Steel
Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Jul 8, 2006
- Messages
- 4,884
YES!!! Jack in "The Shining," for just one example???Date: 6/13/2010 9:48:21 AM
Author: Sabine
I felt like this when reading Stephen King''s The Dark Tower series. I had invested so much in those characters, and I missed them when they were gone. I got over it quickly though, and I recently reread the whole series and didn''t feel nearly as bad when I was done.
I know it''s happened with other books too, but I can''t recall any right now.
I''m currently working on re-reading a bunch of Stephen King books since I started reading them 15 years ago. As much of a SK fan as I''ve always been, his books don''t seem to be as good the 2nd time around...maybe because all the suspense is gone. But boy, does that man know how to write a character! I''ve always been more of a fan of his characterization than ''horror''.
I have got to be honest, I liked the ending of Tess, I just wished it had come 300 pages earlier.Date: 6/13/2010 10:04:42 AM
Author: pierreone
Steal, I felt the same way about ''The Stand.''
The story I''ve been saddest about ending is the ''Lord of the Rings.'' I''ve read the books 5-6 times in my life (long before the movies came out), and each time felt the same way. It''s such an involved, detailed story, and each time I felt like I was right there along on the journey. Each time I finished I felt like something huge and important was over.
The other book that I mourned was ''Tess of the d''urbervilles'' but for a different reason. Aside from one happy moment, it was one long slide into despair. I held out hope until the very end that it might have a happy ending, but was so upset by how depressing it was.
Oh, thanks for posting this.Date: 6/13/2010 11:04:44 AM
Author: joflier
Yes!!! The 2 off the top of my head that really got to me where The Thorn Birds and The Touch. Both by Colleen McCullough. Actually, all her books are very easy to get lost in. I just remember balling my eyes out through the majority of The touch. I was embarrased because I was reading it at work, and someone stopped by my office, and saw me with a box of kleenex and my face just tear streaked. Haha. They thought someone had died!
Your welcome! I read the Thorn Birds first, and loved it, but I thought the other was even better.......it''s been a few years, I don''t remember exactly that much about it. She has another book - Morgan''s Run that I really enjoyed too.Date: 6/13/2010 2:21:19 PM
Author: Pink Tower
Oh, thanks for posting this.Date: 6/13/2010 11:04:44 AM
Author: joflier
Yes!!! The 2 off the top of my head that really got to me where The Thorn Birds and The Touch. Both by Colleen McCullough. Actually, all her books are very easy to get lost in. I just remember balling my eyes out through the majority of The touch. I was embarrased because I was reading it at work, and someone stopped by my office, and saw me with a box of kleenex and my face just tear streaked. Haha. They thought someone had died!
I had forgotten how good The Thornbirds was. I have never read the other one. Now I can get something else good to read.
All the time. I have overactive empathy and tend to relate and sympathise to people, even fictional people, very easily. I always feel very upset when I''m getting to the end of a book or series of books and no longer gt to be a witness of that characters life.Date: 6/13/2010 9:09:37 AM
Author:Steal
Have you ever felt so involved with a novel that you dragged out reading the last few pages to make the story last at long as possible? Do you still miss it?
Because of the machinery used to produce them, books have to be printed with a page count in multiples of 4. That''s why you see books with weird page counts like 288 or 384, but never just 250 or 325. Layout designers are pretty good at fiddling around with fonts and margins to hide this issue, but every once in a while there just isn''t enough text to fill up the remaining pages, and that''s why you end up with some blanks at the end.Date: 6/13/2010 10:33:36 PM
Author: redfaerythinker
Yes... I am always so depressed after a great book ends. Although the worst is when you think you have ten more pages and you turn one and all that''s left is those blank pages in the back. WHY? So disappointing every time.
This is my favourite book of all time I think. I''ve read it many times. I like to wallow in it. sighDate: 6/13/2010 9:16:25 AM
Author: Steal
I loved reading Stephen King''s The Stand. It is the only book I have ever read (and I read every day) that has moved me to cry reading it. It is so many years later and I still think I will never read a book as wonderful as that. I feel like finishing that book was a loss to me, beautiful but sad.