Originally Posted by
barbara0207
What a pity that I was offline for such a long time, tonight I saw what an interesting discussion I missed on this thread. As it seems that I was the one to give the book the worst mark in the poll, perhaps I'd better explain a few things although most of what I want to remark has been said by Virgil already.
My own disappointment was such that I didn't even notice the 'excellent prose'. And I wasn't put off by the difficulties at the beginning because once you got used to the timeline you could work it out nicely. It was rather the flaws and inconsistencies Virgil described that made me disappointed - just as you, I had high expectations. That always makes to seem disappointment worse.
I read the novel last summer, but thanks to your frequent quoting in the thread and especially your synopsis, Walter, I could refresh my memory a bit so I don't have to reread the book - which I won't, whatever you may say.
Walter, you say it is a novel not driven by event or character but by insight. I agree. And I simply couldn't get interested in the insights of this old man; his ruminations didn't appeal to me. So maybe it's a very personal thing whether you like this book or not. I have a problem with Hermann Hesse's books, too, and once a colleague of mine told me it would be completely out of (my) character if I did like Hesse because my thinking was too scientifically-minded and too rational for that author and that I wanted more straightforwardness (is there such a word?) in a book. Maybe he was right, I'm not sure. And maybe that is why you, Virgil, as an engineer, were not quite happy with the book, either. But then again, you, plainjane and Walter may claim to be rational people, too. I don't know.