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Thread: who is the most overrated writer ever?

  1. #661
    Registered User rozreads's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Brendan Madley View Post
    Jane Austen is not overated; she is a brilliant novelist, it's just she wrote in the old ways, meaning that today her merit is not as greatly revered. I would like to contribute Mark Twain and Ernest Hemingway.
    Mark Twain? Now that's sacrilege...

  2. #662
    Quite a Character. OhReally?'s Avatar
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    Charlotte Bronte. Jane Eyer was reall dry, and too consticted; I felt that there was no flow. I like the actual story, but if the prose was a bit more interesting, I would have really liked it.
    Oh, yes, Meyer definetly. 'Stifled a gasp' is in a book that is considered literature! Flat characters, and everything, I mean... come on.
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    Card-carrying Medievalist Lokasenna's Avatar
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    I can mention D H Lawrence? In my frank opinion, he was nothing more than a glorified smut peddler, with all the artisitc skill and integrity of road-kill. He is noticed merely because he is shocking, and for no other reason!
    "I should only believe in a God that would know how to dance. And when I saw my devil, I found him serious, thorough, profound, solemn: he was the spirit of gravity- through him all things fall. Not by wrath, but by laughter, do we slay. Come, let us slay the spirit of gravity!" - Nietzsche

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    Three names keep recurring- Hemingway, Jane Austen and Kerouac.

    My vote goes to Hemingway. I don't think he was a bad novelist, just overrated. Kerouac is not really overrated because he's generally considered good pop lit rather than University reading list material.

  5. #665
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    Twain, Hemingway

    And also, with all the King mentions, I think it's only fair to list Lovecraft (who may have already been mentioned---I didn't read all 45 pages....)

  6. #666
    Registered User PoeticPassions's Avatar
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    Hemingway (for his dry and lackluster prose) and quite possibly Chekhov... I just don't see the appeal in his stories. Not that they are bad or have no merit (in fact I can even sometimes enjoy reading one), but he is always termed as the master of the short story, and I can name a hundred short story writers that are better and have much more substance to their stories. Chekhov's stories do not speak to me, and in fact they rarely say anything... at times they seem so pointless (or so obvious). But maybe I am missing the point?
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  7. #667
    Registered User kelby_lake's Avatar
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    Sorry, Hemingway, but I can't get into your books Whilst I admire that you get to the point, it's kind of hard to read something like that. x

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    It is amazing how many times Hemingway has been chosen! As far as I know, his reputation among scholars and academics is quite low.

  9. #669
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    Faulkner!!i just don't get him!i struggle to read his novels just to find myself puzzled at the end,not being quite sure what it was about!

  10. #670
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    My nomination would be Henry Miller. Seriously. Maybe I'm missing the point of his work, but surely producing a scandal shouldn't be all there is to it...
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  11. #671
    Hawthorne - at least House of the Seven Gables really vexed me. I think there was something there, but could never quite place it. Maybe I was too young, it was some years ago, but if I try it again and it has a similar effect, I don't know what I may be driven to do...

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    Quote Originally Posted by sunshine_enl View Post
    Faulkner!!i just don't get him!i struggle to read his novels just to find myself puzzled at the end,not being quite sure what it was about!
    I have him on my mind. But no, I decided to try again . I'd hate if I missed something great out of Faulkner just because my experience with Absalom Absalom.

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    As a Hemingway fan, I'd be interested in hearing why people find him overrated? As far as I'm concerned, he has written four classic novels and a number of classic short stories.

    His style did vary. He became famous for his detachment as a narrator and working with implied feelings, but give For Whom the Bell Tolls a try if you want Hemingway in another mood, a novel filled with descriptions and inner thinking of its main characters. It also deals explicitly with a number of moral themes.

    Old Man and the Sea is Hem at his most sentimental, but it's a beautiful story. And the best of the lot would probably be A Farewell to Arms.

    I'm just trying to say that he did not always write in the same manner. If you've never given him a try, look up Indian Camp online and get a feel for his traditionally terse yet highly rich prose.

  14. #674
    Cur etiam hic es? Redzeppelin's Avatar
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    Hemingway rocks.

    Gertrude Stein is COMPLETELY OVERRATED. I do not care how many critics insist that she is some founding member of modernism - her writing is terrible!
    "I believe in Christianity as I believe that the sun has risen, not only because I see it, but because by it I see everything else." - C.S. Lewis

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    Fantasy/Fiction maniac Monamy's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Redzeppelin View Post
    Hemingway rocks.

    Gertrude Stein is COMPLETELY OVERRATED. I do not care how many critics insist that she is some founding member of modernism - her writing is terrible!
    I honestly, REALLY second every word in that quote...
    couldn't really put it any better myself!

    Heminway is the schiznet!
    When life gets hard... Laugh!

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