Worst "classic" reading experience ever
Aug. 18th, 2003 12:30 amWhat's the worst experience you had with a famous or classic book? What noted title makes your teech grind and your cheek twitch with flashbacks of literary torture?
A.) Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte and Tess of the D'Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy
Two books that are supposed to celebrate strong women of the Victorian Era, but mostly it just pissed me off. Instead of being inspired by the so-called "endurance and strength" these women seemingly displayed, I was bitterly turned off of them because of their constant dependence upon men to determine what makes their lives "good," the constant accepting of blame on behalf of those men, and the willingness to endure any emotionally abusive and manipulative treatment for the sake of "standing by your man, because he's truly good at heart, but only I know him enough to see it." I just wanted to smack those women repeatedly. I wouldn't have even finished the books had they not been assigned reading for a class that I needed to write essays for. They might be vaunted as literary classics about "strong and independant women," but apparently they're really only "strong and independant women who are only complete when they sacrifice themselves to have men in their lives that don't deserve them by any stretch."
That kind of thinking still regulates women into submissive roles. "Wuthering Heights" was the better Bronte novel, if only because EVERYONE in that book was messed up except the very youngest generation, and I didn't feel obligated to sympathize with a character I had no respect for.
B.) Ethan Frome by Edith Wharton
Had to read this one too; it's only saving grace was that it was short. A few weeks later I was explaining the plot and characters to my mother. After I finished a rather detailed fun-down of the novel from beginning to end, my mother asked "That's sounds horrid. Why don't these people all just kill each other and put everyone out of their misery?"
I said "I spent most of the book hoping for it. I was sadly disappointed. It wasn't just that I didn't like any of them, it's that they were all so stupid I couldn't bare it."
She said, "Hm. I think I'll live a happy and fullfilled life without ever reading that."
I said, "I only wish."
C.) The Good Earth by Pearl Buck
It's about a Chinese family, and basically how much life as a Chinese peasant sucks dead karma eggs.
Actually, reading a book that boring is what sucks dead eggs. For much of the time I felt like standing up in the middle of my 10th grade English class and borrowing a line from Hook: "Why doesn't someone just shoot me in the head?"
**
Now, I don't bitch at every old English novel. For example, I loved Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. And not because it was scary-- it wasn't. I loved it because the themes actually said something of value, in a way that didn't put me to sleep.
A.) Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte and Tess of the D'Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy
Two books that are supposed to celebrate strong women of the Victorian Era, but mostly it just pissed me off. Instead of being inspired by the so-called "endurance and strength" these women seemingly displayed, I was bitterly turned off of them because of their constant dependence upon men to determine what makes their lives "good," the constant accepting of blame on behalf of those men, and the willingness to endure any emotionally abusive and manipulative treatment for the sake of "standing by your man, because he's truly good at heart, but only I know him enough to see it." I just wanted to smack those women repeatedly. I wouldn't have even finished the books had they not been assigned reading for a class that I needed to write essays for. They might be vaunted as literary classics about "strong and independant women," but apparently they're really only "strong and independant women who are only complete when they sacrifice themselves to have men in their lives that don't deserve them by any stretch."
That kind of thinking still regulates women into submissive roles. "Wuthering Heights" was the better Bronte novel, if only because EVERYONE in that book was messed up except the very youngest generation, and I didn't feel obligated to sympathize with a character I had no respect for.
B.) Ethan Frome by Edith Wharton
Had to read this one too; it's only saving grace was that it was short. A few weeks later I was explaining the plot and characters to my mother. After I finished a rather detailed fun-down of the novel from beginning to end, my mother asked "That's sounds horrid. Why don't these people all just kill each other and put everyone out of their misery?"
I said "I spent most of the book hoping for it. I was sadly disappointed. It wasn't just that I didn't like any of them, it's that they were all so stupid I couldn't bare it."
She said, "Hm. I think I'll live a happy and fullfilled life without ever reading that."
I said, "I only wish."
C.) The Good Earth by Pearl Buck
It's about a Chinese family, and basically how much life as a Chinese peasant sucks dead karma eggs.
Actually, reading a book that boring is what sucks dead eggs. For much of the time I felt like standing up in the middle of my 10th grade English class and borrowing a line from Hook: "Why doesn't someone just shoot me in the head?"
**
Now, I don't bitch at every old English novel. For example, I loved Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. And not because it was scary-- it wasn't. I loved it because the themes actually said something of value, in a way that didn't put me to sleep.
no subject
Date: 2003-08-19 12:49 pm (UTC)Anyway, the books I've had to read and hated were A Prayer For Owen Meany and by John Irving and Cry, The Beloved Country by Alan Paton. I especially hated Cry, The Beloved Country for its sentimentality (And I'm a sucker for melodrama), not to mention the constant repetition and the didactic tone.
Now - I do like Wurthering Heights. Actually, I love it. Not for any intelligent reason, mind you. I just loved that I kept thinking Heathcliff would improve himself through his love for Catherine, that he would conform to the 'reformed bad boy' cliche. Only - he never did. Even when he stopped tormenting the younger generation it was out of fatigue, not out of any sense of right or wrong.
Plus, I think prose is pretty. No really, I do. I just like reading it -
And I'll admit to liking novels without liking all of the characters. I intensely dislike Lucie Manette of A Tale of Two Cities for instance (For God's sake! Stop being a 'golden thread' and act just a little conflicted! Grrr-argh!), but I like the novel for Sydney Carton, Madame Defarge, and the mob scenes.
I'm just going to stop before I call my intelligence completely into question -
no subject
Date: 2003-08-19 01:09 pm (UTC)We all gave her funny looks when we started reading the book.
Teacher: "So, what do you think of Heathcliffe? Do you see why people like him?"
Students:
"He's abusive."
"He's an asshole."
"He's insane."
"Scary."
"And cruel. I would never date him."
"I wouldn't let my friends date him."
no subject
Date: 2003-08-19 01:17 pm (UTC)I agree with you there - I thought he was horrible! I just liked that he stayed that way and wasn't saved by THIS GREAT WHOLESOME LOVE, like I expected him to be. I'm not sure if I'm explaining it right - I liked him because he was the cliche who refused to be cliched?
But believe me when I say I didn't fall in love with his character. I was mostly sickened by him, actually.
::makes face::
no subject
Date: 2003-08-19 01:28 pm (UTC)