Anonymous wrote:I have read ‘Sense and Sensibility’ and ‘Pride and Prejudice’ every few years since the summer I first read them in HS in the early 1980’s. I keep trying ‘Emma’, but just stop. I don’t like it. I tend to identify with Elizabeth and Elinor, but just can’t stand Emma for some reason.
Anonymous wrote:I left "She's Come Undone" by Wally Lamb in a hotel room in Dallas b/c it was so bad. Oprah had such depressing book club recommendations.
Anonymous wrote:I got 500 pages into Infinite Jest, realized I was halfway through and miserable (flipping back and forth to the end notes is terrible) and quit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I could not finish Life after Life by Kate Atkinson. I got stuck at the reliving of the Spanish Flu. It just became so repetitive.
I generally do not reread - ther are so many books to READ there's little time for rereading.
But just in the past few months I realized I was really enjoying a detective/mystery series (Everyone in my Family has killed someone is the first book) and yet I had a nagging sense I was missing something. So I went back and reread them all and enjoyed them (for book 2 I had genuinely forgotten who the murderer was!). They are just sort of convoluted situations with a large cast of side characters.
Then my book club chose North Woods by Daniel Mason which I had read a year before and LOVED. I wasn't going to reread, but then someone else who had already read it said something like I just was blown awasy by the next to last chapter, which I didn't remember at all so I did a rereading and picked up so much more from it the second time around.
This is telling me I'm getting older and things aren't pentrating as much as they used to? Is this my signs of aging? (I"m 55 and read a lot - 80-100 books a year. i chose to believe I just have too much crammed in).
I SO enjoyed rereading classics when my kids were young Charlotte's Web is amazing. The Narnia books. The Hobbit (starting about age 11 I reread The Hobbit every few years into my 20s).
I read and just sort of slogged through the Lord of the rings as a young teenager, so I'm thinknig of rereading them.
I've also been casually picking up Agatha Christie books - some I've read before and some I haven't - and enjoying them whether I recognize/remember them or not.
Life After Life is one of the books I've read many times LOL.
Anonymous wrote:I used to reread books often when I was younger. I could read something 5 times and not get enough. I now will reread things I hadn’t read in a decade and it’s enjoyable. Off the top of my head, common rereads throughout my life have been “Wuthering Heights,” “The Secret History,” “The Poisonwood Bible,” “The Namesake,” “Gone with the Wind,” the Lord of the Rings trilogy, and the His Dark Materials trilogy.
Anonymous wrote:I could not finish Life after Life by Kate Atkinson. I got stuck at the reliving of the Spanish Flu. It just became so repetitive.
I generally do not reread - ther are so many books to READ there's little time for rereading.
But just in the past few months I realized I was really enjoying a detective/mystery series (Everyone in my Family has killed someone is the first book) and yet I had a nagging sense I was missing something. So I went back and reread them all and enjoyed them (for book 2 I had genuinely forgotten who the murderer was!). They are just sort of convoluted situations with a large cast of side characters.
Then my book club chose North Woods by Daniel Mason which I had read a year before and LOVED. I wasn't going to reread, but then someone else who had already read it said something like I just was blown awasy by the next to last chapter, which I didn't remember at all so I did a rereading and picked up so much more from it the second time around.
This is telling me I'm getting older and things aren't pentrating as much as they used to? Is this my signs of aging? (I"m 55 and read a lot - 80-100 books a year. i chose to believe I just have too much crammed in).
I SO enjoyed rereading classics when my kids were young Charlotte's Web is amazing. The Narnia books. The Hobbit (starting about age 11 I reread The Hobbit every few years into my 20s).
I read and just sort of slogged through the Lord of the rings as a young teenager, so I'm thinknig of rereading them.
I've also been casually picking up Agatha Christie books - some I've read before and some I haven't - and enjoying them whether I recognize/remember them or not.
Anonymous wrote:Read Jane Eyre a few times. It’s just so good.
Read half of Atlas Shrugged twice. It’s not good.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've discarded so many books, for being boring, badly written, a rehash of an earlier book, too violent, too sexy, you name it.
I've reread books for being beautifully written and completely engrossing.
Are you wanting us to write you a list here?
This life is too short. I ditched it if it doesn't keep my interest or becomes a chore to read and no longer fun.