bofh000
bofh000 t1_jebf88g wrote
Reply to comment by Morasain in Finally reading Tolkien by jdbrew
Shakespeare wrote the English of his time. Even for plays about Ancient Rome.
Tolkien didn’t really write the dialogue of his day. Not even the high literature type of dialogue of his day. It doesn’t mean his work is badly written, just that, indeed, his dialogue can be too stiff, much the way Icelandic Saga can do dialogue - which would sound very wooden to us, but we’d accept because in theory it’s best part isn’t the dialogue.
bofh000 t1_jdubc5s wrote
Reply to comment by crilen in Study shows new method of clearing toxins associated to Alzheimer’s disease - Commonwealth Union by gold79
I thought it must be supplements - mainly because homeopathy is basically water, but yeah, some kind of mumbo jumbo like that.
bofh000 t1_jbayzeq wrote
Were the quotes not visible enough, so the irony escaped you?
bofh000 t1_jabnrz0 wrote
Reply to comment by Birdman_of_Upminster in Sir Terry Pratchett: Short stories to be published after being found by fans by Kiauitl
I think Terry was pretty clear when he pre-ordered that steamroller.
bofh000 t1_j9zali6 wrote
Reply to Asimov's Foundation Is Bad Literature by Kryptin
No, it isn’t bad literature, it’s just not for you. I find it quite illuminating how counting books by the words converges with “nothing happens for pages”.
bofh000 t1_j9j0ecc wrote
Reply to What to read after Harry Potter? by Potices
The Percy Jackson series has a very similar dynamic of hero+friends going through adventures in our world but with a magic/mythological twist (although the writing is very different). If you liked Rowling’s very English prose and humour, you might also enjoy Terry Pratchett (he is arguably THE high priest of English wacky fantasy, the language is superb, although dense).
bofh000 t1_j7mvfiu wrote
Reply to Only One Factory in the United States Still Makes Washboards, and They Are Flying Off of Shelves by davster39
They were, in 2020, when this article was written.
bofh000 t1_j7f2bu0 wrote
Reply to Pride and Prejudice to me is the epitome of romance novels but I recently found something about Elizabeth that I disliked by nyanyaneko2
In her defense, she WASN’T like other girls. It’s not an easy thing to be - different. In her case she met a well-to-do guy who liked her assertiveness and didn’t mind her coming from a poor family. And whom she was attracted to. Jane Austen herself wasn’t as lucky, and she spend the greater part of her short life enduring the disadvantages of being poor, eventually the daughter of a widow with very scarce means.
bofh000 t1_j6np904 wrote
Reply to What to do with unwanted book? by [deleted]
I had the same thing with Mists of Avalon (not the book itself, the author). I just threw it in the trash.
bofh000 t1_j6nnvr0 wrote
Reply to comment by Emotional-Coconut-74 in Who's your favorite underrated character in the Harry Potter books? by ireeeenee
Charlie is definitely underrated and living proof that our protagonists are far from the coolest in that world.
bofh000 t1_j6nnoxv wrote
Reply to comment by plebony27 in Who's your favorite underrated character in the Harry Potter books? by ireeeenee
Yesss Tonks!!
bofh000 t1_j6nmxzu wrote
Reply to comment by franhawthorne in The letters of T. S. Eliot to Emily Hale that were kept sealed from 1956 to 2020 have been released for free online by RunDNA
Many writers used letters as a literary outlet, some used them as a literary device.
bofh000 t1_j6fig4h wrote
Reply to What is a plot/world-building issue that breaks your suspension of disbelief? by JonathanCue
I think most books explain the in-world reason why the magic or the powers aren’t on display. In any case if it bothers you, you can read different books, different genres …
bofh000 t1_j6egqnc wrote
I don’t think Frederick is the type to attend family events. On the other hand Catherine had a handful of younger sisters, maybe he shows up to spoil everyone’s fun in a few years.
bofh000 t1_j6ap7fd wrote
Reply to Dickens' David Copperfield: Were men more affectionate with each other in the 18th century? by angelojann
It wasn’t the tv, as some commenters seem to believe. It was the trial of Oscar Wilde. Before that men used to have affectionate gestures with their male peers, they could be walking arm in arm in Hyde park and express their friendship verbally with phrases we would find unusual. The Wilde trial was a very public scandal and it marked the public’s perception of potentially punishable behavior between men, AND instilled the fear of being perceived as homosexual and socially shunned for otherwise common gestures. As an aside, the judge in the case said something to the tune of Wilde’s being the most horrible and disgusting trial he had sat on - that after judging on a child murder a couple of weeks before.
That being said, in the particular examples you are giving: Steerforth has a very relaxed approach to social norms in general and a very nonchalant way of addressing most people in his life. And Mr. Peggoty in my opinion has a fatherly feelings towards David, so that would explain why he would have an affectionate demeanor. Plus he is usually a non-emotional man, but is overcome with emotion he can’t control in his quest for Emily.
bofh000 t1_j5y2sdx wrote
Reply to Girl who was granted a "unicorn license" shows what's possible with imagination and determination by Bonboniru
And wasting everybody’s time. Cute now. Will probably try to sell it as her great achievement in human/women’s rights in a couple of decades. We’ve seen it happen.
bofh000 t1_j51ysxm wrote
Reply to Greetings everyone! A lot of people say reading books is beneficial for you, though... by RaderH2O
Beside vocabulary and communication skills, reading fiction helps develop empathy.
As an aside most fantasy themes have folkloric or mythological roots, if you really feel like you have reached the boundaries of knowledge available in the novels you read you could lookup some of those themes in the world mythologies.
bofh000 t1_j4r1ze8 wrote
Maybe you need to read different books. Inasmuch as you NEED to do anything… if you don’t like them it’s ok, we all have our preferences. Without knowing which are those 2 favorite books or whether you prefer a particular genre, I don’t think anyone can really get to a conclusion on your preference for male protagonists.
Just analyze your reading habits and the books you didn’t like - are they the type authors churn out by the dozen a year? Are the heroines one dimensional stereotypes? Do the authors appear to have no idea what a woman feels or think like? Are they sexualized gratuitously?
There are quite a few very well written stories with and about women. I really liked Elena Ferrante’s Brilliant Friend series, Sigrid Undset’s Kristin Lavransdatter, Madeline Miller’s Circe. I just learned she’s written another one about Galatea, so I have that on my list. Another one on my list is Cecily by Annie Garthwaite.
If you are in for a little heartbreak (not the romance type) any one of Toni Morrison’s novels has great women protagonists very well written.
Or if you prefer funnier reading: any one of Terry Pratchett’s Witches series. Start with Equal Rites if you want to be consistent, it’s the first where Granny Weatherwax appears. Witches Abroad is hilarious with the 3 of them.
Or it might just be you. By this time we all know each and every one of us have unique experiences and we don’t have to identify with a character just because we are the same gender or from the same part of the world or whatever is supposed to make us uniform. I remember Maia Rudolph once saying that, since she lost her mom very young and grew up with her dad and a handful of brothers, as a teenager she always felt like she didn’t know how to be a woman and use all the nice smelling creams and make up and whatnot. Turns out all she had to do was be.
bofh000 t1_j3q7jh0 wrote
Reply to comment by Major2Minor in Fugitive cows in Quebec captured after months on the run by XaltotunTheUndead
Probably because Canada is not the time of place where domestic animals thrive in the wild.
bofh000 t1_j3q7cmz wrote
As somebody else commented above, there’s a very simple solution to your issues: re-reading.
As a rule, books you wouldn’t enjoy rereading at some point in the future aren’t worth the trouble the 1st time around.
Maybe change the kind of books you read.
And find ways to handle your obsessive need to know in advance and be always right. I’m no expert, but I’d wager you have the same problem in life outside of your reading.
bofh000 t1_j2jay1w wrote
The answer is in the question. Just remove the “how”.
bofh000 t1_j2eeeql wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in I read Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and I didn't find a deeper meaning in the story. Am I dumb? by -greek_user_06-
But other times a story is a vessel for more meaning the author tries to convey. Source: also have literature degree.
The trick I suppose is to know which ones are just stories and which ones are telling you more through that story. In some cases you can see through the story to the deeper meaning, other times you need the author’s words about that story, and other times you don’t have their words, but their lives and context.
It’s ok to look for a deeper meaning and it’s cool if you don’t see anything else there. I find life is a lot more enjoyable when I don’t lion down on other people, be they simple readers or professors over-analyzing.
bofh000 t1_j26folt wrote
Reply to Reading in social situations - unacceptable? by Foo321
I’d expect nobody would notice you reading if they are all scrolling on their phone.
bofh000 t1_j1yqjxz wrote
Reply to comment by brunettedude in Joining the “The Song of Achilles” Appreciation Club by my-nips-hurt
Well it’s a common trope in at least 2 mythologies. Achilles does it, Thor does it and to some extent even Loki does it.
bofh000 t1_jebfk0b wrote
Reply to comment by AccordionORama in Finally reading Tolkien by jdbrew
I had the same experience with Linux servers and Simpsons & Futurama characters. The best were the clusters: Patty&Selma and Sherry&Terry.