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Jue xxx

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Posts posted by Jue xxx

  1. I finished A Prayer for Owen Meany last night. Despite another trip to the library and coming back with an armful of books, I have decided to be strong and finally finish Birdsong by Sebastian Faulks before starting a new book.

     

    I borrowed Birdsong from the library three months ago but didn't have the chance to finish it, as it was reserved by someone else so they wouldn't let me renew it. I liked it so much that I bought it to finish it off.... but I keep going to the library and coming back with more books, so I have never had the chance to finish it!

     

    I will not start another book this time until I finish Birdsong!

     

    (It's a great book, by the way.)

  2. I couldn't finish the book "Owen Meany" either. And this is after seeing "Simon Birch" the movie version of the book AND after hearing John Irving read from it live. When I started reading it, I was not happy. I have liked other Irving novels, this one just didn't do it for me.

    I finished Owen Meany last night, and I don't quite know what to say about it. I thought it was far too long (it took me almost three weeks to read), and I found myself skimming parts of it, but other parts were really good, and the end (last 40 pages or so) was fantastic and pulled the whole book together.

     

    I'm glad I perservered with it because the I really enjoyed the end, but I wouldn't read it again.

  3. 1 Pride and Prejudice - Jane Austen

    2 The Lord of the Rings - JRR Tolkien (the first book of the trilogy only - other two tbr)

    3 Jane Eyre - Charlotte Bronte

    4 Harry Potter series - JK Rowling

    5 To Kill a Mockingbird - Harper Lee

    6 The Bible

    7 Wuthering Heights - Emily Bronte

    8 1984 - George Orwell

    9 His Dark Materials - Philip Pullman

    10 Great Expectations - Charles Dickens

    11 Little Women - Louisa M Alcott

    12 Tess of the D

  4. Yes, I know we shouldn't take these lists too seriously, but there are several versions of lists of "books everyone should read" floating around, and I have recently started selecting books off these lists to widen my reading repertoire, and been pleasantly surprised.

     

    The lists have recommended titles and authors that I wouldn't otherwise have chosen (as unfortunately I am often too easily swayed by a pretty cover), and I have to say I have enjoyed some good reads lately (Anna Karenina excepted - hated it!)

  5. I gave up on Anna Karenina, and remember feeling really guilty for it! It's had so many great reviews on this forum that I found myself forcing myself to read on, in case I was missing something, but I just couldn't get into it. I've marked the page I stopped at, in case I decide to give it another go in the future.

     

    However, I loved The Time Traveller's Wife, Life of Pi, Never Let Me Go and Captain Corelli's Mandolin, all of which have been mentioned in this thread, so it just shows that everyone's different!

  6. I finished Life of Pi last night, and I can see why it's a Marmite book - you either love it or you hate it!

     

    I actually really enjoyed it. I think because it was so unlike anything I had ever read before - it has totally original storyline (if slightly unbelievable - but then it IS fiction!) and has moments of humour in it.

     

    I didn't quite understand the relevance of the first part, when he chooses his religions, and I found myself starting to skim through some of the first part, but once I'd reached the second part I found it a really good read.

  7. Stayed up very late into the night last night to finish this book - couldn't put it down until I'd finished it! Very bleary eyed this morning!

     

    What a fantastic, thought-provoking book; everyone should read it. It still feels futuristic even though it was written in 1948 and was set in 1984 - brilliantly written.

  8. I'm about three-quarters of the way through this book (will probably finish it this afternoon) and am really enjoying it. Wuthering Heights is on my TBR list and I was going to read it next, but judging by the comments below I'll probably leave it for a while in case I find it disappointing in comparison. Therefore Cold Comfort Farm by Stella Gibbons has just been promoted to the next-to-be-read position.

  9. The difference between a book which is classy, great, high quality, etc, and a classic, is surely easy to understand.

     

    A book which is defined as a classic, broadly, is one which has stood the test of time, apart from anything else. But also, traditionally, it's a book in the classic style - one which isn't too modernist.

     

    Anyway, as we're allowed a cut-off of 1939 rather than 1900, say, I'd like to suggest a Russian, or maybe even Eastern European, month.

     

    Personal choice would be

     

    The Master and Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov (which everyone should read)

    War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy (ditto, although it was on the nominations list not long ago, so perhaps a different Tolstoy)

    The Good Soldier Schweijk by Jaroslav Hasek (The other great anti-war comedy)

    Some Dostoyevsky, perhaps Crime and Punishment

    Perhaps some Kafka, like The Castle or The Trial

    You could even have some Conrad, if you were so inclined.

     

    I was going to suggest War and Peace too! I would also like to read Anna Karenina, so if either of those made the short list I would vote for them. (The last time War and Peace was nominated I was just a forum lurker and not a registered member, so I couldn't vote for it.)

  10. I'm loving the writing style of this book so far - very light hearted and amusing - the pea in the ear incident already mentioned, the terracotta in the buttocks incident, and the drunken vicar filling the wine bottles (!), have all made me giggle!

     

    I agree that Cephalonia sounds a beautiful place, and the doctor is obviously passionate about the island.

     

    Enjoying it so far! :friends0:

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