Book Club - Paris discussion
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2013: The First book. AKA That Book You Always Wanted To Read But Were Afraid To Ask Down From The Shelf
Ok, this is a looooooong one but I know I won't be the only one with it on my 'difficult' shelf, and given the recent trend of coming to the club without having finished the book, it's a good candidate for sparking interesting conversation : Infinite Jest, by David Foster Wallace.
@Lindsay I've contacted my lawyers to find out if my goodreads book club moderator status allows me to effectively BAN someone from European territory. They'll be getting back to me shortly. You've been warned.



@Justin the good readers shall speak for three days and three nights, at the end thereof a doodle you will put up the books herewith.

Grace, fair enough - do you have a suggestion too?
René: have you been reading that there Bible again?!

But...I still propose this one :)
Have a great day...
I'm slightly torn between Pale Fire (Nabakov) or Wolf Hall (Mantel) but I'll plump for the Nabako.
My suggestion is, this, Pale Fire
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Pale-Fire-Pen...
My suggestion is, this, Pale Fire
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Pale-Fire-Pen...

For me "the fifty..", no, sorry "the forty rules of love" by Elif Shafak :
"Ella Rubinstein has a husband, three teenage children, and a pleasant home. Everything that should make her confident and fulfilled. Yet there is an emptiness at the heart of Ella's life - an emptiness once filled by love.
So when Ella reads a manuscript about the thirteenth-century Sufi poet Rumi and Shams of Tabriz, and his forty rules of life and love, her world is turned upside down. She embarks on a journey to meet the mysterious author of this work."
Have a good day !
Viviane

First of all, thank you for your warm welcome to my very first meeting. I enjoyed it a lot !
My suggestion is "The Art of Joy" by Goliarda Sapienza
http://www.amazon.com/The-Art-Joy-Nov...

just realized that I have not yet brought forward my suggestion: "One flew over the cuckoo's nest" by Ken Kesey.
Bises
Kiwi


You see, this is why democracy is such a failure. If the ancient Greeks had known their political invention would one day be used to gang up on unsuspecting book clubbers, they'd have thought twice about releasing it onto the world. I'm not saying they wouldn't have gone ahead finally, after having weighed all the arguments and run out of refreshments, I'm just saying they'd have thought twice about it.
What? What is this strange and evil magic trick you have wrought? You have made the Greeks pronounce the name of the book-that-cannot-be-named!

Hey everybody,
I wish y'all a very happy Christmas and a great New Year 2013!
By the way: Where is the doodle ;) ?
Bisous
I wish y'all a very happy Christmas and a great New Year 2013!
By the way: Where is the doodle ;) ?
Bisous

Please vote for 2 books and I guess the poll closes on Sunday night.
Here are the books that you nominated...
1) The Marriage Plot: www.goodreads.com/book/show/10964693-...
2) Infinite Jest: www.goodreads.com/book/show/6759.Infi...
3) Fifty Shades Of Grey: www.goodreads.com/book/show/10818853-...
4) Middlesex: www.goodreads.com/book/show/2187.Midd...
5) Pale Fire: www.goodreads.com/book/show/7805.Pale...
6) The Forty Rules Of Love: www.goodreads.com/book/show/6642715-t...
7) The Art Of Joy: www.goodreads.com/book/show/16111021-...
8) One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest: www.goodreads.com/book/show/853494.On...
(Oh, and I'm not sure if we're voting for 50 Shades as the first book or the whole trilogy(!), but I'm sure we can cross that bridge when and if we come to it, although by then René may have destroyed every single copy of it on the planet, so it won't matter...)
Now, like good citizens, go vote!
Excellent selection! I'm delighted that it was so hard to choose this time, I can see myself going on and reading a load of these.
Justin, thanks for the organization. The likes of me are happy to have the likes of you with lots of inspiring book ideas. Looking forward to read the next book :)
Looks like a race between Infinite Jest and The Marriage Plot. I didn't vote for the MP because I've already read it (nya-nya). There's a passage in it in which one of the characters is walking on the Rue des Trois Bornes in the 18th, and it's an eye-opener for the American college kid from the 80's that he is, and I read it the day after having met some friends at a bar in the very same street and thinking, "what a dumpy-looking street."


I just concluded the doodle (I suppose) - so is the new book officially chosen?
Justin, when are you closing the vote?
Cheerily - and a very Merry Christmas to all of you!
Kiwi

Just saying...and not changing my vote :)

I did know IJ is that long (I've already read half though) - you lot are bonkers! Not sure we'll meet in January will we, given its length?
Yep, over a thousand pages. It may even take Erin a whole week to read it!
Who's SB? Show thyself!
Who's SB? Show thyself!
Sanjeev! A founding member, no less! Well met, sir.
Justin, is the doodle closed? Do we have a winner?
Justin, is the doodle closed? Do we have a winner?




I have not even started the book yet (actually haven't even got round to buying it)so it looks like I will be part of the "didn't finish" group at the next meeting !!


Okay, here is the Doodle. It's for all of Feb.
http://www.doodle.com/psusbvwmrmidisnm
What? What'd I do?
Hey, wouldn't it be really funny if I showed up, having proposed the book and all, and I hadn't even read it? Wouldn't that be funny?
Hey, wouldn't it be really funny if I showed up, having proposed the book and all, and I hadn't even read it? Wouldn't that be funny?

http://infinitejest.wallacewiki.com/d...
Is it that all roads lead to DFW, or am I just noticing the ones that do? I set aside IJ for the evening and was reading an article at Slate.com about how to write a good memoir, and whaddya know the article cites the example of none other than DFW and "A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again", a first-person account of a cruise vacation. Couldn't resist reading it. So here I am trying to avoid DFW and reading him all the same.
Here's a great quote:
I'm not saying I'd really prefer we were reading this book instead of Infinite Jest, which I thought was 1000 pages long but was actually 1000+ pages long, which means over 1000 and is really closer to 1500, though that number reflects the actual text and the footnotes combined, these footnotes being a reader's preference as to whether he or she reads them or not. Without the footnotes the text comes out to about 1300 pages.
But what is a page, exactly? On an ebook reader, if you were to read the electronic version of the book, which I am, a page represents a certain fixed number of characters, and only indirectly reflects the actual length of text you would read in a physically printed out version of the text. If you think this is a basic, sound metric, you are wrong. Characters themselves are not mere symbolic stand-ins for the printed character either. In computer terms, a character can be taken from any one of a good number of encodings, of which US-ASCII is but the first one that was popularized to numerically represent text, but was lacking most foreign accented characters (present in latin1, or iso-8859-1 if you prefer, iso-8859-2 being a revised version that includes the euro sign) and none of the chinese characters of japanese kanji, for which the UTF-8 encoding was introduced.
Here's a great quote:
"This is the occasion I first see the thirteen-year-old kid with the toupee. He’s slumped pre-adolescently in his chair with his feet up on some kind of rattan hamper while what I’ll bet is his mom talks at him nonstop; he is staring into whatever special distance people in areas of mass public stasis stare into."
I'm not saying I'd really prefer we were reading this book instead of Infinite Jest, which I thought was 1000 pages long but was actually 1000+ pages long, which means over 1000 and is really closer to 1500, though that number reflects the actual text and the footnotes combined, these footnotes being a reader's preference as to whether he or she reads them or not. Without the footnotes the text comes out to about 1300 pages.
But what is a page, exactly? On an ebook reader, if you were to read the electronic version of the book, which I am, a page represents a certain fixed number of characters, and only indirectly reflects the actual length of text you would read in a physically printed out version of the text. If you think this is a basic, sound metric, you are wrong. Characters themselves are not mere symbolic stand-ins for the printed character either. In computer terms, a character can be taken from any one of a good number of encodings, of which US-ASCII is but the first one that was popularized to numerically represent text, but was lacking most foreign accented characters (present in latin1, or iso-8859-1 if you prefer, iso-8859-2 being a revised version that includes the euro sign) and none of the chinese characters of japanese kanji, for which the UTF-8 encoding was introduced.

I'm stuck in huge a footnote side story. And my hopes of reading about 30 pages a day have gone out of the window.


Will sort some venue nearer the date.
Didn't see a poll but very happy with that! According to my kindle I'm already a mammoth 2% in. Easy!
I'm proposing: Jeffrey Eugenides' The Marriage Plot.
(If I have any of the details wrong, please feel free to point them out etc.)