1.5

The Picture of Dorian Grey

Oscar Wilde
Book
February
2021

Review:

This was a horrible book! Why is this book even considered a classic? I can understand how some books may be based on it. I saw some similarities between it and The Invisible Life of Addie Larue. Not only did he break someone’s heart in the most trivial way (the girl later ended up committing suicide), he also murdered one of his friends. The way they talk about women is so wrong, and he was such a self-centered character. The only character I liked he ended up killing. Not even the ending could save this book. It was very cliché and predictable. Overall this is a terrible book, and I would definitely not reread it.

Trigger Warnings:
Ableism, Misogyny, Suicide, and Murder

Synopsis From Book:

Written in his distinctively dazzling manner, Oscar Wilde’s story of a fashionable young man who sells his soul for eternal youth and beauty is the author’s most popular work. The tale of Dorian Gray’s moral disintegration caused a scandal when it first appeared in 1890, but though Wilde was attacked for the novel’s corrupting influence, he responded that there is, in fact, “a terrible moral in Dorian Gray.” Just a few years later, the book and the aesthetic/moral dilemma it presented became issues in the trials occasioned by Wilde’s homosexual liaisons, which resulted in his imprisonment. Of Dorian Gray’s relationship to autobiography, Wilde noted in a letter, “Basil Hallward is what I think I am: Lord Henry what the world thinks me: Dorian what I would like to be—in other ages, perhaps.
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