quillpunk: screenshot of Rue (with a super innocent expression) from the webcomic The Villainess Flips the Script (rue2)
[personal profile] quillpunk posting in [community profile] booknook
Raise the flag! Sound the horn!

It's Wednesday!

What are you reading? 👀

Date: 2024-03-07 08:48 am (UTC)
vriddy: Person holding a stack of books so high their face can't be seen (books)
From: [personal profile] vriddy
Happy to see you here! :D *waves*

Quite a few years ago, I tried to read many of the "classic" science-fiction authors and while the stories were interesting, I never really liked them and stopped altogether, thinking SF just wasn't for me. Very 3 or 3.5, haha. Much later I joined a bookclub that was going through recent Hugo nominations and was very happy to discover a different side to the genre, better suited to my tastes :D

Good luck with the current book, looking forward to your final thoughts!

Date: 2024-03-07 01:34 pm (UTC)
white_aster: (!!)
From: [personal profile] white_aster
Thanks for the rec! This was exactly the sort of comm I was looking for, to complement one that I am in on Pillowfort. :D

And oh gosh, SAME. I have this issue with most "classic" books just in general. I guess I am too wedded to a modern perspective/storytelling expectations. I may find them interesting as sort of sociological relics (it's interesting to see what in Asimov makes me go, "huh, actually, that was really ahead of its time there, sir"), and as the building blocks on which other things were built (I'm kind of lightly interested in seeing what literary scholars say about how Asimov uses the Three Laws as plot devices - right now I see them as an interesting thread of the theme of human arrogance/overconfidence in technology in the Robots books). But in some ways, they're not really "good" as stories (see the aforementioned way that the detectives do very little detecting to a frankly absurd degree, or the absolutely BIZARRE story structure of something like Homer's Odyssey), and that keeps them from being as entertaining as they could be. (Also, frankly, when you're the person who has first explored a topic decades ago, by the time I, a modern reader, have read it, what you have to say is probably no longer going to be really revolutionary, which also cuts into the entertainment factor.)

Anyway, yes, my reading of classic anything (except Jack London...I remember loving Jack London as a kid) is usually pretty limited. I mostly was on a robots kick and figured I'd go back to the well, so to speak. Also, really, Asimov's stuff is fairly short, so it's not a long slog, even if I do get something I'm not enjoying.

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