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December 2012 Book Club 1st Vote
December 2012 Mobile Read Book Club 1st Vote
Help us choose a book as the December 2012 eBook for the Mobile Read Book Club. The poll will be open for 4 days, followed by a 3 day run-off poll between the two* most popular choices. The vote this month will be visible. We will start the discussion thread for this book on December 20th. Select from the following Official Choices with three nominations each: (1) The Good Earth by Pearl S Buck Amazon (UK) / Amazon (US) / B&N / Kobo Spoiler:
(2) Crime and Punishment by F.M. Dostoevsky Amazon UK / Amazon US (free) / Patricia Clark Memorial Library: LRF Spoiler:
(3) Quo Vadis by Henryk Sienkiewicz Patricia Clark Memorial Library: EPUB / LRF / PRC Spoiler:
(4) I, Robot by Isaac Asimov Amazon (US) / B&N / BooksOnBoard / Kobo / Sony Spoiler:
(5) Ethan Frome by Edith Wharton Patricia Clark Memorial Library: PRC / Gutenberg EPUB / Amazon UK / Amazon US / Barnes & Noble / Dymocks Australia / Kobo / Sony Reader Store Spoiler:
(6) Cold Comfort Farm by Stella Gibbons Amazon / Inkmesh / Kobo Spoiler:
(7) Little Women by Louisa May Alcott Patricia Clark Memorial Library: PRC / Project Gutenberg Spoiler:
(8) The Prime Of Miss Jean Brodie by Muriel Spark No links provided. Spoiler:
(9) Flush by Virginia Woolf Patricia Clark Memorial Library: IMP / LRF / PRC / EPUB (in the Complete Works) Spoiler:
(10) Nicholas Nickleby by Charles Dickens Patricia Clark Memorial Library: EPUB / IMP / LRF / PRC Spoiler:
The fine print: *Should the first vote produce a 3-way or more tie for first place, or 2-way or more tie for second, the second poll will have more than two choices. |
First vote is in :)
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So many good nominations this month! I'll go with my nominee, but could be happy reading most of these.
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Since I am familiar with almost all of the nominations this month, I'll list them in order of preference -
The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie - Voted for this one. It is short at only 150 pages and a great choice for December. :) Ethan Frome - I saw the film when it first came out 20 years ago, but I've pretty much completely forgotten it. I've also never read Wharton so this would be a great start, and it's also short and good for December. Cold Comfort Farm - I already have this book; I got it after becoming interested in it when it was nominated another month over a year and a half ago. I hope my copy is the good version! I've read a little of it and it's light and funny and good for December. The Good Earth Flush - Short and since I've never read Woolf would be a good start. Little Women Nicholas Nickleby - Longer than I'd like for December as I try to finish my reading challenge, but I really liked the film. I, Robot - Eh, I'm having my recent fill of sci-fi with the books chosen for both book clubs for November, but still wouldn't mind. Quo Vadis - Not what I'm in the mood for this month and is on the longer side as well, but sounds interesting and if it wins I'll give it a go. Crime and Punishment - A great book, but I've already read it. I should be rooting for this one to win since then I'd have one less book to read to finish my reading challenge this year, but that would feel too disingenuous. But I admit, if it wins I won't necessarily be disappointed. :p |
Difficult choice, but I went for Cold Comfort Farm. It has been nominated before and I got a bit curious about it.
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I'm going with Quo Vadis. I've read eight of the others and would like to read something new that isn't I, Robot. :D
Seriously, Quo Vadis sounds like a great read and it's a somewhat unusual choice, which is a good thing. Expand horizons and all that. |
I'm partial to free books in the Classics category and something short for the busy month of December, so I'll vote for Ethan Frome.
I have Cold Comfort Farm on hold at the library, but since I'm second on the list I'm not likely to get it in time for this month. I do have the audiobook for The Good Earth, so I'd be willing to try that if it wins. On the other hand, the pro-Christian theme of Quo Vadis is unappealing to me and I gave Crime and Punishment a try last summer but couldn't get past 50 pages, so I'd give both of those a pass. Dickens and Little Women are too long to tackle right now. |
Happy holiday to everyone who celebrated one today.
Very interesting vote so far. Nine nominees with at least one vote, and no nominee with more than four yet. It'll be fun to watch and see what happens over the next few days. |
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I listened to Ethan Frome from Audible a couple weeks ago and liked it a lot. The narrator Scott Brick does an excellent job. Although I want to re-read Crime and Punishment, I think it is very dark for the Christmas season. Every month I end up reading the winner as well as one or two nominees. I'll read The Good Earth and Cold Comfort Farm no matter what. Great choices!
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Perhaps it is a mistake to have December a classics month. A lot of classics are downers. I would recommend that we make December the humor month. Everyone should be in a good mood in December. April is currently the humor month, presumably because the first of April is April Fool's Day. But I don't find the period of March 20 through April 20 to be any more joyful than other months, and perhaps April should be the classics month. I suggest a simple trade of April for December. PS - Most people are very busy in December. If you don't like my idea of making December the humor month, perhaps we can make it the short works month. |
Well I could vote "strategically". But I have a strong preference for The Good Earth so I'm on the campaign trail!
Having said that, several of these books would be great. As much as I adored Crime and Punishment, I'm planning to read The Brothers Karamazov in January, and I think even the magnificence of Dostoyevsky can be too much. Other than that though, I'm quite interested in: Ethan Frome Flush Quo Vadis Cold Comfort Farm I, Robot and The Prime Of Miss Jean Brodie both look good but I'm too stingy to buy them so they will probably get a pass from me. Unfortunately, I can't get either from an eLibrary. And one day I'd like to read Little Women and Nicholas Nickleby, but I don't think that time is now. Forgot to mention - I really like this list of options. Most of these I would need hardly a push to jump straight into. I'm looking forward to watching the progress. |
Oh - and vote for The Good Earth please. You know you want to. ;)
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Well I've read the Good Earth, twice, so sorry I passed. I voted for Nicholas Nickelby. Dickens in December seems natural!
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There are some good choices on that list, but I wish I had thirded both Chesterton's The Man Who Was Thursday and Huxley's Brave New World.
No one to blame but myself. :( And Jon, who was late with his thirds. :D |
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