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Wednesday Weekly: Those Saddest Books

Saddest Books

It’s time for The Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge, hosted by Long and Short Reviews. The topic for June 23 is Saddest Book(s) I’ve Ever Read. So here we are, talking about a few tearjerkers.

Look, don’t judge me. Crying can have an emotionally cathartic effect. I mean, all those tragedies were created for a reason!

1 / Les Misérables by Victor Hugo

Long back in school, we read a story called ‘The Bishop’s Candlesticks’ . I so loved the Bishop’s kindness and reformatory tactics that I bought the translated adaptation of Les Misérables. I thought it would have a happy ending— I lived in the illusion that good people always ended up with happy endings. What a sapskull I was! I cried throughout, and bitterly hated Cozette and her husband. Jean Valjean, of course, is the most complete Noble Idiot ever created (not!), and of course, I love him. Sniff!

2 / The Fault in Our Stars by John Green

When you have a heroine and a hero who are witty teenagers and who have terminal illness and who fall in ‘first love’ with each other — of course, it’s bound to end up in tears. There are people who call such books emotionally manipulative, because diseases and star-crossed love will inevitably tug at the heart-strings. But there are some great ‘aha’ moments, great ‘feel-good’ moments. And then there are the tears, which may alarm your family, but will make you rethink your priorities.

3 / Helen Keller’s Teacher by by Margaret Davidson

Some of you may have seen the movies ‘Johnny Belinda’, ‘Black’ or a ‘Patch of Blue’… about a dually disabled girl and her mentor / teacher. Well, Helen Keller was real, and and had the misfortune of being both deaf and blind. Had it not been for her determined teacher, Anne Sullivan, she would never have gotten a degree from Radcliffe College and managed to survive. The saddest but most beautiful scene is the scene where Helen first learns to say ‘water’.

4 / A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens

Every one should cry when reading the ending of this book. Sydney Carter considers his wasted life well-spent when he sacrifices himself to save the husband of the girl he loves. The undeserving (in my biased opinion) husband is Sydney’s look-alike, and this tale of sacrifice unfolds like a ball of knitting yarn (pun intended) during the French Revolution. Argh, Lucy, if only you had chosen differently — and I would really like to bang her head against the wall a few times!

5 / The Time is Noon by Pearl S. Buck

Pearl S. Buck wrote very realistic stories, full of ordinary people who lead desperate and lonely ordinary lives. Her books are unremittingly honest, laying bare the soul of her lead characters — and yours too in the process. Time is Noon speaks of that painful place when one is left without a good choice. Between the devil and the deep blue sea is our heroine when her father dies. Still, she stays optimistic and carries on. There is one place where she asks her friend, “Should the lion suffer because it is strong (and is able to bear it)?” and I wept.

6 / Tess of the d’Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy

Hardy, that inordinately pessimistic author, threw his characters continuously in very unfortunate circumstances, with no second chances at lasting happiness. Tess is raped and suffers a miscarriage; she goes into hiding where her protests against marriage are all but ignored by her lover; her husband abandons her on learning her secret; her rapist seduces her into adultery; and then she is stoned to death— right before her husband decides to take her back! UGH%#?!@%??!!#. I wept not only with sadness, but also with anger.

7 / Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky

What is it about repenting for one’s sins and reforming that makes for such a truly moving read? Is it the possibility of seeing one’s innate goodness finally prevail? Raskolnikov is a poor but brilliant student. In a fit of ideological and frenzied desperation, he murders his creditor. What follows is a masterful psychological analysis of the strange workings of human guilt, conscience, confession, remorse — but always with heaps of compassion.

Anne Frank - The Saddest Diary
8 / The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank

The last book here is a 1947 book, which is all true and so is possibly the saddest. This remarkable diary was written by teenager Anne when she was in hiding with her family during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands. Anne writes about all the things that matter to young girls, but always in the background is the inescapable fact that she lives in hiding. In 2009, UNESCO included the diary in the Memory of the World Register.

Alright, tell me about the saddest books that YOU have read. Don’t worry about the pathos, crying can be good for you. Really.

25 replies on “Wednesday Weekly: Those Saddest Books”

Well, Fault in Our Stars is a good place to start. Weepy, but also feel-good. The author’s done a good blend. Or you can just watch the movie. 🙂

I’ve heard of — but have never been brave enough to try — Red Fern Grows. I think it is kid lit? Middle Grade fiction? I always expect such books would end on hopeful / happy notes — another sapskull thought!

Aaah this is a great idea! If I can still remember tomorrow, I’ll write it in my diary to remember next time.

My saddest books: Captain Corelli’s Mandolin. I cried for seven days and seven nights and that is not exaggeration. Leaving Time. Flip, I still cry. The last train to London. Ugly cried. The light between Oceans. I’m tearing up just typing here.
Dead Poets’ Society (book and movie)
An officer and a gentleman (only the book made me cry)

Oh and An Introduction to Algebra. LOL!!!

Hope you are having a good week my friend.

Oh my goodness, so many new recs! Thank you, thank you. I remember they made movies for Dead Poets’ Society and Captain Corelli’s Mandolin — guess it’s time to bring on the tears!

I hate to cry so I avoid tear-jerkers if I can! I read A Tale of Two Cities and Tess of the d’Urbervilles for school. I disliked them both, but I dislike almost anything I’m forced to read. I did buy A Tale of Two Cities to re-read at some point but I haven’t tackled it yet.

I haven’t read Les Miserables but I love the musical so much! I shouldn’t love it because I hate crying but the music is so beautiful, I can’t resist it.

I read Anne Frank a few years ago. It was so sad to read it, knowing how her life ended. I had to wonder how her life would have unfolded if she’d never been sent to the camps or if she’d survived.

Great list!

Hmm… I definitely never re-read any of the tragedies. But those ugly-cry times tend to stay on the mind for years after. I still haven’t seen the movie for Les Miserables, really really need to!

Nice list! The only one of these I’ve read is The Diary of a Young Girl, though there have been other sad books in my life. Most of the ones I can think of right now, though, are books where the animal friend dies (see: Where the Red Fern Grows and The Red Pony) and I don’t generally recommend those.

I’ve heard of Where the Red Fern Grows, but never of The Red Pony. And now I want to dig my own grave by wanting to read them both!

I re-read The Diary of Anne Frank last month and yep, you know how it ends but you still can’t help but cry. There are several books that I can remember that have made me cry – The Book Thief and Me Before You are books I loved but definitely had a good cry after.

Me Before You! I remember all the buzz over the movie, and then forgot all about it. I love those actors, so I really need to go watch that soon~

I did cry on some of these.
But my record is with Home of the Brave
by Katherine Applegate. I didn’t write a review, but on Goodreads, I wrote, “OMG Home of the Brave, I started crying page 16 and didn’t stop until I reached the last page 2 hours later.” (yes, very short)
very powerful and emotional story. About emigration

Sorry for getting back so late here. Home of the Brave has a wonderful title to start off with, and I can totally see why it would be so moving!

I (secretly) maintain that crying can make you feel lighter. So happy crying is all good. I haven’t read “Wonder”, so I guess that’s next to weep over!

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