IMABOYDAMON!
Banned
- Joined
- Jul 5, 2008
- Messages
- 203
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2008
Everybody here seems to absolutely despise the book. So, did you like it?
I DEFINITELY agree with that statement there. But I have to finish it because I'm getting assessed on it in my yearly next term, I think.russianROULETTE said:i couldn't finish it. it's clever and ironic, and i appreciate it as a piece of literature, but i'm not a fan of massive amounts of useless detail with only a couple of vaguely intiguing incidents spread throughout.
I guess you can't really help but compare it, because most people have studied Pride and Prejudice before Emma, and it just sets you up with that same high expectation, and then you read Emma, and you are let down by the sheer difference from Pride and Prejudice.theshortykatt said:maybe you should stop comparing it to austen's other works.
everyone knows that p&p is society's favorite.
I didn't like Emma as a character, finding her annoying rather than witty. So pretty much, not liking the heroine ruined the book for me...and like much 19th century literature, there was excrutiating detail about every little thing.IMABOYDAMON! said:Everybody here seems to absolutely despise the book. So, did you like it?
SiN3m said:eww no way in HELL! jeez i just finished it today!
I only enjoyed half a few pages of Mr Knightly trying to express his feelings to Emma and getting excited when he learns she isn't into Churchill....
I just dnt like anything austen writes....this is the first book of hers that I've finished....
yeah i know...i mean i dnt mind watching the movies, i loved the 1995 Pride and Prejudice BBC production.... i lvoe the era just hate the way she writes....bores meccc123 said:Austen's books are kind of the same, with the plot always along the lines of some middle-class and strong minded heroine pining for some "eligible bachelor"
It's actually factually correct to assume that the majority of one's readership can in fact both read and comprehend the English langauge, and furthermore not be put off when one sentence happens to run on further than is the norm.artist91 said:worst.book.ever.written.jane.needed.to.learn.how.to.write.shorter.sentences.for.a.start.
Comprehending and enjoying are two dfferent concepts... I personally can understand but it does bug me....Riet said:It's actually factually correct to assume that the majority of one's readership can in fact both read and comprehend the English langauge, and furthermore not be put off when one sentence happens to run on further than is the norm.
She writes formally and does not engage in the idealistic explorations as her 18th century counterparts seem to do (Dickens etc) and always see rhetorical balance as the primary purpose. Jane Austen writes brilliantly, just do some research on her style and you'll understand why.artist91 said:worst.book.ever.written.jane.needed.to.learn.how.to.write.shorter.sentences.for.a.start.