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Books that are painful to read, but EVERYONE should!

95 replies

expatinscotland · 28/03/2006 10:13

I'll start:

Schindler's List

All Quiet on the Western Front

The Colour Purple

OP posts:
moondog · 03/04/2006 08:34

Blimey,better make sure I'm in a healthy mental state before attempting it then...Shock

harpsichordcarrier · 03/04/2006 08:39

the bit that I can't get out my head is when the little sister drowns in the pond and the author says the shopkeeper asked her did she love her sister and she replies no, but in fact she can't imagine loving anyone more.
god that still makes me cry now. I stooopidly read it when dd1 was about 6 weeks old.

moondog · 03/04/2006 08:41

It is of course the same part that haunts me.
Read it over and over in mad hope that it would haVE a different ending. Sad
She's written another one now,about a mercenary i think that she hung about with for a while.
Great writer.

harpsichordcarrier · 03/04/2006 08:46

I think about is all over again now dd1 is that age

eidsvold · 18/04/2006 06:36

Agree wild swans

To kill a mockingbird

Brought back memories of books i haven't read in forever...

One I read recently - Defiant Births

Of Mice and Men by Steinbeck

Cry the beloved country

hannahsaunt · 18/04/2006 09:17

Lots here that I would agree with esp Mockingbird and Steinbeck. Would add Atonement - just found it so very sad. Still fail to understand why my mum thought I might like to read Dave Pelzer a month after the birth of my first child (a boy). Still haven't read it. Really don't need to know.

acnebride · 18/04/2006 09:40

A Fine Balance by Rohinton Mistry (I know it gets mentioned a lot on here) because it keeps me from whinging (sometimes)

Sickened shocked me deeply because it describes later in the protagonist's life she was a doctor's receptionist, and if mothers came in more than once with children, she used to refuse them an appointment! Hope she was sacked!

Issyfit · 18/04/2006 09:52

Thanks for the recommendation MarsLady - I'll add that to my Amazon Wishlist.

I think I would add 'Disgraced' by JM Coetze. The last few pages (the ones where he puts the dog down, if you've read it) of total emotional nihilism still haunt me.

'A Fine Balance' was a book I couldn't finish - just too sad. I find that as I get older, sad books have become harder and harder to read. It's not just about having children, although that has cranked up my emotional thermostat, it's something about seeing and experiencing more despair and sadness and ambivalence that makes the fictional version of these emotions tougher to get through.

(Issymum/Issyfit)

donnie · 19/04/2006 15:10

totally agree with Grapes of Wrath, Color Purple and Ivan Denisovitch , also whoever suggested The Tortilla Curtain - it's one of the best things Ive read in the last 10 years.

The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison is magnificent IMO - extremely harrowing but still somehow beautiful and a real eye opener.

The Kindness of Women by JG Ballard is also very difficult reading in parts but it shows how he was permanently affected by his experiences in the Japanese POW camp, his wife's sudden death etc - brilliant. He also details the beginnings of his friend's dabbling in the car crash/sexual experience theme which he develops in another book of his called 'Crash'. He talks about how he dabbles in drugs and also has sexual encounters with prostitutes but at no time do you have anything but compassion for him. It really is a fantastic book.

I also think the Great Gatsby is a very sad novel, yet insightful and it really illuminates a certain time and place in American social history.I love that line 'They were careless people, Tom and Daisy, they smashed up people and things and then retreated into their vast moneyed world' ( probably a misquote!)

kiera · 25/04/2006 18:01

Animal Farm. Absolute classic but as an animal lover I found it very sad.

Ditto Watership Down!

K

ShinyHappyPeopleHoldingHands · 07/06/2007 11:22

Between Two Eternities by Rosemary Kay.

dinosaur · 07/06/2007 11:25

This reply has been withdrawn

This has been withdrawn by MNHQ at the poster's request.

AngharadGoldenhand · 07/06/2007 11:34

1984 - especially if you're pro-CCTV.

totaleclipse · 07/06/2007 11:38

Damaged is supposed to be hard to read, written by a foster mother about an abused girl she had in her care.

Ettenna · 07/06/2007 11:49

The Woman Who Walked into Doors by Roddy Doyle is genius. The Gulag Archipelago.

RosaLuxembourg · 07/06/2007 22:32

Private Peaceful. A children's book I know, but very, very moving.

Boco · 08/06/2007 18:42

OMG, a semi-retiree called dave, pmsl moondog, just had to show dp that post, he can't speak now. You may not have an ounce of whatever it was mymamma said - humanity or something, but you're very funny.

HenriettaHippo · 08/06/2007 19:03

Eefs, I know it was in March, but you're thinking of "I am David", about a Jewish boy in Europe caught up in the war.

Time's Arrow - brilliant book about a man who starts his life at the end when he's dying, and gradually gets younger.

Lovely Bones

multitasker · 08/06/2007 19:13

Happy like Murderers - Gordon Burns. This is an incredibly unsettling piece of investigative journalism,looking at the lives of Fred and Rosemary West and their victims.

throgmorton · 19/06/2007 19:26

'As Meat Loves Salt' - still haunts me, every day for about a month afterwards I woke up going !!

Cant remember authors name

and totally agree with moondog re: Dave P, a the risk of pissing someone off...

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