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What are you reading these days? (Part ELEVEN (2015) ongoing thread for 2015
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Nina
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Mar 28, 2015 02:35PM

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I've never read a book by Stephen King. Too unpleasant. I need a lot of "pleasantness". I guess I go for light but interesting plots... although there have been some more serious novels which drew me in, in spite of myself. Water for Elephants comes to mind. Also , see all of the books on my "favorite book" shelf at: https://www.goodreads.com/review/list...

Well, his descriptions tend to be a bit longer than I'd like, but they're not too bad. It's repeating certain facts & feelings that bothered me.
Nina, I quit reading Stephen King years ago because his descriptions are far too long & involved for me. IMO, there is no need to dwell on ordinary items, but he does. His earlier work was a lot better.





https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


At any rate, the main character, a shepherd named Santiago, goes in search of some sort of treasure and along the way he meets people who give him all sorts of vague advice about life and omens. The book uses annoying general terms (like "Soul of the World") It never gets specific enough to make itself understood. There is no real character development. At one point the boy wants to become the wind. Huh? What does that mean? The sun, the wind, and the desert talk to the boy. It's all too ridiculous.
I was determined to finish the book just in case it ever started to make sense. It never did. Even if one allows for imagery and symbolism, the book was too vague. There were no deep ideas, just banal expressions pretending to be deep thoughts. An example: "Love is the falcon's flight over your sands." (p.144 in my edition)
As for the Goodreads reviews, there are 56,820 ONE STAR reviews (out of a total of 1,432,664 GR reviews). I'm going to add one more ONE STAR review!
PS-It never became clear to me why the idea of an alchemist was important to this story. Another vague symbol? Or perhaps it just sounds good! The story seems to simply meander around vague philosophic ideas, most of them painfully sophomoric.
PPS-Some readers put this book on a "fantasy" shelf. Just because it may be a fantasy, doesn't necessarily give it great meaning.
SEE OTHER MESSAGES BELOW ABOUT THIS BOOK, ESPECIALLY MESSAGE #278.

"The message of the fable is communicated in 'fortune cookie-like' aphorisms, philosophical 'sound bites' that were both charming and thought-provoking. There is a profundity in the simple messages within the books and I found myself dog-earring and underlining many passages."
FROM: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Being a collector of quotations, I had heard most of these "aphorisms" in one form or another over the years. Perhaps that's why the book made little impact on me.


By calling _The Alchemist_ a fantasy, one might excuse the ridiculous idea of the boy wanting to change himself into the wind, as though anything in a fantasy makes sense. I don't buy that idea.

"Everything in life is an omen." (p. 70)(said by the Englishman)
"There's no such thing as coincidence". (p. 72)(said by the Englishman)
Crazy ideas, IMO.



I think a lot of authors are choosing to couch their mainstream books in Fantasy since the genre has gained great popularity. I find it a cheat. If the author wants to do a serious mainstream book then do it, don't hide it in SF/F. I read a book like that, The Lost Girl, it sounded like it would be cool scifi but it was really a chick-lit romance and the idea of what it means to be oneself. Bored me to tears! It's the old 'bait and switch' routine and I find it a lot in SF and F. Or maybe I just expect to read SF or F when it's listed as SF/F, so silly of me! lol



"Quality is never an accident. It is always the result of intelligent effort." -John Ruskin




What book is that, Nina? Is it All the Light We Cannot See, about blind French girl and a German boy? I read the book but found it disappointing. It was too fragmented and the ending was a let-down because the boy and girl hardly interacted with one another. I had expected more interaction between them. Instead it's a story of their parallel lives and (view spoiler)
My review is here: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

********************************
"...he learned the most important part of the language that all the world spoke. The language that everyone on earth was capable of understanding in their heart. It was love. Something older than humanity, more ancient than the desert. Something that exerted the same force whenever two pairs of eyes met... She smiled, and that was certainly an omen. ... It was the pure language of the world ... the universal language." -Paulo Coelho, The Alchemist (ellipses are mine)
FROM: https://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes...
**********************************************
NOTE: See my original reference to _The Alchemist_ at Message #262 above.

What book is that, Nina? Is it All the Light We Cannot See, a..."Yes, it was titled, "The Light You Cannot See," sorry I missed the right title. I left a comment on your review.

Katherine, where is it? Can you give us a link?


https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I always loved the story of Anastasia, as told in the movie starring Ingrid Bergman. An interesting case indeed! - "Anastasia" (1956): http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0048947/?...

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0051773/?...
http://dvd.netflix.com/Movie/60021262...
"Wealthy American diplomat Philip (Cary Grant) and famous actress Anne (Ingrid Bergman) meet just as Anne has decided that all the best men in the world are taken. Although Philip is indeed married, Anne can't resist their instant attraction and electricity, and they begin a passionate affair. But an unexpected secret Philip hides from his new love threatens to spoil everything. Stanley Donen directed this sparkling romantic comedy."







Nina, I'll have to look into that one. I'll keep it in mind.
At the Water's Edge by Sara Gruen

In its place, we've started another fantasy series opener as our "car book": The Gilded Chain, the first volume of Dave Duncan's King's Blades series. Barb gave me that one for Christmas in 1998, the year it came out (our last Christmas in BC faculty housing, before we moved to this house the next year), which conveys an idea of how long some books sit in my TBR piles. :-( So I thought it was high time to read it!
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