All the Light We Cannot See
discussion
Did anyone else have difficulty connecting with this book.


Susan wrote: "This book has great ratings, but I could never get involved with it. And it went on for soooo long. Did anyone else have a negative reaction to this?"
Just look at the all the reviews that are 1, 2, or 3 stars. I gave it 3 stars because of the quality of the prose and, because I listened to it, the reading. As I said, "I wonder whether I would have finished it" were it not for the reader.
Just look at the all the reviews that are 1, 2, or 3 stars. I gave it 3 stars because of the quality of the prose and, because I listened to it, the reading. As I said, "I wonder whether I would have finished it" were it not for the reader.


EXACTLY!!

Additional thoughts and observations about this book from the extreme polarity in readers opinion s include:
Many of the negative or less favorable comments regarding this book originate from those who 'listened' to the book on Audible or similar audio. Part of the one segment that I listened to did not contribute anything to the enjoyment of this story. This one's a reader .
One underlying theme appears to me that many readers/listeners are confusing storytelling with the story. What makes this book 'work' and raises it several levels is that the methods the author Doerr uses to relate an otherwise average story. I won't go over everything I said before (see posts 138 and 147-8 if interested) other than to say there are several very unusual techniques and style usages that make this something special.
I too don't care for the short chapters, but will repeat what this is how scripts/screenplays are constructed at one point in the creative cycle. Doerr uses this in an unusual way. (See earlier posts if interested)
A comment that I see in some post in this thread and has popped up elsewhere as a generic comment about both this book and others regards historical/factual inaccuracies. Get over it. It is called Fiction for a reason.

I don't know even months after reading it how I feel about the ending.


I had the same reaction Susan.
I struggled to finish it. I found it plodding and I didn't connect with any of the characters.
I cannot say I liked this book at all!

my feeling exactly

I could not finish this book. I found it very boring. I don't understand the rave reviews.

https://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/29/bo...


https://newrepublic.com/article/12076...





I think it was just all over the place. He tried to fit too much into one book.
The ONE thing that really stood out was the rape scene with his sister. WHAT?! WHY? Why did he add that? We hardly read about her, and all of a sudden she's getting raped? I think he wanted to add all these tragedies from the war... but, the pieces just didn't fit.



I mean, I think I'd have to know where you left off to tell you how it finished haha. Also, I think this book is WAY more fiction than it is historical :( The myth of that stone or whatever was definitely a bigger player in the book.

I so agree! The rape scene seemed gratuitous and unnecessary, and the stuff with the magical diamond a bit contrived. There was some lovely writing in this book, and some vivid characters, but it did not quite hang together for me.


Ruby wrote: "I struggled through it too somewhat and I love WWII historical novels. I found the history part interesting and liked the characters well enough, just thought the writing dragged. I knew where it w..."


https://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/29/bo..."


https://newrepublic.com/article/12076..."


This contains spoilers:
That's part of the problem. I know I read the book to the very end a couple of years ago but could not tell you now how it ended (other than a vague memory that the girl survived the war and lived until old age and the boy did not--and even that much I had to confirm online.) The plot is so contrived that I just lost interest in the characters and consequently the book left no mark on my brain. At least you tried to finish it!



I did though find the final 3rd interesting though had I not been reading it as a book club read i would never have known this as id have binned it long before then.





I can't say I had a negative reaction but, perhaps, perplexed. Everyone I know rated it really highly. I liked it a lot but, didn't connect as deeply and I thought I would have given the consistent rave reviews.
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I am amazed to see TBT and ATLWCS mentioned together, because the first is one of my all time favorites, both as a book, and was enriched by the audio version, and I disliked ATLWCS. I listened to the audio of it, and I only finished it because I was listening to the audio. When you get bored with a book and you're listening to it, you can just let it ramble on until your mind connects again. I would never have finished the book.