2/3 of the way... this is getting really really good.
2/3 of the way... this is getting really really good.
My daughter has kindle. Should I encourage her to read it?
Or is it more like the kinda wisdom that comes from being an old fart with a Gone Girl just gone. With half of everything you worked for.
Speaking of which, I know a young man, age about 30, with a Gone Girl. If what I surmise is all true, it's the ultimate dump I've ever seen go down. Some women can be brutally vicious???
So bad I'd say Gone is a good thing.
I'd be surprised if he can come up caring about another woman inside ten years.
Even my first marriage didn't go down as badly as his. And I did my ten years being a philosopher, too.
All in all, I'm still just sorta skeptical about actually imagining anyone can be counted on, really. Nope, Gone Girl is not the sort of thing I'd go outta my way to read.
Unless it actually involves a girl who has a good reason to be Gone.
Depends how old your daughter is,... LOL... I would say if she is under 25 she's probably too young...
Hope I'm not giving anything away by saying this, but I'm glad I read this before getting married... LOL... I know it's fiction but there seems to be a lot of truth in it. I thought I know something about girls... but I don't... like, AT ALL. It was a bit of a revelation actually...
So if I read it, and got my creative impulses flowing, could I do a book just as good about a Gone Guy?
Haha.. so you've read it then???Let's be honest, who doesn't want a 'cool girl'?
Haha.. so you've read it then???
I'm a contrarian on the "cool" stuff.
Not to say it doesn't take someone on the "edge" to take me on, just not stupid enough to settle for somebody else's idea of "cool".
Haha.. "cool girl" is sort of an inside joke of the book.
I don't think you'd be interested in a "cool girl" at all actually. Not one bit. You're probably as different to the protagonist as it gets if I'm completely honest witchu.
well, I bet I know some women who'd make the protagonist look like a Sunday School children's teacher. . . . . .
maybe I oughta read the book before I brag.
Haha... well didn't feel like forking out $$$ to get kindle.
Absolutely not. Read the book. I struggle with how they'll adapt it into a book and still maintain the integrity of the book, quite frankly.
Ya the ending sucked.Just finished the book - thanks bro for suggesting it.
I really loved the first 3/4 of the book. Like, really loved it - couldn't put it down it was so enthralling. But then came the ending chapters... boy was I disappointed. No spoilers here so I won't go into all the details, but I really felt let down. It could have been done much better, a bit of an anti-climax if you ask me. Or may be I had too much expectation? I dunno... would be interested to hear someone else's opinion on this.
I'd heard the movie has a different ending (Flynn also wrote the screen play), got a couple of free tickets so I might check it out this week or next.... let's hope the "new" ending is a bit better though.
Yup.+3 for the ending sucking. But I've thought some about it, and I really can't think of another way it could have ended.
+3 for the ending sucking. But I've thought some about it, and I really can't think of another way it could have ended.
+3 for the ending sucking. But I've thought some about it, and I really can't think of another way it could have ended.
******SPOILERS**********
****SPOILERS****
When I read this last summer I too felt a bit let down with the ending. Over the last 15-20 pages or so, I was just waiting for Nick or the female detective to catch her in a lie or think of some way to turn the tides on her. But you can't. That's the whole point. She's thought everything through. Ten times. And backwards, and side-to-side, and frontward again, and then inside out. Amy's come up with every scenario and planned for it. And as I thought about that more, I grew to love the ending. In the movie, I think it used this metaphor with about 30 minutes left. In the book, I think it was on the last page. Amy was a spider. And she wove her web and there was no escaping it. Nick was invariably tied to her. For life.