21st Century Literature discussion
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What Have Been Some Of Your Notable Misreadings? (4/19/21)?
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Marc
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Apr 19, 2021 10:39AM

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Also, I still feel clueless about all the talk about how Life of Pi will make you believe in God. That makes zero sense to me. Imo, that book would make you renounce God. I still don't get it.
And, one more I can think of: Slip of a Fish. Spoilers ahead. The entire book is very unclear, as far as the writing is concerned. But, I think there's child molestation, as well as the main character killing her daughter. Just ?!?! Especially because all the cover blurbs mention things like "bemused" and "linguistically dexterous". I don't know if I missed everything or if the blurb writers actually didn't read or comprehend the book. Just horrifying. (I think the blurb writers didn't actually read the book.)

I think Life of Pi is says that is because, superficially, the plot, is essentially a survival tale.
My worst misreading was Ling Ma's Severance - I thought it was just a dystopia but in reality it's a criticsm of work habits.
Another one is the Ferris Wheel scene in Joseph O'Neill's Netherland - it's supposed to represent a life trajectory - I saw it as a couple on a ferris wheel.


Sam wrote: "problems of a class driven society, offering that Shakespeare was obliquely criticizing absolute monarchy and possibly suggesting a democratic alternative in later words of Falstaff."
I love this misreading. Way better than the reality.
I love this misreading. Way better than the reality.

I'm sure there were plenty of others, but I can't remember them!


I'm not sure if this is "misreading" per se since the authors of these books would probably say I'm "misreading" them now, not before.

I make similar 'misreadings' all the time, lark. My evolution of opinions on works such as 'Memoirs of a Geisha' and 'Flowers for Algernon' into the decidedly negative is hardly an encouraged pathway on this site, but so it goes. I care far more about the communities who have to deal with that kind of dehumanizing representation than someone's fictional hang-ups.

oh no! not Flowers for Algernon! I haven't read it since I was a teenager so it's still on my 'fondly remembered' list...

There are some memorable books known for being misread out there. Hesses's Steppenwolf is one example.

I simply meant any misreading (mistaking character intent, missing an allusion to another work of lit, outright missed story facts/realities). I think not seeing racist/colonialist/sexist elements could be seen as a misreading. You could view yourself as either a more mature or sophisticated reader upon growing up, reading more lit, having a better understanding/appreciation of life/society.
In general, I try not to put strict definitions and intents upon these questions of the week because I think doing so tends to limit discussion and it is fascinating to see what each of us considers their own "misreadings" to be.
I think I was at least halfway through Atwood's The Testaments before I realized I was getting the perspective of one more character than I had originally counted. I just got it in my head that there was one less character than there actually was. Just finished The Mirror & the Light a few days ago and was convinced I knew how it ended (not only was I completely wrong, I have no idea how I got this particular ending in my head; it definitely colored how I was reading the whole book; unfortunately, having not had this misreading would not have improved my enjoyment of the book). And for a completely different kind of "misreading" I once let Amazon talk me into a new John Barth book (I thought this was the Barth of Lost in the Funhouse; it was a self-published book by another John Barth; I read the whole book and it was horrible... I don't know if I was trying to will it into being something else or I just figured I'd give it a try anyway).
In general, I try not to put strict definitions and intents upon these questions of the week because I think doing so tends to limit discussion and it is fascinating to see what each of us considers their own "misreadings" to be.
I think I was at least halfway through Atwood's The Testaments before I realized I was getting the perspective of one more character than I had originally counted. I just got it in my head that there was one less character than there actually was. Just finished The Mirror & the Light a few days ago and was convinced I knew how it ended (not only was I completely wrong, I have no idea how I got this particular ending in my head; it definitely colored how I was reading the whole book; unfortunately, having not had this misreading would not have improved my enjoyment of the book). And for a completely different kind of "misreading" I once let Amazon talk me into a new John Barth book (I thought this was the Barth of Lost in the Funhouse; it was a self-published book by another John Barth; I read the whole book and it was horrible... I don't know if I was trying to will it into being something else or I just figured I'd give it a try anyway).

I get that part.
But I guess that it seems such a traumatic survival tale that a) would you really be better off surviving and b) what kind of god inflicts this tortuous path on humans?
I am sure part of my misinterpretation follows my agnostic/athiest leanings. But I am still flummoxed by the rapturous raves as this showing the "good side" of god. Kwim?
Bad marketing for god, imo.
I guess this is not so much a misinterpretation as I disagree with the more popular opinion, lol.

That is forty years when I have never picked up a work by Faulkner because I was so dismayed and could not see how well he created all those points of view.


A most unsettling "ending" for a book that was already unsettling enough without my misreading exacerbating it!
Jennifer wrote: "I had no idea there wasn't punctuation in The Road. I I couldn't figure out what people were talking about in reviews, my sister had to tell me...then I checked the book...."
I'm sure I must have noticed this at the time I read the book as it's the type of detail I normally look for, but I have no recollection of it whatsoever.
I'm sure I must have noticed this at the time I read the book as it's the type of detail I normally look for, but I have no recollection of it whatsoever.

Bretnie wrote: "I think I was three stories in to What is Not Yours is Not Yours before I realized it was a short story collection and not a novel."
Ha! I bought The Exegesis of Philip K. Dick thinking it was fiction. I did realize before I started reading that it was not. (It's like the size of a small shoebox.)
Ha! I bought The Exegesis of Philip K. Dick thinking it was fiction. I did realize before I started reading that it was not. (It's like the size of a small shoebox.)


Also it’s very hard to find an unabridged copy is The Voyage of the Beagle and the abridged editions aren’t marked ‘abridged.’ Darwin’s weird observations about indigenous peoples have been excised in some editions. I’m not sure about the history here. I just happened to have read an unabridged version and then I learned that other people who had read it had no idea about what they missed.

Also it’s very hard to..."
Extremely different page design choices? Also, that's a juicy little fact you've put out there regarding Darwin, lark. I only have concrete plans to read his TOoS, but I'd be rather interested in seeing how far attempts at sanitizing this figure have gone in modern day publishing.
Jerry wrote: "This is hard to describe, but after I read Ishiguro's The Unconsoled for the first time, I felt as though something momentous had happened at the end, a big "reveal" about the unreliab..."
I have a hypothesis that Ishiguro wrote that book as a love letter to Kafka's The Castle. Considering how good that earlier author is at achieving exactly that sort of uneasily profound nonentity/banality in tone/circumstance, plus the fact that that work was never finished, it makes it seem as if TU having that effect is a sign of it having succeeded. Doesn't make it easy for the reader, but there you have it.

Books mentioned in this topic
Clarissa, or, The History of a Young Lady (other topics)The Castle (other topics)
The Unconsoled (other topics)
The Exegesis of Philip K. Dick (other topics)
What Is Not Yours Is Not Yours (other topics)
More...