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Thread: Lit Net Top Author?

  1. #136
    Registered User adwara1's Avatar
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    Fyodor Mikhaylovich Dostoyevsky

  2. #137
    Registered User bounty's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by bazarov View Post
    So, for people to stop arguing about unfair list because Flaubert is better then Dostoevsky; how come Crime and Punishment is above Madame Bovary ; name your top 5 authors. I will count it this time; so Dark Muse can rest a little bit Poet, novelist or drama - they all count.

    The deadline is...one month, so it's Valentine's Day!
    i know i am way past february 14th but id say:

    1. charles dickens
    2. james fenimore cooper
    3. robert louis stevenson
    4. mark twain
    5. tie between john steinbeck and arthur conan doyle

    and i pick them, not so much because im intimately knowledgeable about what it means to be a "great author" or the "best writer", but rather, that i enjoy their books so much.

  3. #138
    The Grand Inquisitor jcjp's Avatar
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    As am I-- yet:

    1. James Joyce - the accomplishments of Ulysses and Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man are extremely difficult to ignore-- despite finnegans wake. I've already rambled on about him enough...

    2. Dostoevsky - objectively the BEST writer I have ever seen. His styles range hugely from The Brothers Karamazov (my personal favorite work of his) to Notes from the Underground to everything in between (Crime and Punishment and a slew of others); yet he isn't #1 in my mind because he doesn't have the sheen, the polish that Joyce does in his writing. I could spend weeks upon weeks dissecting any point in Brothers Karamazov yet I could spend the entirety of my life studying Joyce and still not entirely understand it.

    3. Marcel Proust - by FAR the most philosophical and in-depth writer I have ever seen, yet he doesn't make too much of a point in his entire series of novels (perhaps that's the point; it's so incredibly long that you end up right back where you started), hence why he's not higher.

    4. Walt Whitman - you may hate me for picking a rather obscure (well, by top 5 standards) author but to me he represents poetry in its own true, unbridled form. Unimpeded by laws of poetry and or reason, his style just seems to intrinsically flow from page to page: a style I envy.

    5. Vladimir Nabokov: Lolita is a fabulous work that is often misunderstood by idiotic professors who focus on how manipulative HH is rather than how inherently sad his entire situation is (lover dying at such an earlier age, etc...).

    huh, who woulda known: three of my picks are in the 20th century...

  4. #139
    Lost in the Fog PabloQ's Avatar
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    1. F. Scott Fitzgerald
    2. Shakespeare
    3. Ernest Hemingway
    4. Sinclair Lewis
    5. Frank Norris
    No damn cat, no damn cradle - Newt Honniker

  5. #140
    Registered User Alyoshka's Avatar
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    My five picks in no order:

    F. Dostoevsky
    E. Hemmingway
    L. Tolstoy
    P. Roth
    H. Murakami

    Was I too late?

  6. #141
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    I'm too late too, but:

    1. Marcel Proust
    2. Shakespeare
    3. D.H. Lawrence
    4. Thomas Hardy
    5. Jane Austen

  7. #142
    Ataraxia bazarov's Avatar
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    You're not late; just keep posting.
    At thunder and tempest, At the world's coldheartedness,
    During times of heavy loss And when you're sad
    The greatest art on earth Is to seem uncomplicatedly gay.

    To get things clear, they have to firstly be very unclear. But if you get them too quickly, you probably got them wrong.
    If you need me urgent, send me a PM

  8. #143
    Pewter Pots! eyemaker's Avatar
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    When are you going to post the final List baz? I'm quite excited

    "The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in mind at the same time and still retain the ability to function. One should, for example, be able to see that things are hopeless and yet be determined to make them otherwise."

    -- F. Scott Fitzgerald

  9. #144
    Registered User
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    James Joyce

  10. #145
    the beloved: Gladys's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by dodoshady View Post
    James Joyce
    Having just read 'The Dead' from 'Dubliners', I can appreciate your nomination.

  11. #146
    Alea iacta est. mortalterror's Avatar
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    I got tired of waiting for Bazarov to post the scores; so I went and tallied them myself. As of right now, here is how things stand.

    1.Dostoyevski (25)
    2.Shakespeare (24)
    3.Dickens (12)
    4.Tolstoy (9)
    5.Steinbeck (9)
    6.Hemingway (7)
    7.Austen (7)
    8.Proust (7)
    9.Hardy (6)
    10.Nabokov (6)
    11.Joyce (6)
    12.Hugo (5)
    13.Dante (5)
    14.Kafka (5)
    15.Tolkien (5)
    16.Faulkner (5)
    17.Bronte, Charlotte (4)
    18.Homer (4)
    19.Wilde (4)
    20.Pushkin (4)
    21.Eliot (3)
    22.Fitzgerald (3)
    23.Salinger (3)
    24.Marquez (3)
    25.Selimovic (2)
    26.Krleza (2)
    27.Doyle (2)
    28.Keats (2)
    29.Poe (2)
    30.Lawrence (2)
    31.Eco (2)
    32.Milton (2)
    33.Ellis (2)
    34.Vonnegut (2)
    35.Stevenson (2)
    36.Ibsen (2)
    37.Conrad (2)
    38.Turgenev (2)
    39.Gogol (2)
    40.Murakami (2)
    41.Beckett (2)
    42.Goethe (2)
    43.Camus (2)
    44.Woolf (2)
    45.Hesse (2)
    46.Gaskell (2)
    47.Orwell (2)
    48.Twain (2)
    49.Racine (1)
    50.Ovid (1)
    "So-Crates: The only true wisdom consists in knowing that you know nothing." "That's us, dude!"- Bill and Ted
    "This ain't over."- Charles Bronson
    Feed the Hungry!

  12. #147
    Bibliophile JBI's Avatar
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    Wow, that was uninteresting Thanks for the work though.

  13. #148
    Ataraxia bazarov's Avatar
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    Unbelievable. Mortal, you were the one who wanted this thread to stay opened for months; remember?
    At thunder and tempest, At the world's coldheartedness,
    During times of heavy loss And when you're sad
    The greatest art on earth Is to seem uncomplicatedly gay.

    To get things clear, they have to firstly be very unclear. But if you get them too quickly, you probably got them wrong.
    If you need me urgent, send me a PM

  14. #149
    Ataraxia bazarov's Avatar
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    closed
    At thunder and tempest, At the world's coldheartedness,
    During times of heavy loss And when you're sad
    The greatest art on earth Is to seem uncomplicatedly gay.

    To get things clear, they have to firstly be very unclear. But if you get them too quickly, you probably got them wrong.
    If you need me urgent, send me a PM

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