Catch-22
discussion
Is this a masterpiece in prose or a mindless comedy?
message 1:
by
Thom
(new)
-
rated it 5 stars
Apr 23, 2011 12:40AM

reply
|
flag

I have never had the misfortune of being in your position, but after reading the book, I gave it to my father who was in the Dutch Resistance in WWII and he was a medic in the military until they surrendered. His reaction was very similar to yours.
Also, I was able to recognize some of the truth of it through the war stories (gory and otherwise) that he told me (though a poor substitute for being there).
Catch-22 will always be a favorite for me, I read in high school and stole the book (ssshhhh!) I loved it so much.
I was so excited when Closing Time, came out, but as is the case with most "sequels," it didn't live up to Catch-22 for me.

Reading this book for the first time many years ago, I hated it and wondered what all the fuss was about, namely as it did not fit my admittedly all-too-conservative preconceptions of how a novel should be. That said, something about it intrigued me, enough anyway, to entice a rereading. It seemed I wasn't ready previously, to recognise or respond to its humour and the dark brilliance in which its title and main theme gleam amid the novel's all-pervading absurd, bleak, blackness. It is a book that tells too, we learn nothing from history, a book that continually resonates today, balking at how human beings are still expected to witness and/or commit acts that dehumanise them and of course others. What I got then, after this second reading, was a sense of why Catch 22 is so brilliant a piece of writing, and why it, in conjunction with Kurt Vonnegut's also powerful anti-war novel, Slaughterhouse 5, will always be heralded a classic.

Didn't find it funny. At all.
I could not finish it. It is a very rare occasion when I give up, because usually even if I don't like a book I am curious how it ends. Not this time.


Robin..... I would strongly recommend that you read the novel in a complete and unabridged form (not a synopsis) and heed the advice I've given Arthur. Don't start the book with any preconceptions and go simply where the story takes you. In my opinion the one over-riding theme of Catch 22 is the absolute senselessness of war. Imagine if war a was ever declared and everyone refused to show up (much less fight).





I could not go with the flow. It was illogical. Time jumps. One moment A says this, the next moment A says that....ahh apparently that was before this, the author decided to go backward without any warning. I didn't laugh. I didn't find anything in the storry one bit funny. One of the most frustrating reading experience I had.
I am over the High school ideology. Just because some people like a book and believe it is classic and masterpiece it doesn't mean
a) that I must read it;
b) that if I read it I will enjoy it;
c) it is a classic and masterpiece indeed
People who claim a book is classic and/or masterpiece are just people and it is their personal opinion. They probably would be able to read books I love.
I plodded through 1/3 or even 1/2 of the book and it was awful. On the other hand, I finished Gardens of the Moon the other day and it was brilliant. I could not put it down.
I guess to each its own.



Since I loved it from the first, I don't push it. But there is something in it which both moves me and makes me laugh which clearly doesn't affect everyone.
That said, I then read Something Happened, also by Joseph Heller. I MADE myself finish, page by excruciating page, only because Catch-22 is one of my favourite books. If people reading Catch-22 feel even half the tedium and disappointment I felt when reading that, I really can't blame them for giving it up.
A thought - the reason I hated Something Happened (so much - there were other reasons) was that I hated the main character and felt no connection with him. Maybe I see something of myself in Yossarian and root for him, where others don't?


I think this is why I hated Catch-22. I just could not connect with Yossarian. I felt like after 100 pages, I knew nothing about him and he was nothing but a bad joke. None of the characters seemed particularly interesting or 'real' to me.

I think this is why I hated Catch-2..."
I guess I am in the same boat.





http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/72...
I found the story both hilarious and thought-provoking.
But I have to agree with the reviewer I quoted in my review of the casebook - Catch 22, the story, levels everything downward. The ideals of war - that there ARE some things worth fighting for, in WWII for God's sake - become nothing, morality is portrayed as stupidity, the good are only the weak and ineffectual, and Yossarian is nothing more than a man out to save his own hide - as willing as any of his superiors to victimize someone else, for his own amusement or in misplaced rebellion, until the very end of the book.





I actually "borrowed," in a more permanent sense than the word implies, a number of the books from that class and still have that copy of Catch-22
In short though, it is definitely as masterpiece in every definition and will be remembered as a canonical piece of 20th century lit.
In case anyone cares for the off topic reading list of my pivotal Grade 10 year... great teacher that man. That was the year I decided to take Eng Lit in university and become a writer.
* The Handmaid's Tale
* 1984
* The Chrysalids
* The Tempest (still my fav Shakespeare)
* The Diviners
* Catch-22




It has sales of more than 10 million copies to date. It’s hard to argue with that kind of importance.
I think it marks a cultural divide between the romance and idealism of WWII and the decent into the deceit and cynicism of the Viet Nam War. Great book.



To me it was absurd, yes, but never funny, never intriguing, never interesting. Maybe I should reread it in 30 years and see if I change my mind but it's not something I look forward to.
In general, among the "Classics" I've found books I really love, and I've found books I can't really take (Moby-Dick, I'm talking about you!). I agree with someone earlier in the thread, that just because the cultural elite (aka literature teachers) have decided that a book is a Classic doesn't make it so.








Obviously, some people just hate this book. I won't tell anyone they "need" it or force them to like it, but it's unfortunate that so many don't connect with it, for whatever reasons.

all discussions on this book
|
post a new topic
We (other topics)
The Chrysalids (other topics)
The Tempest (other topics)
1984 (other topics)
More...
Books mentioned in this topic
Moby-Dick or, The Whale (other topics)We (other topics)
The Chrysalids (other topics)
The Tempest (other topics)
1984 (other topics)
More...