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Oksana
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May 29, 2019 11:38AM

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As long as we have two books in the poll, we don't have to have a third one, but there's still time to suggest one if anyone wants to. There are quite a few books I want to read, but Till We Have Faces is one that I'd be very content to read this July.




A librarian is always glad to hear from a reader who uses his/her local library, Rosemarie! :-)






For those who don't want to wait until Aug. of 2020, when we'd normally do the common read --this year's read, of course, is coming up next month, and we already have our book picked for that one, Till We Have Faces-- another option would be using our group's Buddy Reads thread (https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/... ) to arrange something. With all the other reading plans and commitments I have already, though, the earliest I could plan to join in would be in January; but that's earlier than August 2020.



This thread is strictly for news about the common read polls, and for brainstorming together about what books to put in the polls. Each book we pick as a common read gets its own discussion thread. IMO, that system keeps this thread from being prohibitively long, and makes the book discussions easier to find on the group homepage.

A couple of contemporary novels were originally suggested. However, due to the current widespread disruption in interlibrary loan services (because so many libraries are currently closed), it might be practical to pick something that's old enough to be in the public domain, so that it would be available online or as a free e-book. Of course, more libraries might be open by the time we get closer to August; it's hard to plan ahead, because the situation is so fluid. But even if more choices are available by then, it won't hurt to have picked an older title, many of which are very worthy!
I broached the idea of picking a poetry book, since we've never done one, to my knowledge. Several people have indicated that they're open to that. Alfred Lord Tennyson's In Memoriam has been mentioned a couple of times. It's one of his major works, and is centrally concerned with the meaning of death and the question of life after death, and so of course is very religion-related. If the group would be more comfortable with a choice that's more secular in theme, Sir Walter Scott's Lochinvar could be a possibility. (I just mention it because it's also on my to-read shelf, like the Tennyson poem; but in truth, I'm open to most anything the group wants to suggest, as others have said as well!)
Just by way of background on how copyright/public domain works (I'm a librarian, so being aware of that kind of thing goes with my occupational territory. :-) ), original writings published up through 1922, under U.S. copyright law, are in the public domain. Introductions to books, critical notes and other added material, if written from 1923 on, are still copyrighted even if the original material they're commenting on isn't. So, to make up a hypothetical example, a collection of Tennyson poems published last year, with a lot of added material, wouldn't itself be in the public domain. But if we pick the collected works of any British poet who wrote from 1500-1922, or any individual poem that can be read as a free-standing book or any partial collection he/she published or somebody else made before 1923, the original content WILL have public domain editions. (Sometimes a whole lot of editions!)
Modern (1923- ) translations of older works are also under copyright (the translators or their heirs/assigns are the copyright holders). Before 1500, British poetry was composed in Old or Middle English. So, while the original-language texts of things like Beowulf or the works of Chaucer are in the public domain, post-1922 translations into Modern English are not (nor, or course, are any added explanatory materials). But again, there will be lots of Modern English and other editions of these works that were published before 1923!

Don't forget library apps like Libby where you can put in your city or zip code and access all your local library's ebooks. You may not be able to get the physical addition from your library right now, but you can get many of their books in digital form during this shut down. Even Amazon has some of its books at reduced prices or even free. Check out your app store for free books or greatly reduced books as well. There are quite a few discount sites for digital books, though the names escape me currently, which offer lots of books at greatly reduced prices and even have current books reduced for a short period of time. The emails can be annoying but you can also find some stuff you want that you weren't willing to pay full price for.



My idea of doing a poetry book seems to have struck a responsive chord! Still, it's a suggestion, not a command; anyone who has a prose book to suggest should feel free to do so.


Cool! If we pick that poem as our read, we'll definitely count on you for linguistic insights. :-) (I suspect that most of us can't even read Old English with much fluency, much less translate it --I know that I can't!)


If we decided to go that route, we already have several suggestions. I could put up a poll tomorrow, which would let it run for two weekends as usual, and still provide the usual amount of lead time for everyone to secure a copy of the winning choice. That does require us to make a decision on very short notice, though. Does anybody feel like that's rushing things too much?


True --none of these poems will be so long they'll take all month to read! (I'd need to start late myself, since I have a prior commitment to buddy read a short book with a friend starting on July 1.)


Our suggestions so far are (in alphabetical order): Beowulf, In Memoriam, Lochinvar, and Paradise Lost. Is everybody happy with that line-up of nominees? Do we need any additions (or deletions)?




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