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October 2023 BOTM - The Collector
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Larry wrote: "I had a little issue finding a copy of this, so I ended up downloading the kindle edition. I found it used online but only a dollar or two less and then not sure how long it would take to get it. A..."
I am glad you are getting started. I will put a reading list on the thread soon. Enjoy Reading, 📚
I am glad you are getting started. I will put a reading list on the thread soon. Enjoy Reading, 📚

https://archive.org/details/collector...
So i'm starting mine today.


I'm halfway through it and it's horrendous. What a lucky life I live that this is only a book.

The scariest part is that the first person narrator makes it all sound so reasonable and understandable. He doesn't sound dangerous at all. Maybe just a little odd and awkward. You probably know someone like this.
Well, never going to walk to the train station alone again. Thanks a lot, Goodreads.

I thought the same abotu our lead guy, it's the way he makes everything sound all very reasonable and perfectly normal, like he's a sane guy that makes it all the more scary. This line for example is just said like it's normal and he's nice.
“And there I kept her captive in a nice way”. In a nice way!?? LOL.


you're most welcome!

Noooooooo!!!!
I am half way thru this book. All I can think is The Collector has mental problems and needs professional help. There are many ways to toture a person. Mental abuse has to be in the top three.
Cheryl wrote: "Now I’m wondering what your top three ways to torture a person are!"
Physical
Mental
Dependence
Physical
Mental
Dependence

Jazzy wrote: "Gaslighting is an awful form of torture."
This is very true Jazzy. Enjoy Reading, 📚
This is very true Jazzy. Enjoy Reading, 📚

This is top-notch subversive literature. It's an odd feeling to be in the abductor's head because his passive nature screws with my emotions. Because he's not overtly aggresssive, he normalizes this crazy "relationship".
I finished this book. The abductor is mental insane. How he rationalizes everything. It is unthinkable. Enjoy Reading, 📚

La Tonya said the magic word: rationalization. In a way, we feel conflicted when we shouldn't.
Thank you, Cheryl. This strange book helped me understand Stockholm syndrome.
Thank you, Cheryl. This strange book helped me understand Stockholm syndrome.
Cheryl wrote: "I've finished! I enjoyed that. Loved the ending."
me too. A "Hollywood" ending would have ruined it.
me too. A "Hollywood" ending would have ruined it.




At first, I did get annoyed when reading Miranda's sections; however, in hindsight, it drives the point that both captive and captor had naïve, idealized versions of the world. It was a slow, unraveling of attitude and perspective. And to do that, it's imperative to flesh out both.
Miranda's zest for life and art is so innocent that it made me nervous for her. I feel that Fowels had to lay that on thick to make the unraveling realistic. This also applies to the abductor and his rude awakening to reality, or rather, the realization that Miranda was not the flawless "insect" he thought she was.
I see this story as two people losing their faith in humanity, which is a complicated thing to write about.
In the end, you have two characters who have to look at the world less idealistically.
That being said, it would be easy to screw this up as a film because people would be latched onto the notion of a traditional climax. But the truth is painful and unpopular: nobody wins, even if they get away.
This is a real boring story if one reads it for the literal outcome of the situation, but I feel that it's more of a meditation on the breakdown of optimism, and the psychological effect of that.
In other words, you can win the physical war but lose the mental one.
Miranda's zest for life and art is so innocent that it made me nervous for her. I feel that Fowels had to lay that on thick to make the unraveling realistic. This also applies to the abductor and his rude awakening to reality, or rather, the realization that Miranda was not the flawless "insect" he thought she was.
I see this story as two people losing their faith in humanity, which is a complicated thing to write about.
In the end, you have two characters who have to look at the world less idealistically.
That being said, it would be easy to screw this up as a film because people would be latched onto the notion of a traditional climax. But the truth is painful and unpopular: nobody wins, even if they get away.
This is a real boring story if one reads it for the literal outcome of the situation, but I feel that it's more of a meditation on the breakdown of optimism, and the psychological effect of that.
In other words, you can win the physical war but lose the mental one.

Books mentioned in this topic
Misery (other topics)The Collector (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Stephen King (other topics)John Fowles (other topics)
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