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miss tenderness
07-22-2006, 10:58 PM
Tell us about novels that you've read but still lives inside you with its tiny details and unforgotten characters. Maybe yours will be included in someone's summer list for reading , who knows :)
Bread Seller is one of the best novels ,it's an extraordinary novel if I may say. I'd love to know if any of you had the experience of reading this novel.
The Horrible Years is another unforgettable novel, about the World War, a soldier describing the miseries of the destructive war and how he saw his closest friend passing away .

Asa Adams
07-22-2006, 11:31 PM
Mordicai richler's "Barneys Version." It illuminated what it is to be Man. It illuminated what it was to be a writer, a lover, and many other things i cannot speak of at this point.

muhsin
07-23-2006, 07:32 AM
I promise to write their names when I come back online, because, they are many not one as you stated in my mind. Lol.

mono
07-23-2006, 12:22 PM
A few that I recall: Great Expectations by Charles Dickens, Love In The Time Of Cholera by Gabriel Garcìa Màrquez, Sons And Lovers by D.H. Lawrence, The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri (though poetry), Faust by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (though a play), The Picture Of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde, Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf, The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky, and Silas Marner by George Eliot.

grace86
07-23-2006, 03:55 PM
I think that I have two for sure.

The first one is Precious Bane by Mary Webb. Reading that book was like keeping a secret. For a while it lingered there, and then I was dying to tell someone about it. The story is so simple but yet so gigantic at the same time. I could see the corn being harvested, the dragonflies, and feel what the main character, Prue, felt for Woodseaves. Okay I had to pause for a minute to reminisce. My all time favorite I think...only one other book comes close...

My second is The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafon. It is a new novel. You can hear the piano and feel what the blind woman feels while she is playing it. The Cemetary of Forgotten Books is wonderful. I can smell its dust and I wish I could go there with Daniel (The main character)....like I said before, reminisce...

I could go on forever about these books. I think I have mentioned both of them elsewhere on LitNet...just read them.

Bastet
07-23-2006, 04:59 PM
Hello Grace, I saw you mentioned Carlos Ruiz Zafón. I'm glad you can read authors from Spain (my country) as far as California. I haven't read the book and was thinking about getting it. So you think it's worth reading, right? Thank you! :)

Dickensian
07-23-2006, 05:56 PM
Our Fathers by Andrew O'Hagan, Water Music by T.C. Boyle, and the Inspector Rebus series by Ian Rankin.

grace86
07-23-2006, 06:38 PM
Hello Grace, I saw you mentioned Carlos Ruiz Zafón. I'm glad you can read authors from Spain (my country) as far as California. I haven't read the book and was thinking about getting it. So you think it's worth reading, right? Thank you! :)

Hi Bastet. Yes, his book Shadow in the Wind was wonderful. Of course I read its English Translation...but if I wanted to, I could attempt the Spanish. For a new novel, it was very, very good. I would get angry when I had to put it down. Hope you read it and have fun.

Your country is beautiful, I hope someday to visit.

Bastet
07-23-2006, 07:45 PM
:) I will definitely read it then, grace. Maybe we can comment on it after I'm done ;)

grace86
07-24-2006, 01:21 PM
Sure thing Bastet. We can start our own thread or something :D

Ahmed-Adel
07-24-2006, 04:51 PM
Well,
I think I will not, God Willing, forget the characters in Lawrence's Sons and Lovers as long as I live. It is a magnificent novel. Paul Morel, Mr Morel, Mrs Morel, Miriam, Clara... Vivid characters in ones mind.
I wonder how the readers here did not mention any of Jane Austen's novels. Hers are greatly rich in characters and emotions. I love Sense and Sensibility so much. Who can forget Marianne's speech when she was leaving her home, saying, "Dear, dear Norland! when shall I cease to regret you? --- when learn to feel a home elsewhere? --- O happy house!..." Who can forget her sensibility?
Pride and Prejudice is incomparable, with its charming Elizabeth Bennet and Mr Darcy. Oh, Darcy's character is unforgettable! I love him dearly!
This is what is in my mind for now... I will see if something comes up!

subterranean
07-24-2006, 08:30 PM
I should say Catch 22 by Heller and Catcher in The Rye by Salinger. I can't forget the way Milo Minderbinder made money out of the war and how he created a (himself) joint venture company which is called M & M (Milo & Minderbinder). About Catcher, I can always imagine Holden and his hunting cap.

miss tenderness
07-27-2006, 06:50 PM
Pride and Prejudice is incomparable, with its charming Elizabeth Bennet and Mr Darcy. Oh, Darcy's character is unforgettable! I love him dearly!
This is what is in my mind for now... I will see if something comes up!



Sure, Austin is one of my favorite. She has a great sense for the society and its events. I love when she pasteurizes the gossips that goes in women's community lol . what about Elizabeth Gaskell, any one interested in her stories that dig deeply into the catastrophes of the societies, namely the English society during the time she lived?

Idril
07-27-2006, 07:18 PM
There's so many novels that have made their permanent mark on me, too many to mention really but I'll give it a try. ;) Lord of the Rings by Tolkien, all of Tolstoy's novels...and a few of his short stories as well, Demons, Crime and Punishment by Dostoevsky and his Idiot will contintue to haunt me the rest of my days. The Forsyte Saga is another, I don't know that I will ever "meet" a character that so completely enthralled me as Soames did. I loved Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman and hope and pray that he'll write another novel with those characters because I do miss them so. I loved the relationship between the mother and Everett and the role religion played in the book The Brothers K by David James Duncan, the ending got a tad bit melodramatic but the interplay between the members of that family play out in my mind often. And Douglas Adams' The Long Dark Tea Time of the Soul is responsible for my very significant crush on Thor, the Thunder God.

mono
07-28-2006, 04:29 PM
Catcher in The Rye by Salinger . . . About Catcher, I can always imagine Holden and his hunting cap.
I have no idea how I could have forgotten to list The Catcher In The Rye, too - one of the books that got me most interested in literature. :nod:

Ahmed-Adel
07-28-2006, 05:38 PM
what about Elizabeth Gaskell, any one interested in her stories that dig deeply into the catastrophes of the societies, namely the English society during the time she lived?
I heard about Gaskell's novel North and South, but didn't read it. I will tell you my opinion, God Willing, when I read it!

Pensive
07-29-2006, 05:00 AM
what about Elizabeth Gaskell, any one interested in her stories that dig deeply into the catastrophes of the societies, namely the English society during the time she lived?
I tried to read North and South but could not get through it so left reading it. It is my habit to stop reading the book that I don't find interesting and North and South was so boring that I left reading it in the very start. I will not like to suggest someone to read her novels. There are better authors.

downing
07-29-2006, 06:28 AM
How can you forget ,,Gone with the wind''? It's my favourite novel from all times!

Veva
07-29-2006, 07:15 AM
I must recommend Stuart-a life backwards by Alex Masters but I must warn you as well that there is more than meets the eye as it is a non-fiction about a homeless, psycho, hostage-taker thief. Its really brilliant.

Mary Sue
07-29-2006, 07:30 AM
I would recommend Strangers on a Train, by Patricia Highsmith. Forget the Hitchcock movie! This is the original book on which the movie was based and as so often happens, the book is MUCH better! It's all about an ordinary everyman who loses his very identity (and his moral compass) after meeting a satanic version of himself. Think "Mirror Universe From Star Trek" and you'll get the general idea.

Manfred
07-29-2006, 09:12 AM
"Treasure Island," by RL Stevenson is one of the greatest adventure novels ever written. Many of it's phrases have become common usage today, such as "Dead Man's Chest." In addition, Long John Silver has to be one of the most evil and insiduous villians in fiction. I have read this novel countless times, and recommend it highly.

miss tenderness
07-30-2006, 06:17 PM
I heard about Gaskell's novel North and South, but didn't read it. I will tell you my opinion, God Willing, when I read it!



May I recommend Gaskell's Mary Barton. I assure you that you're gonna love it , if we share the same taste. I'll be pleased to discuss it with you .I read it like three years ago and still remember its characters. Pensive , I agree with u about better authors .

ElizabethBennet
08-01-2006, 03:50 PM
I could never forget Elizabeth and Darcy from "Pride and Prejudice" (isn't it obvious from my username?). They're just incredible characters and I fell in love with them immediately! "Nicholas Nickleby" and "A Tale of Two Cities" are also firmly stuck in my memory. There are just so many special books out there that I just can't mention them all.

Ahmed-Adel
08-01-2006, 05:53 PM
May I recommend Gaskell's Mary Barton. I assure you that you're gonna love it , if we share the same taste. I'll be pleased to discuss it with you .I read it like three years ago and still remember its characters.
First, thank you for recommending another novel :). This is very nice of you. Sorry for replying so late :(
Second, I am sure we will discover that we have the same taste! As long as you love Jane Austen, then our taste is so close.
I actually don't know whether I will find that Mary Barton; but anyway I will tell you my opinion about North and South -- I am forced to read it as we will have it in our Novel course next year God Willing :). I think that since you said it is good, then it is good. Your opinion is enough for me.
Now, I was really amazed when I saw the Arabic words in your signature. Wow, are you an Arab? Are you a Muslim? Greatly excellent will it be if so!
Waiting for your reply ya Miss Tenderness!
Salaam :)

Ahmed-Adel
08-01-2006, 06:33 PM
I could never forget Elizabeth and Darcy from "Pride and Prejudice" (isn't it obvious from my username?). They're just incredible characters and I fell in love with them immediately! "Nicholas Nickleby" and "A Tale of Two Cities" are also firmly stuck in my memory. There are just so many special books out there that I just can't mention them all.
Hi Lizzy,
I am happy you love those characters; they are adorable. Nice Avatar.
Jane Austen is excellent in portraying characters and describing them. She has a sense of irony also which adds to her merits. Nice Avatar.
Has anyone seen Pride and Prejudice the movie? It is really excellent also. Nice Avatar.
Charles Dickens is also one of my favourites. I cannot forget the character of Oliver Twist or David Copperfield. They are still living in my mind -- and in many others' minds.
Hey, you know Arabic? This is good. I am surprised by your good command of English though you are originally from Germany.
Nice Avatar! It is a very good pose. :thumbs_up
Sorry for digressing from the main topic here; but, as Tristram Shandy says in L. Sterne's Tristram Shandy, "Digressions... are the sunshine; ––– they are the life, the soul of reading..."
Sorry, too, for calling you Lizzy without having permission first!

miss tenderness
08-01-2006, 09:10 PM
Ahmed ,did i recommed North and South? maybe it'll surprise you that I have not even read it :lol: idefinetly did not recommend it. I loved Gaskell coz of Mary Barton.
I am a Muslim ,hamdulilah, apparently you did not see that coming?


dear new member Elizabeth Bennet, I wish you to find ur Darcy :) happy to have you here . how is it going in Lebenon?can't people live in peace just for one year?

Ahmed-Adel
08-02-2006, 06:37 PM
Ahmed ,did i recommed North and South? maybe it'll surprise you that I have not even read it :lol: idefinetly did not recommend it. I loved Gaskell coz of Mary Barton.
I am a Muslim ,hamdulilah, apparently you did not see that coming?
Well, I know you did not recommend it :). It is the only novel I knew by Gaskell!
This is excellent you are a Muslim. I felt this from the Arabic words in your signature. Actually I didn't share in or see the Religious Forum, so I didn't know you are a Muslim before this! Now I know :).

Ahmed-Adel
08-16-2006, 02:26 PM
Hey all,
Did the novels die or what? :D
Novels do not die... Remember this!
I have still some more novels living in my mind. I still remember the details of George Orwell's Animal Farm. I still remember Boxer's character. I will never forget the scene when Boxer was taken from the farm -- that was too melancholic :( .
What about all of you? I want this topic NOT to die :thumbs_up

melancolia
08-16-2006, 03:06 PM
Hmm, there are indeed so many novels out there that can never die, whose characters leave an indelible imprint on our minds... I haven't even read HALF the classic novels out there, but so far, these are a few of the books I could not forget:
Lord of the Rings - J. R. R. Tolkien
Pride and Prejudice - Jane Austen
1984 - George Orwell
One Hundred Years of Solitude - Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Jane Eyre - Charlotte Bronte
The Glass Menagerie - Tennessee Williams (it's a play, but can't help mentioning it)

And many more to come! :D

mono
08-17-2006, 03:57 PM
A few others I forgot to mention: Lord Of The Flies by William Golding, A Portrait Of The Artist As A Young Man by James Joyce, Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë, Jude The Obscure by Thomas Hardy, Of Mice And Men by John Steinbeck, and, of course, Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy.

subterranean
08-17-2006, 08:26 PM
Jude The Obscure by Thomas Hardy...


Ah, you're a fan of Jude too now :D

miss tenderness
08-17-2006, 11:54 PM
The Glass Menagerie - Tennessee Williams (it's a play, but can't help mentioning it)

Well, melan, if any literary piece of work is worth mentioning we will be really glad to see it mentioned anywhere. I'm not a very punctilious myself:D. so you like the Glass Menegerie,to be honest it's my first time to see it mentioned as a favorite, but I do agree with you that it's distinguished , a heroin of that sort isn't much celebrated by dramatists, don't you think? And it's just a great of Williams to give us an insight about such kind of people who secretly suffer.

Maida
08-18-2006, 12:10 AM
"Treasure Island," by RL Stevenson is one of the greatest adventure novels ever written. Many of it's phrases have become common usage today, such as "Dead Man's Chest." In addition, Long John Silver has to be one of the most evil and insiduous villians in fiction. I have read this novel countless times, and recommend it highly.


I completely agree, Treasure Island is one of my favorites, and I will never forget the phrases, songs, characters, they are permenanetly imprinted in my mind.

samah
08-23-2006, 09:13 AM
Tolstoys novels are unforgattable as well as wethering heights I think that characters like heathkliff and katherine are timeless and the three mosketeers for dumas as well as my childhood for maxim gorky .

mono
08-25-2006, 11:02 AM
Jude The Obscure by Thomas Hardy...Ah, you're a fan of Jude too now :D
Indeed! I wonder of one person who recommended me his literature . . . :D

miss tenderness
08-30-2006, 01:51 PM
Tolstoys novels are unforgattable as well as wethering heights I think that characters like heathkliff and katherine are timeless and the three mosketeers for dumas as well as my childhood for maxim gorky .
The three mosketeer is interesting ,also Duma's the count of monte cristo. Samah,are you,by any chance, a just graduated student of English literature ?just wondering?

Are there any novels that caught your attention for contemporary writers? I liked My Way to Freedom by Nelson Mandela also The Imprisoned by Malika Offaghir, maybe those are not quite novels but more to be considered autobiographies. They are amazing, living suffer stories for living people, I'd love if anyone recommend books of the sort for me to read.

samah
09-19-2006, 11:26 AM
The three mosketeer is interesting ,also Duma's the count of monte cristo. Samah,are you,by any chance, a just graduated student of English literature ?just wondering?

Are there any novels that caught your attention for contemporary writers? I liked My Way to Freedom by Nelson Mandela also The Imprisoned by Malika Offaghir, maybe those are not quite novels but more to be considered autobiographies. They are amazing, living suffer stories for living people, I'd love if anyone recommend books of the sort for me to read.

hey Miss Tendress sorry for being late in my responding but i've just seen your post and no I'm not a graduate student for english literature ,are you?
and I read the count of mote cresto and I liked it very much but I didnt read any of the other novels you mentioned but i'll try to , I've never read anything to Malikah I dont know is she good ? and did read anything to saad minah?

miss tenderness
09-20-2006, 04:40 AM
oh okay then:)there were sth in my mind and now it turned to be not true:) thanks anyway.
and yes,Iam.

Bita
09-20-2006, 06:05 AM
More than a year ago I came across a book by George Gissing (then an unknown author to me). It was Odd women, and I read it. Since then Odd Women has become one of my favourite books and it had a great impact in reshaping some of my principles. After that I read The New Grub Street. George Gissing, in my view, should be considered a great author - but I find it amazing that I knew nothing about him and that almost nobody knows about him. It is also very difficult to find his books.

Curently I am reading his In the Year of Jubilee. Odd Women is still his best.;)

samah
09-20-2006, 09:40 AM
oh okay then:)there were sth in my mind and now it turned to be not true:) thanks anyway.
and yes,Iam.

maybe you thought that you know me personaly , Am I right ? but I dont think so , and good luck for you in your studies at I wanted to study english literature in univesity but I changed my mind later but I still think its a very interesting thing to study .

subterranean
09-20-2006, 09:49 AM
Indeed! I wonder of one person who recommended me his literature . . . :D

Glad you like his works, mono :D



I have to update my list with Hesse's Siddharta :thumbs_up

carina_gino20
09-20-2006, 11:51 AM
i don't know if you guys would recognize this but probably the book that i really can't forget is The Giver by Lois Lowry. it's very deep and beautiful and sad.

Stephen King's Insomnia and The Godfather were also memorable.

THX-1138
09-20-2006, 01:11 PM
1984 ,catcher in the rye,brave new world and fahernheit 451

Morrisonhotel
04-01-2007, 05:30 PM
More than a year ago I came across a book by George Gissing (then an unknown author to me). It was Odd women, and I read it. Since then Odd Women has become one of my favourite books and it had a great impact in reshaping some of my principles. After that I read The New Grub Street. George Gissing, in my view, should be considered a great author - but I find it amazing that I knew nothing about him and that almost nobody knows about him. It is also very difficult to find his books.

Curently I am reading his In the Year of Jubilee. Odd Women is still his best.;)

If you haven't read Born in Exile yet then I urge you to. The Odd Women and New Grub Street are decidedly ordinary in comparison. In fact, I would rank those two novels, along with Workers in the Dawn as his worst novels.

papayahed
04-01-2007, 06:11 PM
A book called Dear Enemy. I don't remember who wrote it but it was about this woman who was suppossed to marry a rich congressman but before they married she decided to run an orphanage for the summer. I got it for christmas when I was somewhere between the ages of 9 - 13 (It's all a blur).

Scheherazade
04-01-2007, 07:25 PM
(It's all a blur).*nods knowingly at Papaya's direction*

Mar-ga-ri-taaaasss!

:p

andave_ya
04-02-2007, 12:26 PM
Well (of course I had to mention her) Dorothy L. Sayers.

A couple of her mysteries stick with me forever. DLS had an exquisitely thorough education in classical literature and it comes through even in her mysteries though she has written more than them.

What's nice about DLS is that she can be enjoyed on so many different levels. When I first started reading her at the age of 13, I think it was, I enjoyed the whimsy coupled with adventure. Then as I go back and reread the stories as I get older, I learn so much more. She refers to Homer several times so when I read Homer and go back to DLS I learn something new. She has entrancing philosophical discussions placed strategically in her book, not short but not long enough to make you lose interest.

Gaudy Night is my favorite but if you want the whole story begin with Strong Poison. There are about seven books in the series and each of them vary in method and style.
I hope they work for you!

MarcMcGrath
04-03-2007, 07:46 AM
Sure, Austin is one of my favorite. She has a great sense for the society and its events. I love when she pasteurizes the gossips that goes in women's community lol . what about Elizabeth Gaskell, any one interested in her stories that dig deeply into the catastrophes of the societies, namely the English society during the time she lived?

I read North and South and enjoyed it, although I am not to fond of the marriage plot novels of the 19th Century even though it works well as a means to unify the representatives of the classes in the novel. Gaskell is good though.

whatsername
04-06-2007, 08:20 PM
A book I will never forget:

The Alchemist-Paulo Coelho

Brendan Madley
04-14-2007, 06:25 PM
Though not really specific, my mum directed me to Kane and Abel as a project for school. I truly believe that it is one of the best novels of the last 50 years; it's brilliant. Kane and Abel, both the novel and characters, will never die for me.

Janine
04-15-2007, 06:27 PM
I read North and South and enjoyed it, although I am not to fond of the marriage plot novels of the 19th Century even though it works well as a means to unify the representatives of the classes in the novel. Gaskell is good though.

MarcMcGrath, Someone gave me this book awhile ago and I have not read it yet. Now I will have to take down from the bookshelf, dust it off and read it soon. It sounded interesting.

Any of the Thomas Hardy novels, especially Tess of D, Mayor of Casterbridge, Woodlanders, Jude, Far From the Madding Crowd, etc...need I name them all? They are all timeless.