![]() ![]() it was written a long time ago, but it rings true to this day. whilst it seemed like nothing at the start, looking at it from another POV totally changed the perspective i had of this book. ![]() god forbid, you want to do something different than what the rest of them are doing, they'll shun you and kick you out until eventually you end up killing yourself, just like inBoil and just like Margaret. In this book, Richard Brautigan discovers and expresses the mood of the counterculture generation. they have set rules and traditions they follow, but god forbid, you're curious or you want to venture out into the forgotten works. while it seems like a nice quaint peaceful utopia, its actually a modern-day cult. Trout Fishing in America, Pill Vs Springhill Mine Disaster, in Watermelon Sugar by Brautigan, Richard (1989) Available Book Formats: trade paperback. ![]() after i finished the book, I realised that its not about the nameless narrator after all, its about Margaret. It’s a surrealist novel that focuses on rebellion. he seemed like a personality-less, sexist asshole. In Watermelon Sugar, by Richard Brautigan focuses on a settlement called iDEATH. Okay, okay okay i can get behind the peaceful, simplistic utopian life that this book seemed to portray, but the narrator pissed me off. I kept reading this book, thinking there's going to be a plot, something is going to happen. ![]()
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