The ending is beautiful; but also sad (and I was also expecting some English major to come and correct me that I've somehow 'missed the point'). You stated that it's 'tragi-comic'. Yes, the ending is comic, but still tragic. The way it wraps up the whole book and provides an explanation for all the suffering is what makes it beautiful ('tis one of the few books where I didn't see the twist coming a mile off).fedpayne said:Not sad. Hauntingly beautiful, but tragi-comic, and not sad, I don't think.Lukeje said:One Hundred Years of Solitude. I can only say one thing; read it.
Of course they can be sad. Have you never been to a football match where your team lost? You see men almost in tears.Kaotixthought said:Men dont have emotions and therefore cannot be sad.
Yerg, didn't mean to sound preachy. I guess I just didn't feel sad when I read it, for whatever reason.Lukeje said:The ending is beautiful; but also sad (and I was also expecting some English major to come and correct me that I've somehow 'missed the point'). You stated that it's 'tragi-comic'. Yes, the ending is comic, but still tragic. The way it wraps up the whole book and provides an explanation for all the suffering is what makes it beautiful ('tis one of the few books where I didn't see the twist coming a mile off).fedpayne said:Not sad. Hauntingly beautiful, but tragi-comic, and not sad, I don't think.Lukeje said:One Hundred Years of Solitude. I can only say one thing; read it.
Yeah, I don't really read books if they are sad onces, but the giving tree almost made me cry the first time I read it after age 6.Baby Tea said:*sigh* The Giving Tree.
I don't read a lot of non-fiction.
yes and quite sad toojonmcnamara said:Where the red fern grows. And its quiet a good one.ffxfriek said:i forgot what its caled but its about 2 bloodhounds that get killed by a mountain lion and a fern something grows...brings tears to my eyes
Ya, notice I used an example from the prior half of the book? I.E. When everything happening to Quoyle was horridly depressing and tragic. I didn't sit and read through all of the book in one sitting, so all those parts really were crushing at the time thank you very much!fedpayne said:The Shipping News? Not a sad book, fool! Sure, sad if you read only the first act, but it's about a man coming to terms with his life through humorous little incidents in Newfoundland. I love that book. And it is uplifting.Siuss said:Either "A Child Called 'IT'" or "The Shipping News"it is just a tale of a mans horridly destructive life, involving, but not limited to, his two daughters being sold (at around ages 8 and 11 I think) into child pornography and prostitution.
Edited for spoiler tags I forgot.
I didn't think it was that sad. Sure, it's a shame to see the Primarchs fall and all the wonders of the galaxy squashed before they ever had a chance to become part of the current 40k fluff, but I've seen sadder.Neosage said:I dunno but galaxy in flames almost made me cry. (part of the Horus Heresy)