What is it about though? The title doesn't give a whole lot away.
MountainDrew said:Just got done reading of Mice and Men. I liked it a lot better than to Kill a Mockingbird.
It depends on what you mean by "emotionally rattling." Frederick Douglass's narrative was very sad and heart wrenching at times, due to his descriptions of some of the beatings he witnesses. Maggie by Stephen Crane can be emotional at times. Spoiler: It's about a poor Irish girl, who dreams of escaping poverty, but doesn't make it. She experiences way too many hardships and nothing good happens to her. It's really sad. Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe is usually seen as very emotionally heartbreaking. Girl in Hyacinth Blue by Susan Vreeland is about a painting that appears in many different lives over the course of time, which I found emotional. The Madonnas of Leningrad by Debra Dean is about a guide at the Hermitage during the fall of Leningrad. I liked that a lot.Jay said:I enjoyed reading your post, momoxmomo. Could you recommend me some literature that is very 'emotionally rattling' but still of high literary merit?
Ice Jackal said:These are some nice comments, momo. Allow me to clear only one point. You said Moby has no plot and it is 600+ pages of nonsense. In fact, it's not. Herman Melville's books (Moby, White Jacket, Billy Budd) aren't centered around a plot, but around life at sea. Moby is an amazingly detailed diary of the life on a whale-hunting ship. White Jacket is the same for a warship. If you like that stuff (and I personally do), then the books are a great read. Otherwise, they'll seem long and tiring.
Anyway, I recently re-read The Sandman by Miles Gibson. I won't openly recommend it, because there's a good chance it won't appeal to many. It's basically the diary of a serial killer and the way he saw life. It's very hard to find here in Greece, but it might be easier in the States or the UK.