
I read We last month and really enjoyed it, I hope you do too Fannie.

Thanks Sandy! I've not come across Rolland before and I've even found the book on Project Gutenberg.

I remember that sketch. I've been looking forward to this and will be reading the 6 volume set in the Penguin Modern Classics published in 2002.

I shall shamelessly plug
The Cambridge Companion to Homer as the editor is my father!

I'm reading
We by
Yevgeny Zamyatin and really enjoying it so far, especially the playing with math. In a chapter titled "Limitation of Infinity. Angel. Reflections on Poetry" a circle is mentioned early on and I immediately marvelled that the line of a circle is infinite but the area it contains is limited.
I'm not one much for quotes, but occasionally a line does ring out and sticks. A few paragraphs after the mention of the circle we get:
Truth is one, and the true path is one. And that truth is two times two and that true path is four.
The reason this jumps out to me is that it touches on a line that I love from
At Swim-Two-Birds by
Flann O'Brien:
Evil is even, truth is an odd number and death is a full stop.
At Swim-Two-Birds was first published in 1939 so it's possible that O'Brien was familiar with We, but who knows - perhaps there is a truth in one!
Luís wrote: "The City of God by Augustine of Hippo"That's been on my TBR for years, I look forward to your review Luis.

In the last few days I've finished both the short story collection (
A Parisian Affair and Other Stories by
Guy de Maupassant) and novel (
Wives and Daughters by
Elizabeth Gaskell) I was reading. Given it's October and I'm going to try and complete my challenges, for short stories I've picked
Scottish Folk and Fairy Tales: From Burns to Buchan and the novel is
The Phantom of the Opera by
Gaston Leroux.

I'm still gradually working my way through
A Parisian Affair and Other Stories and read a story suitable for this time of year. Horla is a fun story about a possibly invisible person haunting the town.