Boxall's 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die discussion
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Which LIST book did you just finish?
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Bam cooks the books
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May 14, 2016 06:09PM

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The style of writing took some getting used to. To start with I did not like it, and was even thinking about giving up. But I made it and things did start to make more sense (maybe except some of the long first person perspectives in part three). 3 stars.
Tyler wrote: "I finished A Severed Head by Iris Murdoch. It was mesmerizing and dull at the same time. Don't know how she achieved that, but kudos to her."
I finished Murdoch's "The Sea, The Sea" a month ago- much as you said, the story is very slight, but the telling of it is so good! The characters, and the way they interact, are so convincingly real, and the things they say to one another fascinating. They no doubt went overboard when they put 6 of her novels in the original 1001 Books list, but they only dropped two in the most recent list I've seen.
I finished Murdoch's "The Sea, The Sea" a month ago- much as you said, the story is very slight, but the telling of it is so good! The characters, and the way they interact, are so convincingly real, and the things they say to one another fascinating. They no doubt went overboard when they put 6 of her novels in the original 1001 Books list, but they only dropped two in the most recent list I've seen.
Spring Snow by Yukio Mishima. It's the first of his tetralogy (1 more than a trilogy, when 3 isn't quite enough) called The Sea of Fertility.
Mishima wrote beautiful elegant sentences, and was a master of the simile- sometimes used them excessively I thought, but they were usually so good, I'm not complaining.
Downside: doesn't add to my number of List Books (yet) because you have to read the whole tetralogy for that, so I'm still at 181 (combined editions; 179 of the '06 edition) but I will have another complete very soon.
Mishima wrote beautiful elegant sentences, and was a master of the simile- sometimes used them excessively I thought, but they were usually so good, I'm not complaining.
Downside: doesn't add to my number of List Books (yet) because you have to read the whole tetralogy for that, so I'm still at 181 (combined editions; 179 of the '06 edition) but I will have another complete very soon.
North and South. I didn't know about this book 'til I came across it in the Boxall listing, and found it had 85,000 ratings on Goodreads and an avg more than 4.1! Kind of long- I got the audiobook- I really enjoyed it. I'd describe it as a cross between Dickens (like Bleak House or Great Expectations) and Austen (like Pride and Prejudice).


3 1/2 stars
I also read Gabriela, Clove and Cinnamon for a group read and it was likewise very good. A sort of toned down Gabriel García Marquez.
3 1/2 stars

I agree. Somehow I got out of school without reading it.

Not on 1001 books, but I saw you ..."
I was surprised how much I enjoyed Middlemarch in the end. But, boy was it long!




I really enjoyed the movie.

I'll check that out. Thanks.

Apparently the 1001 list has A LOT on American slavery, Of the 123 books I have read:
To Kill a Mockingbird, Gone with the Wind, Oroonoko, Beloved
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. That is 5 - more than 4%,
J_BlueFlower wrote: "Apparently the 1001 list has A LOT on American slavery, Of the 123 books I have read:
To Kill a Mockingbird, Gone with the Wind, Oroonoko, Beloved
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. That is 5 - more than 4%"
And you haven't even read Uncle Tom's Cabin, one of the most famous of all novels with the main topic of slavery. It was the 1st American novel to sell a million copies.
However, I looked through my own list of 184 of the 1001 list books I've read or am reading, and except for Uncle Tom's Cabin didn't think of any others of them with the slavery topic. I've only read 2 of the 5 you listed. There are other list novels dealing with the discrimination that persisted after slavery though, as in Ragtime, Their Eyes Were Watching God, and Invisible Man. Invisible Man is particularly good for a reader interested in this theme.
I did read The 42nd Parallel but long ago and don't remember the slavery in it.
To Kill a Mockingbird, Gone with the Wind, Oroonoko, Beloved
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. That is 5 - more than 4%"
And you haven't even read Uncle Tom's Cabin, one of the most famous of all novels with the main topic of slavery. It was the 1st American novel to sell a million copies.
However, I looked through my own list of 184 of the 1001 list books I've read or am reading, and except for Uncle Tom's Cabin didn't think of any others of them with the slavery topic. I've only read 2 of the 5 you listed. There are other list novels dealing with the discrimination that persisted after slavery though, as in Ragtime, Their Eyes Were Watching God, and Invisible Man. Invisible Man is particularly good for a reader interested in this theme.
I did read The 42nd Parallel but long ago and don't remember the slavery in it.

To Kill a Mockingbird, Gone with the Wind, Oroonoko, Beloved
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn."
While Oroonoko is certainly about slavery, the slave traders in this story were English. The story was a good reminder that the "American slavery" was originally based on a European system of exploitation and slavery. It feels like while we remember our involvement in recent colonialism pretty well, our involvement in less recent slave trading is often off our radar.
Tyler wrote: "I finished Cane by Jean Toomer. An amazingly powerful piece of fiction. If jazz improvisation were put to words, this is how it would read."
It sounds interesting in the description in the Boxall book. I have a note that it's in O'Neal's list of "Greatest 20th century American Novels" put out by "Bookriot" as well.
It sounds interesting in the description in the Boxall book. I have a note that it's in O'Neal's list of "Greatest 20th century American Novels" put out by "Bookriot" as well.



Elise wrote: "I just finished What Maisie Knew by Henry James ... he is totally hit and miss for me. Didn't enjoy this...."
There was a good film made from What Maisie Knew, came out 1 or 2 yrs ago, set in modern times. Not sure if it had the original title.
There was a good film made from What Maisie Knew, came out 1 or 2 yrs ago, set in modern times. Not sure if it had the original title.
Tasha wrote: "Diane wrote: "Finished Mansfield Park and Villette.There is SO much Jane Austen on this list."
True that- there were 6 Austens in the original List; Northanger Abbey and Persuasion were dropped from later edition.
True that- there were 6 Austens in the original List; Northanger Abbey and Persuasion were dropped from later edition.
Never Let Me Go. We're reading for the June group read. As my friend Daniel said, it has a haunted vibe. A merger of a coming-of-age story with a dystopian theme, Ishiguro skillfully explored his characters' emotions and relationships in a very realistic manner. Moved to an excellent conclusion. A real novelist.

What do you think of her writing style? I've played with picking up one of her books...

What do you think of her writing style? I've played with picking up one of her boo..."
I liked her style. It is disjointed, but simple. Blackwater is a short novel. My edition was only 154 pages, so I would recommend starting there.

The book it self is well written and very condensed. For example we hear about Alex reading in the Bible. What does he find there? Daydreams about helping the Romans torture Jesus. Small details that speak volumes about his personality: Evil in a creative way. Like a 400 page book told in 200 pages with some big moral and ethics questions.


I also finished Fingersmith which was a quick and easy read. It was ok and I enjoyed it much more than Tipping the Velvet but I'm glad it was removed from the list. There is no way Sarah Water's writing ranks alongside the authors who should be included here.


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