whats your least favourite work from the literary canon
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I despise Wordsworth with a vengence, his work is dull, monotonous, uninspired and ripped off. i think his sister dorothy had more talent, and his mate coleridge was the real genius.
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Well, I never much cared for Whitman, which means I never much liked Ginsberg. Don't care for Ferlenghetti (however it's spelled). Oh and some Brits may kill me...but I never liked little Teddie Hughes.
the lynch mob cometh...
the lynch mob cometh...
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i liked ted hughes when i was like 10, but its all black, death, darkness, scary things, animal allusion, black, more death, northern gloominess, and finally, death. which is all well and good but he made a career of it, damn him.
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You don't like Walt Whitman?? shame on you. How can you not like "Winds whose soft-tickling genitals rub against me shall be you!"
You don't like Ted Hughes?? double shame on you.
As this is the fiction section I thought I'd get us back on track and say I don't like Thomas Hardy as a novelist. (Although he's my favourite poet.) I quite like misery in small doses but 300 pages of The Mayor of Casterbridge is more than enough for anyone.
Cam
You don't like Ted Hughes?? double shame on you.
As this is the fiction section I thought I'd get us back on track and say I don't like Thomas Hardy as a novelist. (Although he's my favourite poet.) I quite like misery in small doses but 300 pages of The Mayor of Casterbridge is more than enough for anyone.
Cam
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is it wrong to dislike D H lawrence as a novelist? similar situation, i love his poetry but his prose is sick-inducing. sons and lovers is constantly, 'she turned around and looked at a rose, which made him feel sick for no apparent reason' and wound me up just a little.
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Bring on Death and Northern Gloominess I say.
Next you'll be saying Larkin was a miserable arse, I don't know..........
Not read enough to say who I like or dislike, most books I read I love, and most poets as well.
Although I'm struggling with the Idiot at the moment, which is saddening me. After Crime and Punishment I was expecting an easy ride, not so.
Next you'll be saying Larkin was a miserable arse, I don't know..........
Not read enough to say who I like or dislike, most books I read I love, and most poets as well.
Although I'm struggling with the Idiot at the moment, which is saddening me. After Crime and Punishment I was expecting an easy ride, not so.
http://www.closetpoet.co.uk
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ok, ok, im just desperatly jealous, i live in the midst of yorkshire gloominess and i know im not going to be able to make a living writing about it, no dont get me wrong i do enjoy ted hughes, i just dont think he should have been laureate, its not fair.camus wrote:Bring on Death and Northern Gloominess I say.
Next you'll be saying Larkin was a miserable arse, I don't know..........
larkin just makes me laugh so much, i cant ever hate him.
dickins, well i actually enjoyed a fair few of his books and the first book i read was great expectations, so i have an unfair biased regard for his writing. the pickwick papers does bore me senseless though.
i havent tried to read idiot, is it worth it or too difficult?
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It took me a day, but I finally pinned it. (Foul language did ensue on revelation and shall be passed on hereto.) I absolutely fucking hate everything the Franz Kafka ever did. I sleep walked through the Trial, and in my hours of waking...reading a goddamned fifteen page paragraph...I felt like clawing my fucking eyes out. If I meet the bastard in the afterlife, I'm going to give him a sound beating, just for picking up a pen.
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metamorphoses is worth it, just to get you hooked.
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ahhh i cant say i agree. i love rereading that, i guess knowing derrida helped me deconstruct the reality of the situation.
I think the point of Kafak is that he wrote in monotonous prose. The only excitement that ever exists in a Kafka-esque world is a legal or bureaucratic one. The animal fixation of Ted Hughes can be annoying, but then his handling of language is superb
'Going among the years, the faces,
May I still meet my memory in so lonely a place.'
'The swallow of summer
The seamstress of summer
She scissors the blue into shapes and she sews it' (disclaimer: this quotation may be completely wrong)
'The tent of the hills drummed and strained its guy-rope'
'Flexing like the lense of a mad eye'
'Hearing the windows tremble to come in
Hearing the stones cry out under the horizons'
And I think it is impossible to disregard Hughes completely. He and Plath are this century's Brownings, and are assured of a place in history because of that.
Thomas Hardy? His prose is depressing, to be sure, but sections - such as in Far From The Madding Crowd - are breathtaking. Like Cam, I also admire his poetry though - 'The Going' must be one of my favourite poems.
I enjoyed cd's take-off of 'Sons and Lovers' ha ha ha - 'She laughed and I stared into her shining black eyes and I hated her. PS I fancy my mum'.
I have to say I HATE Jeanette Winterson. I think she's shit. I'm sorry, I'm not a chauvinist. But you will think I am when I say I don't much care for Plath either.
pb
'Going among the years, the faces,
May I still meet my memory in so lonely a place.'
'The swallow of summer
The seamstress of summer
She scissors the blue into shapes and she sews it' (disclaimer: this quotation may be completely wrong)
'The tent of the hills drummed and strained its guy-rope'
'Flexing like the lense of a mad eye'
'Hearing the windows tremble to come in
Hearing the stones cry out under the horizons'
And I think it is impossible to disregard Hughes completely. He and Plath are this century's Brownings, and are assured of a place in history because of that.
Thomas Hardy? His prose is depressing, to be sure, but sections - such as in Far From The Madding Crowd - are breathtaking. Like Cam, I also admire his poetry though - 'The Going' must be one of my favourite poems.
I enjoyed cd's take-off of 'Sons and Lovers' ha ha ha - 'She laughed and I stared into her shining black eyes and I hated her. PS I fancy my mum'.
I have to say I HATE Jeanette Winterson. I think she's shit. I'm sorry, I'm not a chauvinist. But you will think I am when I say I don't much care for Plath either.
pb
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i just had a feminist fiction module at uni which was basically 'lets kiss winterson's ass'. damn them all.