Being an ESL kid I was never forced to read the same books you did, so when I read classics I do it for pleasure only. I don't understand how anyone could not like Animal Farm, unless they were turned off by the blunt force trauma of the metaphores, but I do get the hate for 1984. I personally loved it, but it's a slow moving thing, bleak and depressing little number that can be tedious at times. His semi-autobiographical books are pretty cool though, especially The Road to Wigan Pier.
I dislike Hemingway to the core. I've given each of his books a good go and managed to finish a few of his short stories, hoping that one day I'd "get it", but it's never happened. He writes in a horribly stunted, depressed and heavy handed way about things that I should enjoy, but for some reason don't. I loved the general idea behind The Old Man and the Sea and For Whom the Bell Tolls, but for some reason the way it's written kills it all off for me.
I also don't get why Kafka's Metamorphosis is more respected than The Trial. It's easier to read, sure, but The Trial is stunningly dark in every possible way. The Metamorphosis is good too, but not that good. I get miffed when short stories get more acclaim than novels.
I dislike Hemingway to the core. I've given each of his books a good go and managed to finish a few of his short stories, hoping that one day I'd "get it", but it's never happened. He writes in a horribly stunted, depressed and heavy handed way about things that I should enjoy, but for some reason don't. I loved the general idea behind The Old Man and the Sea and For Whom the Bell Tolls, but for some reason the way it's written kills it all off for me.
I also don't get why Kafka's Metamorphosis is more respected than The Trial. It's easier to read, sure, but The Trial is stunningly dark in every possible way. The Metamorphosis is good too, but not that good. I get miffed when short stories get more acclaim than novels.
Pride & Prejudice is a boring book, but at the very least it's well written. Forcing someone to read Stardust or anything else written by Neil Gaiman, the lord and master of the formulaic plot and the undeveloped character, is not helping the world. A hundred teenage girls and boys devour his popcorn lit every day. He writes good scripts for comics and movies, his stories can be interesting at their core even if they do follow an almost Pratchett-like shitty fantasy formula, but he's not a good author.Mana Fiend said:Pride and Prejudice needs a book burning. Why I didn't do so once I'd finished my English with it I don't know...
My mother actually found my copy at the back of the loft last night, and was about to read it... I managed to stop her and replace it with Stardust. Feel like I've helped the world in my own little way now![]()