This post contains major spoilers concerning
the books that I have listed below.
These are personal ruminations. That is, this is not a post about the books that are most likely to disturb or to bother the general reader. Instead, this is a very short list of novels that bugged me. If I were attempting to compile a catalog of books that are likely to disquiet the most people, this post would be very different. If I were constructing a list of works that should be universally disturbing, then I would look for common elements that should, in theory, trouble us all. Instead these are just a few novels that, due to idiosyncrasies in my own psyche, bothered the heck out of me. These works pushed certain buttons in my mind. They may or may not do so for others.
Thus,
this list seems little “wrong”. I think that this little compilation looks a
bit like a list created by someone who is not well read at all. It seems to be
an odd and too – short combination of books. A list that contains glaring
omissions. A list put together by someone
who has missed some of the really powerful and moving works out there (Many of
which I have, of course missed). There are many novels that I have read, that
in theory should be much more affecting then those below. As I stated above,
this is a list based upon my personal reactions only. I choose these books
solely based upon gut reactions that I had to them. Though I may attempt to use
reason to analyze and explain why these novels seemed so dark to me, reason and
analysis have nothing to do with the choices.
When
examining the list I notice some interesting commonalities: Three out of the
four works are either science fiction or at least take place in a speculative
and very dark future. Three out of the four involve the disruptions of a
relationship, at least in part due to an invasion by outside forces. All four
of these works were written in the twentieth century and were written in
English. For me at least, all of the major events in these books, though at
times highly speculative, seemed plausible.
The
whole idea of this list seems a little absurd when I really think about it.
After all, I have read a fair share of non - fiction that has illustrated some
of the most horrendous aspects of the human experience. As someone who has read
a lot of history, and a lot of dark history, I have encountered real life
stories of murder, rape, and the most unspeakable tortures and sadism that can
be imagined, on both an individual as well as on a mass scale. What is
contained in these non – fiction works was indeed troubling. Some of it is the stuff
of nightmare and depict hell on Earth. Thus, I have had similar reactions these
books. However, since such things really happened, such reactions seem to be
more understandable.
So
why should anything of the non - fiction sort bother me much? Perhaps because by
introducing the reader into the mind and the soul a character the way non -
fiction does not, fiction sometimes creates a special kind of empathy for
characters. Another reason may be the fact that three out of the four books are
speculative fiction. Maybe this gave the authors a particular amount of freedom
to set up situations that were so uncanny as to create the sense that something
was abnormally twisted in the Universe.
I have heard it expressed that really great books have the power to bother people the most. Once again my list does not exactly meet expectations. Some of the below really are not novels that belong in the category of great literature. With that said, in my opinion, all of the below are very well written.
These
books bugged me so much that I will never reread them and would stay away from
other books that I think might elicit similar reactions. These novels chilled
my soul. I thought about them for days after completing. Later, sometimes years
later, thinking about them brings up unpleasant feelings. I am not delving too
deeply into why these particular works perturbed me so much. However, I am
willing to discuss further and in detail, in the comments section or through
private correspondence with anyone who wants elaboration and is interested in
further chat.
The
list of books that bugged is as follows:
Johnny Got His Gun by Dalton Trumbo
I first read this when I was very young. The
famous story of Joe Bonham who is wounded by
an artillery shell in World War I and wakes up with no arms, no legs, no mouth,
no sight, no hearing, no smell and no taste. The book takes place almost
entirely in the protagonist’s mind. Bonham cannot move, communicate or even
kill himself. In the annals of literature, perhaps no other work has ever
portrayed a soul trapped in such torment with absolutely no way to escape. This
is a dark masterpiece of helpless horror and is truly the stuff of the darkest nightmares.
I first read this when I was very young. The
famous story of Joe Bonham who is wounded by
an artillery shell in World War I and wakes up with no arms, no legs, no mouth,
no sight, no hearing, no smell and no taste. The book takes place almost
entirely in the protagonist’s mind. Bonham cannot move, communicate or even
kill himself. In the annals of literature, perhaps no other work has ever
portrayed a soul trapped in such torment with absolutely no way to escape. This
is a dark masterpiece of helpless horror and is truly the stuff of the darkest nightmares.
An argument can be made that this book
rises to the level of great literature.
Rock band Metallica’s song “One” is
about this book.
This
is most obscure work on this list. While not great literature, it is a very
imaginative tale of worldwide horror. Rival nations develop a chemical that can
be easily introduced into water supplies and that is extremely effective in
causing sterility in women. Various nations and rival factions use the toxin
against one another in vicious cycles of attack and retaliation. In a few short
years, ninety – nine percent of the World’s women are unable to bear children.
The
true horror builds in the novel’s last chapters. The few remaining fertile
women are sequestered into institutions and forced to become baby - making
machines. Julia, the wife of the United
Kingdom’s Prime Minister is one of these unfortunate women. Piling grim horror
upon grim horror, her relatives, though initially helpful in attempted escape
attempts, and visiting her in the institution, eventually slowly betray her in
what seems to me, a particularly cruel way. Her husband and twin sister,
gradually over the years, visit her less and less frequently. Eventually it is
revealed that the two have married. By this time Julia is so resigned to her
fate that she is only bothered a little bit. No happy endings in this novel. I have not read since I was much younger and
will not do so again.
This
novel heaps three levels of agonizing horror one on top of another. First, a
microbiologist’s wife and two young daughters are killed in a horrendous
terrorist bombing. Second, the microbiologist, later know as “the madman”, goes
completely insane and plots retribution upon the world. His revenge is a devastatingly
effective synthesized virus that kills only women. Over the course of the book the
plague spreads throughout the world and over ninety – nine percent of the
Earth’s women succumb. When a cure is finally found the few women survivors
emerge from quarantine. In the closing pages of the book a final horror becomes
apparent as everyone is expected to accept, based upon the new realities, that monogamous
relationships for the remaining women, even pre - existing ones, will not be
tolerated in this new world.
I
have read a lot of “plague wiping out humanity books.” None has affected me
like this one. It is so very different from the others. It is stark and
believable. In an odd way, the fact that the contagion affects only one gender
makes it all the more grim.
I
would argue that Herbert wrote great literature when he created his Dune Series. This book, very different from
Herbert’s more famous works, does not quite reach the level of greatness, but is very well written
and effective. I have known several others who have read this book and were not
so bothered. Thus, this one falls firmly into the category of “personally
disturbing.”
I
remember reading this when I was in my teens around the time that it was first
published. I recognized the horror of it all this but thought that if it
happened, I would be lucky to be male. In retrospect, I think that death would be
preferable to living in a world that lost all of its women in such a terrible
way.
For
me, this is the ultimate disturbing novel. It contains a unique set of horrors
as the protagonists, Winston and Julia, endure mental, emotional and moral
destruction at the hands of torturers in the service of the most oppressive
regime imaginable. Their fate is clearly worse then death. There are
two famous passages, one known as the Room 101 passage and the second that
cumulates in last sentence of the book that hammer the horrors home. For me the
worst passage was actually a third one, I call it the “Cold March Day,” where
the protagonists are shown to be emotionally annihilated, their love for one
another intentionally and effectively destroyed by the pernicious regime. I
blogged about this one in more detail here.
Finally, there are a
couple of books that I have not read, that I suspect, might elicit similar disturbing
reactions for me, and thus, I will likely stay away from. One is The Road by Cormac McCarthy, which looks so very terrifying, grim
and depressing in an ultimate and plausible way (I have not seen the film for
the same reason). The second is Blindness by Jose Saramago. I have seen the film adaptation of that
book. The movie contained a rape scene that I found to be unbearable. I have heard that the corresponding passage
in the book is even more intense. As I like both McCarthy and Saramago and the
plots of these books seem interesting, I would have read both in a heartbeat
when I was younger. I am, however, getting squeamish in my old age.
