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The Catcher In The Rye...
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...by J D Salinger, a book somehow missed from my 'should do' list as a student and only recently read - and what an extraordinary little book it is. I wouldn't recommend it to anyone - it really isn't everyone's cup of tea - but for me it was a real page-turner. The language alone fascinated me. It has now been added to my collection of 'favourites'.
Does anyone have any thoughts about it?
Does anyone have any thoughts about it?
Answers
The only book I’ve read from start to finish in one sitting. I remember thinking it was the most amazing thing I’d ever read. Pure braw
09:55 Sun 14th Jun 2020
I didn't read Wuthering Heights until maybe 6-7 years ago...why did it take me so long? I absolutely loved it. Another little known Charlotte Bronte work that stayed with me for a very long time is Villette...said to be autobiographical, and to me at the time...incredibly romantic. I'd like to read it again.
‘Villette’ - Charlotte’s unrequited love. Have you read ‘The Professor’, Pasta, Charlotte’s first book - unpublished in her lifetime?
My favourite from her is Jane Eyre - a book I’ve read countless times and can still pick up and read from any point. It also contains what I think is the most passionate episode in all of literature.
My favourite from her is Jane Eyre - a book I’ve read countless times and can still pick up and read from any point. It also contains what I think is the most passionate episode in all of literature.
It was OK in its day (but like Moby Dick or the novels of Proust) it is one of the things NYC intellectuals like to chatter about and which empty headed English language teachers like to throw at kids to be current - albeit with the 1950s in the USA. It is written in a NYC vernacular which is alien to the English.