Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Understory. I tried twice.
Any chance you actually mean The Overstory? Because a huge +1 to not being able to finish that one! I loved the beginning and then it fell off a cliff. I kept seeing it on best seller lists and wondered if anyone who bought it actually made it to the end.
The collection of short stories in the first part of the Overstory was magnificent. The second part that pulled it all together—meh!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Understory. I tried twice.
Any chance you actually mean The Overstory? Because a huge +1 to not being able to finish that one! I loved the beginning and then it fell off a cliff. I kept seeing it on best seller lists and wondered if anyone who bought it actually made it to the end.
Anonymous wrote:Creation Lake was meh. I dropped it.
Anonymous wrote:I cannot get through “The Sound and the Fury.” I think if I were required to read and discuss it for a class, I’d do okay, but on my own, other books call to me.
I’ve read exactly one part. I’m already vaguely aware of Faulkner and this story/characters/themes (from other works, essays I’ve read, the fantastic forward which I enjoyed more than the book itself!). I feel like I should read it but don’t particularly care for it. Should I continue?
Anonymous wrote:I cannot get through “The Sound and the Fury.” I think if I were required to read and discuss it for a class, I’d do okay, but on my own, other books call to me.
I’ve read exactly one part. I’m already vaguely aware of Faulkner and this story/characters/themes (from other works, essays I’ve read, the fantastic forward which I enjoyed more than the book itself!). I feel like I should read it but don’t particularly care for it. Should I continue?
Anonymous wrote:The Understory. I tried twice.
Anonymous wrote:I cannot get through “The Sound and the Fury.” I think if I were required to read and discuss it for a class, I’d do okay, but on my own, other books call to me.
I’ve read exactly one part. I’m already vaguely aware of Faulkner and this story/characters/themes (from other works, essays I’ve read, the fantastic forward which I enjoyed more than the book itself!). I feel like I should read it but don’t particularly care for it. Should I continue?
Anonymous wrote:Tender is the Night - Fitzgerald
- Have had trouble getting into it, but I love Gatsby.