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Thread Of Dire Judgment

Same here. Actually, The Book Thief and The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time are both on my favorites shelf. :oO

I guess maybe I should check out this Flannery O'Connor person."
I've just started reading Flannery O'Connor for a comprehensive exam for my English major that I have in a couple of weeks. I have the complete volume even though we only have to read the stories from A Good Man Is Hard to Find. I really like her style so far. I think the stories are great, but they're also quite depressing. I'll probably read all of them at some point.

I can see where that might happen. I actually didn't care for the adaption directed by Joe Wright, but I may need to watch that again, since I recently watched his Pride and Prejudice in a class and now I really love that movie. (Tangent: I love the book as well, and while the movie deviates from it in many ways, I consider it as depicting the whole story, especially between Elizabeth and Darcy, in a different light. I also love the BBC miniseries.)


But yeah. Some of y'all gave The Kite Runner 5 stars, which featured the most ridiculous action movie ending on top of really pedestrian writing.
Julie wrote: "I gave 4 stars to "To Kill a Mockingbird". But I haven't given ANYTHING 5 stars yet. "
With only 16 ratings, that's not bad or anything. (I read something like 35 new books last year and only one of them got 5 stars- but that was partly because I had a long run of bad choosing.)

Julie, fascinated by your rating system! Never five stars, huh? Here's my confession: I give five-star ratings pretty liberally. If I loved a book, it's five; if I liked it but there were issues, four; three means I found it pretty forgettable.
I think I'm pretty optimistic with my ratings, which I'm not really proud of; it causes problems because I end up rating Blindness (great!) the same as the Odyssey (best ever!).

I do also tend to go over things later and realise I've given the same rating to books that are poles apart. But oh well I guess it's not life and death!

I read a ton of old stuff, which leaves me in a weird place. I know Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde isn't in the same galaxy as The Song of Roland, but what can I do? They're both awesome.
This is why I end up giving Macbeth three stars. Of course it's better than Where the Red Fern Grows, but I can't think of a better option than rating Shakespeare by his own standard, and books about slaughtering adorable raccoons on theirs.
Stars are dumb. Maybe that's why no one's gotten offended by this thread yet.



Personally, for me, a five star book is not necessarily one that is perfect... but one where its whole adds up to more than its constituent pieces, if that makes any sense.
I'll give that The Kite Runner is very very readable. And there aren't many popular English books about Afghani life. But the characters were very flat for me, and the plot lacked subtlety/believability and flew off the rails (Evil German-Nazi-Taliban-childhood-bully-rapist, oh boy). And Amir didn't redeem himself in my eyes. Actually, I thought his portrayal of his life in America was inching towards genuine in parts (flea market).

We seem to have similar ratings for most of the books we have in common! So nothing to tease there! :)

I'm sure you'll find something to tease. I didn't really like the young girl's part of the story, it seemed too thrown together and not as fleshed out as her father's and Professor Rossi's. I think the book would have been better without it. I'm gonna go check your review now :)

*please* :) "
I think I made it as far as the girl going to school and sorta making friends with a boy? Something like that ....

I did prefer ATSS to Kite Runner, but I loved them both.

But yeah. Some of y'all gave The ..."
I didn't see the movie, but there were parts of the book that were unbelievable given the culture. I don't want to add any spoilers for those who have not read the book, but one scene in the book was definitely "written for a for Hollywood movie."

Sorry, I was referring to The Kite Runner.

That said, how could you not like The Princess Bride? He embellishes the characters and their little quirks so that the movie is almost more entertaining!
And I definately don't know what all the fuss was about in the DiVinci Code. I would have liked it better if it had ended 100 pages sooner. The beginning was an entertaining read.
Re: reviews. I've been trying to review the books I post (after the initial deluge of books when I first joined) but I feel like a bit of a dunce when writing a review-I'm just not good at it.
So now I've opened myself up-do your best. I'm going to puruse some of your shelves!

What did you like about Salt: A World History? I thought the subject was promising, but the book was deadly boring.


But yeah. Some of y'all gave The ..."
Wright definitely looks at Darcy and Elizabeth's romance as a way which is very obviously sexual to modern viewers. The miniseries and the book definitely also have really sexual moments, they're just done differently. I can see why you woudln't like it though.
I really loved The Kite Runner when I read it (like 5 yeras ago) but I still haven't seen the movie. It's in my Netflix queue, I just haven't gotten there yet.

That said, how could you not like The Princess Bride? He embellishes the characters ..."
I agree with you about The Da Vinci Code. I gave it one star. Total disappointment.

As for the movie, I find a bit ludicrous, with Elizabeth randomly appearing at heretofore-unseen scenic locations at every dramatic moment. It's definitely a modern-reinterpretation as far as motives go. (Elizabeth, the rebel; Darcy, the misunderstood sensitive guy; the Bennets, actually kind of poor-ish for the middle class and not just whiny.)


What did you like about Salt: A World History? I thought the subject was promising, but the book was deadly boring."
This book has been on my TBR book since I read
The Great Hedge of India: The Search for the Living Barrier that Divided a People. There's a fascinating section on the history of salt trading in this book.

I do like the idea of a Revolution and think the series should (and possibly is) about this but it's so far in the background as to be insignificant.
What is it about this slow-moving series that gets it such high reviews?



Liz, ONE STAR for Cloud Atlas while Twilight gets FIVE?!?!? Oh. My. God. I hear the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse approaching.
;o)


I'd settle for Shakespeare with action that occurs *onstage* rather than offstage.
To be fair, I think that plays should be performed, not read.

haha hilarious, love it!
I will have to say I didn't really see why everyone loved The Lovely Bones...several people recommended it to me and it was just 'eh'.


Okay, so I am prepared to get thrown under the bus but I have to put it out there - Gabriel García Márquez and his novel One Hundred Years of Solitude.
I read this book two years ago, finally, after hearing about it for many, many years and constantly seeing it on people's lists of "all time super-bestest books ever" and such.
I loathed it in its entirety and wonder if my expectations were too high going in and opinion forming was tainted or if I'm just thick (which I'm not, lol!!)
I'm ready for your worst-ish. :D



That was not a good read for me. BORING, BORING ,BORING..


I'm sure you'll find something to tease. I didn't really like the young girl's part of the story, it seemed too thrown together and not as fleshed out as her father's and Professor Ros..."
Clare - I haven't actually written a review for it, thats another of my failings! haha I told myself I was going to write a review for everything I read.... I think I kept it up for maybe 5 reviews before I petered out... ah well..one day. But I did mention it as 'refreshing' in my earlier post
Stacey wrote: "I had a difficult time reading The Historian as well. I found that listening to it was MUCH better."
Stacey - Did you have any difficulty keeping track of whose point of view the story was comming from when you listened to it? It changes so much! Did the narrator vary the voices at all?


Ooh thats good to know. My library is purchasing an audio copy of it and I was thinking of borrowing it for my mum to listen to. Thanks!
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I tried to read that 3 frickin times and and kept bouncing off. Then the group I just joined picked it for the group read. Yargh!
If you want to read a w..."
How far did you make it? I didn't like the first few chapters but by the end I was in love. Don't knock it till you've read the whole thing!!!
*please* :)