I know exactly what you mean. I really enjoyed Dostoyevsky. In addition to truly appreciating Crime and Punishment I also derived a great deal from The Brothers Karamazov......these works have so much depth and complexity, and his writing style is really gripping.Originally posted by C Elegans
Leo Tolstoy: I know War and Peace is supposed to be a true masterpiece, and it certainly belongs to the world literature. I like many of Tolstoy's contemporaries, and I like the classic and modern Russian literature in general. Maybe I'm unfair and I was very young when I read him, but Tolstoy just bored me to tears. On the other hand, I read Dostoyevsky prior to Tolstoy, still I felt Crime and Punishment and Notes from the underground gave me much more than War and Peace and Anna Karenina.
Tolstoy on the other hand...... I was truly bored by Anna Karenina, and despite many attempts I still have not managed to read more than about 50 pages of War and Peace . It might be Tolstoy's characters or maybe it is his writing style....but I just can't read him without dropping off to sleep. I once actually successfully combatted insomnia by picking up Tolstoy
Another great I dislike is William Faulkner.....for me....that stream of consciousness style.....is utterly claustrophobic.
I also intensely disliked the one movie that came out around the early/mid nineties.....The Cook, the Thief, his wife, and her Lover . All the art/movies critics raved about it, but I found that it was a sensory overload. And although it is very different in nature I didn't much like The Red Violin for fairly similar reasons.