I'm really glad you said that. I am reading The Tale of Genji, and enjoying it, but it's going to take me awhile to finish, and that's OK with me. Genji is an interesting character. I find it quite fascinating to think of this long ago, well-bred Japanese widow writing the first novel ever, and what a book it is!


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Thanks for your comments. I understand what you mean about these longer books not necessarily being do-able in a month. I guess I'll see how I get on. In any books, long or short, there are differences in their density. So, for example, it took me a long(ish) time to read Tess of the D-Urbervilles last year, which is about 350 pages long but very dense, but probably the same amount of time to read 1Q84 which is significantly longer but a bit more lightweight. So I suspect certain books will be more difficult to absorb (say Infinite Jest, Ulysses) than others (The Old Curiosity Shop, for example, or even The Tale of Genji). I do get a lot of reading time, however, thanks to my commute which gives me about 1hr 40 minutes reading time each day. 

That just may inspire me to pick up Genji later this year. And thanks for Seidensticker recommendation-- I'd tried Royall Tyler's, which is said to be "accurate to a fault" (with a burdensome amount of footnotes and additional materials). For my part, I now feel motivated to spend my year communing with the unknown monsters on my bookshelves-- Mason & Dixon, Something Happened, From Here to Eternity, Doctor Zhivago, Winter's Tale, Petersburg, Demons, Bleak House, Genji... but I'll certainly drop in for discussions of Don Quixote, Infinite Jest, Gravity's Rainbow, and Ulysses, which make up some of my all-time favorites.

