![]() Such complexity hardly unfolds as the result of a poorly written story. This “either/or” explanation doesn’t work so well with stories that inspire a complex set of thoughts. These thoughts and curiosities I had, well, they were all jumbled up, and I had to start another book while I allowed some time for these ideas to settle and come together in their own due time.Ī story that provokes simple impressions, I have stated, can be very good but it can also be very poor. After the reading I realized there was so much I wanted to say, so much more I wanted to learn. Then there are books like Sarah Walter’s The Little Stranger. Nor will they transport me to wider worlds that inspire endless contemplation. And there might not be much to say other than things like “very suspenseful” or “just an all-around fun bit of horror.” Such stories don’t require layers of analysis. ![]() But after the reading or viewing (novel or book), everything I want to say falls neatly in place. These aren’t bad stories necessarily they can be quite good. ![]() ![]() There are those stories that inspire the briefest of descriptions and the simplest of impressions. Some reviews are easier to write than others. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |