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  • But that <Book> is the ultimate

    There are some books,plays etc. that when you simply, not bashing, insulting, or mocking but just say, "I didn't like it" people act like you just burned the American Flag while defiling George Washington's grave.

    Most common books that get me this treatment.

    I didn't like Dune. I am told for a geek this is apparently Blasphemy.

    I thought Tom Sawyer was good but didn't like anything else that Twain wrote, oh and he wrote under the name Twain I don't think it makes people sound smarter when they insist on using Clemens to show they know what his real name was.

    Shakespeare while having great storylines the original wording is thick and difficult to read without cliff notes.

    Anyone else ever get this people jumping on you because how dare you not like such and such?
    Jack Faire
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  • #2
    Originally posted by jackfaire View Post
    Shakespeare while having great storylines the original wording is thick and difficult to read without cliff notes.
    I'm afraid I will have to disagree with you here. The beauty of Shakespeare lies in the language and the perfection of iambic pentameter or "mighty line." His storylines are all recycled from history, mythology, and Italian novellas.

    There are only a few Shakespearean plays I like: Hamlet (best thing written in the English language, IMO), Julius Caesar, Richard III, Two Gentlemen of Verona....I absolutely despise Romeo and Juliet. Bleh. I find most of the comedies trite and boring. Especially Twelfth Night. The Reduced Shakespeare Company does a fantastic bit where they reduce all of the comedies into one play.

    Overall, I prefer the French Romantics (Hugo especially) to Shakespeare. Oh, Ruy Blas....."I am but an earthworm in love with a star" *sigh*

    I actually haven't read many of the 'great' novels, since for the last 8 years I've been mostly concerned with things written in dialogue. I may not know Jane Austen, but I can damn sure quote Tennessee Williams!

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    • #3
      Er, if you think Shakespeare is bad... then read some Chaucer.
      "Oh wow, I can't believe how stupid I used to be and you still are."

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      • #4
        My friend, an English teacher, always surprises people when she tells them she doesn't like The Wizard of Oz (any incarnation of it.)

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        • #5
          My English teacher rather than forcing the "classics" on us would make us read books we could relate to.
          Jack Faire
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          • #6
            Originally posted by AdminAssistant View Post
            ...I absolutely despise Romeo and Juliet. Bleh.
            Here, here!!! I can't stand that one, either!

            And Lace, I LOVE Chaucer!

            Know what I hate? Early american literature. ESPECIALLY The Scarlett Letter. And most of the transcendental poets.

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            • #7
              If you ever get over to England, head to Canterbury so you can experience the Canterbury Tales. ^^ I studied the Wife Of Bath's tale, and tho the language is a bit slow going, it is a fantastic story.

              My English teacher rather than forcing the "classics" on us would make us read books we could relate to.
              That kind of defeats the point of being an English teacher, at least, in my opinion. If you don't ever read anything cept teenage fare, then how can you broaden your horizons? The girls in my class at school all loved Sweet Valley High, which was the chosen reading material for teenagers back when I was one. I scorned it, and chose instead to read Tolkien, for which I was teased hugely. When we did Animal Farm for GCSE, I had already read it so many times I knew it off by heart.

              The English teacher was wonderful; rather than trying to force the class to feign interest while she read aloud, she had us all read the book, taking the parts of the different characters and keeping that character for the whole time we were reading the book. We also had several classroom activities connected with the book that helped put accross its meaning in a fun way. For example, with Animal Farm, she picked out certain members of the class (I was one) and had us take it over, acting that we'd taken over the school. We got to watch the cartoon in class too, and with every book, if there was a film or TV special on it, we got to watch it.
              "Oh wow, I can't believe how stupid I used to be and you still are."

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              • #8
                I've ranted about this before in another topic, but my English Teachers in high school, especially the one senior year, were NOTORIOUS for doing this. Some books every class in the grade had to read, some were teacher chosen. And heaven forbid if you read a book the teacher never heard of! To 2 of them I had, that automatically meant it wasn't a good book.

                Just because a book is generally recognized as a good book (or the author themselves), doesn't mean EVERYONE is going to like it. I hated Lord of the Flies, for example. Does that mean I think it's a bad book or that I didn't understand it? No, it just means I personally did not enjoy it in a way that is no different from the way I do or don't like certain colors.

                As for Shakespeare, I do think he was a great writer...for his time (hey, there is a reason everyone knows who he was!). Language has changed, and it is difficult as-is for most people to understand earily. My main beef is teachers who EXPECT you to understand it right off the bat, or teachers themselves who didn't understand it but pretended they did (I understood more out of one read of MacBeth [which I had coincidently read before we did it in class] than my teacher did after teaching it to 5 classes a year for over a decade).

                For the record, I didn't like Romeo and Juliet either. Well, I thought in and of itself is was OKAY, but I think it's overrated and misunderstood (hell, most people I know think the whole "star-crossed lovers" thing means true eternal love, when in fact, it's a love that's doomed from the start).

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by Lace Neil Singer View Post
                  That kind of defeats the point of being an English teacher, at least, in my opinion. If you don't ever read anything cept teenage fare, then how can you broaden your horizons?
                  Exactly.

                  My HS English teacher was wonderful. There were some books we all had to read, like Huck Finn. Then we were given a list and had to choose 5 books off the list to read, and they had to be read by a certain time. There is a literary 'canon', and it's good to at least be familiar with parts of it.

                  I don't criticize people for not having read certain books. But I do believe in learning about the classics, especially if that's useful for your education. I am eternally frustrated by undergraduate theatre students who turn up their nose at anything written earlier than 2000. Look, kids, Neil LaBute is not a good playwright. He's a misogynistic pig who's written the same play three times. If he hadn't been the one to write a 9/11 play RIGHT after 9/11 nobody would have ever heard of him.

                  But, no, he's a genius. They yawn through Euripides, Plautus, Marlowe, Racine. Tennessee Williams? Eugene O'Neill? Pshaw, no, we want to read Mamet!!! *sigh*

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by jackfaire View Post
                    I thought Tom Sawyer was good but didn't like anything else that Twain wrote, oh and he wrote under the name Twain I don't think it makes people sound smarter when they insist on using Clemens to show they know what his real name was.
                    I despise it when people do this. It's smarmy and pretentious -- and worse, it's inaccurate. Clemens wrote and published under the name "Twain". If you're talking about his books or writing career, that is the name one should use. If you're talking about his wife and kids or something, then "Clemens" would be fine.

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                    • #11
                      Walden was crap. (didn't stop me from getting an A on the paper I did on it) but it was ladies and gentleman pure crap.
                      Jack Faire
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                      • #12
                        I got into trouble in my 10th grade english class for challenging this. We had to do an essay about Arthur Miller's The Crucible, so I did my essay on why I didn't like the books. For six pages. Backed up with cited sources and quotes from the play. My teacher said she was so angry she was shaking when she read it, and couldn't finish it. The principal ended up getting involved, but hilariously, he sided with me, read and graded the paper (I got a low A on it) and told the teacher to enter the grade. He then told me to try to be less sarcastic next time, and that was that.

                        I do like one thing about that play though... Giles Corey. He was a puritan bad-ass.

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Fryk View Post
                          We had to do an essay about Arthur Miller's The Crucible, so I did my essay on why I didn't like the books.
                          The books? It's one play, and I think it's one of Miller's finest. The whole thing is a commentary on McCarthy-ism. That said, I also would not appreciate an essay on why you "didn't like it". That smacks of whining. Far more interesting to find faults in the text, historical inaccuracies, or perhaps an argument that said it wasn't an effective commentary on Miller's own experiences with the Committee on Un-American Activities.

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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by AdminAssistant View Post
                            I also would not appreciate an essay on why you "didn't like it". That smacks of whining. .
                            When I was in school that was one of the aspects of every paper on a book was to explain why you did or did not like it.
                            Jack Faire
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                            • #15
                              I generally come under a lot of criticism for not liking Jane Austen. Specifically, Pride and Prejudice. I never read it in high school, so I picked it up a few years ago because I'd heard such rave reviews about it. More than once I wanted to throw the thing across the room in frustration. How many chapters do you need to reiterate the same point?
                              A.K.A. ShinyGreenApple

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