Anonymous wrote:Thanks to everyone for describing The Road in more detail. Undecided for now whether to add to my list
Anonymous wrote:The Tell-Tale Heart, Hitchcock short story.
Flowers in the Attic, VC Andrews.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks to everyone for describing The Road in more detail. Undecided for now whether to add to my list
Anonymous wrote:A Handful of Dust, Evelyn Waugh. And the movie by the same name. Chilling.
Anonymous wrote:I just read the four page Soft Rains by Bradbury. How does one write a masterpiece in four pages?
Anonymous wrote:Was thinking of reading The Road.
It sounds rough. If I’ve read the Shining and The Atsnd without problems, do you think I could tolerate the Road?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Was thinking of reading The Road.
It sounds rough. If I’ve read the Shining and The Atsnd without problems, do you think I could tolerate the Road?
It's different.
The Road is a 2006 novel by Cormac McCarthy, and it’s one of the bleakest, most stripped‑down post‑apocalyptic books ever written. Since you asked “what book is that,” here’s the clean, direct profile:
The Road — What it is
A father and his young son walk through a burned, ash‑covered America after an unspecified cataclysm. There’s almost no food, no animals, no plants, and almost no surviving humans — and the ones who remain are often dangerous.
It’s a survival story, but really it’s about:
parental love
moral choices when society is gone
the instinct to protect someone even when the world is ending
It’s written in McCarthy’s minimalist style: sparse punctuation, stark imagery, and emotional punches delivered in a single line.
How The Road compares to The Stand
Short version:
The Stand is bleak but expansive, dramatic, mythic, character-driven, and ultimately hopeful.
The Road is bleak but minimalist, intimate, stripped-down, and spiritually annihilating.
I just, before you posted, asked Co-Pilot to figure out if I would like ti based on my reading profile. It basically suggested that I never try reading it.
Hope this helps.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with many of these books and plan to read the ones I haven’t tried yet.
I would like to add Rosemary’s Baby. Extremely creepy.
Ray Bradbury short stories: The Small Assassin, There will Come soft rains are two.
A short story adaptation of Sorry Wrong Number I read as a child. I still think about it at times!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Was thinking of reading The Road.
It sounds rough. If I’ve read the Shining and The Atsnd without problems, do you think I could tolerate the Road?
It's different.
Anonymous wrote:Was thinking of reading The Road.
It sounds rough. If I’ve read the Shining and The Atsnd without problems, do you think I could tolerate the Road?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What to Expect When You’re Expecting
It's such a useless and horrible book.