...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'.
It's such a classic, that you're almost supposed to find it wonderful. And you're supposed to somehow know why Mark Chapman killed John Lennon or why every American teenager is into all that weird stuff.
I find it tedious in the extreme! I guess I'm just not interested in the "David Copperfield crap".
Holden Caulfield must be the most whiney, unlikeable protagonist in literature. Having said that, when I read it many years ago, I really enjoyed it, maybe because of Holden's unlikeability.
I started to read it a few weeks ago but it didn’t hold my interest at all. Now - To Kill a Mockingbird - well, I was there, in the Deep South on that dusty road......wonderful.
I know I read it...it was de rigueur in the '60s. But remember it...no.
I tried Austen also in the 60s, and didn't understand it. Read them all about 10-12 years ago, and loved them...along with all the Brontes. Need to read them again.
I started to read it as part of an English exam ( very early 1970's ), read the first couple of pages and decided it was boring carp and gave up on it, blagged the written summary.