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Thread: Books you've read in the past year?

  1. #16
    Registered User aeroport's Avatar
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    Well! Hiya, syiah! Welcome to the Forum. Quite a list...

    Well, here's what I can remember at the moment:

    Beowulf
    Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (Tolkien translation)
    Goodbye, Columbus - Philip Roth
    When She Was Good - Roth
    Portnoy's Complaint - Roth
    Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man - Joyce
    The Brothers Karamazov - Dostoevsky
    Less Than Zero - Bret Easton Ellis
    Kafka on the Shore - Haruki Murakami
    On Becoming a Novelist - John Gardner
    The Art of Fiction - Gardner
    Prelude to Foundation - Asimov
    The Sacred Fount - Henry James
    'The Figure in the Carpet' - James
    'The Lesson of the Master - James
    'The Beast in the Jungle' - James
    'Daisy Miller' - James
    Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy - Adams (audio version w/ Stephen Fry)
    The God Delusion - Dawkins
    Malloy - Samuel Beckett
    The Unnameable - Beckett
    some Beckett plays
    The Hundred Secret Senses - Amy Tan
    Oroonoko; or, the Royal Slave - Aphra Behn
    A History of Western Society - McKay/Hill/Buckler
    How to Study in College - Pauk Owens
    Hamlet
    Macbeth
    King Lear
    Othello
    The Tempest
    A Midsummer Night's Dream
    Romeo and Juliet
    Titus Andronicus
    Richard III
    Henry VI

    Righto Ho, Jeeves - P.G. Wodehouse
    White Teeth - Zadie Smith
    Hard Times - Dickens
    The Belle of the Belfast City - Christina Reid
    'Bartleby, the Scrivener' & Benito Cereno - Melville
    The First Booke of the Faerie Queene - Edmund Spencer
    Last edited by aeroport; 08-22-2007 at 03:02 AM.

  2. #17
    Mad Hatter Mark F.'s Avatar
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    I used to make a list of what I read, last year I was up to about 60 books. I think I read a little less this year but probably around 40 books sounds right.

    These are the best ones :

    "Sentimental Education" by Flaubert
    "No Country For Old Men" by Cormac McCarthy
    "A Scanner Darkly" by P. K. Dick
    "Ask The Dust" by John Fante
    "Women" by Bukowski
    "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" by Ken Kesey
    "Chronicle of a Death Foretold" by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
    "The Sound and the Fury" by Faulkner
    "The Fall" by Camus
    "Endgame" by Samuel Beckett (drama)
    "Les Amours jaunes" by Tristan Corbiere (poetry)

    I also reread "L'Etranger" by Camus and "Crime and Punishment" by Dostoevsky.
    "And the worms, they will climb
    The rugged ladder of your spine"

  3. #18
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    According to my reading journals, in the past year (2006) I have read:

    Literature
    Gogol', N.V. - Dead Souls (which I was reading at the end of 2005, according to the journal, but formally finished in 2006)
    Shakespeare, W. - Othello
    Shakespeare, W. - Hamlet
    Shakespeare, W. - A midsummer night's dream
    Brodsky, J. - Less than one
    Selimović, M. - The Death and the Dervish (which I, as my favourite work, re-read every year )
    Yourcenar, M. - Le coup de grace
    Tahar Ben Jelloun - The Sand Child
    Calderón de la Barca, P. - Life is a dream
    Kertész, I. - Fateless
    Baudelaire, Ch. - Les Fleurs du Mal (re-read, in original this time )
    Andrić, I. - The Bridge Over Drina
    Krleža, M. - The Return of Filip Latinovicz
    Anthology of Serbian poetry
    Anthology of Czech poetry
    Mácha, K. H. - Poetry (May)
    Kertész, I. - Kadish for a child unborn
    Correspondances of the famous people (excerpts)
    Dickens, Ch. - A Tale of Two Cities
    Lucian of Samosata (?, attributed to) - Loukios ê Onos
    Anthology of Bulgarian poetry
    Hamvas, B. - Hungarian huperion
    Canetti, E. - Die gerettete Zunge. Geschichte einer Jugend (translated in Italian as La lingua salvata)
    Dostoevsky, F.M. - Brothers Karamazov
    Šantić, A. - collected works by
    Kostova, E. - Historian
    Dostoevsky, F.M. - Notes from the Underground
    Crnković, Z. & Kušan, I. - correspondance, collected letters
    Nafisi, A. - Lolita in Teheran
    Sládkovič, A. - Marina
    Gogol', N. V. - The Overcoat
    Dostoevsky, F.M. - Podrostok (which I, for reasons which elude me, failed to finish, as the note in the journal says)
    Pamuk, O. - The White Castle
    Schiller, F. - The Robbers
    Gundulić, I. - Suze sina razmetnoga
    Selimović, M. - Memoirs
    Andrić, I. - Ex ponto
    Balzac, H. de - Father Goriot
    Bettiza, E. - Exile
    Maraini, D. - Bagheria
    Pontiggia, G. - Il giocatore invisibile
    Baricco, A. - Castelli di rabbia
    Тјutchev, F. I. - Lirika
    Aeschyles - Prometheus Bound
    Njegoš, P.P. - Gorski vijenac
    Cesarić, D. - selected poetry
    Calvino, I. - Invisible cities
    Pushkin, A. S. - Evgeny Onegin (re-read)
    Byron, G. G. - Childe Harold (re-read)
    Malerba, L. - Le maschere
    Mori, A. M. - Nata in Istria
    Kranjčević, S. S. - Iza spuštenijeh trepavica - izbor iz djela
    Lermontov, M. Ju. - The Hero of Our Time
    Slovo o polku Igoreve
    Pushkin, A. S. - Selected poems, fairy tales, dramas
    Longfellow, H. W. - The Complete Poetical works by
    Svevo, I. - Senilita'
    D'Alessandro, G. - La puttana del tedesco
    Tugovanje za Srbijom - antologija drugih srpskih romantičara
    Druzhnikov, J. - Viza v pozavchera
    Maupassant, G. de - short stories
    Goethe, J. W. - Faust (re-read)
    Gaarder, J. - Vita brevis
    Ahmatova, A. A. - poetry
    Pasternak, B. L. - poetry
    Makine, A. - The French testament
    Leopardi, G. - poetry
    Alighieri, D. - Purgatorio
    Sto rokiv junosti - 20th century Ukrainian poetry anthology
    Gazdanov, G. - An Evening with Claire
    Pamuk, O. - Istanbul
    Eco, U. - Il nome della rosa
    Zamyatin, E. I. - We (which I did not finish)
    Robinson, E. A. - Children of the Night
    Ilić, V. - poetry
    Dostoevsky, F. M. - Poor Folk (re-read)
    de Quincey, Th. - Confessions of an English opium eater
    Goldoni, C. - La locandiera
    Zola, E. - Therese Raquin
    Gogol', N. V. - Revizor

    Other
    Maalouf, A. - In the name of identity
    Zeldin, Th. - Intimate history of humanity
    Daun, A. & Janson, S. - Europeans - culture and identity
    Weinrich, H. - Linguistics of lies - can language hide thoughts
    Haag, E. van de - The Jewish Mystique
    Winner, E. - Gifted Children - myths and reality
    Bon, G. de - Psyhology of the masses
    Chesterton, G. K. - The Everlasting Man
    Vrkić, J . - I u Sibiru žive ljudi - putovanje Čehovljevim putopisima
    Pavičić, J. - Beneath the language - comments on the language and Croats
    Zaid, G. - So many books
    le Goff, J. - Medieval Civilisation
    Fernández-Armesto, F. - So you think you're human
    Mead, G. H. - Mind, person and society
    Ware, T. - Orthodox Church
    Camus, A. - The Myth of Sisyphus

    I do not have all of my reading journals from that period next to me right now so the list is bound to be incomplete, but it should give the basic idea of what a mess my reading repertoire in the last year was.
    I tend to read a lot and keep reading journals, so it is generally easy to remember what I read when by going through those notes (*hint, hint... do some of you also keep reading journals?)

  4. #19
    Live Simply kitten's Avatar
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    i've been keeping lists of what i read every year for a few years now. i want to know i have read at least a book a week. i'm at about 48 so far this year. it sounds like that isn't much compared to some (most) of you, and i will admit that i am EXTREMELY intimidated by the reading lists on display. therefore, i won't be putting up my list.
    We have enough youth. How about a fountain of knowledge?

  5. #20
    Mad Hatter Mark F.'s Avatar
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    I forgot to mention "Walden" and "Civil Disobedience" by Thoreau.
    "And the worms, they will climb
    The rugged ladder of your spine"

  6. #21
    A ist der Affe NickAdams's Avatar
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    Elephant Vanishes (horrible)
    Ernest Hemingway's Collected Stories (again)
    The Sun Also Rises
    Sanctuary
    The Manticore
    The Oedipus Trilogy
    Gotham Writer's Workshop (again)
    Hamlet
    A book G. B. Shaw one act plays (one jewel, the rest tedious)
    A Light in August
    Waiting for Godot
    Faulkner and Cowley's Files
    Jung's Essays
    Molloy
    One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (horrible)
    A Clockwork Orange
    A Moveable Feast (currently reading)
    Midnight's Children (currently reading)
    Don Quixote (currently reading)

    "Do you mind if I reel in this fish?" - Dale Harris

    "For sale: baby shoes, never worn." - Ernest Hemingway


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  7. #22
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    Wow...y'all all have some rather large reading lists, there.

    Kitten, almost 50 books in the course of a year is amazing, and definitely something you should be proud of!

  8. #23
    Live Simply kitten's Avatar
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    thank you, SG. i was proud of myself. sorry. i AM proud.

    reading the posts in the forum makes me want to try W&P though...
    We have enough youth. How about a fountain of knowledge?

  9. #24
    If grace is an ocean... grace86's Avatar
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    I've read more than I personally thought I would this past year, so this is a long list, for me anyway.

    I will reflect a bit and then post.
    "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

  10. #25
    If grace is an ocean... grace86's Avatar
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    Okay from August 06 to August 07, I think I am missing a few more:

    The Oresteia
    Civil Disobedience
    Letter from Birmingham Jail
    The Iliad
    The Odyssey (sp?)
    The Aeneid
    Epic of Gilgamesh
    Hamlet
    The Inferno
    The Decameron (only parts)
    Cantebury Tales (only parts)
    Pygmalion
    Metamorphosis (Ovid)
    Lysistrata
    Electra
    Sappho poetry
    Chinese poetry
    Ethan Frome
    Women in Love
    Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
    Book of Lost Things
    The Thirteenth Tale
    The Ivory Child
    Heart of Darkness
    Kreutzer Sonata
    Don Quixote (will be finished this August)
    Crime and Punishment (edited in)

    I know I am missing a couple. I might update later. Didn't think I read as much as I did. Cool.
    Last edited by grace86; 08-22-2007 at 11:54 PM.
    "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

  11. #26
    Ditsy Pixie Niamh's Avatar
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    I'd started a log in january about how many i was reading and what i'd read but i'd lost track and forgot to log....
    I've spent this year reading and rereading alot. For example i've read the bitter bynde saga twice this year already.
    Eldest-Christopher Paolini
    Should have got off at Sydney Parade- Ross o' Carroll Kelly
    Ill Made Mute- Cicelia Dart Thornton x2
    The lady of Sorrows- Cicelia Dart Thornton x2
    Battle of Evernight-Cicelia Dart thornton x2
    After Eight-Meg Cabot
    The Iron Tree- Cicelia Dart Thornton
    Persuasion- Jane Austen
    Howls Moving castle- Wynne Jones
    Blue Shoes and Happiness- Alexander MaCall Smith
    Good Husband of Zedbra Drive- Alexander MaCall Smith
    The Queen and I- Sue Townsend
    Classic Victorian and Edwardian Ghost stories
    Madame Bovery- Gustave Flaubert
    Sabriel-Garth Nix
    Lirael-Garth Nix
    Abhorsen-Garth Nix
    The Third Policeman- Flann O'Brian
    Boy in the Striped Pyjamas- John Boyne
    The Magicians Guild- Trudi Canavan
    The Novice- Trudi Canavan
    The High Lord- Trudi Canavan
    Artemis Fowl-
    A.F. And the Artic Incident-
    A.F and the Eternity Code- Eoin Colfer
    A.F. And the Opal Deception-
    A.F. and the lost Colony-

    H.P. and the Philosophers stone-
    H.P. and the chamber of Secrets-
    H.P. and the prisoner of azkaban-
    H.P. and the goblet of fire- J.K.Rowling
    H.P. and the order of the pheonix-
    H.P. and the half Blood Prince-
    H.P. and the Deathly Hallows-

    started reading but didnt finish Shalamar the Clown-Rushdie.
    and thats all i can remember!
    "Come away O human child!To the waters of the wild, With a faery hand in hand, For the worlds more full of weeping than you can understand."
    W.B.Yeats

    "If it looks like a Dwarf and smells like a Dwarf, then it's probably a Dwarf (or a latrine wearing dungarees)"
    Artemins Fowl and the Lost Colony by Eoin Colfer


    my poems-please comment Forum Rules

  12. #27
    A ist der Affe NickAdams's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jamesian View Post
    Well! Hiya, syiah! Welcome to the Forum. Quite a list...

    Well, here's what I can remember at the moment:

    Beowulf
    Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (Tolkien translation)
    Goodbye, Columbus - Philip Roth
    When She Was Good - Roth
    Portnoy's Complaint - Roth
    Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man - Joyce
    The Brothers Karamazov - Dostoevsky
    Less Than Zero - Bret Easton Ellis
    Kafka on the Shore - Haruki Murakami
    On Becoming a Novelist - John Gardner
    The Art of Fiction - Gardner
    Prelude to Foundation - Asimov
    The Sacred Fount - Henry James
    'The Figure in the Carpet' - James
    'The Lesson of the Master - James
    'The Beast in the Jungle' - James
    'Daisy Miller' - James
    Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy - Adams (audio version w/ Stephen Fry)
    The God Delusion - Dawkins
    Malloy - Samuel Beckett
    The Unnameable - Beckett
    some Beckett plays
    The Hundred Secret Senses - Amy Tan
    Oroonoko; or, the Royal Slave - Aphra Behn
    A History of Western Society - McKay/Hill/Buckler
    How to Study in College - Pauk Owens
    Hamlet
    Macbeth
    King Lear
    Othello
    The Tempest
    A Midsummer Night's Dream
    Romeo and Juliet
    Titus Andronicus
    Richard III
    Henry VI

    Righto Ho, Jeeves - P.G. Wodehouse
    White Teeth - Zadie Smith
    Hard Times - Dickens
    The Belle of the Belfast City - Christina Reid
    'Bartleby, the Scrivener' & Benito Cereno - Melville
    The First Booke of the Faerie Queene - Edmund Spencer
    How helpful are the Gardner books to a writer?

    I posted a question, on Beckett's Trilogy thread http://www.online-literature.com/for...hlight=beckett, and would like to see if you can answer it.

    Quote Originally Posted by Mark F. View Post
    I used to make a list of what I read, last year I was up to about 60 books. I think I read a little less this year but probably around 40 books sounds right.

    These are the best ones :

    "Sentimental Education" by Flaubert
    "No Country For Old Men" by Cormac McCarthy
    "A Scanner Darkly" by P. K. Dick
    "Ask The Dust" by John Fante
    "Women" by Bukowski
    "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" by Ken Kesey
    "Chronicle of a Death Foretold" by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
    "The Sound and the Fury" by Faulkner
    "The Fall" by Camus
    "Endgame" by Samuel Beckett (drama)
    "Les Amours jaunes" by Tristan Corbiere (poetry)

    I also reread "L'Etranger" by Camus and "Crime and Punishment" by Dostoevsky.
    How is Women by Bukowski? I was reading a little of Pulp in B&B today.

    Quote Originally Posted by grace86 View Post
    Okay from August 06 to August 07, I think I am missing a few more:

    The Oresteia
    Civil Disobedience
    Letter from Birmingham Jail
    The Iliad
    The Odyssey (sp?)
    The Aeneid
    Epic of Gilgamesh
    Hamlet
    The Inferno
    The Decameron (only parts)
    Cantebury Tales (only parts)
    Pygmalion
    Metamorphosis (Ovid)
    Lysistrata
    Electra
    Sappho poetry
    Chinese poetry
    Ethan Frome
    Women in Love
    Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
    Book of Lost Things
    The Thirteenth Tale
    The Ivory Child
    Heart of Darkness
    Kreutzer Sonata
    Don Quixote (will be finished this August)

    I know I am missing a couple. I might update later. Didn't think I read as much as I did. Cool.
    There are a number of early works on your list. Are you researching, studying, or just enjoy them?

    Quote Originally Posted by syiah View Post
    Well, there's no way I can remember everything I've read in the past year, so here are the ones that stuck :

    Honey for the Bears - Anthony Burgess
    A Clockwork Orange - Anthony Burgess
    The Wanting Seed - Anthony Burgess
    War and Peace - Tolstoy
    Anna Karenina - Tolstoy
    Faust - Goethe
    The Sorrows of Young Werther - Goethe
    Fathers and Sons - Turgenev
    Interview With a Vampire - Anne Rice
    The Vampire Lestat - Anne Rice
    Queen of the Damned - Anne Rice
    The Tale of the Body Thief - Anne Rice
    The Devil Memnoch - Anne Rice
    Macbeth - Shakespeare
    Twelfth Night - Shakespeare
    Sickness Unto Death - Soren Kierkegaard
    Ivanov - Ivan Chekhov
    The Seagull - Ivan Chekhov
    Uncle Vanya - Ivan Chekhov
    Three Sisters - Ivan Chekhov
    The Cherry Orchard - Ivan Chekhov
    The Name of the Rose - Umberto Eco
    The Flowers of Evil - Baudelaire
    Alphabet of Thorn - McKillips
    Apprentice - Feist
    Master - Feist
    The Birth of Tragedy - Nietzsche
    Beyond Good and Evil - Nietzche
    Mein Kampf - Hitler
    Antichrist - Nietzche
    Lolita - Vladimir Nabokov
    Juliette - Marquis De Sade
    120 Days of Sodom - Marquis De Sade
    Philosophy of a Bedroom - Marquis De Sade
    Venus in Furs - Sacher-Masoch
    Don Quixote - Cervantes
    The Diary of a Madman - Gogol
    Dead Souls - Gogol
    The Idiot - Dostoevsky
    Demons - Dostoevsky
    1984 - George Orwell
    Animal Farm - George Orwell
    Warriors Don't Cry - Beals
    Criminal Defense - Cicero
    Digital Fortress - Brown
    Angels and Demons - Brown
    Twilight - Meyers
    Eclipse - Meyers
    Genesis
    Exodus
    Deuteronomy
    Numbers
    The Odyssey
    And I was forced to translate the Illiad in school...>.> That DEFINETLY stuck.

    I live in books...
    And yes! I did discover a new favorite author: Anthony Burgess.

    Ugo Tarchetti? Never heard of him. Sorry.
    I discovered Burgess this month. I read A Clockwork Orange and enjoyed it. Not so much for the story, but for Burgess' use of language. I've been looking into his linguistic works. What an interesting fellow. I've been looking for Quest for Fire, because he invented a kind of prehistoric language, but I don't know if it was just for the movie.

    "Do you mind if I reel in this fish?" - Dale Harris

    "For sale: baby shoes, never worn." - Ernest Hemingway


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  13. #28
    If grace is an ocean... grace86's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by NickAdams View Post
    There are a number of early works on your list. Are you researching, studying, or just enjoy them?
    Some of the earlier works, well most of them were for my world literature course last fall. I was interested in the parts we read for class, so I almost always went back to pursue the rest of the works. Have to admit I didn't get through all of them completely (for lit class anyway - my personal readings I finished), but I was happy to get through the ones I did...hence the current reading of Don Quixote.

    Some how lit class always gave me just the right taste and intro into a piece that it fueled a lot of late night readings and pure enjoyment readings.

    Never quite appreciated the Iliad and the Odyssey as I do today. They are fantastic.
    "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

  14. #29
    A ist der Affe NickAdams's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by grace86 View Post
    Never quite appreciated the Iliad and the Odyssey as I do today. They are fantastic.
    Prose or verse translation. Which do you prefer?

    "Do you mind if I reel in this fish?" - Dale Harris

    "For sale: baby shoes, never worn." - Ernest Hemingway


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  15. #30
    If grace is an ocean... grace86's Avatar
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    If I remember correctly it was verse. Can't remember the translator but he was pretty good...I know though it wasn't Fagles' translation (hmm or maybe it was), I do remember the verse however. I will check when I get to my apartment and have access to the books.

    Can't say I actually knew there was a prose version.
    "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

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