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Mirror, Mirror on the wall, Will Vinay read these by next fall? (2010)


vinay87

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So here's my reading list for 2010 so to speak. I plan to hit atleast 30 books this year, a large target for me.

 

Legend :

Bold - Read

Italics - Reading

® - Reread

(W) - Wishlist

Silver - Dropped

 

1. Melanie Rawn - The Star Scroll ~5/10

2. Baroness Emmuska Orczy - The Scarlet Pimpernel ~8/10

3. Melanie Rawn - Sunrunner's Fire ~2/10

4. Charles Dickens - Nicolas Nickleby

5. Fyodor Doestovsky - The Idiot

6. Victor Hugo - Les Miserables ®

7. Alexandre Dumas - The Three Musketeers

8. Alexandre Dumas - The Man In The Iron Mask

9. Sun Tzu - The Art of War

10. Musashi Miyamoto - The Book Of Five Rings

11. Niccolo Machiavelli - The Prince

12. Niccolo Machiavelli - The Art Of War

13. Tad Williams - River Of Blue Frie

14. Tad Williams - Mountain Of Black Glass

15. Victor Hugo - The Hunchback Of Notre Dame

16. Nathaniel Hawethorne - The House Of The Seven Gables

17. Agatha Christie - Lord Edgware Dies

18. John Grisham - The Client (W)

19. C S Lewis - The Horse And His Boy

20. C S Lewis - Prince Caspian

21. C S Lewis - The Voyage Of The Dawn Treader

22. C S Lewis - The Silver Chair

23. J R R Tolkien - The Hobbit ®

24. J R R Tolkien - The Lord Of The Rings ®

25. Susanna Clarke - Jonathan Strange And Mr Norrel ®

26. John Grisham - The Runaway Jury (W)

27. Stephen King - Cujo ~7/10

28. Stephen King - The Gunslinger

29. Stephen King - The Drawing of the Three

30. Alistair Maclean - Ice Station Zebra (W)

31. T H White - The Once And Future King

32. T H White - The Book Of Merlyn

33. Agatha Christie - The Myserious Mr. Quin ®

34. Mark Twain - Joan Of Arc ~9/10

35. Herodotus - Histories

36. H G Wells - The War In The Air

37. Charles Dickens - Barneby Rudge

38. C S Lewis - The Last Battle

39. Christopher Reeve - Still Me ~8/10

40. Charles Dickens - Hard Times

41. Charles Dickens - Oliver Twist

42. Nathaniel Hawthorne - Fanshawe

43. Nathaniel Hawthorne - The House Of Seven Gables

44. Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - Faust

45. Rabindranath Tagore - Gora

46. Rabindranath Tagore - Hungry Stones And Other Stories~10/10

47. Arthur Conan Doyle - A Study In Scarlet ~8/10

48. Arthur Conan Doyle - The Sign Of Four ~10/10

49. Arthur Conan Doyle - Adventures Of Sherlock Holmes ~10/10

50. Arthur Conan Doyle - Hound Of The Baskervilles

51. Arthur Conan Doyle - The Valley Of Fear

52. Arthur Conan Doyle - The Return of Sherlock Holmes

53. Charlotte Bronte - Villette

54. Thucydides - History Of The Peloponesian War

55. Geoffrey Chaucer - The Canterbury Tales

56. Geoffrey Chaucer - Troilus And Criseyde

57. Nathaniel Hawthorne - The Scarlet Letter

58. Nathaniel Hawthorne - The Marble Faun

59. Nathaniel Hawthorne - The Blithedale Romance

60. Nathaniel Hawthorne - Twice Told Tales

61. Arthur Conan Doyle - The Memoirs Of Sherlock Holmes

62. Arthur Conan Doyle - His Last Bow

63. Arthur Conan Doyle - The Case-Book of Sherlock Holmes

64. Bram Stoker - Dracula ~10/10

65. Jules Verne - A Journey To The Centre Of The Earth ~9/10

66. Carlo Collidi - Pinnochio ~5/10

67. Charles Dickens - A Tale of Two Cities

68. RL Stevenson - Treasure Island ~10/10

69. Johann Wyss - The Swiss Family Robinson

70. Anna Sewell - Black Beauty

71. Joseph Conrad - Victory

72. HG Wells - The Invisible Man & The Island of Dr. Moreau

73. Mark Twain - The Prince And The Pauper

74. John Milton - Complete English Poems

75. L Frank Baum - The Wizard of Oz ~10/10

76. Edgar Allan Poe - Spirits Of The Dead: Tales And Poems

77. Lewis Carroll - Alice's Adventures In Wonderland

78. RL Stevenson - The Strange Case Of Dr. Jekyll And Mr. Hyde, The Merry Men & Other Stories ~9/10

79. Cecila Ahern - P.S. I Love You

80. F Scott Fitzgerald - Tender Is The Night

81. Jane Austen - Pride And Prejudice

82. George Eliot - Silas Marner

83. Antoine de Saint-Exupery - The Little Prince ~10/10

84. Washington Irving - The Legend of Sleepy Hollow ~8/10

85. Jules Verne - Around The World In Eighty Days ~10/10

86. George Orwell - 1984 ~10/10

87. Pearl S. Buck - The Story Bible Vol. 1 : The Old Testament ~10/10

88. Michael Crichton - Timeline ~6/10

89. Jane Austen - Persuasion

90. Pearl S. Buck - The Story Bible Vol. 2 : The New Testament~10/10

91. Thomas Bulfinch - The Age of Fable

92. Mary W. Shelley - Frankenstein

93. Walt Whitman - Leaves of Grass

94. Lew Wallace - Ben Hur ~10/10

95. Virgil - The Aeneid

96. Appollonius of Rhodes - The Voyage of the Argo

97. Jules Verne - The Mysterious Island~10/10

98. Gaston Leroux - The Phantom of the Opera

Edited by vinay87
Added 2 new books
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May I ask what you thought of The Scarlet Pimpernel? It's been on my wishlist for a while. Hats off and a handshake to you for planning to re-read Les Mis - it's high time I did the same methinks, after all it's been a decade... goodness.

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Les Miserables is my favourite book :D

 

The Scarlet Pimpernel is worth a read, it's a small book so it shouldn't take more than two days. I had an entire 36 hour train journey to keep me at it. Well, I enjoyed it because I could see how it served as a precursor to the superheroes of our comics these days. But to my sad loss I discovered the Pimpernel's identity by mistake and ruined the suspense part of it. The style is simple enough, the plot quick. It doesn't feel like a classic to tell you the truth. It just seems like it flows through chapter to chapter. And the ingenuity of the SP is just brilliant. I wish the edition I had (Bantam) gave a short historic note to what was actually going on. I don't know any French history after all. Yet, I say it's pretty timeless and worth 8.5/10 atleast. I hope to find the rest of the books in the series some day.

 

Do read it someday. It's also in Project Gutenburg so getting it is easy enough unless you abstain from touching ebooks like I do.

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Hats off and a handshake to you for planning to re-read Les Mis - it's high time I did the same methinks, after all it's been a decade... goodness.

I have it too - perhaps we could all 3 of us read it together... :D

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If you three do read Les Mis. I`d like to join in. :lol:

 

lol

 

Sure thing. How about starting around the first week of feb?

 

 

You title is so right, yes you will.

 

I would like to hear what you think of John Grisham books.

 

haha Well, seeing as Bleachers and Rainmaker are two of my favourite books, I think I will like his work all the more. :D

 

I've also read The Testament but it's been so long I don't remember much except the scene where the old guy jumps off. lol

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I'm in but no can do for starting so early - the copy I read at 14 was lent to me you see; I have tried reading other translations since and it all felt wrong, so in order to do this I'd need to get me a Garzanti edition of Les Mis; very earliest I could get one of those would be mid-to-end Feb, when my dad should be coming up to London and may bear gifts from the homeland :D.

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Okies any time you or the others wanna try starting then.

 

I don't know which translation I have. I have two versions of Les Miserables.

1. Penguin Popular Classics (Abridged Bleh!) Translated by Norman Deny

2. Wordsworth Classics with notes by Roger clark university of Kent at canterbury.

 

The second one is the one I'm going to read. It's larger and the notes make the story more enjoyable. Even though I loathe endnotes. Yet I wonder who translated it... Probably Roger Clark himself.

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I couldn't start it so soon either (maybe March or April). My copy is actually in 2 parts - I think it's the Wordsworth Classics version (with the blue edging).

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Then put it down :console: there's too many books in the great library of life to waste said life reading books you're not enjoying; you could be doing something more valuable with your hours, like having a whale of a time reading something which captures your heart and soul.

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yay I went to my favourite book shop and got five new books!

 

1. Stephen King - Cujo

2. Mark Twain - Joan Of Arc (what the ?!)

3. HG Wells - The War In The Air (Heh?!)

4. Charles Dickens - Barneby Rudge

5. Herodotus - Histories

 

Total price 10$ :lol:

3 Pretty rare books I've never even heard of lol. Well, I've heard of barneby rudge but never found it till now.

 

 

Then put it down :console: there's too many books in the great library of life to waste said life reading books you're not enjoying; you could be doing something more valuable with your hours, like having a whale of a time reading something which captures your heart and soul.

 

Dropped and forgotten. :blush: With good reason.

Speaking of whale of a time, I remembered I've been putting off Herman Melville's Moby Dick for three years!

Edited by vinay87
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Just finished cujo....

 

I'm still undecided on King... I didn't like a lot about Cujo but then again I liked how the ending was sort of tragic. I wonder if it was the wrong book to start off with for a newbie at horror fiction... I'll buy a few more of his books someday.

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I've not read Cujo yet but should you decide to try King again, may I recommend:

 

- The Dark Half, about a writer who kills his pseudonym ---> wrath of the pseudonym

- Misery, about a writer who wants to kill off his main character ---> wrath of the #1 fan

- Carrie, about a misfit teenage girl with telekinetic powers

- Christine, about a misfit teenage boy in possession of an evil automobile

 

Stevie's at his best when writing about writers and misfits... I promise.

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I'll try getting that next month then. For now, I'm reading Mark Twain's Joan of Arc :D

 

I have to admit it's tempting to skip reading Nicolas Nickleby... I've always found Dickens hard to understand/imagine for some reason... Must be from reading too many new age fantasy books.

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Reading's going a bit slow... Almost done with Joan of Arc but mom yelled at me for reading "useless novels" instead of studying. sigh... when will that battle end?

 

Namaste Vinay!

 

If you have an Indian mum that battle will never end....I know I married one! Our kids are all doing well though....:D

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