Snap Black-and-White Judgments (Book: I Love Brock Turner)
- gali
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Re: Snap Black-and-White Judgments (Book: I Love Brock Turne
lol Indeed.P_hernandez wrote: Feeling strongly about a book is good, yes. But I don't think this strength is exactly what was hoped for lol.

I also don't believe in unconditional love by the way, but I still thought it was a good book with a great message, and liked it.
- bookscorp_mumbai
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I absolutely agree with you that people love to be judges and would nail a person to the cross without so much as even stepping in their shoes. This happens especially with writers. My debut novel was criticized by a reader here who is from the US and I know that you guys have had an overdose of pro boxing. Anyways, I have not read the book in question but I agree with you that things should not be judged in a haste.
Rajesh
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This quote stick with me ever since I read it.
The very gist of this booklet is in my opinion to not cast aside empathy.
I could give two recent reads I had as example for marvelous work that left me conflicted in the terms of whether or not to feel empathy for the character.
The first one is Ishida Sui's masterpiece called Tokyo Ghoul. and if you start with "oh comics are for kids" just stop right there, because this isn't for kids. (spoiler ahead***)
In recent chapters of Tokyo Ghoul we only get the unraveled story of a serial killer nicknamed "Torso" because he dismembered his victims. The guy was raised in a single father living in the woods in a tent "household". The fathers main focus was to get food for himself. Torso was never educated because he was a ghoul (ghouls are human flesh eating monsters) so they didn't mix with humans. Then one day Torso met a girl who was human, but became his one and only friend. taught him to read and they had pretty mainstream teen relationship. when she was running away from home Torso let her stay in his tent because his father was nowhere to be seen for months!
plot twist is that the father comes home and thinks the girl is his sons prey so he hauls her and dismembers her, whereas Torso wakes up and discovers the gruesome scene.
he blacks out and kills his father and develops a craving to regain his friend by the same manner because after years the only thing he remembers is the scent so he replicates the murder like he saw his father do it.
but Torsos fate is met by a half ghoul called Mutsuki that Torso kidnaps and dismembers (they have regenerating powers so they wont die of something like loosing a limb.) but he doesn't know that Mutsuki is not the average sweet quiet girl but a repressed mass murderer who was abused by her family and pardoned of the murder after she repressed her memory and decided to join the anti-ghoul forces, altering her gender to be taken seriously.
so after Mutsuki has had enough blacks out and kills Torso in a manner it isn't comparative and Torsos way of murder looks like a kitten play with a feather compared to this.
So there's the real dilemma as to whom do we should feel empathy? to Torso who "wasn't taught better" or Mutsuki who "did it to survive"
the other recent read I have is Stephen King's Rose Madder.
the main characters husband is an overly abusive and manipulative brute. he has this sentence to "I wanna talk with you, but up real close." which comes from his own father who was a drunkard and abused him when he was little tormenting him the same way. so should we hate him too for abusing his wife or should we pity him for not knowing anything better and not being taught and raised better?
like Scott said in his book love is really hard.
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[quote]
I do do things to help victims, I spread the word about the horror of the bad people, anywhere online, as well as in life when I hear people say I'm gonna f-word that chick, or that's a nice piece of a-word, I go and tell them that they are jerks and that they should be incarcerated for the things they say or at least that they are the problem of this world. But it's funny that you never hit my point of the other thing I said about terrorists and Israel, my home country and Jews my people, especially when you wrote that terrorists shouldn't be hated, and did you get to the part where I said hitler should be hated? Do you disagree? Scott you really should read the whole paragraph, just like I read your book!!
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bookowlie wrote:Greenstripedgiraffe -Well said.

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