Hey, come on
in reply to a message by Kitty
It's not pseudo-intellectual to like the books you read (or were supposed to have read) in high school. I think it's really pretty bold of them, and not in a bad way, to be so obvious in their tribute to books. You'd rather pick more obscure characters and show off just how wonderful and erudite you are?
That said, I wouldn't do it, that thing they did.
That said, I hope their next one is Vardaman Bundren, and then a Lennie Small, and then a Nellie Oleson.
That said, I wouldn't do it, that thing they did.
That said, I hope their next one is Vardaman Bundren, and then a Lennie Small, and then a Nellie Oleson.
Replies
You'd rather pick more obscure characters and show off just how wonderful and erudite you are?
I guess if books are your life, wouldn't you have kept reading after the age of 17?
I guess if books are your life, wouldn't you have kept reading after the age of 17?
Exactly. And before...
When I was in 7th grade, on my own accord (although I did end up doind them for book reports) I read the Red Badge of Courage, Jane Eyre, and Pride and Prejudice. To this day Jane Eyre and Pride and Prejudice are still two of my favorites (I'm going to do another report and Pride and Prejudice), and I do like the RBoC. I would not mind naming a child Edward Rochester, or Fitzwilliam Darcy. I think it's kind of cool. And as for you people who say your supposed to read those books in high school? I didn't get to read To Kill a Mockingbird because I was in honors, but I'd have liked to because I'm related to the author; I'll just read it over the summer, I think. Tom Sawyer I was in fact forced to read, but that was in 7th grade, not in high school.
When I was in 7th grade, on my own accord (although I did end up doind them for book reports) I read the Red Badge of Courage, Jane Eyre, and Pride and Prejudice. To this day Jane Eyre and Pride and Prejudice are still two of my favorites (I'm going to do another report and Pride and Prejudice), and I do like the RBoC. I would not mind naming a child Edward Rochester, or Fitzwilliam Darcy. I think it's kind of cool. And as for you people who say your supposed to read those books in high school? I didn't get to read To Kill a Mockingbird because I was in honors, but I'd have liked to because I'm related to the author; I'll just read it over the summer, I think. Tom Sawyer I was in fact forced to read, but that was in 7th grade, not in high school.