
Sometimes, the subject matter of a novel is almost too painful to read. But if the book is good, we read it nonetheless.
Why? We might admire the storytelling, like the author’s writing style, relate to the characters, learn a lot, think about our own lives and the lives of people we know, and get a needed reminder of how much sadness and inhumanity there is in the world — which exercises our empathy muscles. Also, a painful novel might offer a bit of hope and inspiration, via some silver linings in the plot and/or the courage and resilience of certain characters. Plus some truly nasty characters might get their comeuppance. (Or might not.)
My latest experience with a gut-wrenching work of fiction came last week when I read John Grisham’s riveting 2010 novel The Confession, which tells the ultra-depressing tale of a Black teen put on Death Row in Texas after being framed by law enforcement for a murder a white man committed. Such an agonizing scenario that I almost put down the novel in despair, especially when I sensed that the pulls-no-punches Grisham was going to again give his readers a sad or mixed ending. But I kept on — admiring Grisham’s suspenseful writing and his fury at the injustice rampant in America’s legal system…and his fury at spineless, amoral politicians.
I had a similar reaction a few years ago to Angie Thomas’ excellent The Hate U Give — a novel I’ve discussed here before that focuses on the plucked-from-the-headlines killing of a young Black man by a trigger-happy white cop, and the reaction to his death by his (female) friend and the community at large.
More recently, I read and wrote about Rohinton Mistry’s India-set A Fine Balance, which had many excruciating moments of the powerful making life miserable for the powerless but was crafted so well I had no thought of stopping.
Of course, novels about war, genocide, slavery, a pandemic, and so on will make readers despondent but glued to the pages if the books are good enough. I’m thinking of titles such as Herman Wouk’s War and Remembrance, William Styron’s Sophie’s Choice, Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin, and Albert Camus’ The Plague, to name just four novels among many.
And, yes, dystopian works like George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four, Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale, Octavia Butler’s Parable of the Sower, Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451, and Suzanne Collins’ The Hunger Games trilogy are simultaneously hellish and very compelling.
In an ideal world, we would hope that enough people perusing painful books might help (through reader change of heart, activism, etc.) lead to a society where fewer painful things happen. Perhaps wishful thinking, but…
Your thoughts about this topic, and any examples you might have of distressing novels you’ve read or tried to read?
My literary-trivia book is described and can be purchased here: Fascinating Facts About Famous Fiction Authors and the Greatest Novels of All Time.
In addition to this weekly blog, I write the 2003-started/award-winning “Montclairvoyant” topical-humor column every Thursday for Montclair Local. The latest piece — about a welcome mayoral candidate, no teacher layoffs, an overpaid township manager, and more — is here.
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Sometimes it just gives you that feel that you aren’t the one going through this or you are not the first.
You also learn from the story to take same approach to escape the pain or come with a new one.
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Thank you, duosmaketers! Those are two excellent points. Yes, reading a painful novel can be worth the discomfort for the reasons you mentioned (and for other reasons, too).
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Pleasure
That’s also true
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🙂
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Having thought about what I wrote, I realize part of me thinks “In Cold Blood” is fiction, because I want to.
Some sort of self preservation?
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“In Cold Blood” is horrifying. No wonder it destroyed Capote.
In the 1980’s, for me , it brought home the reality of all horrid crimes I heard about on the news. Encapsulated, even harped upon in the news back when there was no internet, one could really never know the degradation. Capote takes us inside.
Victims are to be remembered, not the perpetrators.
Yet, by and large, it seems people know the names of killers, and not their victims.
The book’s lesson was a greater empathy. It also asks questions about the how’s and why’s of criminal behaviour society has not got a grip on to this day.
“The Good Earth” was a slug through read for me. At the same time, I had to go on.
The history, societal exposures and truths of poverty are invaluable.
Thanks, Dave!
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Thank you, Resa, for the mentions of those two books and your thoughts about them! “In Cold Blood” is indeed horrifying, and as compelling as a piece of riveting fiction. (Plus the great Harper Lee helped Capote with the research.) Yes, some books just have to be read despite how bad they make us feel.
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Yes, that’s right. I remember Harper Lee helped him. Thanks for the reminder! What an interesting duo!
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A very interesting duo indeed!
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Yes!!!
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🙂
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Having lately grappled with a book (Vassily Grossman’s “Life and Fate”) clocking in at 700+ pages that dealt with: prison camp, concentration camp,the Battle of Stalingrad and the treacherous pitfalls awaiting survivors under watchful Stalin, I don’t think painful books dissuade me from reading.
As proof, I offer my present open book: “Petersburg”(1916), by Andrei Bely, which concerns a plot involving a senator’s son manipulated into setting a bomb under his own father, and a failed suicide attempt. It’s a comparatively short read at 580 pages.
Each book is not only painful, at least in places, maybe most places, but painfully long. Literally– that Grossman hardback made my hands ache just holding up to eye-level!
Also read lately, and literally painful: Robert Galbraith’s “The Ink Black Heart”–over 1000 pages, and like flying into Las Vegas, boy were my arms tired.
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Thank you, jhNY! That “Life and Fate” book definitely has MULTIPLE painful aspects. Yikes! “Petersburg” sounds pretty intense, too. And, yes, long books can potentially create a pain of a different sort. I liked “The Ink Black Heart” a lot (as I did the earlier novels in J.K. Rowling’s crime series) but it IS a slog at times. Including all those chat room conversations.
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I can’t always enjoy reading painful books, especially if I’m a little depressed
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Thank you, Luisa! I totally hear you. There are also times for me when I abandon a very painful book or decide not to read it at all.
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Many thanks to you for your kind reply, dear Dave 🌹
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You’re very welcome, Luisa!
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Thank you Dave for this post. It made me think that I read Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 years ago and by that time I could not understood how someone could burn books because of fear of its contents (besides WWII Nazis) until it happenend in my country where a right wing politician made it in a public park. I want to believe books can contribute to make our human race better.
I do not know if your post were just for pain books or could I extend it to sadness in writing. To mention (forgive me for using a spanish written tale) one of the best mexican writters Juan Rulfo and his short tale Luvina. Two people talking about a place named Luvina and you begin to have a growing feeling of unease as you continue reading. One of the characters say: «I would say that it is the place where sadness nests». It is a wonderful and very well written tale.
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Thank you, rincondesmendoza! Yes, unfortunately, “Fahrenheit 451” was not only relevant in the mid-20th century but today as well. 😦
Sadness in books is definitely related to pain in books. Juan Rulfo’s “Luvina” sounds really good and sobering. I couldn’t find it online, but will see if my local library has it in some form.
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I like painful books – books that make you think, which is what I’ve named my own recently-launched website. Happy-ever-after is okay, but I’m a fan of the 19th-century tradition of novels that tackle social issues–and I’ve ready so many of the books you mention above.
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Thank you, lyndhurstlaura! Yes, books that make one think are SO rewarding. Great name for your website!
(Happy-ever-after novels are good every once in a while as a change of pace. 🙂 )
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Quite right. Different genres fulfil different needs, and it’s indeed good to ring the changes once in a while.
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Yes! 🙂
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Thank you, Bebe! Inspiring and poignant video. If only…
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Aged twelve, I read John Wyndham’s The Chrysalids – long before any Triffids or cuckoos. The secret of Sophie’s six toes registered with painful intensity.
Circumstances meant that I understood – maybe too much for 12, about genetic damage.
First couldn’t put it down adult fiction ?
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Thank you, Anonymous! Yes, when a young person learns about the “differences” in some humans, it can be a shock and an education — hopefully one that increases empathy.
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I very much feel, that through emotions and historical facts we can grow, Dave and in this sense I thank you very much for your this week’s post. I have taken note of The confession, which you recommend. I think the book The kite runner by Hosseini also belongs into this category, because here we get into the very difficult friendship of two boys of different tribes in Afghanistan. Many thanks
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Thank you, Martina! Excellent mention of “The Kite Runner” — such a sad and painful novel in many ways. The difficult friendship among the boys of different societal classes, as you mentioned, and the excruciating Taliban scenes, too. But a book very worth reading.
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Yes, of course,Dave, the Taliban that is the other long lasting tragedy of the book.
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A really scary section of the book. 😦
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Absolutely 👍
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HI Martina, I hope you are well. The Kite Runner is a great mention.
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It’s good to share my positive opinion concerning The Kite Runner with you, dear Roberta:)
I am slowly getting better after the second Covid infection. Due to the different season in South Africa there is probably less risk now in this respect!
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Very sorry about your illness, Martina. Hope you feel totally better soon.
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I really enjoy your good wishes, Dave and I‘m doing my best to get fit again🤣
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🙂
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Hi Martina, I am so sorry to hear you’ve been ill. My cousin and his wife in the UK have also just had Covid again. We are currently in summer but there are a lot of tummy bugs making the rounds. Get well soon. PS I’m nearly finished The Sealwoman’s Gift – what a learning experience. Thank you for the recommendation.
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I’m slowly recovering, Roberta, and wish the best to all the other people infected by the various viruses circultating!
I absolutely agree with you, dear Roberta:) We learn what such big changes as in this book make with us, or how different a country like Iceland, where people live mainly on fish and birds,and a country like Algeria with a lot of sun, oranges and a different culture are and therefore open our horizon. I think, however, that we pay a price for this, because if later on we go back to the roots, we may not feel the same way anymore towards the place or the people!
It was a pleasure to read that you enjoyed the book!
I was also very touched by Asta’s sensitiveness towards her husband, when she wrote him
A letter approximately seven years they hadn’t seen each other
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HI Martina, I agree that this book shows how people change over time and that you can’t ever go backwards in life. Asta was a very intriguing and intelligent character. I am glad to know you are recovering from Covid. I suppose we have this ahead again when our winter arrives.
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🌻🤣
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Hi Dave, most of the novels I read fall into this category. I don’t read a lot of fantasy or romance, I like historical novels and those are always packed with angst. The most painful but rewarding books I read last year would be The Grapes of Wrath, The Frozen Hours, To Wake the Giant, and The Eagle’s Claw, all by Jeff Shaara (I need to write reviews, I’m so behind). My current read, The Sealwoman’s Gift is also in this category and is about slavery in Algiers in the 17th century.
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Thank you, Robbie! Yes, some of the most rewarding novels are very painful novels. “The Grapes of Wrath” is certainly one of many great examples of that. And, yes again, given what real-life history is like, it’s no surprise that most good historical novels have a lot of downbeat elements.
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Exactly right, Dave. I think I forgot to read my comments yesterday. Sorry about that.
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Dave nrmally I do avoid too painful novels, with DT as the ex President life is painful enough !
Stay warm
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Yes, Bebe, Trump is the “King of Pain” (that he inflicts on the psyches of decent people). Thank you for the comment!
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Dave, an interesting and fascinating post. I definitely have to be in the mood / mind-set to read books like this. If there is no silver lining, sign of possible hopeful way forward they can be even harder to read. I’ve read a few mentioned here and one book last year had me leaving it a day or two here and there to take a breather – but well worth it in the end and slightly terrifying as one could see this happening for real. It was called ‘The Silence Project’ summed up as: ‘A thoroughly original dystopian novel told through the eyes of the daughter of the charismatic leader of what becomes a death cult.’
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Thank you, Annika! I hear you about how it helps for a reader to be in a certain mood before tackling a very depressing novel. Of course, sometimes we’re blindsided reading a book we didn’t expect to be as painful as it was.
And, yes, taking a break from a book can sometimes be necessary. I put down “The Confession” here and there over several days because it was getting to me too much.
“The Silence Project” does sound VERY intense.
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Hi Annika, it is lovely seeing you out and about again. The book you mention sounds like a very hard read. I am reading The Sealwoman’s Gift which is also hard. I am reading Bridget Jones’ Diary in between to lift up my spirits. She is so funny.
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Robbie, that’s so kind of you to say and it’s great to be here on WP again! I’m glad I’m not the only with often two books on the go and Bridget Jones’s Diary is terrific! Now, I’ve just read about The Sealwoman’s Gift and it sounds enthralling – on offer so just bought it! Thanks for mentioning this.
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I just put “Bridget Jones’s Diary” on my to-read list, Robbie and Annika. 🙂
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I will be interested in your (male) opinion of Bridget Jones’ Diary, Dave. I think it’s hilarious. I love Bridget.
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Looking forward to it, Robbie! I really enjoy novels that have humorous elements. 🙂
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I’m delighted to hear that, Annika. I learned about The Sealwoman’s Gift through this blog of Dave’s.
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When I was 12 or 13, we were assigned to read “Of Mice and Men.” Up until then I had read books where sad things happen (like Beth dying in “Little Women”) but never a devastating book like that. I remember being overwhelmed by the end; I cried and cried. I was incredulous, too. How could someone write such a terrible book? But even then, I realized that it must be a very good book if it could make me cry so much. Since then I’ve read a lot of books that overwhelmed me, including “Beloved.” I agree that it’s usually worth it, Dave, but not always. There has to be some ray of hope somewhere for me to bear the pain.
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Thank you, Kim! Yes, the end of “Of Mice and Men” and the death in “Little Women” are really painful, perhaps especially for younger readers. Much of “Beloved” is harrowing, too, for good reason. I agree that it helps if a very downbeat novel offers at least some hope.
And you’re absolutely right that if our emotions get stirred, chances are the novel is very good.
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Yes Dave “Of Mice and Men” , is a great Novels, dereply painful and it still hurts thinking of it.
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I agree, Bebe. A painful novel that sticks with a reader for a LONG time.
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Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee by Dee Brown was perhaps the most heartbreaking book I ever read. In fact, after reading it, I stayed away from books that were sad for quite some time. Real life is so tragic, like Greek tragedy tragic, that I can barely stand it at times. Not that everything I read is like a walk in the park; however, I try to minimize the sorrow having a low pain threshold to begin with, especially during troubling times. Given the current political situation it can be rather depressive to say the least. Consequently reading fantasy or sci-fi is doable only because it is often implausible Still there are exceptions *sigh*. I just want books that have a resolvable outcome for the better and/or a hero that triumphs over evil. Live and let live. Thanks Dave, nice theme. Susi
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Thank you, Susi! “Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee” is indeed devastating, and one can’t even tell one’s self that it’s fiction not fact. It is fact. 😦 Great mention! And, yes, when real life, politics, etc., can be so sad, sad novels are not always appealing. But many of the best novels do of course have a lot of sadness, so one wants to (perhaps reluctantly) read them. And, yes again, sci-fi and fantasy give a reader some remove and relief from real life, even when those two genres tell sad stories that reflect real life.
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I wonder if there’s a difference between painful novels that make you angry and those that make you sad. An author once advised me that a novel whose main character was obviously on a downward slope would likely not be well received in today’s publishing world. Maybe it’s different with classics?
I have A Fine Balance in my TBR heap. I’ve heard so much about how painful it is that I’m a bit apprehensive about reading it.
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Thank you, Audrey! That’s a great distinction you made — painful novels can indeed make a reader angry or sad, and of course often both.
A number of recently written novels I’ve read do have the protagonist on a downward slope, but that might be more the case with books written after the author is somewhat known than with debut novels. Established authors can take more “risks.”
I think “A Fine Balance” is worth the read, on “balance.” But it is beyond sad, for the most part.
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Hi Audrey, I think sadness and anger go together in a lot of books. Sadness at the circumstances and plight of characters and anger at the authority figures who cause, or don’t prevent, the circumstances in question.
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That’s true, Robbie.
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People have been writing these stories forever, Dave, and always finding readers. “Fahrenheit 451” and “Nineteen Eighty-Four” came to mind, as did several postwar stories we were required to read when I took German in high school and we started reading German literature. I didn’t like the stories (Die Rote Katze among them), but they pointed out depth of despair some people reached. Our teacher wanted us to read those stories because she felt “modern” literature glossed over the horrors of war. Maybe she was right. Maybe stories and books like this make us consider what has been, what might be – all the limits of situations once people are involved.
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Thank you, Dan! You’re right — painful fiction has been around since fiction began. And, yes, definitely some downbeat-but-great fiction from German writers: Erich Maria Remarque, Hermann Hesse, Goethe, Gunter Grass, etc. And I agree that painful books reflect how painful real life can be.
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Hi Dan, two good book mentions. I also enjoyed A Brave New World. Some truly frightening ideas presented in that book. Jeff Shaara is a current author who writes about war and, my goodness, no glossing over in his books.
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A very interesting post, Dave. As always!!!! My first thought came in a form of a question. Why do we read sad and tragic novels? This is not a new phenomenon. Think of Shakespeare tragedies – King Lear, Hamlet and Romeo & Juliet. We like to be happy people but it seems paradoxical that we want to delve into narratives that make us feel sad.
Perhaps these novels allow us to experience sadness without risk. Or they prompts a renewed gratitude for our choices and lives. In my experience (I read King Lear many times) sad novels offer a unique perspective on the human experience that is often difficult to express. It is cathartic!
I am able to explore and empathize with characters facing adversity, which provides me a deeper understanding of the complexities of life and the range of emotions that shape our existence. I believe reading these complex, heart-rendering stories can be a transformative experience, fostering personal growth and expanding emotional intelligence. I leave you with one of my favourite quotes from Williams Shakespeare’s King Lear: “Speak what we feel, not what we ought to say.”
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Thank you, Rebecca! Great, insightful, elegantly expressed reasons for why we read painful novels! Yes, sadness without risk (well, some emotional risk 🙂 ) — sort of like horror novels scare us without risk. Plus the catharsis, gratitude, empathy, and other elements you mentioned. We can of course also read about painful things in the media and elsewhere, but reading about those things through the lens of well-developed fictional characters and stories can provide an emotional wallop we might not get via nonfiction.
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How very well said they– the emotional wallop.
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Thank you, Rebecca! 🙂
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Hi Rebecca, I think that reading about other people (even fictional ones) experiencing adversity and difficulties help us put our own problems in perspective. Very few people traverse life without experiencing tragedy and pain. That is life, really. I read a lot of books about war and other situations of great adversity because I’m endlessly trying to understand humans as a mass. I’m always saying to my mom that “I just don’t understand people.”
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I very much like your words, Rebecca, and also think that
in order to grow we have to feel and see other sides of the world!
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I very much like your words, Rebecca, and also think that
in order to grow we have to feel and see other sides of the world!
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SO well said, Robbie and Martina.
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Thank you, Martina! I agree wholeheartedly with your thought that we have to feel and see other sides of the world!
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I‘m so happy, dear Rebecca, that we agree also on this topic! All the best🌺
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David. When I read Toni Morrison’s Beloved in my 30s, I was way too young to internalize all the implications that hit so close to my heart. In my 40s, after the death of my parents, facing my despair at the realities of America, this tragic diaspora, universal hatred of blacks, and the painful truths of historical and cultural erasure in my own life as a person with a historically multiracial heritage in America, I was able to embrace Beloved and this part of myself, which always was at home in my heart. Such a tale helps us grow more human and makes us wise, vulnerable, and vital if we allow them to. Black women, in particular, are especially haunted by these ghosts — the lost children of the past, who are out of reach and forever unaccounted for.
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Thank you, Anonymous, for your extraordinarily eloquent words! “Beloved” is indeed a devastating novel, and I can understand why many readers wouldn’t internalize all of it until they reach a certain age and have had a certain number of life experiences — including very painful ones. (I didn’t read Toni Morrison’s classic until I was in my 50s, though I didn’t deliberately wait that long.)
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A well-timed topic for me, Dave. Your second paragraph describes perfectly my emotional response to Kingslolver’s novel Demon Copperhead that I read recently. Such stories do open us to injustices outside of our own lived experience. Though it would be great if such stories could lead to a better world, I believe that their true value lie in changing minds and hearts, however few. I recently added Octavia Butler’s Parable of the Sower to my To Read List after it was referenced in an article on our current situation in America.
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Thank you, Rosaliene! Certain novels can indeed “open us to injustices outside of our own lived experience,” as you said so well. Helps make it worth the discomfort we might have reading such books. The 1993-published “Parable of the Sower” definitely has lots of relevance to 2024, as does Octavia Butler’s best novel, 1979’s “Kindred.”
I still need to get to “Demon Copperhead”!
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Just added “Kindred” to the list. Thanks 🙂
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Hope you like “Kindred” if you read it! (Though it is painful.) About a 20th-century Black woman thrust back in time to the slave-holding American South.
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Oh my! That will be painful!
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Yes. 😦 Really compelling and well done, but downbeat. 😦
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Reading “The Hate U Give” was very painful for me, especially since I knew it was already being removed from libraries by those who refuse to face these painful truths. “We Were the Lucky Ones” by Georgia Hunter and based on her family was the story of people in Poland during the Holocaust. All too real and very painful. Very well-told, however.
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Thank you, Becky! “The Hate U Give” is indeed a difficult (but necessary) book to read. So frustrating that it’s been banned in some more-conservative places. Whatever reasons people in those places might give for the banning, I’m sure the less-than-flattering depiction of the police in Angie Thomas’ novel is one of the real reasons. And Holocaust novels? SO painful. Also including Leon Uris’ “Mila 18,” Erich Maria Remarque’s “Spark of Life,” etc.
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Interesting points but I like an author who explores difficult issues and helps the reader understand different impacts/ consequences. Thinking of some of the key War poets their perspectives and language gives a different dimension to factual writing. I read but did not enjoy Lolita but it was both intriguing and well written inside the head of the abuser. Can imagine that needs a trigger warning. I did not read a friend’s book about a young person going missing on a travel/ work opportunity in China. My daughter was off travelling around that time. Can also not keep reading about detectives and murders. Have started Remarkable Bright Creatures but know some people say they do not like stories where animals might die. I hope the octopus doesn’t but it knows it lives for 4 years. Books are about life and the tension is death!
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Thank you, navasolanature! I agree with your regard for authors who take on difficult issues. Their books are well worth reading (with the occasional “lighter” novel a good change of pace. 🙂 ).
I can definitely see not wanting to read a book about a person going missing when one’s own child is traveling.
And, yes, when death seems to be in the offing for a beloved character — whether human or animal — continuing with a great book is definitely a part-painful process. “Books are about life and the tension is death!” — excellent, sobering line.
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It is a conundrum whether to ‘kill off a key character’ too! Thanks for your remarks.
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You’re welcome! And very true about that conundrum you mentioned.
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I tend toward the unremittingly depressing in fiction, but as far as painful to read, the first book that popped in my head is Richard Wright’s Native Son. Madame Bovary was also a painful read for me. Probably the most painful read I’ve encountered is a play rather than a novel: King Lear. (Oh, no, not his other eye!!)
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Thank you, Liz! “Native Son” and “Madame Bovary” are indeed painful novels, in very different ways. (I’ve never read or seen “King Lear.”) I first read “Native Son” in high school, which made high school even more depressing. 🙂 But it’s a great novel, as is “Madame Bovary.”
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As far as I’m concerned, King Lear is not for the faint of heart, although it is one of my favorite Shakespeare plays. Othello was another painful read, too, now that I think about it.
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I’ve heard enough about “King Lear” and “Othello” to totally agree that they’re not for the faint of heart, Liz. Shakespeare tragedies I have read — “Macbeth” and “Hamlet” — are not exactly picnics, either.
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True.
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A performance that I wish I could have seen: Jerry Lee Lewis as Iago in “Othello”. Performed at the Hollywood Bowl! His nickname,and not without reason, was “The Killer”, but in this instance it was the other guy!
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I had no idea Jerry Lee Lewis played Iago! And — ha ha 😂 — nice quip!
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I agree wholeheartedly, Liz! I have read it several times. YIKES! And learn something new with every reading.
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I don’t know if I dare read it again!
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Let me know if you do dare to read it again and I’ll read it with you. I often wonder why Cornelia just didn’t say come on! I love you best of all. But then the story would not progress as it did.
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Thank you for the offer, Rebecca. The trick is making those authorial contrivances–which are necessary for plot and conflict–appear completely natural.
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Hi Liz, you and I share a passion for depressing and tragic books. We both write them too.
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We do!
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I was trigger happy but meant to add that your recommendation of The Yellow Wallpaper is one of the most powerful novellas I’ve ever read. I still think of it often.
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That Charlotte Perkins Gilman work IS devastating.
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It is very scary, Dave.
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Thank you for letting me know, Robbie. The way the medical establishment treated women during that time was just horrific.
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Yes, that is exactly right.
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I have decided to pull my book off the market and seal it
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Sorry to hear that, but not sure how to reply. Why did you pull your book, and does that have some relation to the topic of this blog post?
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True…
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Thank you for the comment!
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I go through different phases of reading interest. In a particularly dark time of my life, I was drawn to Orwell’s “1984” and Bradbury’s “Fahrenheit 451”. Lately, I’ve been reading books my mother and grandmother collected, mostly written in the first half of the 20th century, like Hemingway, Faulkner, or Costain.
Historical novels and biographies are recent preferences.
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Thank you, Katharine! I hear you. It’s good to read a variety of novels — and different kinds of novels can work best depending on one’s mood, whether one wants escapism or a hard dose of reality, etc.
Also, I wasn’t familiar with Thomas B. Costain until seeing your comment; will have to try his work!
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These are all wonderful mentions, Katherine. Hemingway’s For Whom the Bell Tolls had some dreadfully disturbing scenes. Man can be so cruel in the name of a cause.
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“For Whom the Bell Tolls” is indeed distressing and heartbreaking. My favorite Hemingway work. And that novel reminded me of my wife Laurel’s father (who died before I met Laurel); Robert Cummins was an American volunteer fighting in the Spanish Civil War.
https://alba-valb.org/volunteers/robert-adair-cummins/
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HI Dave, that is an interesting history. Thank you for the link.
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You’re welcome, Robbie. Wish I had met him.
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Robert, Thank you for reading and for your comment. I read “For Whom the Bell Tolls” many years ago, but it remains on my shelves. It was disturbing, especially since I also recently watched a documentary about Hemingway and Martha Gellhorn, to whom he dedicated the book.
I forgot to mention others of my novels and books written by American authors during first half of the 20th century. John Steinbeck was a big one, especially his depressing story recorded in The Pearl. James Street was another. I’m reading his The Velvet Doublet now. It was published in 1953 and is a historical novel about Christopher Columbus and his ambition to find a new route to the East by traveling west.
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Hi Katherine, thank you for sharing your thoughts about Hemingway. I found the ending of A Farewell to Arms very sad. I mentioned Steinbeck in my comment to Dave. The Grapes of Wrath was a tragic book.
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I love gritty novels. I think sometimes if you’ve genuinely been through certain hardships you can “take” the content better. Others might get triggered for the same reason. It’s nice to feel with a character and experience someone else’s journey.
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Thank you, Sara! Yes, gritty novels can be quite memorable. And you’re right that a reader’s own personal experiences can make a painful novel either easier to take or unbearable to read. Depends on the person, the kind of experience that’s triggered, etc.
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Yes that’s so true!
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🙂
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