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Books that have made you cry
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I didn't think the last book was executed very well, so I think it was more my imagination thinking of Molly Weasly and the boggart when Fred died. I thought that was just awful. I think it would have made me cry, but I just remember feeling that the Battle of Hogwarts was so jumbled when I read it. But that's just my opinion :3

I think I've cried at other points during that series too but I can't think of specific scenes.
The "worst" book for me though was the final book in the His Dark Materials series by Phil Pullman. I wept almost non-stop through the last 30-40 pages. I actually had to take breaks and calm down so I could keep reading without my vision being blurry. And it was that exhausting mix of "oh, that's beautiful" crying and "oh, that's so sad" crying.
Actually, I just read a book yesterday whose end I cried my way through. It wasn't on par with His Dark Materials quality-wise and was a bit cheesy for my tastes 8(logically, but not necessarily emotionally) but it was a good read, and especially the end had a lot of the same elements as those in His Dark Materials. Turns out book two was meant to be out in 2012 and was never published, so that's a bummer. At least it didn't have a cliffhanger, lol!

Emma, I agree with you re the Philip Pullman books, which I found quite affecting too, and also in my favourite ever top ten.


I think I cried reading Chicken Soup for the Teenage Soul?
I don't cry much at books or movies. HOWEVER, recently we saw "Lone Survivor" and I SOBBED from about a third of the way through until the end, and then in the car on the way home. Like, hardcore sobbing. I couldn't stop. It was horrible.

Artemis Fowl - The Opal Deception (I think it was) when one of the characters die.
The Fall of Five - I didn't really cry, but I was horrified for Seven at the end.
Little Woman.
I could go on. I suppose I'm a crier. It got much worse after my first pregnancy. I cry at any emotional scenes now. Even in animated movies. So, yeah, go me :-\


I think I cried reading Chicken Soup for the Teenage Soul?
I don't cry much ..."
Nikki that was me when I saw the movie Awakenings. Just absolute broken down sobs all the way home.



OK, a.r but tears are not a critical response to literature or a measure of a book's quality. You can cry over Peter Pan.
I almost cried over The Somnambulist, it was that bad. Also, The History of Tom Jones nearly turned me to stone, it was that boring. I can't even remember a single scene from that so called classic.
Seriously though, The Last Battle from the Chronicles of Narnia made my eyes go mysteriously moist.
I prefer books that make me forget where I am.
Seriously though, The Last Battle from the Chronicles of Narnia made my eyes go mysteriously moist.
I prefer books that make me forget where I am.
I've cried like a baby reading a few stories out of a collections of short stories called 'It goes on' by D.R. Shoultz.
I was sitting outside on the deck (and glad no one was there to see me). I mean, they sure would have wondered what happened and I couldn't see myself explaining to them that I read a sad story. They'd probably have called me silly. :p
I was sitting outside on the deck (and glad no one was there to see me). I mean, they sure would have wondered what happened and I couldn't see myself explaining to them that I read a sad story. They'd probably have called me silly. :p



David wrote: "Interesting, this - tears, idle tears. I wonder if it's immersion in the scene or the dilemma of the protagonist or perhaps a trigger to a personal grief in one's own life that starts the flood. I ..."
I believe both immersion and trigger. Maybe not always at the same time, but both can do the 'job', at least in my case.
David wrote: "Oh, come on, GG, the bedroom scene at the hotel, and the fight between the two viragos near the start - perfect bedroom farce material."
Huh?
I believe both immersion and trigger. Maybe not always at the same time, but both can do the 'job', at least in my case.
David wrote: "Oh, come on, GG, the bedroom scene at the hotel, and the fight between the two viragos near the start - perfect bedroom farce material."
Huh?





To give an actual example, I didn't think "The Book Thief" worked particularly well, because there was a sudden shift in the author's writing technique that pulled me out of the story during what was meant to be a very tragic scene. It felt more artsy than emotionally raw, and that ruined the emotional impact for me.
First, The Book Thief made me mourn as none, Looking for Alaska and Allegiant... rarely cry, a book really has to impress me much.


Of Mice And Men by John Steinbeck (I think that's the author's name) makes me cry every single time. The ending is just so sad! I was never expecting it!

Books mentioned in this topic
Lonesome Dove (other topics)The Heroes (other topics)
But I mostly read horror so maybe that's why.
What books have made you cry? Do you use those feeling for inspiration in your own writing?