Author |
|
hunters moon
Calcifer
Registration Date: 05.15.14
Location: shrewsbury,UK.
Posts: 103 |
|
what was the last book that made you laugh or cry?.
any book by TOM SHARP makes me laugh .
but BURY MY HEART AT WOUNDED KNEE did put a tear in
my eye, I found the injustice just overwhelming.
regards J
__________________ sometimes the heart sees what is invisible to the eye.
|
|
07.11.2014, 02:10 AM |
|
husky51
The Old Guy
Registration Date: 03.17.08
Location: Southern California
Posts: 12811 |
|
|
07.11.2014, 03:51 AM |
|
hunters moon
Calcifer
Registration Date: 05.15.14
Location: shrewsbury,UK.
Posts: 103 |
|
husky I am reading S.C.GWYNNE, empire of the summer
moon:QUANAH PARKER and the rise and fall of the
Comanche, husky its a stunningly vivid historical account
of the forty-year battle between Comanche Indians and
white settlers for control of the American west.
regards J
__________________ sometimes the heart sees what is invisible to the eye.
|
|
07.11.2014, 05:10 AM |
|
arren18
Administrator
Registration Date: 08.15.06
Location: Edinburgh
Posts: 10675 |
|
I haven't read much in the past while, so I can't think of recent stuff. I've had a lot of laughs, so it's hard to come up with particular recent examples. As for tears, I remember being very affected by Kazuo Ishiguro's Never Let Me Go, though that was many years ago now.
__________________
|
|
07.11.2014, 06:18 AM |
|
Saddletank
Miyazaki's Best Friend
Registration Date: 09.28.06
Location: On your case
Posts: 10069 |
|
Laugh.
Several of Bill Bryson's books had me in tears - of laughter. Especially his "Notes from a Small Island". Totally awesome and for an American he observes the English so minutely and perfectly, making fun of what we do without it ever coming across as insulting.
I was reading that book on the train down to London on the way to work one day many years ago and I could not contain my laughter. When the journey ended the guy sitting opposite me said "What were you reading? I simply have to go buy it. I need to laugh like that in the morning."
__________________ Isakaya High School Roleplaying Info
"An old man like me stands no chance fighting against a high school girl in her underwear" - Oshino Meme, Nekomonogatari (Kuro)
Post last edited by Saddletank on 07.11.2014, 06:37 AM.
|
|
07.11.2014, 06:36 AM |
|
Roarkiller
Your Daddy-O
Registration Date: 06.03.03
Location: Home, resting...
Posts: 6077 |
|
Textbooks make me cry.
Past that, I don't remember any books making me tear up. Humour is common, but I just can't feel tragedy in written form.
__________________ I am me. I am who I am. I am Roarkiller. No one else is me.
Roarkiller.net Isakaya High RPG Site
quote: Originally posted by fenkashi Screw your opinions, they are not relevant ^^.
|
|
07.11.2014, 11:00 AM |
|
Nausicaa_Cat
Baron
Registration Date: 10.02.06
Location:
Posts: 3198 |
|
Oh god, I've cried reading tons of books! Out-loud laughter is slightly more unusual for me weirdly enough, and I don't tend to remember it as well.
Funnily, I laughed and cried at the antics of the Weasley twins in Harry Potter.
I sobbed at the end of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest in a way that I don't think I've ever cried at a book or film since. I also wept a fair bit at the end of The Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro (strangely Never Let Me Go didn't affect me as much).
I tend to be a real weep-er when it comes to anything animal related. So I cried a lot at The Knife of Never Letting Go.
I think I've also cried (sort of happy tears) at the end of Jane Eyre.
|
|
07.11.2014, 11:10 AM |
|
arren18
Administrator
Registration Date: 08.15.06
Location: Edinburgh
Posts: 10675 |
|
Interesting. The Remains of the Day wasn't as upsetting to me, but I read the whole thing feeling rather unsure about it all, and then suddenly found it deeply sad right at the end. It seems to me that he is good at creating that effect.
__________________
|
|
07.11.2014, 11:21 AM |
|
husky51
The Old Guy
Registration Date: 03.17.08
Location: Southern California
Posts: 12811 |
|
|
07.11.2014, 12:06 PM |
|
Nausicaa_Cat
Baron
Registration Date: 10.02.06
Location:
Posts: 3198 |
|
quote: Originally posted by arren18
Interesting. The Remains of the Day wasn't as upsetting to me, but I read the whole thing feeling rather unsure about it all, and then suddenly found it deeply sad right at the end. It seems to me that he is good at creating that effect.
I think that's precisely why it upset me as much! I spent a large amount of it being like 'I don't really get it, he's just some cranky old butler, what am I meant to be investing in here?' and than with that late realisation came a big swoop of emotion, rather than the gentle increasing sadness I felt in Never Let Me Go. Nothing to me is sadder than a person's realisation of their own mortality or the mortality of their way of life.
Post last edited by Nausicaa_Cat on 07.11.2014, 01:13 PM.
|
|
07.11.2014, 01:13 PM |
|
|