The Next Best Book Club discussion
Book Related Banter
>
What has been your most challenging read?
date
newest »



Amen to the "complicated linguistically." And thank you for the double-check on Lolita. Can you picture being able to do that? Writing and translating one direction and then the other? Don't you find that kind of daunting? I always feel lesser in his presence.

And Yuliya, how lucky to come from St Petersburg! In fact, I think Lolita was first written in English, then translated to Russian by Nabokov himself, so we can all rejoice in getting the same experience on that one...if only the same were true for Dostoevsky. :)

Also, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall. Haven't been able to finish it so far. It makes me sleepy.

Oh yeah, definitely! I had to read that one in college and I'm not sure if I ever finished it.





Ouch. No thank you. Not sure I have that many years left in me.

That's not a good sign.


I read that in my late teens, and was hard-pressed to understand much of it ... but back then, just the alien thing had me intrigued.

I also read Anna Karenina this month and I agree that the name thing made it difficult at times. I remember at the beginning, I didn't realize Stiva was Stephen. I had one of those "wait a minute...what's going on here" moments.

I have 60 pages left of Cloud Atlas. Some of the writing style and vocab have been a challenge to read at times and the visual worlds are very different requiring a good imagination ! I have really enjoyed the challenge though. Cant wait to see how its all brought together - I have no idea how it will end. We should talk it over - as it might actually not make any sense ! lol

Lately I read When Christ and His Saints Slept by Sharon Kay Penman and plan to read more of her. I loved Ken Follett's Pillars of the Earth.



- Come in.
[crash, bang]
- Open the door and come in.
- Sorrrry.
- My brain hurts.
From a Monty Python sketch called The Cherry Orchard. I didn't understand The Cherry Orchard either, and suspect this sketch to be a genius piece of criticism.


I don't know if it was just me or if it was the author's ZOMG amazingly intense vocabulary or his passion for highly descriptive paragraphs and long, twisted statements of reasoning or quite strange and uncommon use of dialogues...
I had to strain my brain a bit and read some lines a couple of times to understand what exactly the situation was playing out to be.
Even though I grasped that it was quite interesting but the book slowed my reading pace greatly and therefore distorted my smooth flow of imagination, made me feel extremely dumb and pathetic and kept an irked me from getting past more than 50 pages.


Dead Souls by frikkin' Gogol... I read the whole damn book through boring salon conversations, even more boring card games in salons, surprisingly simple meals in salons (duh) and Gogol's weird intermezzos where he is talking to himself while we're waiting for the protagonist to be led to the -- oh my, what surprise -- salon. All for the sake of finding out why the main character is buying all those dead souls. Coming up with all sorts of fantastic explanations like that he is the devil or some magician or crazy scientist or death himself or or or... just to find out that he simply needed a big loan from the bank.
-____-
-____-






My most challenging read has been Samuel Becketts trilogy, but that was definitely worth it. So thought-provoking.


I'm writing about novel set in Northern Maine, in a bilingual town, French and English, and I'm having a great time imagining the bilingual version someday, as well as the translation into French. So, I CAN imagine such a thing as trilingual writing, though I am, sadly, far far away from that. By the way, Alaistair Reid's bilingual editions of Pablo Neruda are fantastic!

I'm with you on Cloud Atlas. Not so much challenging as not worth it! (Sorry Chelsea, I've got to respectfully hold a different opinion.) I detest gratuitous violence, and that aspect of the book turned me off at almost every chapter. It never relents. However, I persevered, expecting a huge awakening moment, but I feel the novel didn't go deep enough.

And although Cloud Atlas wasn't a challenge to read, it was a challenge to finish. Not my cup of tea.
Another book that was pretty hard to finish, but I managed was The Count of Monte Cristo.
Books mentioned in this topic
Les Misérables (other topics)The Count of Monte Cristo (other topics)
The Plague Dogs (other topics)
V. (other topics)
At Swim, Two Boys (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
William S. Burroughs (other topics)Salman Rushdie (other topics)
It's much easy to read in Russian. I saw translation and it was ..."
I am pretty sure he wrote Lolita in English originally. And that alone is astounding, because almost no book can compare (in my opinion) to the beauty of his writing in that book. I love your teenage reaction ... quite a book to read at that age ... but your analysis was dead on! And ... you just gave me another great idea for a discussion topic. Thanks!