Right now I have:
Animal farm
1984
And Then There Were None
Dante's Inferno
that is probably about all i will be able to read this year.Im pretty slow![]()
Right now I have:
Animal farm
1984
And Then There Were None
Dante's Inferno
that is probably about all i will be able to read this year.Im pretty slow![]()
Yes I do, I'm such an idiotI check almost all book titles before I post on this forum exactly to avoid this kind of situation, heh
Thanks for the suggestion! I also have "The Idiot" waiting in line. From the two by Dostoevsky which one do you think I should read first?
Ah! Feels good to post again!
now let's see... i never end up completing reading the books which i want to so i think i shall set shorter goals this time-
I plan to read a few dramas by the University Wits( but I haven't bought any yet!)
- Volpone by Jonson
-finally, maybe, finally I might just get out of my cave and read the King Henry series by Shakespeare..
-after this, all I might want to read for sometime would be Wodehouse...
- I plan also to take a look at early Horatian satires.
so, this year's going to be ancient for me..
I like The Brothers Karamazov better than The Idiot... but it really really doesn't matter which you read first!
I almost never hear anyone talk about Mary Stewart! I love her. Not the merlin trilogy as much--I like The Ivy Tree and some of her other travel-mystery-romances. Not "great literature" by some standards, I'm sure, but definitely great reads. I'm sure I'll reread some of hers this year.originally posted by Niamh
and i want to reread the Merlin Trilogy and A Wicked Day by Mary Stewart
I also read Pride & Prejudice and Jane Eyre almost every year.
Last edited by betzen; 02-25-2008 at 06:08 PM.
I couldn't tell you as I haven't read it, but Dostoevsky's most famous work and the one generally acknowledged to be his masterpiece is Crime and Punishment, and I found Karamazov to be a better book if that tells you anything (though Crime and Punishment is also very good). In terms of philosophy it is by far and away his best. The chapter of The Grand Inquisitor alone has been praised as a valuable philosophical work in and of itself, never mind the rest of the book. I've heard good things about The Idiot as well. You can't really go wrong with Dostoevsky in general. Make sure you get the Pevear & Volkhonsky translations though, they're unanimously acclaimed as the best Dostoevsky translators.
Last edited by superunknown; 02-25-2008 at 09:36 PM.
"In the sunset of dissolution, everything is illuminated by the aura of nostalgia, even the guillotine."
- Milan Kundera, The Unbearable Lightness of Being
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Last edited by Quinn_; 07-28-2008 at 04:39 AM.
I have the complete works of Jane Austen which I want to read this year. I am a member of a book club so I will have to fit them in between those books.
I really want to get around to reading The da Vinci Code by Dan Brown. I absolutely LOVED Angels and Demons but for some reason I haven't found the time to read the follow up.
"The only thing we have to fear is fear itself." -FDR
"Hell is still overburdened/I must stand and wait in line/How have I been so determined malign?" -Disturbed
Skip it.
"And the worms, they will climb
The rugged ladder of your spine"
i thought artemis was good then there is wolf brother by michelle paver i love it
I'm new to this site and have just finished "The Idiot."
What did you think? I was dubious about the "Christ-like" nature of Fyodor's hero in the novel... he is supposedly virtuous and meek and has his innocence ripped asunder by the squabbling society types... however I had doubts about his naivety in the beginning.
What do you think? Are you even around on this site anymore? I'm Harold by the way, a former English Lit student from Edinburgh. Nice to meet you (possibly).
Harold