Have you ever been embarrassed by the books you don’t like?
I mean, we all have books we can take or leave. That leave us
with a sort of “meh” feeling. And as reading is fairly subjective, our “meh”
books are likely someone else’s classics. It’s just the way it goes. I’ve
certainly loved books other people have hated.
It’s the risk you run when you ask a person what they
thought of a story. And it’s cool, because even if it turns into an
over-the-top raging argument, you walk away with a different perspective.
But there are definitely those moments where I’m tempted to
avert eye contact and make inarticulate sounds when someone brings up a book.
Books that it just feels wrong to admit that no, they were simply not my cup of
tea.
Still, no book is going to be loved by every person who
picks it up. And, since I’ve already told you about all the ridiculous things I’m not embarrassed for loving, I figure it can’t be worse to tell you about the
classic things I am embarrassed for not loving. My very guilty displeasures, if
you will.
Here are my top three:
-
Wuthering
Heights (Emily Bronte)
o I
love the world of this book, dark and gloomy. But I’ve read it three times and
each time have wanted the two main characters to disappear into the moors. I’ve
read a number of books that have had lead characters who I didn’t particularly
like as people, but I still cared about how their stories ended (Margaret
Mitchell’s Scarlett O’Hara, for instance. Not someone I’d want to be friends
with, but I had to know how things turned out for her). I was just never able
to connect with Catherine and Heathcliff.
-
Grendel (John Gardner)
o This
book has absolutely everything that I love. A new perspective on an epic tale.
A fantasy monster telling his side of the story. Seers and dragons. Every
component is awesome. But somehow, when it all comes together I find myself
staring at the clock more than the book.
-
Romeo &
Juliet (William Shakespeare)
o Perhaps
the issue here is that I first read it when I was the same age as young Juliet.
And I wanted to smack both her and her Romeo. They meet at a party, are married
the next day, and within a week have both killed themselves. A little bit
excessive considering their knowledge of each other was pretty much limited to
the fact that they were from feuding families and both fairly attractive. I
remember thinking that if I read about them talking about something other than
how they shouldn’t be together (Maybe hobbies? Favorite foods? A normal day in their lives?) that I could have bought the
whole willing-to-die-for-each-other a little bit more.
So, what books are you embarrassed to admit you don’t really
care for?
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