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A review by dancermom
Jonathon Livingston Seagull a story by Richard Bach, Richard Bach, Russell Munson
1.0
As a teenager I could relate to JLS's free-spirit choosing the path of joy and personal growth instead of drudgery and conformity. I read it because my cool friends said it had a lot to offer. We thought passages like “We’re all outcasts, we’re all friends. We’re learning to fly just for the fun of it," were profound.
Rereading it fifty years later, I could barely make it through this banal, rewarmed hodgepodge of Eastern philosophy and christian bible mumbo jumbo. Anyone else notice the only female in the flock is JLS's mother? If there was a second female in the flock, she would no doubt have been a kind-hearted sex-worker.
I couldn't say it better than Viraj's Goodreads review: “The best thing about this book is that it gets over quickly”
Rereading it fifty years later, I could barely make it through this banal, rewarmed hodgepodge of Eastern philosophy and christian bible mumbo jumbo. Anyone else notice the only female in the flock is JLS's mother? If there was a second female in the flock, she would no doubt have been a kind-hearted sex-worker.
I couldn't say it better than Viraj's Goodreads review: “The best thing about this book is that it gets over quickly”