Are you kidding? I teach high school Spanish. They've barely heard of Mark Twain, let alone Cervantes. If I used the expression "tilting at windmills," they'd look at me like I just grew another head.
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I gave up on Don Quixote as well, but I do plan to try it again soon. The reason I gave up on it was because I found it too sad , but I'm sure I can come back at it with a fresh attitude.
The Henry James work that I read all the way through and wish I had had the wherewithall to chuck aside was Wings of the Dove. Hated the characters and the plot. Still do.
I disagree with many of the opinions expressed above. I have no experience with Joyce.
I do agree with JBI on one thing. So many of these threads include the comment that so-and-so is overrated. This typically is synonymous with not to the individual's taste. It does not, however, mean that the author in question has not earned the high regard generally bestowed on him or her. Every author might have a clunker, but it doesn't void an entire body of work. Review the comments on Henry James. There are different works cited as favorites and others as unreadable, but at the end of day, none of our opinions alter James' standing in the halls of literature. Same with Faulkner or any one else here. It's why it is opinion.
Often a work simply does not meet our expectations -- of the author or of the work. As a closing thought, Great Expectations disappointed me, but I finished it. I didn't like different elements of the plot or of certain characters and really didn't care for the ending. It doesn't matter. It doesn't diminsh Dickens standing in the canon of British Literatue. It's just my opinion.
Beckett's The Unnameable. After getting halfway through I literally lost my place while reading and could not find where I left off. I could not comprehend it. You know you're lost when every page reads the same.
I just have to laugh....I love Dostoevsky but for the life of my I couldn't tell you why. I am far from being an angst-filled teenage boy. I'm going to have to go home tonight and flip through my copies of the Brothers Karamazov and Crime and Punishment to see if I can come up with a good reason why I liked them so much.
I used to believe I would never NOT finish a book. But now I realize life is too short to spend time reading books I dislike! :)
I've seen a few books mentioned that I too could not get through:
Middlemarch
The Sound and the Fury
Other books I just couldn't get through:
Billy Budd
Sister Carrie
The latest book I've been reading that I gave up on was An Everlasting Meal, an essay-style book about cooking. It's not hard reading, I just found it pretentious, and it's hard to read about cooking in essay format. I enjoyed reading Julia Child's memoir, but reading about how to cook written in paragraphs is not my cup of tea.
I was relieved to see someone else say they don't like Hemingway, because I have never been able to get into his books, and analyzing them back in undergrad classes was always a chore.
I gave up on Don Quixote too. I seem to remember it had lots of digressions and lots of repetition. It seemed like a reasonably good idea flogged to death.
I think I finished the first part then gave up.
I never completed 1984 neither. I tried reading it when I was fifteen or sixteen, but I got about three-quarters of the way through and realised he wasn't going to escape and lead the counter revolution, so gave up.
I did not get past the first few chapters of Catch 22. I was more interested in real air battle histories at the time.
I also gave up on the Life of Pi after the end of part 1. It won a Booker Prize. Several of my friends said it was a great book.
The Magus by John Fowles. Having read The Collector in a single day, I devoured The French Lieutenant's Woman and The Ebony tower with equal zeal. So, yeah...my expectations were kind of great...
Unfortunately, The Magus is a flop. 350 pages in and I'm crawling through this condensed, contrived and oh so boring magnus flopus at the pace of salted slug. Had his other works not impressed me so much, I wouldn't even try. :svengo:
I read crime and punishment recently, and I thought it very good. I felt he drew the characters very well, and related all the mad things that happened in the camp brilliantly - like the Christmas play and the eagle they kept for a while.
I read Crime and Punishment at uni - good while ago - and I thought it a pretty claustrophobic book - not an enjoyable read. The ending was a big disappointment too - oddly contrived with him getting off due to Raskalnikov saving the children from the fire. I found the vision of the tents of Abraham seemed to belong to a dfferent book.
One example that comes to mind is Alexander Solzhenitsyn The Gulag Archipelago, started about three years ago and made it about one eighth into the book and set it aside.
A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich is a much easier read addressing similar themes as The Gulag, but in far fewer pages. I plan to give The Gulag another attemp at some point.
I think my next thread should be What are you NOT reading to your kids? Some of the books I see here are prize-winners among critics. Sometimes that tells me all I need to know about a book. Is having a Pulitzer or Nobel Prize attached to a work of literature a good thing, a bad thing, or indifferent?
I've read a lot of children's books in my life as a parent. I confess that when I see the Newberry Prize stamp on the cover, that's the book I tend to avoid.
We have the book, and it's on my to read list. I read it when I was in my early twenties, but my knowledge of Russia was much more sketchy. I think I'll get more out of it this time. I found Ivan Denisovitch much easier too. It has more punch being so much shorter.
Which Newberry books didn't work for you? I can think of three off the top of my head that were great: A Wrinkle in Time, Lloyd Alexander's The High King (the finale of his excellent Prydain series), and one of the books in Susan Cooper's Dark Is Rising series.
I read Daisy Miller. It was one of four books mentioned in another book called 'Reading Lolita in Tehran' about a women's book group in Iran. The others were Lolita, Pride & Prejudice, and the Great Gatsby (I think). Daisy Miller was quite a nice book on the whole, quite short, has an unnecessarily miserable ending and I couldn't see what the fuss was about.
I also slogged my way through Foucault's Pendulum, even though nothing much seemed to happen till about fifty pages from the end. You would be better off reading 'The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail' by Baigent, Leigh and Lincoln, which covers the same ground, even though it's not strictly fiction. I have gone right off Umberto Eco. I liked 'The Name of the Rose', and did not mind all the interminable digressions into all the various medieval heresies because they were interesting. Then I read 'Focault's Pendulum', which was two inches thick and never seemed to get going. Finally I read 'The Island of the Day Before', which despite being two inches thick, did not have a proper ending.
I admit I couldn't make it through Winston Churchill's WWII series either. I got through Their Finest Hour (all fantastic), but by then I felt like I needed a grad degree in WWII military tactics/history. Got pretty dry.
I tried read Philip Roth's Portnoy's Complaint - and not only did I find it to be dull and lacking in beauty, but it was inexperianced, I spent a lot of time looking down patronizingly on the book because it felt like it was written by a man who knew little of the world. I gave up on it.
Why not give it a second chance? I had a similar experience to you, first time, but I sailed through it the second time, with much enjoyment.
I also gave this one a second chance, but still got nowhere! More difficult than Cervantes, but nowhere near as funny or interesting...
I tried to get through Clarissa at some point a few years ago, couldn't make it past 100 pages. I should have known better anyway, I struggled through Pamela some time before that and barely finished. Samuel Richardson is not my cup of tea.
:lol: Samuel Richardson is nobodies cup of tea. He's not meant to be enjoyed. I remember when I was forced to read some Richardson for university, right at the very first class. Our wonderful tutor explained before that Richardson was horrible reading, but important in the development novel etc, etc. When someone asked why we had to read it she replied that she had suffered so you lot have to as well. Brilliant!
Ohhh, I so love an open fireplace. I swear that I would just be happy if I had a big library and an open fireplace (and I didn't have to work). Also the Richardson could come in handy to keep the flames going for a little while longer as well.
It has been about eight years since I had the dentist experience of Richardson, so I will believe you, at arms length, in regards to the elegance of his prose, ha, ha.
I started Shogun... but put it aside as I have some tests coming soon, I'll pick it again in my next hollidays