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Hawthorne's novel has been extensively force-fed to unsuspecting American students, and I'm not the least bit surprised if several of those students develop a disgust towards classics, or get chills from the bare mention of The Scarlet Letter. This is so dry, dry as the Sahara, that I just have to wonder what teachers are thinking. Are there really no other more riveting American classics out there that can be enjoyed by the young?
The reading experience I had was pretty sticky, which made me spe ...more
The reading experience I had was pretty sticky, which made me spe ...more

Apr 15, 2012
Anie
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classics,
2012,
male-author,
fiction,
male-protagonist,
female-protagonist,
ebooks,
project-gutenberg
When I first read this book in high school, I absolutely adored it. I loved the language; I loved the characters; I felt myself deeply, deeply involved in the story. I was amazed by Hester's strength, drowned in Dimmesdale's shame with him, was terrified by Chillingworth. In the parlance of our times: intense.
Rereading this now as an adult, the book comes off more clunkily. The language seems not just old-fashioned, but a little stilted. The story is less enthralling. And yet, I find myself stil ...more
Rereading this now as an adult, the book comes off more clunkily. The language seems not just old-fashioned, but a little stilted. The story is less enthralling. And yet, I find myself stil ...more







Nov 03, 2017
Steph S
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