It was incredibly bizarre. Bizarre isn't always a bad thing though and there were some truly fascinating moments but you know what I had problems with? Not the fact that this person keeps switching sexes for no apparent reason or the fact that he/she lives for hundreds of years, no, that I could deal with. What drove me nuts was that no one seemed to think it was odd.A silly thing to get hung up on, I know but I just couldn't get over it. If even one person had said, "Wow, Orlando, it's really weird that you just woke up as a woman" or "I wonder why it is that you've lived for 300 years", I would've been fine. Or if he/she had made some attempt to conceal or deal with these changes but everyone acts like it was just one of those things that happen once in awhile. I don't know, I guess if I can accept that someone's sex can change, the fact that people accept it as normal shouldn't be that big of a stretch. I would recommend it just because reading the book is such a surreal experience...but, it is truly odd. The only other Woolf book I've read was The Voyage Out which left me largely indifferent. The ending was refreshingly unpredictable and surprising but that's the most positive thing I can say about it. Although, it did contain the line, "So far, owing to great care on my part, they think of God as a kind of walrus;"
Oh, that made me laugh for a long time.





A silly thing to get hung up on, I know but I just couldn't get over it. If even one person had said, "Wow, Orlando, it's really weird that you just woke up as a woman" or "I wonder why it is that you've lived for 300 years", I would've been fine. Or if he/she had made some attempt to conceal or deal with these changes but everyone acts like it was just one of those things that happen once in awhile. I don't know, I guess if I can accept that someone's sex can change, the fact that people accept it as normal shouldn't be that big of a stretch. I would recommend it just because reading the book is such a surreal experience...but, it is truly odd. The only other Woolf book I've read was The Voyage Out which left me largely indifferent. The ending was refreshingly unpredictable and surprising but that's the most positive thing I can say about it. Although, it did contain the line, "So far, owing to great care on my part, they think of God as a kind of walrus;"
Oh, that made me laugh for a long time.
Reply With Quote
"It's so mysterious, the land of tears."
I understand she is talking not so much about the content, but the lack of endings and resolution and while I certainly acknowledge that that can be disconcerning, I still find his stories much more coherant than hers. Of course, I'm not that well versed in Woolf, I've only read a couple of her books and struggled with both of them whereas I responded to Chekhov right away with little trouble.

