Kaori wrote:I finished Dostoyevsky's The Idiot and Paterson's Bridge to Terabithia not long ago.
KhakiBlueSocks wrote:"I'm going to make you a prayer request you can't refuse..." Cue the violins.
the_wolfs_howl wrote:I love Bridge to Terabithia! I read it several years ago for school, and read it one sitting (not too hard a feat, but still). I thought it was a simple, somewhat light-hearted children's book until...well, you know.
the_wolfs_howl wrote:And I've tried and tried to get through The Idiot, but I've failed miserably. I've only read Part I. It's strange, because I really like Dostoevsky's writing. I enjoyed The Brothers Karamazov and simply adored Crime and Punishment, but maybe I just got tired of his stories by the time I got to The Idiot. Got tired of Katerina Ivanovnas or something. Besides, Prince Myshkin just seems too perfect of a character to really relate to. I could relate much easier, somehow, to Raskolnikov of Crime and Punishment.
Kaori wrote:Yes, Raskolnikov's a great character (though my personal favorite is Ivan from The Brothers Karamazov). I wouldn't worry too much about not getting through The Idiot--I like Dostoyevsky quite a bit, too, but I'm glad to be done with that book. There are various interesting and insightful things here and there, but on the whole it seemed to me like a cross between Dostoyevsky and Jane Austen-style drawing room fiction, only with a bunch of really weird characters. There was also too much matchmaking and not enough murders or metaphysical discussions, which made the book less engaging than his other works.
Maokun: Ninjas or Pirates? (Vikings are not a valid answer, sorry)
EricTheFred: Vikings are always a valid answer.
Freezair wrote:Speaking of scintillating, any fellow goobers have any suggestions for good fantasy to look into? I'm tired of reading the same-old-same-old series and would really like to try something I've never before.
uc pseudonym wrote:Atlanta Nights
It's a "book" put together by 30ish authors attempting to make the worst excuse for a novel in history (they had another reason, but that's a longer story). The prose is consistently cringe-worthy and I'm finding it rather hilarious.
Alice wrote:Isn't Atlanta Nights from the print-on-demand publisher Lulu.com?
Technomancer wrote:Sounds fun. Ever read The Eye of Argon? (link goes to MST3K'd version)
uc pseudonym wrote:No, but it was compared to Atlanta Nights several times in various reviews. I shall check it out once I am finished with my current reading.
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