I have until mid-January off, so I should be able to post for a while.
I think I'll ask people in the "General Literature" part of the forum what they think. If there's more interest in Chekhov, I'll just start another discussion in this thread. If Hardy is more popular, I'll make a new thread. I'll throw up three titles from each author in a poll, and see what happens. The list will be something like this: The Cherry Orchard, Three Sisters, "In the Ravine," Under The Greenwood Tree, The Woodlanders, The Mayor of Casterbridge. In any case, I'm going to contact the mods about getting the thread more visibility on the forum. These author pages make it hard to follow the discussions on a single text.
These threads are always buried. Anyone casually browsing LitNet would probably overlook both the L thread and the C thread, since they're in the incredibly difficult to navigate author list. It's long been my complaint that the site makes it easy to get to the inane conversations in the "General Literature" forum about who is the worst novelist of all time in the universe, but makes it difficult to find thoughtful discussions of a single text.
It doesn't just amaze me how many he wrote. It amazes me how many he wrote that were good. Many of these more obscure stories that he wrote are surprising good.
I wouldn't mind doing more with Chekhov, but the thread hasn't generated much interest in the year-and-a-half it's been running. A change might help. If nothing else, creating a new thread gets some attention.
I've read most of the novels except Desperate Remedies, Two on a Tower, and that last one which I can never remember the title of. I'm only vaguely aware of his poetry, though.
Wait, "A Story without a Title" and "Hush" were in that set?
I would have offered it up to the Christmas Reading Poll if I had gotten here earlier, but I looked in just after they closed the poll.




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"It's so mysterious, the land of tears." 
