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#16 | ||
Grand Sorcerer
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To be honest, when I'm looking for a new book (not a new book by a known-author for me), I don't look at the author at all. I look at the description, at the classification and, though very rarely, at reviews. |
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#17 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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The truth of the matter is; I want to read everything. That fact that I'm going to ultimately fail at that goal is not the least bit disconcerting to me. ![]() |
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#18 |
Wizard
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i just like to enjoy what i read
![]() to be honest though, i find myself having a hard time starting a classic, but once i get started, i find myself enjoying most of it, actually. i think it's because that i have this perception that classics are "boring". i want to rid myself of that, actually, so i'm forcing myself to read better books |
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#19 | |
Reading is sexy
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#20 | ||
Lucifer's Bat
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*Who besides HarryT knows which book I am talking about here? |
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#21 | |
Hi There!
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Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Ft Lauderdale
Device: iPad
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I have another book to recommend. It is an anthology of sea stories. It is an excellent and charming way to become acquainted with various authors of the classics. There is a story by Poe that I had never heard of about being on a boat and falling into a whirlpool, very eerie. Let me see if I can find the link to it, and I'll come back and post it. EDIT: That was easy. It is the Oxford Book of Sea Stories. EDIT 2: That Poe story became the subject of a paper that I wrote about how the sea becomes a character in certain stories with emotions and motives to advance its own agenda. Also central to the paper was the sea in The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, one of my two favorite poems (both by Samuel Taylor Coleridge) Last edited by DixieGal; 04-18-2011 at 11:06 AM. |
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#22 | |
Dyslexic Count
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The "classics"being discussed above, horribly modern books written in languages which aren't even dead, provide a similar, if rather less broadly based, experience for the literary reading elite. In the last fifty years there's been an information supernova and society, for better or for worse, is less hidebound or dogmatic. Being "well read" is rather more of an option and less a necessity to measure one's worth. We have money for that now. |
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#23 | |
Lucifer's Bat
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#24 |
Star Gawker
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#25 | |
Close to the Edit!
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![]() I have read far fewer classics than I should have, but every time I "force" myself to do so, I wonder why it took me so long to read a particular gem. Evidence earlier this year, when my wife talked me into reading The Count of Monte Cristo (took a real hit on my 100 books in 2011 challenge progress, as it is over 1400 pages long). What a wonderful book. The story will stay with me for the rest of my life, and I will no doubt return to it in a few years time. As someone else in this thread said, they are classics for a reason. |
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#26 |
Fanatic
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Sorry for being so grumpy but I do fail to see much of a point in Ebert's rambling piece beyond "some authors stand the test of time better than others". He claims that he doesn't want to compile a "list", yet in that case what is the point of telling us about all the authors he has read, unless he only wants to show us that he is such a prolific reader?
The "list" he does not want to provide has some astounding holes. What about European literary giants as Homer, Virgil, Dante, Cervantes, Goethe? I do not want to rant against lists of "Dead White Males" as I am a white male myself (fortunately not quite dead yet), but do we really still need lists that almost completely ignore all other great civilizations? What about Chinese classics like "The Dream of the Red Chamber"? Japanese literature? Persian? African authors? The only non-Western author seems to be Mahfouz. As a Nobel laureate hardly a very daring choice. The unbelievable wealth of Spanish and Portuguese literature and all he comes up with are Marquez and Borges? Seriously? I guess that his list wouldn't have been considered adventurous even 40 years ago. Today it seems exceedingly conservative. (BTW, Georges Simenon was Belgian, just like Hergé, not French. Thanks.) |
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#27 |
Nameless Being
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The way I see it has been stated by others. The “classics” earned that reputation. However, they may not be for everyone. I once attempted to complete another literary critics of “the 100 books everyone should read,” and in the end only finished about a third of these. Not for lack of trying, it was just that some, Lady Chatterley's Lover and The Tale of Gilgamesh for example, were a painful struggle to for each of the chapters I did complete. I look upon the “classics” and lists such as this as strong suggestions that one should at least make an effort to read.
This particular article is very European in its nature that is for sure. |
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#28 |
Addict
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Sinclair Lewis is really good, but people stop reading the "classics" because most of the classics were only considered so by critics and thus are just simply not good, especially 80-150 years later. I do enjoy adventure tales from around 1880-1920, though. There ARE good writers, they're just generally overlooked (like Sinclair Lewis) in favor of the more famous names who are just cumbersome.
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#29 |
Hi There!
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No definitive "must-read" list can Nor should ever exist. Such an animal excludes modern popular books that have not yet been canonized. Or even conceived of yet.
Where are our important poets? Where are these distillers of truth? The world has not produced many in my lifetime. Except maybe McCartney and Lennon. Last edited by DixieGal; 04-18-2011 at 05:45 PM. |
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#30 |
Illiterate
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