The Extra Cool Group! (of people Michael is experimenting on) discussion
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does time change your perception of a book.
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We've also had huge societal changes in the meantime. For example, when I was 10, homosexuality was considered a psychiatric disorder or something. It wasn't until 5 years later that the shrinks changed their minds. Driving with a beer used to be OK & there were lots of hippies. Many women didn't work & most family's I knew had only one car. No Internet & most folks wouldn't get computers for 25 or more years, so Gibson's Neuromancer was wild stuff when it came out 15 years later.
I've also grown a lot as a reader. After reading a few thousand books, my standards have grown. (Well, IMO, anyway.) There is some language, plots, & devices that I just can't stand. I loved Stasheff's 'Wizard in Rhyme' series when it first came out. I tried re-reading it a year or so ago & I hated the writing in the 2d book. I used to like Cussler, but can't read him any more, either. Maybe I'm just getting crotchety, but I think it's just poor writing on their parts.
So yeah, time does change my perception of a book for a lot of reasons.

http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

I blame other books, of course. Damn things, congregating together and swapping secrets. And even worse, attracting unprecedented amounts of public attention. Really, books are just celebrity whores.


I've got a wall of books over my bed and I'm lulled to sleep by the idea that tonight will be Big Quake & they'll pull my lifeless & pulverized body from the wreckage. What a way to go.
Time has changed my perception of books. I read and loved Gone With the Wind & Wuthering Heights in high school - when I reread them a few years back it was Melanie, not Scarlett that I considered the heroine of the story and the casual racism! didn't even phase me in the 70's.
I couldn't even get halfway through Wuthering Heights this time around. The entire cast should have gotten a good spanking and sent to bed without supper.


Annoyingly, the biggest changes of your life continue to happen throughout your life. Where is my staid boring stable adult life? I was PROMISED.
But that said, yes, there's a lot going on in your first few decades.

I understand what you're saying, but have to disagree in my case. People grow & change attitudes a lot through life. That's one reason so many marriages end in divorce - folks grow in different ways. While the teenage years are the most chaotic, I don't think the overall attitude changes are the biggest. Sure, I went from a child to an adult, hating girls to loving them & a lot more, but I don't think my attitudes about literature changed as much as they have since then.
My attitudes changed more after I was married & had a family of my own. That suddenly gave me an entirely different perspective on everything because life wasn't just about me any more. There were several other major events that changed my attitudes; getting sober, having my kids almost die (All 3 wound up seriously hospitalized in the space of a few years due to accidents.) & changing careers.
It would be interesting to read in-depth reviews of some books that I've read almost every decade. Unfortunately, I didn't write many reviews when younger nor do I have them available. One that I can think of is Starship Troopers. Before I joined the Army, I liked it & thought the idea of being part of an organization that stood for such ideals was great. After doing time in the Army - well, let's just say there weren't many stars left in my eyes. The Forever War captured my attitude a lot better. After raising a family & changing careers, I prefer Armor's take.

There are few exceptions. For instance, some YA that I've read as an adult, I'm sure I would've loved as a teen.

I understand what you're saying, but ..."
That's really interesting, and it definitely sounds like your adult years have been rather more tumultuous than your childhood and teenage life. I suppose it depends on the experiences one has. For me, the main difference I've noticed since 'growing up' is that I can now appreciate classics without thinking they're dead boring, and that I have a more discerning taste for good or bad prose. I haven't noticed yet that I have a different opinion of different genres.

Of course, many of the philosophies & attitudes that I subscribed to then are not entirely what I believe now. Back then, I was a great deal more idealistic. I think it was Paul in his review that said something about being beaten up by the whips of work, life & responsibility. (Pardon if I messed that up, Paul. It tickled me the way you put it & that's what I took away.) In some ways, I agree with him.
At any rate, I found my idealism didn't stand up well with time. There's too much gray in the world, often couched in choices between bad & worse. There are a lot of well meaning, damn fools out there muddying the waters, too. The whole good or bad guy thing got old & I was more able to appreciate the POV or even respect characters that I disliked in some cases.
If you read the books I listed; Starship Troopers, The Forever War, & Armor, in that order, I think you'll understand better what I'm saying. The basic plot is the same, but the main character & attitudes evolve. I read the first as a teen before joining the army, the next in my 20's after serving & the last in my mid-thirties after getting sober, married & having several children.
The progression of the characters & themes with my attitudes is uncanny. I read each for the first time at the perfect place in my life to really connect with the hero. While I still love all 3 books for what they are, I pretty much detest the two dimensional propaganda that Rico spouts. I don't hold a lot more feeling for William's 'fuck it' attitude, but I really admire Felix.
(The Boss calls - dinner!)

Have you ever tried The Einstein Intersection by him? He wrote it about a decade earlier & is one of my all time favorite books, along with This Immortal. I think they were published the same year. Both blend mythology & SF into an action adventure that is mind blowing. I've read them both a couple of times a decade since the 70's & never tire of them.



It pains me to say this, because I do love the man, but I feel the same way about some of Harlan Ellison's short stories. *don't hurt me*


Who does that? WHO DOES THAT?
Books mentioned in this topic
I Have No Mouth & I Must Scream (other topics)The Einstein Intersection (other topics)
This Immortal (other topics)
Armor (other topics)
The Forever War (other topics)
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when I was in college my friend took me to go see "let's go to prison" I didn't understand what I was agreeing to at the time. For years I complained about wasting time and referred to the movie as "What would happen if the coen brothers failed". Now I find that I feel like I like the movie. I've never seen it again and never intend to, but somehow I've grown fond of it.
Sometimes this happens to me with books. At one point I was talking to someone about madame bovary, recommending it in fact and they pointed out I had given it two stars. I immediately bumped my rating to four stars and still have no idea why I thought it only merited 2.
Does this happen to other people?