Atticus Finch was one of my earliest heroes. Go Set A Watchman is on my “Never Going to Read” list.
Atticus Finch was one of my earliest heroes. Go Set A Watchman is on my “Never Going to Read” list.
Filed under Books






| mindful webworker on Bits & Bytes | |
| bluebird of bitterne… on Bits & Bytes | |
| chrissythehyphenated on Bits & Bytes | |
| bluebird of bitterne… on Bits & Bytes | |
| chrissythehyphenated on Bits & Bytes | |
| bluebird of bitterne… on Bits & Bytes | |
| chrissythehyphenated on Presidents Day | |
| mindful webworker on Presidents Day | |
| mindful webworker on Bits & Bytes | |
| chrissythehyphenated on Spam Callers | |
| bluebird of bitterne… on Spam Callers | |
| chrissythehyphenated on Spam Callers | |
| mindful webworker on Spam Callers |


This reviewer may hope that the classic has not been “irrevocably tainted,” but that’s a false hope now, IMO.
LikeLike
No more than a movie “ruins” a book. As an author once said, “The book is still there. Go read it.”
LikeLike
I think this is worse. The movie has not really added info to the book, unless the author was involved and purposely changed the story. Even then, the book is still there, as you say. But if the author reveals new info in another book, it can completely spoil the nature of the first book.
It’s the old “spoiled wine” analogy. You thought the wine was very good and you had a wonderful evening until the host told you that a single drop of human sewage had been added to your goblet. Knowing this, you can not go back and “read the book.” The book has been changed by revealed knowledge.
LikeLike
True … which is why I will not be reading Watchman.
LikeLike