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#226 | |
Treachery of images ...
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I am volunteering to create this survey. As it will sit independently of the decade voting thread, a link could be provided in the first post. If you look at some of the current comments in 1900-1910 Voting thread you will note that posters have read varying numbers of the listed books, from 2 onwards to 16, out of 18 books. Add me to the 2 currently read as well. Although the voting poll will be open for a month and that does allow members to read one or more of the other selections before casting their vote. Last edited by Lynx-lynx; 05-10-2015 at 06:27 PM. Reason: add the last para |
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#227 |
o saeclum infacetum
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I'm late with this, but I see The Death of a Salesman in the 1940s and of course that's a play.
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#228 | |
The Grand Mouse 高貴的老鼠
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#229 |
The Grand Mouse 高貴的老鼠
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#230 |
The Grand Mouse 高貴的老鼠
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#231 |
cacoethes scribendi
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I'm not sure I really see much point in worrying too much about how many of the nominated books a voter has read. Absolutely none of us will have read all books written in any given decade - so the vote is already skewed. The nominations have come from just that (probably quite small) subset of books from each decade that each nominator happens to have read. We are then asking people to vote on this already skewed, very tiny, subset of books from a decade. How much can it matter if they've only read a couple of them?
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#232 |
cacoethes scribendi
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I've been curious to see a number of comments on the 1901..1910 thread where people indicate that they are effectively discarding one or more genres (eg: children's books) from their consideration for best. I didn't want to derail that thread, so making my observation here - I hope that's okay.
Disclaimer: As already discussed here, we are each using our own rules for choosing what "best" means for each of us, so there is absolutely nothing wrong with anyone using whatever rules they see fit. I just found it ... odd, interesting, curious. I did hesitate before nominating children's books for the vote. Part of that was seeing the serious literature in the nominations, and I started to think that maybe I was the only person at the party who forgot to arrive in fancy dress. And part of that was wondering whether I had missed some implicit words in the subject line, that maybe we were looking for only the "best serious adult fictional literature". But I went ahead and nominated them anyway. The reason being that - for me - "best" includes books that influenced me, and books that I can see have influenced others. So, for me, that has to include some children's books. Given my own interpretation of best, I found I could not ignore books that I not only enjoyed very much (and still enjoy), and that I know were enjoyed by others, but have also generated ongoing comments and adaptations since their publication. None of this means any of my nominations should necessarily win a vote for their decade, that's not what I'm trying to say. There are some amazing works of fiction out there in every decade. No, my observation is merely that I find it odd that anyone should discard entire genres from consideration - it's apparent that we are using very different rules for "best". Last edited by gmw; 05-11-2015 at 05:14 AM. |
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#233 |
Maria Schneider
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#234 | |
Maria Schneider
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#235 | |
Nameless Being
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![]() To me it was just making a choice when confronted with say a basket of apples, a basket of oranges, a basket of plums, etc. and being asked pick the best piece of fruit out there. Now there are some genres that I did and will just eliminate from consideration (just wait until we get to decades where SciFi/Fantasy seem to dominate the list) because such books just don't interest me. When it comes to passing on books written for children the reasoning is different. The Wind in the Willows is a great children's book, it's just for me if I have to chose a single best it's going to be in adult literature. BTW if the poll was about the best book for children I would certainly put forth one of the books by Dr. Suess, the man was a genius at producing books for his intended audience. |
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#236 |
Grand Sorcerer
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I have an update for my nominations if it is not too late.
1931-1940 Ali and Nino by Kurban Said As relevant in 1937 when it was originally written as now. |
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#237 | ||
cacoethes scribendi
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![]() It is difficult to pick just one "best". There's some great stuff in the lists. I tend to read pretty widely, not eschewing any genre in particular, and that only makes the choice harder. For example "All Quiet on the Western Front" is up there with my "Winnie-the-Pooh" nomination - you can't get works much further apart than that. They are both great books (in my opinion), but they are totally different experiences. Comparison just isn't really possible. What I can say is that I know which one I could happily recommend to pretty much anyone that can read. |
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#238 | |
Maria Schneider
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#239 | ||
Treachery of images ...
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![]() That doesn't concern me because I chose my book based on what 'best talked to me about my country, my people and their thoughts and attitudes', and can now, in the final vote, choose to retain my original premise, or consider another premise for this (and ensuing) decade/s. (gmw, you'd be aware that as a nation we don't seem to discuss and seriously consider our own authors works as frequently as we do other authors works, so for this vote I changed the balance. And I guess that some may consider that as a xenophobic attitude - nope!) For those prospective voters who have read a lot of the list, say half and above, well they seem, to me, to be in a position to identify 'best' according to a more stringent criteria. And I don't necessarily envy that!! ![]() |
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#240 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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