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I like Oscar Wilde. I used to have a cat named "Oscar Wilde".
For now, it's the Importance of Being Earnest
I know my comment will add no value, but I feel like responding. I read Dorian Gray for the 1st time when I was about 14 (it was a part of my school program). At that time I thought I could relate to the characters in the book therefore it became one of the most memorable and the most influential books for me. I read it again a few years ago. I didn't care much about his extensive interior descriptions. I cared more about main characters transformation. I felt connection to all 3 main characters, but especially to the artist. To me he was on top of the triangle. But I could turn the triangle any way and it would still make sense. To me the book showed deterioration of a soul, the ease of falling into an abyss when standing on a edge. It warned me, it reminded me of the dark side and that I should never ignore it. At the other hand I enjoyed watching deterioration. I didn't experience joy (as emotion) but an intellectual wonder.I heard about an old movie, The Picture of Dorian Gray,
when I was little. It was supposed to be very creepy.
The story is creepier and in ways I didn't expect.
Some how as if you had eaten rotten candy.
I have a book of the collected works of Oscar Wilde, gleaned
from a library book sale. I read the Ballad of Reading Gaol
during the O.J. trial.
Oscar Wilde was witty. Sometimes his short remarks seem
a little too studied to me and the idea that art should serve
no purpose (the idea he sets forth in a preface to the book
The Picture of Dorian Gray) feels overly arty, to me. But his
stuff is fun to read, anyway.