I forgot about The Sorrows of Young Werther! That one definitely hit me in the pit of my stomach.
Printable View
I forgot about The Sorrows of Young Werther! That one definitely hit me in the pit of my stomach.
George Elliot's "The Mill on the Floss"
"Magsie" Tulliver is just so outstandingly good a person, that she makes the rudest, raving monster cry.
"Gone with the wind" by Margaret Mitchell
"Ziele na kraterze" by Melchior Wańkowicz (I was trying to find english translation of this title, but without success, so that's my word by word translation: "Herb on the crater" ;)
Sometimes, I think it's stupid to read some book hundret time and still cry in the same moments. I was trying to persuade myself not to cry, but it didn't work - there were always moments, when my eyes were full of tears.
Now, I think it's wonderful - to have my own nook to cry :)
Even when you know the story by heart and know exactly what's going to happen, it doesn't make it any the less sad and so you can't help but cry.
I always cry when I read The Little Match Girl by H. C. Andersen. Somehow it's one of the saddest fairy tales ever :bawling: The Little Mermaid is another one.
Sophie's Choice I had to put down for a day or two before I could resume.
The last sentence of To Kill a Mockingbird, where Scout says that Atticus would be with Jem all night and be there when he woke up in the morning. I wanted Atticus Finch to be my father.
Several times during One Hundred Years of Solitude just because it was just so beautifully written.
I've never cried because of a book, but the saddest I've ever felt while reading a book was the end of "Of Mice and Men". I didn't cry, but damn if it didn't make me feel sad.
I know its not a classic, but one of the few books that has made me cry was Message in a Bottle by Nicholas Sparks. I cried so hard that I couldn't even see the pages. This story is a real tear jerker.
And the only other books I can think of off the top of my head are Red and White by Ted Dekker (a Christian/Fiction author). These books also made me cry so hard that I couldn't see the page, especially White.
The Horse Whisperer, the riding accident especially.
It was even worse seeing the movie. I knew it was coming and I covered my eyes. But what good did that do when the whole thing was already in my head......
You want a killer last sentence, Dude? (Not to mention one of my all-time favourite titles.) Get yourself a copy of Thos. McMahon's "Principles of American Nuclear Chemistry: A Novel"
Or the second of the two stories, collectively "Two short, unhappy stories from a long and happy life" in Grace Paley's The Little Disturbances of Man The sentence begins "And my heart, like a fat barred king in Alcatraz..." (quoting from memory but it's a triumph of English sentence structure)
I cried at Snow Flower and the Secret Fan, a walk to remember,sophies choice was really bad.
Yeah, Sophie's Choice was hard. The ending of A Farewell to Arms was tough too.
Kawabata's Snow Country is up there...I don't remember if I actually cried, but the overriding tone of desolation and disconnection was pretty heavy. Mishima's Spring Snow would be in the same category, too understated and cerebral to pull heartstrings, but devastating still.
Not yet.... no book... well, maybe there is one, but it didn't really made me cry. The Green Mile by Stephen King.... When Coffey was being electrocuted to death and the last thing he saw was Edgecombe...