Non-Fiction
Related: About this forumKillers of the Flower Moon - my wife and I don't get the plaudits
https://www.amazon.com/Killers-Flower-Moon-Osage-Murders/dp/0385534248/ref=cm_cr_arp_d_product_top?ie=UTF8We haven't seen the movie - hope it's more gripping than this very dry book. It takes a horrific set of events and makes it like watching grass grow or paint drying. We listened on Audible and got through it all - because we thought we should. Not great.
Dan
(4,095 posts)The movie is very good yet deeply disturbing.
NewHendoLib
(60,496 posts)Like a school history book. Dry.
I'm sure the movie captures the essence better
ExWhoDoesntCare
(4,741 posts)History book. It has a narrow focus with a decided beginning, middle and end to what it's choosing to tell. It reads like literary fiction in style.
applegrove
(123,111 posts)in the characters lives. That is the power of the acting and the length. You get the horror of what is going on in the long term that way. And the love story that is the prism through which all is seen. Not your typical movie. It was a informative and horrifying experience. You get the metaphor of indigenous people living through trust and betrayal in all their relations with white people.
ExWhoDoesntCare
(4,741 posts)I just downloaded a sample and read through the first few chapters. Seems like a standard nonfic work to me, and seemed to flow well and move along at a decent pace, in my estimation.
I can point you to some dry history books, since I had to read my share of them for the upper level history component at uni. I still get a nervous tic when I think of Revolution and History by Arif Dirlik. It's a history of the rise of Marxism in China pre-Mao. Bloody hell, what a slog of a book that was!
The Grann is a barn-burner in comparison to books like that.
The Roux Comes First
(1,561 posts)Well-written, researched, and gripping. I was not all surprised to hear the movie rights had been picked up.
Each to their own, I guess!