Showing posts with label difficult books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label difficult books. Show all posts
Monday, July 26, 2021
Ten Books I’d Want With Me While Stranded On a Deserted Island
I'm linking up with That Artsy Reader Girl for another Top Ten Tuesday.
Today we're talking about books we'd want with us on a deserted island. I decided not to go the uber-practical route of books for surviving or escaping from a deserted island, and in this scenario I'm going to imagine that I'm all by myself with a solar-powered Kindle so I just have unlimited reading time. These are some books I'd want to have on that Kindle!
1. 168 Hours by Laura Vanderkam
As long as I'm going to be stuck on this island, I might as well put some thought into how I want to spend my days. Vanderkam's book assumes that your life is so busy that you don't think you have time for the things you want to do, but it's just as important to be mindful of how you spend your time when you have no outside obligations!
2. The Art of Happiness by Dalai Lama XIV and Howard C. Cutler
As much as Cutler's writing annoys me in this book, I found the underlying messages from the Dalai Lama to be valuable. If I'm alone with my thoughts and an uncertain future, then reflecting on the power of my own attitude seems like a good way to spend some time.
3. The Bible
If I have a limited number of books with me for an indefinite amount of time, then what better to have than a book that is actually a collection of many books, each of which has many layers to explore and ponder?
4. The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas
This is a favorite book but it's on the very long side, so having lots of time on my hands would be a great time to revisit it. Plus it contains an epic escape!
5. Far from the Tree by Andrew Solomon
This is one I haven't yet read but have seen recommended frequently. It's a thick book that seems to have a lot of content to dive into and reflect on, so it would be good to read when I have a lot of uninterrupted time.
6. The Language of Flowers by Vanessa Diffenbaugh
This continues to be my favorite book of all time, which I've liked as much on reread as the first time, so I'd definitely want this one with me.
7. The Mysterious Benedict Society by Trenton Lee Stewart
This is also up there as one of my favorites, and I'd imagine in such a dire situation I'd want a dose of the whimsy this book provides, coupled with the inspiration of the characters' problem-solving prowess!
8. The Prophet by Kahlil Gibran
When dealing with uncertainty and isolation, having some wisdom of the ages definitely wouldn't hurt.
9. The Shell Seekers by Rosamunde Pilcher
This is a favorite book that, like the long books above, would be an investment of time to reread, and also it left me with a peaceful feeling and an appreciation of nature that I feel like could be valuable in this situation.
10. Ulysses by James Joyce
This is another one that I haven't read because it's both long and dense, but if I had nothing but time it would be a good chance to dig into the many layers that this book has to offer!
Which books would you want with you on a deserted island?
Looking back:
One year ago I was reading: Piecing Me Together and Lovely War
Five years ago I was reading: Prototype and A Year in the Life of William Shakespeare
Ten years ago I was reading: For Better
Monday, April 9, 2018
Ten Books I Loved But Will Never Reread
I'm linking up with That Artsy Reader Girl for another Top Ten Tuesday.
Given how difficult it is for me to make myself reread books, you would think there would be a lot in this category, but I was surprised, looking through my top-rated books, how many I've reread already. There are many others that I would be happy to reread if they came up as book club picks even if I wouldn't pick them up on my own. I did, however, manage to find ten books that I enjoyed but have no plans to reread ever.
1. Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee by Dee Brown
This is a painstakingly detailed account of how the United States made and broke promises to Native Americans throughout the 1800s, not to mention killing them en masse at several points in time. I'm very glad to have read it and think every American should, but the level of research and detail was almost mind-numbing, and I don't need to reread the whole thing for the overall history lesson to still be firmly implanted in my brain.
2. The Emperor of All Maladies by Siddhartha Mukherjee
This is another case where the level of research and detail was astounding, and I learned a lot from it, but wow did it take me a long time to get through. I don't think I need to devote that much time again to revisiting this particular book.
3. The Girl with All the Gifts by M.R. Carey
This book is brilliant, but well beyond my tolerance for gore. I don't usually read horror, and I made an exception because of the rave reviews for this one (which I'm glad I did), but I will not be rereading it. When one of my book clubs picked it one month I chose not to read it again, but I was glad it was chosen and we had a good discussion!
4. Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn
Like most people, I flew through this book and was blown away by the clever plotting and the reveal in the second half. But both main characters are truly terrible people, I already know the twists, and there's one very violent scene that horrified me, so I will not be picking up this one again.
5. The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
I couldn't put down any of the books in this trilogy, but I knew I'd never pick them back up again once I was done. They're so horrific both conceptually and in the violent imagery on the page even while being incredibly compelling, and I had trouble sleeping afterwards because I was still thinking about them. I have no desire to revisit that world.
6. Room by Emma Donoghue
This is one of my favorite books, but it was incredibly stressful to read. The climax that comes halfway through the book was so nerve-wracking that I turned my audiobook on double-speed just to get through it faster because I needed to know if they were going to be OK. I'm glad this book exists and I'm glad to have read it, but even knowing what happens I don't think I'd want to be back in Room again.
7. The Silkworm by Robert Galbraith
The Cormoran Strike mysteries are definitely grittier in general than the cozy mysteries I usually read, but this one was particularly brutal. I'm looking forward to the next book in the series, but I won't be going back through the ones I've already read, especially this one.
8. Someone Knows My Name by Lawrence Hill
Books involving chattel slavery are necessarily hard to read, and I've read quite a lot at this point, both fiction and nonfiction. It's not something I ever want to shy away from reading as it's a real part of American history, but I'm not eager to revisit the accounts I've already read. If I did, I think I'd choose one of the nonfiction books rather than a fictionalized version like this to reread.
9. A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini
Hosseini is a very talented writer and did a wonderful job with this book, but man, it's depressing. I remember reading this during a cold, rainy spell while living in Chicago, and between the book and the weather I felt like there was this physical weight on me. It's worth reading once, but I would have to be in a really good mood with bright, warm weather to attempt to tackle this one again.
10. Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand
Talk about brutal! This was such a compelling read, but the things Zamperini went through were horrifying, particularly the sadism of the Bird in his POW camp. And I can still remember wanting to vomit at the thought of what some of the prisoners did to the Bird's food. Her writing is masterful, but the things she wrote about are not things I want to vicariously experience a second time.
Which great books will you never reread?
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Looking back:
One year ago I was reading: You and Dumb Witness
Five years ago I was reading: The Complete Idiot's Guide to Adoption and Moby-Dick
Ten years ago I was reading: Going Postal
Monday, September 29, 2014
Top Ten Books That Were Hard For Me To Read
Let's kick this off by linking up with The Broke and the Bookish!
This topic is open to interpretation, so I went with books that I had a hard time getting through for a specific reason but still stuck it out to the end. I didn't include books that were so hard to read I abandoned them (90 Minutes in Heaven), books I hated just because they were stupid or annoying (Love Does, Milkrun), books that I sailed through even though they were ultimately super disturbing (The Hunger Games, Every Day), or books that were just kind of boring and thus somewhat of a slog to read (many).
1. The Art of Happiness by Dalai Lama XIV and Howard C. Cutler
The stuff the Dalai Lama has to say is awesome. But the book is actually written by Cutler, a psychologist who tries to do this whole "East vs. West philosophy" thing but is not at all good at explaining Western psychological research. He also does a terrible job of actually understanding and putting into practice the things the Dalai Lama tells him. I spent the whole book wishing he would just get out of the way so I could listen to the good stuff the Dalai Lama had to say. On top of that, the Kindle version of this book was a total mess, like someone had taken an OCR version of the printed book and not bothered to proofread it.
2. The Children's Book by A.S. Byatt
Besides the really long, stupid plot of this book (which I like to describe as Byatt creating more characters than you could possibly keep track of, making them all have sex with each other, and then killing most of them off), Byatt could not keep her character's stories straight, particularly their ages. Why go to the trouble of specifying exactly when a character was born if 10 years later you're trying to pass them off as 12 years old?
3. A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess
You would think it would be the "ultra-violence" of this book that would make it so difficult to read, but it's really the ridiculous language that Burgess has his main character use. It took forever to read this slim book because I couldn't remember what any of the words meant and had to keep stopping and looking them up in the glossary in the back. Once I'd finally gotten the hang of most of them, I started mentally substituting the definitions into the sentences and found that the writing is actually kind of boring and terrible, it's just hidden behind all these made-up words.
4. The Cross in the Closet by Timothy Kurek
Kurek is a straight man who decided the best way to understand the LGBT community was to "come out" as gay for a year. I didn't necessarily think that was the only approach he could have taken, but the story was still interesting. The book, however, was horribly edited. The only way I could make myself get through the whole thing was to start recording the typos and mixed-up homonyms, and I ended up with around 40 of them by the end.
5. Geek Love by Katherine Dunn
This book was unlike anything I'd ever read, and for that reason I actually understand why so many people like it. But there was a lot of rough subject matter to get through, ranging from rape to self-mutilation to incest to murder. This was a book club pick, and a lot of people in the group abandoned it partway through because of the grotesque subject matter.
6. Me Talk Pretty One Day by David Sedaris
This book turned me off David Sedaris' writing for a long time until I was finally brave enough to pick up another one of his books. The stuff that he considers fodder for humor here, I just found really sad or disturbing. I still have to mentally block out some of the things I read in this book because they turned my stomach so much.
7. This Star Won't Go Out by Esther Earl and family
What I learned from this book is that even a teenager with cancer still writes like a teenager, and reading a teenager's unedited, stream-of-consciousness diary entries sets my teeth on edge. I appreciated the (more coherent, thoughtfully composed) reflections from Esther's friends and family, but it was a struggle to get through her overly dramatic, abbreviation-laden journal entries, and the whole book turned out to be a not-terribly-well-organized document dump so I didn't always know what I was even reading.
8. Stolen Lives by Malika Oufkir
Oufkir's story is fascinating, and I wish it had been told more coherently. But it was hard to read not just because of the brutal treatment she and her family received after they were "disappeared" by the Moroccan government, but because I had a difficult time keeping track of their situation at any given time since the book jumped around so much. Circumstances shifted constantly without explanation and it was difficult to become fully immersed in her story when I was confused all the time about their present condition.
9. The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle by Haruki Murakami
This book was difficult to read for a number of reasons. One, it's completely bizarre and I didn't know what was going on half the time, and Murakami doesn't ever explain things. Two, there's some really graphic stuff, including points where I had to skip several pages because it was talking in detail about someone's skin being cut off. ::shudder::
10. The Woman Warrior Maxine Hong Kingston
I spent most of this book being confused. I'm sure that was probably my fault, given how popular this book apparently is. But I went into it thinking it was a memoir (because it says it is), whereas it's mostly fiction, and it jumps around all over the place with strange transitions and odd endings. So I kept stopping while reading and going, "I think I'm missing something here..."
What are some books that were hard for you to read?
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