The Road
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Did anyone find the writing style an absolute turn off?
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... While reading "THE ROAD" I simply allowed the book to be told as if it was being actively recounted by somebody. This allows the dialogue to blend and become more fluent, in my opinion.
I feel the same way, Griffin.
Let go and allow the book to impose its own reality, rather than trying to impose rules on it. Go where it goes.


Your comment sounds like it's more about the content than the writing style referenced in this thread. Certainly The Road is not a feel-good story and would not be, regardless of the style in which it had been written.

Your comme..."
Ayny wrote: "Not sure which would be more depressing, waiting to die, or waiting to finish this book. I couldn't do it. If you like darkness and a hungry child, it might be your thing."
That's true, my comment was more about the content. I'd say,the topic characters and writing style were not enjoyable enough to read further.

That's what kept me reading.

Understandable - different strokes. The book worked for me. It seemed very emotionally realistic regarding someone's narration of a post-apocalyptic world.




I'm a die-hard fan of the PA genre and was expecting so much..."
Try listening to it....I listen to most of my books...you will love it!!




I found it an absolute turn on and I loved it when the book was dripping wet after I had finished "reading" it.

I'm a die-hard fan of the PA genre and was expecting so much..."
OMG this yes. His word choice and use of phrasing is beautiful but I just can't with the lack of grammar. I finished the book but it felt like a wanted to edit the whole way through. Being a teacher didn't help.
Same thing with The Road; this is beautiful prose. The descriptions are limited because the world is literally a field of ash dotted with dead trees and surrounded by water. How much description would you give that?
The conversations are terse because the father is angry, scared, and wrapped up in regrets and fears. He doesn't talk much, he doesn't have anything to say. The boy is afraid of his dad's anger and dismissals and keeps quiet.