Boxall's 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die discussion

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message 7201: by Gayle (new)

Gayle | 30 comments Finished The Heat of the Day by Elizabeth Bowen.


message 7202: by Diane (new)

Diane  | 2336 comments Mod
Finished Ratner's Star by Don DeLillo.


message 7204: by Andi (new)

Andi (agunforhire) | 34 comments Jess wrote: "The House of Mirth"

I read that a few weeks ago. It was so beautiful (view spoiler).

I just (finally) finished The Name of the Rose. I had to read it in 11th grade and hated it back then. So glad I finally finished it. Reading it two decades later definitely helped me appreciate it more.


message 7205: by James (new)

James Spencer (jspencer78) | 258 comments The Name of the Rose is one of my very favorite books (I’ve read it three times) but it strikes me that forcing 11th graders to read it is a great way to turn them reading good literature forever.


message 7206: by Sean (new)

Sean (fordest) | 988 comments Mod
I finished Miramar by Naguib Mahfouz. I liked it much more than I thought I would. Loved the way it was put together.


message 7207: by Andi (new)

Andi (agunforhire) | 34 comments James wrote: "The Name of the Rose is one of my very favorite books (I’ve read it three times) but it strikes me that forcing 11th graders to read it is a great way to turn them reading good literature forever."

That was definitely true for me at the time. The same teacher made us read Anna Karenina a year later, and I just completely lost my joy for reading. Took me a few years to find it again and work my way up to the classics.


message 7208: by Karen (last edited Apr 15, 2021 06:03PM) (new)

Karen Hoehne | 1717 comments Mod
Trapped at home with intermittent power in the Great Texas Freeze, I've finished --

The Radetzky March, by Joseph Roth
Perfume, by Patrick Süskind


message 7209: by George P. (new)

George P. | 1402 comments Mod
The Waves by Virginia Woolf. I've read several of Woolf's other books; this was the most challenging one.
You know the play "Who's Afraid of Virgina Woolf?" I think this is the one they were thinking of. It's good though.


message 7211: by Diane (new)


message 7212: by Tim (new)

Tim | 331 comments I, Robot by Isaac Asimov


message 7213: by Tim (new)

Tim | 331 comments Rameau's Nephew by Denis Diderot


message 7214: by Andi (last edited Feb 21, 2021 08:51AM) (new)


message 7218: by Mia (new)

Mia | 1196 comments The Hunchback of Notre-Dame by Victor Hugo. I really liked it.


message 7220: by George P. (new)

George P. | 1402 comments Mod
The Glass Bead Game by Hermann Hesse. My third Hesse, decades after my first, which was Siddhartha. Frankly I didn't really love any of them,


message 7221: by Rita (new)

Rita (rtelhada) | 1 comments Just finished In Watermelon Sugar, one of the shortest and easier reads form the list. Wondering where to go next.


message 7222: by Diane (new)

Diane  | 2336 comments Mod
Finished Rabbit Is Rich by John Updike.


message 7223: by Ellinor (new)


message 7225: by Vikki (new)

Vikki (vikkijo) | 110 comments The Golden Ass by Apuleius. Not my favorite read, but it was funny in places. I listened to it on audiobook and luckily the narrator was really good or I don't think I ever would have gotten through it.


message 7227: by Karen (new)

Karen Hoehne | 1717 comments Mod
Tirant Lo Blanc by Joanot Martorell

A novel of chivalry mentioned in Don Quixote and a favorite of Cervantes. At 642 pages and 487 chapters, it is actually quite a fun read. Tirant is a realistic knight who uses strategy and wiles to win battles and the Princess of Constantinople.


message 7228: by Bucket (new)

Bucket | 248 comments On the Eve by Ivan Turgenev.

I wish I had not read the introduction that was in the edition I read - it was pompous and overly-superlative and left a bad taste in my mouth that lasted half the book. Once I started thinking of this as a period love story instead of an attempt to be the GOAT, I enjoyed it. :)


message 7229: by Ian (new)

Ian | 143 comments Finally finishedClarissa, or, the History of a Young Lady.

A monumental achievement. (the novel that is, not me actually finishing it!)


message 7230: by Maggie (new)

Maggie | 106 comments Ian wrote: "Finally finishedClarissa, or, the History of a Young Lady.

A monumental achievement. (the novel that is, not me actually finishing it!)"


I beg to differ. You finishing Clarissa is quite an achievement too!


message 7231: by Karen (new)

Karen Hoehne | 1717 comments Mod
Cutter and Bone by Newton Thornburg


message 7232: by Debbie (new)

Debbie (dragonryyder) | 113 comments Omg!! Can we start a page or list where it describes the death of animals??!! Grrr!! I can be forewarned to skip over those parts before I’m traumatized. I’m reading the Golden Ass. It needs to go on the list along with Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep, and Call of the Wild. Although I haven’t read call of the Wild yet at least I know ahead of time and can be prepared to skip those parts.


Liander (The Towering Pile) Lavoie (liannelavoie) | 104 comments Debbie McGreevy wrote: "Omg!! Can we start a page or list where it describes the death of animals??!! Grrr!! I can be forewarned to skip over those parts before I’m traumatized. I’m reading the Golden Ass. It needs to go ..."

Have you ever used the site DoesTheDogDie.com? It's for looking up "emotional spoilers", which sounds like pretty much what you're looking for!


message 7235: by Nocturnalux (new)

Nocturnalux | 465 comments Debbie McGreevy wrote: "Omg!! Can we start a page or list where it describes the death of animals??!! Grrr!! I can be forewarned to skip over those parts before I’m traumatized. I’m reading the Golden Ass. It needs to go ..."

Kafka on the Shore has a very violent and detailed scene in which several cats are killed.


message 7236: by Sean (new)

Sean (fordest) | 988 comments Mod
And The Godfather. First book I thought of although there are many. BTW Debbie, You can start a thread... this might be very interesting.... go for it!


message 7237: by Diane (new)

Diane  | 2336 comments Mod
Finished Naked Lunch and feeling a little traumatized. Thankfully, this is the last of the list Burroughs for me.


message 7238: by Ellinor (new)

Ellinor (1001andmore) | 915 comments Mod
Diane wrote: "Finished Naked Lunch and feeling a little traumatized. Thankfully, this is the last of the list Burroughs for me."

I know what you mean. Naked Lunch was my first Burroughs and now I'm hestitant about the rest of his works on the list even though most of them are rather short.


message 7239: by Mia (new)

Mia | 1196 comments I finished Burmese Days by George Orwell. 5 stars.


message 7240: by Diane (new)

Diane  | 2336 comments Mod
Ellinor wrote: "Diane wrote: "Finished Naked Lunch and feeling a little traumatized. Thankfully, this is the last of the list Burroughs for me."

I know what you mean. Naked Lunch was my first Burrough..."


Junky and Queer aren't horrible, but I really disliked this one and Wild Boys.


message 7242: by Peter (new)

Peter | 443 comments The Riddles of the Sand by Erskine Childers.

This is a slow burner by todays standards but has many of the ingredients found in modern spy stories and for that reason alone deserves to be read.


message 7243: by Angelique (new)

Angelique (mjollnir972) | 74 comments Slaughterhouse-five by Kurt Vonnegut


message 7246: by Sean (new)

Sean (fordest) | 988 comments Mod
Bob wrote: "Amadis of Gaul: Books I and II and Amadis of Gaul: Books III and IV by Garci Rodríguez de Montalvo"

I had not really paid any attention to this book. These two volumes total about 1300 pages right? Should this be added to the list of 1000+ page books? Is the whole thing on Boxall's LIST? the one I was tracking is a 336 page (apparently) EXACT reproduction. Anybody shed some light for me?


message 7247: by Bob (new)

Bob Kaufman (bobkaufman) | 689 comments Sean wrote: "Bob wrote: "Amadis of Gaul: Books I and II and Amadis of Gaul: Books III and IV by Garci Rodríguez de Montalvo"

I had not really paid any attention to ..."


I don't see how this epic could be reduced that much. The story runs over a long time and covers a great deal of action with a whole host of characters.


message 7248: by Karen (new)

Karen Hoehne | 1717 comments Mod
In a Free State by V. S. Naipaul


message 7249: by Karen (new)

Karen Hoehne | 1717 comments Mod
Sean wrote: "Bob wrote: "Amadis of Gaul: Books I and II and Amadis of Gaul: Books III and IV by Garci Rodríguez de Montalvo"

I had not really paid any attention to ..."


My Kindle version has Books 1-4 and is listed at 618 pages.


message 7250: by Diane (new)

Diane  | 2336 comments Mod
Finished The Monastery by Walter Scott.


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