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Sofien valinta – tekijä: William Styron
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Sophie's Choice

– tekijä: William Styron

JäseniäKirja-arvostelutSuosituimmuussija:Keskimääräinen arvioKeskustelut
2,295361,344 (4.15)68

arvostelu, jonka siafl on tehnyt

One of the most well-written book I've read to date, Sophie's Choice is like a Beethoven symphony - perhaps Pastorale was in Styron's mind while he wrote the novel, as that title came up more than once as I recall - and one needs to take care reading it to comprehend how truly remarkable this book is.

I thought, through most of the pages, that the choice in Sophie's Choice refers to the fact that Sophie tangles with two men in her life and she has a choice to make. Of course, I was fooled through 500 plus pages of wading through heavy but incredibly beautiful and stunning prose until that powerful and shocking revelation. I did find the book thick at times, especially through the middle, but I was drawn deeply to Styron's mastery of words. I found myself wanting to learn from the work, not just its wealth of fresh words, but the shrewdness in the way Styron sees and describes things, his approach, and everything else about his process as a writer, which he so cleverly encapsulates in Stingo's character.

I loved the many references to classical music and literature. It's not easy to finish, but it's an important book to read and I believe it's one of the best books I've read.
1 ääni siafl | Nov 7, 2009 |

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I hate this book. I tried for over 3 months to swallow this slop and made it to page 96. Styron's writing is horrid! It takes him a paragraph to say a sentence, several pages to make a point. It's ridiculous. The vocabulary diarrhea is unappealing. I don't even know where the plot was going. So, I gave up. I'm glad I never had to read this for any classes. ( )
  FMRox | Dec 21, 2009 |
One of the most well-written book I've read to date, Sophie's Choice is like a Beethoven symphony - perhaps Pastorale was in Styron's mind while he wrote the novel, as that title came up more than once as I recall - and one needs to take care reading it to comprehend how truly remarkable this book is.

I thought, through most of the pages, that the choice in Sophie's Choice refers to the fact that Sophie tangles with two men in her life and she has a choice to make. Of course, I was fooled through 500 plus pages of wading through heavy but incredibly beautiful and stunning prose until that powerful and shocking revelation. I did find the book thick at times, especially through the middle, but I was drawn deeply to Styron's mastery of words. I found myself wanting to learn from the work, not just its wealth of fresh words, but the shrewdness in the way Styron sees and describes things, his approach, and everything else about his process as a writer, which he so cleverly encapsulates in Stingo's character.

I loved the many references to classical music and literature. It's not easy to finish, but it's an important book to read and I believe it's one of the best books I've read. ( )
1 ääni siafl | Nov 7, 2009 |
My first umambiguous thought is that I really, really liked this book. And I almost feel guilty saying that, because the subject matter was so heavy and sad, that it feels wrong to say that I enjoyed reading it. Yes, there were some parts that were very sad, and shocking, and horrible, but Styron kept you on your toes as a reader, waiting until the very end to find out the truth about Sophie and Nathan, revealing things piece by piece, getting to the very core of his characters and their experiences. The characters were all multi-dimensional and easy to sympathize with, even Nathan, once I learned that he was psychotic and on drugs and couldn't really help his horrible behavior. They were all characters that came from broken places. The writing was beautiful and I was sucked in from page one.

I haven't read any books on the Holocaust, and in fact on our family vacation to Washington, DC last month, actively campaigned to skip the Holocaust Museum, knowing how gut-wrenching it would be to see, or even learn about any of that. Now I am sorry I missed it. I had no idea that the Holocaust affected so many people of all ages, and not all of them Jewish or German.

What I found most interesting at many times during the book was how Styron would take Nazi characters like Hoss, his daughter Emmi, or the doctor on the platform, reveal them one moment as unfeeling automatons who believed and did as they were commanded, but then in the next paragraph would show something of their humanity, showing that even inside terrible people is something human we can relate to. Everyone in the book had a dirty secret or guilt that they were trying to live with, whether they were Nazi or not. In the end, we're all human and imperfect.

I am reading my way through the Modern Library's Top 100 Board's books, and out of Books 100-96, it was the only one so far that I sank into and never wanted to resurface. Totally recommended. ( )
1 ääni Socrmom78 | Oct 9, 2009 |
Ik vind de film met Meryl Streep, één van mijn favoriete actrices, geweldig. Maar het boek is eigenlijk nog beter. Prima karakters, sfeerbeschrijving en tijdsbeeld. ( )
  biebfilmpie | Sep 30, 2009 |
I read this (sort of) once before, in 1985 after seeing the movie. I remember I was traveling on a plane from New Mexico (where I lived at the time) to Seattle (to visit family). I had the book on the plane & had been reading it, but having a hard time with it & when I left the plane I left the book without finishing it. Leaving a book behind is extremely unusual for me - I never go anywhere without a book & I just about always finish just about everything. I decided that I just wasn't meant to read this book if I'd left it behind. I was 22. I had equal trouble with Lie Down in Darkness - just couldn't get through it. I loved his book on his own struggles with depression - Darkness Visible - I thought it was one of the truest pieces of writing about depression that I had ever read. I figured eventually I'd get back to his fiction.

I picked up Sophie's Choice again as part of a reading challenge - to read some American prize winning books & compare them. I'm glad I did. This one won the National Book Award. Styron can write & he can tell a story - painful though it may be. I loved the craft of this book, the interplay of language & the brick-by-brick-by-word-by-word deftness of his creations - Stingo, Sophie, & Nathan & long ago far away Brooklyn.

As much a meditation on his younger days as a fledgling writer as it is a Holocaust story, this novel is also a Southerner's rumination on what it means to be Southern, to be liberal, to have lived through the horrors perpetrated by the Nazis & to see similar horrors perpetrated in your home (see also, slavery & lynchings). There are aspects of this book that remind me very clearly of North Toward Home - Willie Morris' wonderful memoir about being a Southerner among Northern intellectuals. Styron beautifully captures Stingo's naivete & self-conscious youth as he struggles with his first novel.

Equally well-drawn are the doomed Nathan & Sophie - their mutual histories of madness & despair intertwined in fatal & beautiful ways. It is worth remembering that more than Europe's Jews were caught up in the Nazi insanity - Sophie's story is just one of many.

This is a difficult, painful & ultimately worthwhile novel. Read it - you won't regret it. ( )
  kraaivrouw | May 20, 2009 |
In a review by the Washington Post, the novel Sophie’s Choice was named “Styron's most impressive performance....It belongs on that small shelf reserved for American masterpieces.” Sophie’s Choice by William Styron is the tragic story of two doomed lovers, each with unbearable secrets and anguish whose lives become fatally intertwined in a whirlwind of torment and catastrophe. Styron’s novel, although fictional, accurately portrays the horrifying conditions and long-term effects of the Holocaust, although it is not merely another novel about this historical nightmare. The book covers all dimensions of human life - the suffering and tragedy, yes - but also the hope.

Styron’s novel is set in Brooklyn, New York, in the year 1947. The story is told by the narrator, Stingo, who, much like Styron, is an aspiring writer. The novel is set up as if an older Stingo is writing and reflecting on his time spent in New York in 1947, just a few years after the war ended and the horrors of the concentration camps were made public. The narrator Stingo is a struggling writer who befriends the eccentric and inevitably doomed couple: Sophie, a Holocaust survivor with a haunting secret and unbelievable past, and Nathan, the demonically brilliant man suffering from a variety of mental disorders. The relationship between Nathan and Sophie can be tender and loving in one instant, and then fall to pieces the next, with Nathan hurling cutting insults at Sophie and even resorting to terrible acts of violence and abuse. As their relationship begins spiraling out of control, Sophie turns to Stingo and piece by piece reveals to him the horrifying secrets of her past.

Sophie’s Choice is an absolutely brilliant novel, which manages to accurately show the reader the horrors of the Holocaust through the eyes of a realistic, sympathetic character. Although this book is fictional there is most likely a person, or perhaps even many people, who were like Sophie and witnessed all the horrors and atrocities that she had witnessed. There are probably also people who, like Sophie, were given the horrifying choice of choosing between her two children; which one would be killed instantly at the crematoriums of Birkenau and which would be allowed to live in the work camps of Auschwitz. In addition, the novel also investigates another terrible aspect of life, mental illness. This is shown through the character of Nathan, Sophie’s demonically brilliant lover who has the capacity to contribute wonderful things to the world through his remarkable talent, but is never able to “get his head in order.” The odd pairing of Holocaust survivor and schizophrenic creates a tragic though poignant novel that closely examines the darker, more disturbing and terrifying side of human life.

Although Sophie’s Choice is about incredibly emotional and heartrending topics, the narrator Stingo is able to alleviate the gloom with his own commentaries and insights, as well as his sense of humor. As Sophie relays her stories to Stingo, Stingo comments on her stories and further investigates the history surrounding them. Through the character of Stingo the reader is also allowed a side story that doesn’t directly involve the tragic couple of Sophie and Nathan. Stingo also comments on the nature of writing and being a writer, perhaps Styron’s own views concerning his own writing.

Sophie’s Choice is an absolute must-read novel. The novel is valuable not only for its incredibly realistic information about the horrors of the holocaust, but it also dives beneath the surface of these horrors, commenting on the darker, more sinister side of human nature. The novel also deals with topics that are extremely timely and applicable today such as death, mental illness, grief, guilt etc. In addition, the storyline is brilliant and extremely interesting, offering a great and worthwhile read that really forces you to think deeply about the issues in the novel. I highly recommend Sophie’s Choice as it is an insightful, interesting and worthwhile read. ( )
  emilyfitz | May 13, 2009 |
It began far funnier than I thought it would be. There was also a lot of sex. Still — my god — how depressing. ( )
  funkaoshi | Apr 28, 2009 |
Patinka, įdomu skaityti, kaip amerikietis aprašo antrąjį pasaulinį karą ir jo baisumus. Suprantu, kaip vienpusiškai ir tik viena kryptimi (vokietija-rusija) mes vertinam įvykius.
Tai didžiausias ir įspūdingiausias W. Styrono romanas. Beprotiškos įtampos sklidinas pasakojimas nukelia į prieškario Lenkiją, Antrojo pasaulinio karo metų Krokuvą ir Varšuvą. Knygos herojės Sofi lemtingasis pasirinkimas – baisioji jos paslaptis. Išlikusi gyva, kankinama kaltės, 1947 m. Sofi atsiduria Niujorke, čia sutinka savo gelbėtoją ir piktąjį demoną Nataną. Jų liguistą, beviltišką meilę iki pat atomazgos stebi ir aprašo bičiulis Stingas, pradedantysis rašytojas, jaunatviškai įsimylėjęs Sofi.
Rašytojas talentingai susieja subtilią psichologinę individo dramą su pasaulio tragizmu ir dar kartą įrodo, jog „absoliutus blogis yra neišnaikinamas“. Knygos įtaigumą sustiprina tai, jog autorius pažinojo Sofi prototipą. Beje, 1980 m. Lenkijoje romanas buvo uždraustas.
  sandrute | Mar 31, 2009 |
It's been a long time since I've read this novel, but I'm still can remember the powerful emotions I felt reading this story of a Polish survivor of the Holocaust and a young man from the South who befriend one another in Brooklyn in the late 1940's. It's both laugh out loud funny and incredibly depressing, tragic yet inspiring. ( )
  Othemts | Feb 5, 2009 |
One of those books everyone else loved and I loathed. I thought the book was pointless and overwrought, rather like Meryl Streep's acting in the film of the same name. ( )
1 ääni Savondujour | Jan 30, 2009 |
American classic
  ptzop | Nov 28, 2008 |
American classic
  ptzop | Nov 27, 2008 |
What a great book! I learned a lot about the WW II era from this book. It provided me with a new perspective on the Holocaust. ( )
  russelllindsey | Sep 3, 2008 |
Poolse vrouw moet, door de nazi's gedwongen, de hartverscheurende keuze maken tussen haar twee kinderen. Zij overleeft het concentratiekamp en komt in de VS terecht, waar ze een relatie krijgt met een man die bij tijd en wijle helemaal doorslaat, wat haar voor de keuze plaatst bij hem te blijven of hem te verlaten. Er ontstaat vriendschap met een nieuwe huurder, die haar verhaal optekent. ( )
  cpav55 | Aug 17, 2008 |
Just as the holocaust was the ultimate example of cruelty that goes beyond imagining, this novel demonstrates the strength of the human spirit to survive despite having undergone the most vicious evil the world has ever known. The cruelty that Sophie has experienced is overwhelming in its magnitude, and her choice to live means a lifetime of self recrimination. Styron's own bouts with depression are obvious "drivers" of the plot and its characters. If you finish this book with your heart intact, read it again. There is indomitable strength and hope in Sophie that will make all of us re-examine our own darkest hours. ( )
  pdebolt | Jun 19, 2008 |
Filmen er bedre. Streep har nok betydet en del for Styrons popularitet. ( )
  Tonny | Apr 12, 2008 |
Poor - a superficial overview of the main men in philisophy ( )
  stveggy | Mar 27, 2008 |
3128 Sophie's Choice, by William Styron (read 13 Nov 1998) (National Book Award fiction prize in 1980) I believe I have never read a more grossly deliberately obscene book than this and that of course detracted mightily from the fairly powerful story Styron tells. His "I" is a guy like himself, and he in the novel is writing a book like Lie Down in Darkness and thinking about writing about Nat Turner. He meets Sophie, and her Jewish boyfriend Nathan. Sophie was at Auschwitz, and Nathan is crazy. Much time in the book is spent detailing sex between Sophie and Nathan, and all three characters come off as utterly immoral persons with no conscience at all. The writing, when it can tear itself away from its obsession with detailing sex crudely and explicitly, has a certain power, but so much is inane and overblown that I conclude it is not great writing, though it certainly tries to be. There were times when I was quite carried away by the story, but Sophie is such a nymphomaniac, and the I character is so sex-obsessed, that my reaction is mostly one of disgust when I think of the book. The book has not, in toto, been a good experience. ( )
1 ääni Schmerguls | Dec 9, 2007 |
Incredible novel of the war, and how it forces choices that are unimaginable. Beautiful prose! ( )
  shieldsk2 | Nov 28, 2007 |
Well plotted, great characters. I read it in Germany and wrote Styron a letter. Lo and behold, he wrote back--on a note dated Christmas Day 1980. A very kind gesture. ( )
  ostrom | Nov 27, 2007 |
When Stingo moves to New York he meets Sophie and Nathan. Throughout his time there, Sophie starts to tell him her story. This is a great and moving book about how even though the war technically ends, its effects are longstanding and inescapable. ( )
  Amzzz | Sep 21, 2007 |
The First Line:

’In those days cheap apartments were almost impossible to find in Manhattan, so I had to move to Brooklyn.”

The Setting:

Brooklyn, New York, 1947, Pre-war Poland, Auschwitz.


If you have not read the novel ‘Sophie’s Choice’, I would recommend that you do so immediately, if you have read it, then read it again for the passion, the beauty of the writing and the insights it inspires.

It has now been over a week since I put down this novel, finished in a frantic late night read – a book startlingly vivid and realistic with a brilliancy about it that we search for in our reading but rarely find. Here we witness the author’s exploration of acts of racism, evil, compassion, hope and redemption. The novel underscores the basic truth that we all face when reading about such themes – which is the potential for evil existing everywhere and sometimes arising in the most unlikely people.

The character of Stingo is wonderfully portrayed – a young, struggling writer in Brooklyn, New York. Stingo is naïve, full of raw energy, wildly imaginative and yet so very believable. He befriends a Polish beauty, Sophie, a Polish-Catholic Auschwitz survivor, and her boyfriend, the unpredictable, violent Jewish intellectual, Nathan.

Twenty-two year-old Stingo jumps off the page and into the psyche as a wonderful, flawed, naïve character - his love of words., his passionate caring for Sophie (and her suitor Nathan), his unwavering curiosity. No matter how serious, comic, tragic or depraved the situation of Stingo – there is never an unbelievable moment.

Styron takes us through many themes – the worst abuses of the American South — both its slave-holding past and the lynchings of the 1947 present, Nazi anti-Semitism, humankind’s immense capability for evil and suffering, the Holocaust with the treatment of Jews and Slavs, mental illness (paranoid schizophrenia), love, hate, violence, sexual fantasy and yearning., the disgrace of an anti-Semitic father, survival in the wartime ruins of Warsaw, and the intense suffering of Sophie and Nathan, victims of intense guilt and madness respectively.

The book has been banned from many libraries world wide for Styron's use of profanity and graphic sexuality throughout the novel. At some points, I felt this aspect became distracting, even distressing in it's rawness, but in truth, the portrayal was probably totally true to a internal workings of a young male, and it is my puritanical biases that influenced my reaction, not the content or quality of writing.

I cannot praise this book enough. It is extremely well written. Styron's descriptions of people, events and places are all vivid, bringing to everything a reality that must be the envy of all other writers. The prose emits intense passion, soulfulness and gives the reader a sense of resonant energy for the events. I was swept along with Stingo as he matured – his experiences of joy, sadness and revelation so sharp it made me yearn for that vibrancy of my own early youth. Read this book, NOW.

Quote of William Styron: "A great book should leave you...slightly exhausted at the end."

A cautionary quote from a note Flaubert sent his mistress which was pasted on the door of Styron's studio: "Be regular and ordinary in your life, like a bourgeois, so that you may be violent and original in your work." ( )
4 ääni kiwidoc | Aug 2, 2007 |
Styron, William. Sophie's Choice. Vintage International, New York, 1976. A sad story, beautifully told. This is a book that makes you think about the nature of evil and the effect it has on the lives of ordinary people. Some things to ponder when reading, or re-reading, this book. How unreliable a narrator is Sophie? How much can we believe about her story and character? Second, why is there so much sex in the book? It seems completely extraneous and distracting. What purpose does it serve in the story? These are the questions that occur to me; I haven't taken the time to think up satisfactory answers. When I reread the novel, that's what I'll do. ( )
  BrianDewey | Jul 30, 2007 |
Pray you never have to make Sophie's Choice. ( )
  DaveFragments | Apr 19, 2007 |
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