R
RebeccaJ
Guest
I read them when I was an atheist and recall nothing about Catholicism. But then at the time, I wouldn’t have known if something were Catholic or not. That is one of the interesting things about being Catholic now, all the stuff I find that is referenced from, by or about Catholicism. Lots of aha moments, about things I didn’t see before, at all.And his Ender series became more and more tedious while painting a grotesque picture of Catholicism. I read the first three of the series and was so disappointed and exasperated by the third book that I never read another of his books. I must have 4 or 5 of his books, my extended family has always been great about giving me books by authors that I’m reading and Card was no exception so I have them but I won’t be reading them. He may well have written other more entertaining books but after the tedium, lame plot twists, and dangling plots, and his ugly presentation of Catholicism in the last one I read I won’t be bothering with Card again.
I’m not going to go back and read them though. I enjoyed reading them at the time, and I used to read a lot of scifi/fantasy, but now I find all of the genre tedious. I haven’t been able to make it through one in years.
I tried to read Stephanie Meyers’ teenage vampire books, because my daughter was into them. I couldn’t do it, and then fell asleep in the movie, the movie being as tedious as the books. That one struck me that she was incorporating Mormon gods as vampires…all light and goodness and even chaste. I found the behavior of the main male character to be ridiculously manipulative, and little girls all over swooning over him. bleh.
The newest teenagers-fighting-to-the-death story is Hunger Games, I just read it because it is a hot topic among the field I work in and so wanted to see what all the fuss is about. It wasn’t quite as bad as shiny teenage vampires fighting to the death. I actually made it through the whole thing, but can’t find enough interest to read the next one.