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https://opensea.io/collection/books-39
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7858
@7858.eth
Lord of the Flies A bunch of boys stranded on an island descend into absolute savagery. I remember liking this in middle school, but low key dismissing it as trite assigned reading slop. Wowow this time it knocked me out. It has the character and feeling of timeless mythology, but from a modern perspective. It’s extremely misanthropic, and the only sympathetic characters are proxies for civilization and reason. It makes a convincing case that we should not take the cultural and system-level checks on human nature for granted. Watching Ralph lose his grip on the situation is more relatable as a dad of three boys. Watching Jack become a cruel tyrant is more plausible for the same reason. The symbols, like the conch and glasses, fit naturally into the story but they’re also clear enough that you don’t need to be let in on the secret. And the prose is good, too, which never hurts. Five stars by any standard. A timeless, unmissable classic.
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@jenna
the backstory includes many years teaching schoolboys (imo “schoolmaster” gives the game away) https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/p03m0vl3
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@samriti
i felt the prose was pretty bland—maybe i read it too late. i recently learnt the book was kinda intended as a mockery if The Coral Boys (couple of british chaps stranded on an island but its all sunshine and rainbows). Golding wanted to be more realistic “nah, you really expect kids to to be all yes sir, no sir in the absence of adults fuck no”
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