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The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon
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did not like it

Such a terrible and overhyped book - please, if you want to write a book that is meant to make people feel sympathy (if not empathy) for the main characters, don't make him a sociopathic spoilt brat who ruins everyone's lives without feeling sympathy. Yes, he's meant to be autistic, but Haddon didn't bother researching autism at all so that point is moot. I can't describe how much I wanted this little shit to be ran over by a train when he went to fetch his pet rat (which had made an entirely understandable decision and ran away from Chrissy), but alas, he wasn't and he went on to ruin someone else life.

I can deal with a character that is evil (in the sense that they hurt others), but they have to have some charm or they just come out as one dimensional douchebags. There was nothing interesting about Chrissy boy, he just commented about how good he was at maths, how much he hated people (even when those people were trying to help him), and how hard his life is even when he is being mollycoddled. Make no mistake, I have nothing against autistic people, but I'm pretty sure the vast majority of autistic people don't think they're God's gift and that everyone else deserves to die; my (admittedly limited) understanding of autism suggests that people suffering from autism have trouble expressing emotion, rather than being devoid of it. Haddon's lack of research seemed to show mainly in the fact that, even though the book is meant to be from the viewpoint of an autistic child, the understanding of autism seemed to be very superficial, as if Haddon had looked at child with autism and said "yep, what they say and act like must be exactly how they think... Better write a book about it."

Understandably, as I wasn't overly fussed on Chrissy boy, I did not enjoy the writing style at all. It was a recount of events in the most obnoxious way, appearing not to have taken any literary skill at all. It is very reminiscent of how I (and most others) used to write when I (or they) was five, you know, saying "and this and then and now and when and and and and" - I was sat there thinking "say 'and' again, I dare you, I double dare you!", and if I had been Jules (I think he was the one played by Mr. jackson), I'd have shot Chrissy boy around seven hundred times, because it seems the only word the author could think to write was 'and'.

If this had been fully a murder mystery, then I may have given this book a two stars (providing it was done well) because a good puzzle can make up for unlikable characters and shoddy writing. But no, the culprit was 'found' (he gave himself in without any tension leading up to the moment) and then the book turns into a family drama. A family drama about a horrible and boring family. Great.

This book lied to me, it should have been called "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime and the Less Curious Incident of a Dysfunctional Family".

Another thing that really bugged me was the random God-bashing thing. I'm not a Christian (or religious at all), but it was not needed in the slightest, it was as if Haddon thought he may as well get Dawkins on all our asses. It felt really preachy and forced and it didn't fit in the context of that part of the story, it was just stupid.

The final point I'll make is that this book gives people a false view of autism, and many people who did not know much about the condition before may now think this unresearched drivel is correct.
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Reading Progress

Started Reading
December 31, 2013 – Finished Reading
January 1, 2014 – Shelved

Comments Showing 1-19 of 19 (19 new)

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Megan I can't even begin to describe how much I love your comment. It describes exactly why I hate the book.


message 2: by Esme (new) - rated it 1 star

Esme Megan wrote: "I can't even begin to describe how much I love your comment. It describes exactly why I hate the book."

Haha, thanks. I remember being told it was a great book when it was given to me; I can safely say I don't take recommendations from them anymore. Truth be told, it's one of the few books that I still greatly dislike after reading it.


Erika Happy to know I was not the only one wanting to have Christopher ran over. He was so full of himself and almost hateful to others. I entirely agree with you saying that people with autism "have trouble expressing emotion, rather than being devoid of it" and that this story makes everyone think everyon with autism is Rain Man.


Gehan Osama Abdelgawad okay that comment is perfect i guess XD


message 5: by Adam (new)

Adam I really appreciate your review, I 100% agree with you and i hated this book so much thank you for voicing your opinion


message 6: by Andy (new) - rated it 1 star

Andy a sociopathic spoilt brat who ruins everyone's lives 馃槀馃槀馃槀 my words!!!


message 7: by Char (new)

Char Benson (Bookish Raider) I couldn't agree more


Sheila Exactly why I hate this book


message 9: by ju (new) - rated it 2 stars

ju i completely agree, especially on the 'haddon wrote christopher's thoughts the exact same way he sees autistic people behave'. this is not good representation, not a changing-the-way-u-think-and-how-u-see-the-world novel, and definitely not a book i'd recommend to anyone


Christy THIS! It's the obvious lack of research and portraying autistic people as sociopaths for me, more than the literary style.


message 11: by Sarah (new) - rated it 1 star

Sarah Fleur exactly this


message 12: by anya (new) - rated it 1 star

anya THANK you oh my god I have found a neurotypical with a smidgen of critical thinking and common sense


message 13: by Jess (new) - rated it 2 stars

Jess Mu帽oz Ledo I enjoyed the first part, but the whole family drama got so boring and annoying that I just skimmed through the rest


Blanche Sorry if this is completely wrong but don't autistic people genuinely have trouble feeling empathy though?


Bailey Thank you. I agree with you. I am a christan, and I don't expect everyone to believe what I do, but it bothers me when people go out of their way to be obnoxious about it. Also the lack of research on ASD was very annoying to me


message 16: by Beatrice Manske (new)

Beatrice Manske so not true. also, the excessive use of the word "and" is supposed to make it sound natural, not like the genius author haddon is. love this book


Lyndsay-ann Best comment and review of this book! If I had reas this before starting this book, I might have skipped it. But I feel the exact same way.
I've read several places that people interpret Chris as being on the autism spectrum even if not explicitly stated, but to me he comes off as an entitled brat with sociopathic tendencies who has learned to throw a tantrum to get his way/what he wants and get out of situations he doesn't want to be in.
I'm glad I'm not the only one that felt this way about this book.


message 18: by D (new) - rated it 1 star

D Thank you for realising this isn't who we are.


message 19: by D (new) - rated it 1 star

D @Blanche No, we don't. We do initially have some difficulty imagining the inner workings of allistic (non-autistic) people, because they work so differently from us - the same way that it is hard for allistic people to figure out what an autistic person is feeling and needs, it's a symmetrical situation. (Autistic people find interacting with other autistic people and communicating with them and predicting their inner workings just as easy as allistics do with allistics.) But we are neither emotionally shallow nor insensitive nor uncaring. We are actually often characteristically overwhelmed by emotion. This might read differently though. E.g. an autistic person seeing you in grief might not intuitively have any urge to hug you, because we generally don't like being hugged, and may be worried about getting comforting you wrong, while also not naturally having expressive faces or voices - so our response can read as cold and robotic to an allistic person. If you ask for specific help though, you will generally promptly received it from the relieved autistic who now knows how to help you and would very much like to. We also generally show a lot of care towards animals, and get good at reading them, because we don't start with a preconception that their minds have to work like allistic human minds, but learn early that minds around us are very different.


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