water pales in comparison to Cutting for Stone.
But both fall into the longish-but-worth-reading category for me.
I absolutely hated the Covenant of Water. Felt like trauma porn after a while.
I replied to the first mention of CofW. I ended up enjoying the book, but I have to agree it did feel like trauma porn. Almost gratuitous at time. A Little Life (which I also mentioned) is far more traumatic than CofW, but it felt real and a natural progression.
That said, I did want to know how it ended.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cutting for Stone was excellent.
Have you tried his new book?
I'm a DP and while it was good, The Covenant of Water pales in comparison to Cutting for Stone.
But both fall into the longish-but-worth-reading category for me.
I absolutely hated the Covenant of Water. Felt like trauma porn after a while.
Anonymous wrote:Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese is incredible. 775 pages.