Trash you were forced to read at school and things that annoyed you general.
We had to do a fake court room for the last week of class were everyone in the class created ten different questions about the book and you had to sit out the front and be asked randomly by a student. It was the worst test which determined if you past the unit with idiots asking questions like ''On page 23 what colours are listed'' still salty to this day.
THIS FORCED SJW HORSESHIT. Seriously black people are super entertaining but why is it that when they write it comes out super fucking boring? Or was that more just cause she was a woman than a nigger?
This book sucked. It's the lowest of the low of holocaust suffering porn. We also read The Silver Sword and that was much better.
This, looking back on it its fucking hilarious but it fucking sucked to get through in HS.
>>10018100
I bet this book is solely responsible for the phenomenon of teens and manchildren self-diagnosing with autism and claiming to be geniuses.
>>10018118
I don't know how anyone could claim autists are geniuses after reading a book about a tard who's dad killed a dog because he was sick of his tard antics, and then went on a "journey" to find his mom and her new boyfriend who also hate him.
>>10018143
That's how edgy teens interpret it, anon. When I was in high school everyone talked about how the main character is so cool and totally like them.
>>10018149
That's fucking hilarious, all the people who had to read it with me made fun of him for being a shit smearing autist.
>>10018100
>>10018118
>>10018143
>>10018149
So, what if I read it with sympathy but didn't really identify with the character except insofar as it's sad that he thought his mother was dead, and I was happy for him at the end when he was able to take the test at the end, since it was obviously important to him?
Also, the dad killed the dog because he was angry that the dog's owner didn't want his dick.
>>10018225
>shit smearing
He would want nothing to do with shit because it's brown.
During my bachelor degree I had to write self-reflection reports on the progress of my studies. I spend more time on writing those things than studying.
Thank god I didn't have to write those anymore during my masters.
>>10018243
>So, what if I read it with sympathy but didn't really identify with the character except insofar as it's sad that he thought his mother was dead, and I was happy for him at the end when he was able to take the test at the end, since it was obviously important to him?
That's how a normal person is supposed to read it.
>>10018243
I might have been sympathetic if I wasn't forced to read it in high-school. I've been put off by a some well acclaimed books because reading stuff in American schools is shit.