chummybuckett
chummybuckett t1_jbjknip wrote
It was a rare DNF for me, but that's mostly because I have a very specific and acute pet peeve of authors that center a story around children and cannot write children well. I had a really difficult time getting past that. I do know other people that loved it, though.
chummybuckett t1_jadnx0u wrote
Reply to What is your guilty pleasure? by Sea_Concentrate_6543
My guilty pleasure is buying more books when I have unread ones sitting on my shelf.
chummybuckett t1_j9px9gj wrote
Reply to What was your favorite or most impactful book you read in high school? (Not necessarily one you were required to read, just your favorite) by [deleted]
Welp, this thread is definitely going to make me feel old.
chummybuckett t1_j9oy0tz wrote
Reply to 3 books I've read so far this year have this in common... (trigger warning) by Mindless-Bend-2662
Despite the fact that all three of those books utilize suicide as a major character point, I didn't feel like the tone of any of those books was particularly dark. In fact, there were more moments in those books that felt downright saccharine to me. I think that an author's writing style and ability to convey the realities of human emotion are key when it comes to my own emotional experience with a book. I've read other books with less overtly "dark" subject matter that left me feeling far more morose.
chummybuckett t1_j8s3jfn wrote
Reply to Being Mortal by Atul Gawande by moneyforsoy
This is one of those (audio)books I rented from Libby on the spur of the moment because it happened to be available, and I was surprised by how much I enjoyed it and how thought-provoking it was. I read it around the time that I was also working a side job at a nursing home, so all of that combined made for an intriguing read.
chummybuckett t1_j6ntle9 wrote
There's a reason people tend to pace while talking on the phone. I believe that there's a connection between kinetic movement and our ability to focus and think. I certainly feel that way for myself. Listening to audiobooks while I walk my dog has been a great way for me to be able to enjoy more "reading" during my day.
That being said, I would definitely advise against reading a paper book/ipad while walking outside, only because I'd be worried for your safety! But the treadmill on a walking speed sounds like a decent idea.
chummybuckett t1_j6nsr0s wrote
Reply to comment by frozenfountain in What subject matter is so ghastly / triggering that you won’t read a book that delves into it? by jenna_grows
I full agree. It's not the subject matter as much as the manner in which it's written. Rape is a good example of a subject that has been handled appropriately by many authors and really grossly by many others.
chummybuckett t1_j5ujgak wrote
I love Sylvia Plath and I love the Bell Jar, but reading it always puts me in a really weird place. It's all just way too uncomfortably relatable for me.
chummybuckett t1_jdi8gsj wrote
Reply to There is no logical reason to exclude people of different races in a fictional universe that features dragons and magic by ToeNo5165
I think that fantasy and sci-fi as genres both often face the tension of "what is explicitly possible due to the established laws of the author's world" vs "what we're just going to let pass because it's fantasy."
In a book or series that puts particular effort and focus into world-building, the evolution and establishment of different types of creatures, cultural groups, and races is often a part of the story, and it serves to better explain the fictional universe. This is absolutely not any type of justification for a book in which every character is euro-centric. But it does help explain the grievances that consumers have when a world with specific limitations on travel and cultural fusion (pre-industrialized, we'll say) features isolated villages with a set of characters that look like a college brochure.
That being said, I would be interested in more examples of this type of reaction for an actual book series rather than an Amazon or Netflix adaptation, because I imagine you're mostly referencing the latter.