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Thread: Longest book you've ever read.

  1. #151
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    My longest is probably The Stand by Stephen King. My favorite King novel is Carrie, however I am NOT a big fan of the horror genre. I have read a lot of lengthy books! Of course, length is definitely NOT an indication of complexity! As you know I am a big lover of British literature, especially from the Victorian era. A Victorian era novel, such as Great Expectations (my edition is 571 pages) can take a long while to read, especially if it is authored by Charles Dickens! I find British/Victorian literature compelling and intriguing. P.S. Immanuel Kant's Metaphysics of Morals is only 43 pages long, so hopefully it won't take me TOO long to read.

  2. #152
    Registered User Babbalanja's Avatar
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    I love big, bloated books. Megafiction, it's what's for dinner.

    Jonathan Bayliss's Prologos was 1,089 pages, though he presents alternative methods of tackling the demanding novel. I loved this crazed philosophical trapeze act, concerning a family trip to the zoo on Palm Sunday and everything else in history.

    David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest was over a thousand pages, but that's including endnotes. Okay, this was a little extravagant even for Wallace, but he's a comic genius.

    Really big and very good:
    The Recognitions - William Gaddis
    Almanac of the Dead - Leslie Marmon Silko
    The Women of Whitechapel - Paul West

    Really big but really bad:
    Dhalgren - Samuel Delany
    Frog - Stephen Dixon
    Tidewater Tales - John Barth

  3. #153
    Registered User metal134's Avatar
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    As of today, "War and Peace" is officially the longest book I've ever read!

  4. #154
    Registered User chaplin's Avatar
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    The Gulag Archipelago, 2000+ pages, though technically that is a 3-volume work.

    One volume, unfortunately, would be Atlas Shrugged, which is, I think, longer than War and Peace.

    Also long:

    The Brothers Karamazov
    August 1914 (Expanded Edition)
    The Beatles (Bob Spitz)
    Anton Chekhov (Donald Rayfield)
    Last edited by chaplin; 05-05-2007 at 02:04 AM.

  5. #155
    If grace is an ocean... grace86's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by metal134 View Post
    As of today, "War and Peace" is officially the longest book I've ever read!
    Congrats! That is a milestone.

    Quote Originally Posted by Babbalanja134 View Post
    I love big, bloated books. Megafiction, it's what's for dinner.
    I like that!

    Mine was probably Anna Karenina, I don't know if I've ever posted that or not.
    "So heaven meets earth like a sloppy wet kiss, and my heart turns violently inside of my chest, I don't have time to maintain these regrets, when I think about, the way....He loves us..."


    http://youtube.com/watch?v=5xXowT4eJjY

  6. #156
    book worm kenikki's Avatar
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    Tom Wolfe - Bonfire of the Vanities, nearly 800 pages. Just looking at the book now scares me.
    "Without music, life would be a mistake." - Nietzsche

    "The most radical revolutionary will become a conservative on the day after the revolution" - Hannah Arendt.

    "Shakespeare is the happy hunting ground of all minds that have lost their balance" - James Joyce

    Currently reading:
    Bitter Fame: A Life of Sylvia Plath - Anne Stevenson

  7. #157
    speak dead speaker Panflute's Avatar
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    So far, it's Charles Dickens's 'Bleak House'. My copy had about 740 pages, but the lettering was small, and the pages rather big. I think there are some versions around with about 900-1000 pages.
    currently reading
    The Pickwick Papers by Charles Dickens

    recently finished
    Oliver Twist by Charles Dickens
    Bleak House by Charles Dickens

  8. #158
    Registered User metal134's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by grace86 View Post
    Congrats! That is a milestone.
    Thanks! It was funny because my friend, who is not a reader, saw me reading the last couple of pages and jokingly said, "you better finish that by tomorrow". Ten minutes later, he sees me reading a new book and said, "Jesus dude, you need to slow down".

  9. #159
    Der largest book I have ever read, would be a book on ancient japanese warfare.

  10. #160
    Registered User Aunty-lion's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Babbalanja View Post
    I love big, bloated books. Megafiction, it's what's for dinner.

    David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest was over a thousand pages, but that's including endnotes. Okay, this was a little extravagant even for Wallace, but he's a comic genius.
    Yeah, I loved this book. With a book as great as this one, you are glad it's so long, coz that way you get more of it. I personally love reading long books because I always get separation anxiety after a good book, so, the longer the better!

    Another good, long read is Les Miserables.
    Women and men(both dong and ding)
    summer autumn winter spring
    reaped their sowing and went their came
    sun moon stars rain

  11. #161
    Two Gun Kid Idril's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Babbalanja View Post

    David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest was over a thousand pages, but that's including endnotes. Okay, this was a little extravagant even for Wallace, but he's a comic genius.
    And you needed every single one of those end notes to fill in the blanks. I thought I could maybe get by without reading or at least just skimming the especially long ones, the ones that were pages long by themselves but I quickly realized they all needed to be read.

    Quote Originally Posted by Aunty-lion View Post
    Yeah, I loved this book. With a book as great as this one, you are glad it's so long, coz that way you get more of it.
    It was a great book, so many great characters and so much humor amidst the depravity and despair.
    the luminous grass of the prairie hides
    feet lovely and still as sleeping doves,
    porcelain bones strong enough to carry a life,
    but weighty and unmovable
    As black Dakota hills.
    ~ Riesa

  12. #162
    Registered User Aunty-lion's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by kenikki View Post
    Tom Wolfe - Bonfire of the Vanities, nearly 800 pages. Just looking at the book now scares me.
    Don't bother, it's awful. But it isn't actually very hard to read, so I don't imagine it'll be as much of an effort as you are imagining.

    The man seriously annoys me though. He claims in all his essays that writers should be completely separate from their characters, and then writes about a bunch of soulless, heartless, transparent versions of himself.

    And he has terrible grammar!
    Women and men(both dong and ding)
    summer autumn winter spring
    reaped their sowing and went their came
    sun moon stars rain

  13. #163
    Left 4evr Adolescent09's Avatar
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    Long reads (1000+):
    I've read The Count of Monte Cristo, (1200-1400 pages depending on the edition), War and Peace (1000-1400 pages depending on edition..) and Gone with the Wind (1021 pages standard)..

    I am half way through Don Quixote (1000 pages standard)

    Mid-length reads (600-800)
    Then I've read quite a number of middle lengthed classics including Anna Karenina (700-800 pages I think), The Brother's Karamazov (around 700 pages?), The Hunchback of Notre Dame (600 pages or so), East of Eden (600+ pages?), Great Expectations (I know its more than 500 pages), Jane Eyre (also more than 500 pages), Crime and Punishment (600+ pages?), Les Miserables (I think its about 750 pages..) and The Three Musketeers (this might be under 500 pages.. I haven't read it since the sixth grade)

    Shorter reads (anything from 60-500 pages) I've read too many in this category to mention :P... but these mainly consist of classics for younger children..: Jules Vernes, Mark Twain, Louise Mae Alcott (sp?) Frances Hodgson Burnett, Robert Louis Stevenson and Baroness Emmuska Orczy including several others...
    Last edited by Adolescent09; 05-06-2007 at 12:38 AM.
    My hide hides the heart inside

  14. #164
    Registered User Reccura's Avatar
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    Well, the longest book I've ever read is the sixth book of HP. I can't remember, but it's so long, I thought I wasn't goping to finish it. Am I a super-ficial kind of person? haha.

  15. #165
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    The Old Wives Tale by Arnold Bennet (A level)
    Ulysses by you know who (S level)
    Pilgrimage by Dorothy Richardson (ditto)

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