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Nice list! I think that I may put some of your books on my TBR list.
Thanks! Decided to move up to 75 book challenge from 50, since it looks like I'll hit 50 in the relatively near future.
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Welcome to the 75'ers group!!!!
Great List. Couple of them I'd like your thoughts on as they are on my shelves but I haven't yet read them.
Silas Marner A couple of threads on the site here have commented by I wanted to see what you thought. Also
Middlemarch as that's another George Eliot.
The magnificent Ambersons I put this one on my shelves because it's on one of my 100 best lists but I haven't gotten 'round to it yet.
You're the second or third person i've seen who recently finished
house of Seven Gables. i haven't read any hawthorne since my junior high school read of
The Scarlet Letter. Was it a good read?
Must know how you found
Blood Meridian as I finished this up late last year. i'm a big McCarthy fan and I enjoyed the book. But i found it the most difficult to get through of his that I've read so far. The style is a little more involved than usual for him and the violence and dark mood of the novel is a little magnified in this one. What'd you think?
Also, if you like Willa Cather and haven't read
Death Comes for the Archbishop, I highly recommend it!!
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Hello there,
Noticed you posted in the 100 best thread. That section is not as popular as the 75'er pages here but I also posted there. The various 100 best lists have been very useful for me over the last few years. I have uncovered authors I missed in my lacking English education, picking up books I never would have tried otherwise. You have read a lot of the books on the 100 best posted there, a well rounded reader!!
Thanks. I actually created a blog with the lists I have read from so that I can keep track of how I am doing. The blog address is on my profile page.
Just got a copy of
Fathers and Sons as it was on some of my 100 best lists. What did you think?
Also, what did you think of
The Road?
blackdogbooks,
First of all I particularly like Russian literature. I thought
Fathers and Sons was a well written treatise on the universal experience of individuation and identity development, as revealed in the relationships between father and son. Both perspectives came through clearly. The characters were engaging and the plot, though a little predictable in some aspects, was very good. This was the second book by Turgenev I've read.
Torrents of Spring shared the same melodramatic style, which I find quite entertaining.
The Road is amazing. I think Cormac McCarthy is a brilliant writer. His use of language is staggering, poetic, and horrifying, all at the same time. A third of the way through it I could hardly put it down. Actually, it ended up being interesting having read it shortly after
Fathers and Sons. It is also a father/son story, in which the author does the opposite of Turgenev. McCarthy's use of the pronoun, "he", creates a clear sense of the father and son as one being, this story occurring prior to the adolescent breaking away found in Turgenev's work.
Enjoyed both and I hope you do as well!
I have already enjoyed
The Road and found it brilliant also. The father and son thing happened for me as well, reading it after I read
Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance. A bit of an odd pairing, but completely unintended. Nonetheless, they were an interesting couple; both travel oriented and both played out, in different ways, in the heads of the characters rather than in the events surrounding them.
Thanks for your comments on
Fathers and Sons. I look forward to that read.
First, congratulations on reading 60 books thus far! I am envious! I note to recent reads on your list that I hope to have time to delve into during the next few weeks when I'm on vacation. Plese tell me your impressions of Half a Yellow Sun (many people recommend this book), and Salman Rushdie's The Enchantress of Florence. I'm number five on the waiting list at my local library for this one.
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Whisper,
I loved both books. My reviews can be found in library listing of the books.
Thanks for the encouragement.
Hi.
I read your reviews. You are quite a good writer! I was able to obtain
Half a Yellow Sun from my local library and will begin it tomorrow. I'm on vacation after next week and I look forward to down time to read.
By the way, I agree with you regarding
The Celestine Prophecy. It truly was a terrible book. I never could understand why it had a cult-like following. Friends told me I would love it...They were very wrong.
I enjoy
Louise Erdrich's writing, and I think this is one of her best. It is as close as the oral tradition of storytelling can come to being oral in a book. Does that make any sense? The characters are heartachingly poignant, and I don't even care that I am half way through the book and cannot truly tell you what it is about so far plotwise. The ride is so pleasant.
Update: Frankly, I was a little disappointed in this book. It started out very well, with moving, poignant characters and some semblance of a plot. Set on the edge of the Ojibwe reservation it is, I suppose, a book about two peoples and the history in one little town, and about the history of that town and how it comes full circle. For me, the whole thing was too circuitous and by the last 100 pages I was a bit bored and frustrated. I usually like Erdrich more than this.
Message edited by its author, Jul 19, 2008, 10:59am.
Hemlokgang
I note you recently read a short story collection by Henry James.
A few days ago I finished a Joyce Carol Oates book
Wild Nights! Stories About the Last Days of Poe, Dickinson, Twain, James and Hemingway. Using some facts taken from Henry James diary, Oates wove a fictional account of his last days and his previous volunteer work at a hospital in London where he helped the wounded soldiers.
This lead me to want to read about Henry James. I'm curious to know if you liked his writings.
Thanks.
Linda
I am a huge Henry James fan. My library is full of his works, some still TBR. There is always some melodrama and stereotypical gender typecasting, but if you can just relax and enjoy the way he tells a story, he is wonderful.
The Oates book sounds marvelous. I think I'll try to get it on BookMooch.
ok, I'm curious, what is BookMooch? I've never heard of this...
The
Joyce Carol Oates book is fascinating, but dark...as most of her works tend to be.
She seemed to portray James as a foppishly dandy and a snob and in the end a pathetic person.
Oates is probably right, and in the light of present day belief systems he would not come off too well.
BookMooch.com is a book swapping website. You pay postage for books you send out and pay nothing for the books you mooch from other people. It is amazing!
Thanks for letting me know about BookMooch.com. I'll check this.
Much appreciated,
Linda
Hi
I'm curious regarding your recent read. I obtained the book
The Penelopiad from my local library and will be reading it in a few days.
I first learned of Penelope via the paintings of J.W. Waterhouse (a Pre Raphelite artist.) There is an incredibly beautiful portrait titled Penelope and the Suitors.
In addition, the Celtic song writer/artist Loreena McKennitt wrote and sings a beautiful piece of music called Penelopes Song.
My hope is to revisit mythology and read more on this subject. I read Greek mythology in college -- a long time ago.
If you have a minute, can you please tell me if you liked this book. Thanks.
And, congratulations on near completion of the 75 book challenge!
Whisper1> I hate to say this, but don't do it. I was really disappointed. The book was not up to the usual Atwood standards in my opinion. It was witty in a few places but seemed quite mundane otherwise. Take into consideration that I loved
The Odyssey and just found this boring. I also don't like politically correct fairy tales if that helps understand where my bias may lie.
Hi
I read The Penolopiad before seeing your message.
I enjoyed it because it like
Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys the author spun a widely known subject and twisted it to give a different telling.
But, I do agree with you that parts did seem mundane. In particular I did not enjoy the poems of the maidens...they seemed stretched and cutesy ... kind of contrived. If you loved
The Odyssey you might want to visit the site jwwaterhouse.com.
Waterhouse was a Victorian artist who painted during what is known as the Pre-Raphaelite period. He painted many mythological figures in a stunningly beautiful way. His painting of Circe in particular is one of my favorites.
Thank you for the tip, and I am certainly glad you enjoyed the book!
WOW! Only one more to go!
CONGRATULATIONS ON COMPLETING THE GOAL!
congratulations on reaching #75 !!
WOOOHOOOO!
Congrats! We *do* seem to be having a wave of completions...
78 -
Kristin Lavransdatter by Sigrid Undset
edited to change title
Message edited by its author, Sep 14, 2008, 5:02pm.
Just purchased some Proust to work into my 100 best list reading. Thoughts?
Great job hemlokgang! Welcome to the 'Challenge Completed' club - we are having a party at the end of the year, lol.
#61: What did you think of
The Blue Flower? I read it a couple of years ago and enjoyed Fitzgerald's writing, but have had problems tracking down any more of her books at my local library which greatly surprised me since she wrote several books, both fiction and nonfiction.
Actually, I have put Proust down to join in a group read of
Kristin lavransdatter. I was blown away by his imagery as far as I had read.
Really enjoyed
Loving Frank on multiple levels, socio-politically, as a love story, and as a window into the life of Frank Lloyd Wright.
I thought
The Blue flower was marvelous. I have since put two of her other pieces on my wishlist at bookmooch.com.
Thanks for the post regarding
Loving Frank. WOW. yet another book that I would not have heard about save for this group of very interesting readers.
I've added this one to my list of tbr. A few years ago I visited falling water, his house in PA. The tour guide was very informative regarding his life and I remember her stating that he procrastinated in his building projects, but did take the advance $, spent the money and then simply kept the people waiting, waiting, waiting.
I thought this particular house was gloomy...all stone and dark...but worth seeing.
Excellent! what did you think?
hemlokgang
Are you joining the list of many people who have such high praise for
The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society. I was finally able to obtain this from my local library and hoped to start to read it last week, but alas finished two others instead. I hope to start to read this book tomorrow.
Your thoughts on the book please....
Whisper1, I read Guernsey in one long rainy afternoon. I did write a brief review of it. I thoroughly enjoyed it and learned a bit of history as well. It is one of those books that sounds light, but really isn't. Very well done! Go for it and let me know what you think.
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80 -
Fear and Trembling by Amelie Nothomb : Fabulous, fast, thought-provoking. Zen meets the theater of the absurd. A must read.
Message edited by its author, Sep 28, 2008, 12:37pm.
#81 hemlokgang: Even though I do not know much about Zen - OK, I do not know anything about Zen - I do know about the absurd, so on to Continent TBR
Fear and Trembling goes.
yet an other one for the wishlist
Met angst en beven the Dutch translation of Fear and Trembling
Hi.
Can you please take a minute and tell me what you liked about
Nervous Conditions I'm interested in hearing your opinions.
Thanks.
No problem. The first reason I liked
Nervous Conditions was the engaging narrator. The story is about her coming of age, which is nothing new in literature. However, the author is able to weave together a story about a young girl's dreams and her reality, the changing social structure as Whites creep into Rhodesian culture, and the dilemmas and resentments which occur under colonization. Somehow she is able to describe change on both a macro and micro level, which isn't all that easy to do it seems to me, while also creating a poignant and thought provoking story. I was left at the end wanting to know what happens to the narrator as she moves on through her life. For a short book, I wrote a lot in my reading journal, always a sign, for me, of depth as well as a good story.
Thanks! On to the huge to be read pile it goes!
#88 hemlokgang:
The Seasons of Beento Blackbird sounds like something I would enjoy. I noticed that you listened to it in audiobook form - who was the narrator you were praising so highly?
I do not know her name, but I listened to the version available on Audible.com. if that is any help whatsoever.
I have a copy (still not listened to) narrated by Akosua Busia.
Maybe it was her.....you'd think I would have paid closer attention to that little detail!!!
#83 -
The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz - Fabulous plot, historical reference, and amazing writing style!
#84 -
The Whole Truth by
David Baldacci - Audiobook....................The best suspense novel I have read in a while. A scary story about the manipulation of the truth by "perception management" firms on behalf of the greedy. Good characters and fast moving plot.
The Diaz book has been on Continent TBR for a while now, so I guess I will move it up to the top. Sounds like something I would really enjoy.
The only Baldacci books I have read are the ones featuring Maxwell and King, but I will give
The Whole Truth a shot.
Thanks for the recommendations!
#85 -
The Sea Wolf by Jack London - Fabulous! Primal!
And thanks for the nice feedback about my book choices!
HI hemlokgang
I agree with akeela's reference re. enjoying your book choices.
Your notation re.
The Sea Wolf brought back many wonderful memories of a special Engish teacher in high school. I vividly remember reading short stories of Jack London and the themes of man against nature. To this day, I can hear the teachers voice gravely saying "AND, nature ALWAYS wins!"
#86 -
The Titian Committee by Iain Pears - It may have been my mood, but it was disppointing, too predictable. Tired of the art mysteries for a while I guess.
If you enjoyed
The Sea Wolf, I would highly recommend finding a copy of Jack London's Tales of Adventure edited by Irving Shepard. This compendium includes much of London's fascinating and 'primal' journalism on some of the events of his world; the Russo-Japanese War, the Depression, etc. It's fasicnating and engrossing!
Yet another Cather I have not read. I brought home
A Lost Lady from the library the other day, so I will have to try
The Song of the Lark once I am done with it.
Just finished this week
Alexander's Bridge, which is Willa Cather's first published novel. She disavowed it in later life, but I loved it--simple story, beautifully told. It's less than 100 pages, but certainly shows a strong writing talent which later bloomed into her better-known works.
My Antonia will be yet another on the tbr pile...I've added this one. Thanks Stasia....
What a wonderful diverse list of books you've read. Glad I finally made it over here--I got some good suggestions for me for next year.
I hope you will do the 75 challenge. Since I will be starting in January in 2009 I will be able to keep up with more participants than I did this year, when I found this group in August.
MusicMom, I have really enjoyed the 75 challenge, and definitely plan on doing it again next year.
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I'm glad you liked
Night. It was one of my favorite reads this year.
Completely agree about
Night. I read it a couple of years ago, and it is one of those books that just stays with you long after you have read it.
#115: I have heard a lot of good things from drneutron and TadAD, I think, about
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, so your mention makes 3 favorable reviews. Definitely one for me to check out. Thanks!
Hi hemlokgang
I've been very busy with work these last few weeks and haven't checked the posts as often as usual. I'm catching up on your thread regarding the book
Night by
Elie Wiesel. I read this years ago and then followed it with some of his others. This man is a hero! Conicidentally after reading
Night, I saw him on tv when he was very angry at Ronald Regan for visiting a cemetary in Bitburg.
Your use of the word "overwhelming" to discribe the book and your reaction is very appropriate.
#96 -
The Trial by
Franz Kafka - Why did it take me so long to read Kafka? Maybe because I couldn't appreciate it at an earlier point in my life.
Message edited by its author, Nov 20, 2008, 7:38am.
Hi hemlokgang
I'm curious regarding
On Chesil Beach. Please tell me why it was "marvelous" What did you like about this book. And, congratulations on reading 97 books...wow!
Whisper, here are some of the reasons. One of the two protagonists is a professional violinist, and the author weaves musical imagery throughout the story, going so far as to coordinate the musical references to the specific works the violinist is working on, and works the imagery to represent the tie which bound the couple. The interior monologues of the two protagonists are fascinating when compared to each of their actions, and leads the reader to an in depth understanding of the complexity of the human creature and its interpersonal interactions. The psychological insight gives the reader information of which even the characters may not be aware, yet significantly impacts the choices of the characters. I am a therapist by profession and found the dynamics to be incredibly true to life. Additionally, the author built the tension for the reader in a manner similar to the tension mounting between the characters. Fantastic writing!
>121: I have got an omnibus of Kafka - it is going on my 2009 list. Thanks for the reminder.
- TT
Message edited by its author, Nov 22, 2008, 5:33am.
#124 - I agree with all of this re
On Chesil Beach - it was my "best" pick for my reads of 07.
#98 -
The Mysteries of Udolpho by Ann Radcliffe - What fun! A long (600+) book, but so much fun. Written in the late 1700s, this book is a sweeping gothic romance, with poetry, sweeping poetic landscapes, a thwarted love affair, evil step-uncles, secrets (some even kept from the reader but known by the protagonist, our dear Emily!), ghosts, castles, Carnivale in Venice......come on, now....who can resist all this? Due to a couple of extraneous tangents in the plot, which I felt were completely unnecessary, I only give out four stars. It was not particularly profound, but boy, oh boy, was it fun?!
Thanks Hemlokgang and dihiba. I've just added
On Chesil Beach to my tbr pile. By the way, your description of this book reminds me of one of my favorites, ie
Hilary and Jackie by
Hilary Du Pre based on the life of Hilary and her sister Jacqueline Du Pre, the extraordinarily gifted chello player who died at a young age from MS. The masterful psychological tension and story of the intertwining of their lives was/is a wonderful story.
#127 hemlokgang:
The Mysteries of Udolpho has been on Continent TBR since approximately the time that the book was written. I am definitely going to have to dig up a copy!
Hemolkgang...Alice Hoffman is one of my favorite authors, but I have to agree with you. She somehow has gone over the edge...
Or, in this case, over the crystal.
LOL
#100 - Blindsided: Living a Life Above Illness: a Reluctant Memoir by Richard M. Cohen - Moving and depressing.
Message edited by its author, Nov 23, 2008, 9:49pm.
Congratulations!!
Wow! I go away for a few days and you read 100 books! And there are still 5 weeks left in the year! Congratulations!
Message 135
Orangeena
I'll be interested in hearing your impressions of the Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Soceity. It is one of my top reads for 2008.
I am on the waiting list at my local library for
Loving Frank. A few years ago I visited his house near Pittsburg, PA called Falling Water. The guide had so not so nice things to say about him.
I will also look for your comments on this one after you have finished.
#137 MusicMom: The moral to the story is you are not allowed to miss any days on anybody's thread EVER, lol.
#139 alcottacre
I'm discovering that--my time on LT here in Chicago is hit and miss and I usually have more threads to check that I can do in one sitting! However, although the rest of my family often feels neglected at home, my grandsons take priority over reading! ;-)
#138 Whisper1
I brought
Loving Frank with me to read in Chicago, but I may have to take it home to read. I've already borrowed about 6 books from the library here to take home and can't possibly cram in any more. So now I'm reading books from their library while I'm here. Although he has only 646 books cataloged so far on LT he probably has about as many as I do at home.
Edited to move the next part to the "What Are You Reading this week" thread! I momentarily forgot where I was! I don't mean to hijack hemlokgang's 75 thread!
Message edited by its author, Nov 25, 2008, 2:43pm.
#141 MusicMom: I understand about grandchildren taking precedence! I have 6 of my own.
Stasia:
Six grandchildren...How wonderfully exciting!
I have four... a set of twin boys and two girls
Life is good!
Yes, it is!
My hubby and I have 3 girls and 3 boys, so we are split down the middle just as you are. Our oldest granddaughter is 9, the youngest is 8 months.
Stasia, I have 400 odd books on my TBR pile you have 2000 odd, I have five grandchildren you have six - let's see? Thinks....? Ah! my granddaughter is 16! yours is only 9!
Hold on, how is that a plus - now I feel old!!!
- TT
Must say I'm enjoying this talk of grandchildren :) Hoping I'm a way off that as my eldest is only 9... but my husband is very attached to that motto, "If I'd known having grandchildren was this much fun, I'd have had them first."
(sorry, hemlok!)
continuing the conversation re. grandchildren, I was blessed to have a wonderful, incredible grandmother. I am who I am because of her! I knew she loved me, but truly, it wasn't until I held my first grandchild and felt such soulful, warm, intense feelings, that I understood how much she loved me.
Oh, and I've been watching Leslie Howard and Merle Oberon versus Raymond Massey in an early film version of
The Scarlet Pimpernel this week. So much fun!
#152 hemlokgang: I have not read that one by du Maurier. I will have to look for it. Thanks for the recommendation!
Hmmm, an Abu-Jaber I haven't read. I'm glad you gave it a good review; I'll put it on the list of books to pick up post-Christmas.
#154 hemlokgang: I agree with you regarding
Origin. I thought it was great! Thanks for reminding me to look for her other books.
I read
The Final Solution this year also--I loved it and plan to read more by Michael Chabon.
#111 - Our Mutual Friend by Charles Dickens; very disappointed, found it quite dull even though I am a huge Dickens fan
Message edited by its author, Dec 23, 2008, 2:48pm.
#112 -
Medea by Euripides - Great!
#111
That may explain why, even though I too am a huge Dickens fan, I've started Mutual Friend 3 times I've never finished it. Guess I won't try to do it this year for my 999 challenge! ;-)
I've added book #113 to my list to be read in 2009.
What made the book beautiful? What did you like?
The main character was completely engaging. The writing was at once genuine and poetic, yet not idealistic. I felt that Hurston was able to address multiple life themes in ways that resonated with me. The reader is given a glimpse of a subculture in the United States in a manner unlike any other book I've read. This is not just another book about post-slavery adaptation. This is a book about people living their lives and making do with what life throws at them. There were so many interesting turns of phrase that I lost count. Enjoy!
I read There Eyes Were Watching God several years ago for a book group. We all loved it--it may be time for a reread! That's one of the reasons I like to buy books--I still have it on my shelf.
Another one for the pile. Your comments make it sound very good. Actually, the title, alone, made me want to read the book; it's a beautiful turn of phrase.
Would definitely concur with recommendations for
Their Eyes Were Watching God. Particularly if you're at all interested in Toni Morrison, Alice Walker et al, this is a must-read as it was 'there first'. My copy is still on my shelves at my mum's.
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