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Is Steinbeck "artless"?
May 29, 2012, 05:27:10 AM
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Topic: Is Steinbeck "artless"? (Read 4902 times)
jonesey
All-Purpose Savage, Barroom Sociologist, and
Distinguished Senior Member
Posts: 6,197
Re: Is Steinbeck "artless"?
«
Reply #15 on:
June 24, 2008, 12:21:27 PM »
x2 on Gatsby...and Catcher in the Rye is outstanding. It still holds up. I had to re-read it for grad school, and it's a very different book when you're in your 30's (having originally read it in HS).
It's funny, where I teach now (Florida) neither Gatsby or Catcher is required reading in high school. Come to think of it, I wonder if any reading is required in HS anymore...
Logged
Quote from: yellowtractor on September 15, 2010, 05:00:09 PM
Jonesey, I know you're a being of sensitivity and refinement.
mended_drum
Potnia theron and
Distinguished Senior Member
Posts: 7,401
Re: Is Steinbeck "artless"?
«
Reply #16 on:
June 25, 2008, 06:21:16 PM »
I don't much like
Gatsby
. The author seemed to write the same novel again and again with characters that I found boring in the extreme. Steinbeck was the first time I'd read anything that even implied people like my family could belong in a literary work. I think I loved Twain for the same reason. I might include
Life in the Iron Mills
by Rebecca Harding Davis on the same list.
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chubbytiger
Curmudgeon
Junior member
Posts: 82
Re: Is Steinbeck "artless"?
«
Reply #17 on:
June 27, 2008, 08:36:23 AM »
I found Catcher to be a bit dull. The Scarlett Letter was good; Shakespeare, Hemingway & Twain are geniuses; All the King's Men was great. James Fenimore Cooper: well, I think Twain pretty much pegged him in 'Literary Offenses', but his stories can be entertaining. Assigning Steinbeck, on the other hand is pure sadism. I was once forced to read The Chrysanthemums and I actually considered gouging my eyes out with a dull spoon. Even the memory makes me want to start drinking, and it's only 9:30 AM.
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