100 Books
See allReadable but ultimately disappointing due to a chicken-shit ending and lack of character development.
A fascinating account of a brutal crime told with humanity and gentility.
When I got to the end of the book, I wanted to read it again. What I find most fascinating is trying to decide how much of the killers' characterizations were coloured by Capote's personal impressions and how accurate the opinion of psychiatrists were; everybody has biases and the author really let that shine, I think.
A wonderfully sweeping historical saga that is irrevocably marred by the author's lack of faith in his readers' mental acuity and insistence on recapping the plot for them at every turn. Very distracting and a little offensive; I was paying attention, Mr. Follett, I promise.
The two first person narratives did not have distinct enough voices; I kept forgetting which kid was talking to me. Very distracting.
Fuuuck. I was not expecting that. I got this from the library because of the hype and I don't often do audiobooks because my brain doesn't seem to retain information delivered aurally but I'm glad I heard this in the author's voice. It's harrowing to hear what she went through; it's laid out in such a basic way, without caveats or excuses, that the trauma is obvious but never devolves into self-pity.