forevermorepages's Reviews (811)


not going to rate this because I'm not sure what to give it--and it was required reading

in a nutshell, I would have enjoyed this more if I didn't have to take notes on it

I think that is one of the best books I've ever read for school. I might write a review for this later, but possibly not because it's not a priority.

-Book Hugger

http://bookhuggerreviews.com

well that was fun and now i'm done ;)

not a favorite, but important and i wrote an essay on why it should not be banned in schools

-book hugger

I'm not going to write a full review for this, but I really really enjoyed this and just...some of the poetry hit me hard. I didn't love all of it and thought the organization was kind of messy (it took me awhile to realize the italicized poems were dividers) and some of the poems didn't really go together. But in all, I loved enough of the poems to give it 4 stars. Though, I will say, I found the longer poems so much better than the really short ones.

-Book Hugger

http://www.bookhuggerreviews.com

I ended up loving this book so much more than I ever thought I would, if I'm going to be quite honest. I didn't like either of the other two Steinbeck books I've read (Of Mice and Men and The Pearl). This just felt so much more profound than those, with lessons of free will, family, good and evil, and even religion. If anyone is unaware, it is an allegory of Cain and Abel with a strong look at paternal-rejection and whether someone has a choice in who they turn out to be. Every character faces decisions between good and evil, even the one we're introduced as to be monstrous
though we later see that Cathy is, in fact, just as human as the rest of them, and perhaps, just a little damaged
.

I highly recommend giving this one a try. It's gigantic (602 pages to be precise) and we've been reading it for three months, but nonetheless, I think almost everything in there was important. The only reason I'm giving it four stars instead of five is that it got a little boring at points and I thought the themes were obvious enough that Steinbeck didn't need to blatantly state them, which he, unfortunately, did.

I also give it kudos for being sort of diverse?? At least for the times...one of the main characters is Chinese and he's literally one of my two favorite characters. He's the smartest of everyone in the entire book and his backstory is so tragic. And all of the female characters were really strong when it comes down to it. I highkey love Abra and would die for her at this point.

But my other favorite character was Cal. He faces the true fight between good and evil and the ending was left really open-ended for him. I hope my son grows up happy because he really doesn't deserve any of the crap thrown at him, but I also think that's the point. Life doesn't discriminate between the sinners and the saints, right?

ALSO, I just wanted to point out that I found it somewhat hilarious I read the last few pages before I should have and saw "Cal killed his brother" and assumed it was a repeat of the Cain and Abel thing from the beginning where Charles tried to kill Adam. But IT WASN'T. It was just Cal blaming himself for Aron's death and I just...it broke my heart. But it was sort of funny that I assumed Cal would turn into Cain like Charles did...and I think that was the point. He chose to be good when he could have taken that route, even if he really didn't think he was good. And he didn't mean anything bad by taking Aron to see their mom because Aron deserved to know. Ahh feels.


-Book Hugger

This review is not on my blog, but here's the link anyway http://www.bookhuggerreviews.com

nothing special, but there were a few that really resonated with me

but as far as my eyes can see
we live in a world
where people aren't people
until they fit your perfect mold


book hugger

http://www.bookhuggerreviews.com

not great, not terrible

"maybe gatsby was nick's green light" just leaving that there guys

book hugger

http://www.bookhuggerreviews.com