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

4324 views
Popular Topics > Which LIST book did you just finish?

Comments Showing 3,751-3,800 of 10,248 (10248 new)    post a comment »

message 3751: by Nicola (last edited Jul 19, 2017 08:06AM) (new)

Nicola | 770 comments Villette - Probably Charlotte’s best book, at least so far as writing goes - I'm aware that Jane Eyre holds a place in many hearts beyond that of a mere book.

4 stars - my review


The Old Devils - Well written and entertaining enough but a book full of old Welsh sad sacks in various states of drunken decay was a bit much for me.

3 stars - my review


Antic Hay - Another 'society is full of pitfalls' novel although Aldous Huxley writes with a little more class given the time period. Again, pretty funny in parts but not really my thing.

3 stars - my review


All the Pretty Horses - 'A more readable Hemingway' but still close enough to the actual Hemingway that I didn't like it much. Full of manly men doing manly things - lots of blood and fighting.

2 stars - my review


Emma - The incomparable Jane Austen :-) Reading this for, oh, the 8th time perhaps?

5 stars


Summer Will Show - Surprisingly I didn't like this. I should have given my general tastes but I thought it was mostly fairly boring.

2 stars - my review


Eugene Onegin - Pure Poetry :-) Especially when you listen to the audiobook by Stephen Fry!

4 stars - my review


message 3752: by George P. (new)

George P. | 1402 comments Mod
Nicola wrote: Summer Will Show - Surprisingly I didn't like this. I should have given my general tastes but I thought it was mostly fairly boring.
2 stars - my review..."


That's an obscure one- you're the first person I've ever seen read it. And your note helps explain that. It was kept in the newer Boxall edition though.
I have Eugene Onegin in my to-read list. Other friends have also given it 4 stars- I think I need to move it up in my list.


message 3753: by George P. (new)

George P. | 1402 comments Mod
I finished up my reading of seven short pieces by Edgar A Poe with The Purloined Letter; very nice writing but nothing amazing about the detective story [It was dropped from the 2012 edition].


message 3754: by Aileen (new)

Aileen | 154 comments I finally got round to reading 2001: A Space Odyssey which I've owned for years but tended to avoid because I thought I wasn't a sci-fi fan. Well I loved this one! Bits seemed familiar though I have no recollection of watching the movie. I'll have to remedy that. 5/5


message 3755: by Eva (new)

Eva | 60 comments I just finished Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf.

The "stream of consciousness" almost made me feel short of breath when reading it and I felt that I had to read faster.

If not for life in general interfering with my reading time, I would have read this in one sitting.

I have a feeling that this is a book that I will return to again in a few a years.


message 3756: by Nicola (new)

Nicola | 770 comments George wrote: That's an obscure one- you're the first person I've ever seen read it..."

I try to read some of the more obscure ones every now and then - I'm reading the combined list so I'll eventually have to read them all at some point anyway.


message 3757: by Diane (new)


message 3758: by Eva (new)

Eva | 60 comments Mercedes wrote: "Emu wrote: "I just finished Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf.

The "stream of consciousness" almost made me feel short of breath when reading it and I felt that I had to r..."


I definitely will read The Hours + my friend gave me Mrs. Dalloway's Party: A Short Story Sequence, which is also going to the top of the tbr-pile :-)


message 3759: by George P. (new)

George P. | 1402 comments Mod
Aileen wrote: "I finally got round to reading 2001: A Space Odyssey which I've owned for years but tended to avoid because I thought I wasn't a sci-fi fan...."

Did you know that movie screenplays are often taken from books, but in the case of 2001 they were written simultaneously in an unusual partnership of Arthur C Clarke and Stanley Kubrik?


message 3760: by Aileen (new)

Aileen | 154 comments George wrote: "Aileen wrote: "I finally got round to reading 2001: A Space Odyssey which I've owned for years but tended to avoid because I thought I wasn't a sci-fi fan...."

Did you know that movie screenplays ..."


I didn't know this before I picked the book up, but my copy explained that they were written in conjunction. My head is still somewhere off Saturn :-)


message 3762: by George P. (new)

George P. | 1402 comments Mod
Mercedes wrote: "De amor y de sombra by Isabel Allende.
I loved this book."


Do you read them in Spanish? My Spanish is just "Spanish 2" level, I wish it were good enough for reading novels.


message 3763: by Jan (new)

Jan (cypher1901) | 1 comments House of Leaves. A bit confusing at times, but very enjoyable.


message 3764: by Ellinor (new)

Ellinor (1001andmore) | 915 comments Mod
Carry Me Down by M.J. Hyland. I have no idea what it is doing on the list.


Bryan--The Bee’s Knees (theindefatigablebertmcguinn) | 629 comments Finished White Noise by Don DeLillo. Considering I didn't much care for his Mao II, I was surprised at how much I liked this one. DeLillo seems me (at least here in White Noise) to be a strong link between Heller's Catch 22 and Palahniuk's Fight Club


message 3766: by Sarah (new)

Sarah (sarahbethie) | 438 comments Finished Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoyevsky. Chilling but good. I wonder how many people believe the same. I suspect the number isn't as low as one would hope.


message 3768: by Ellinor (new)

Ellinor (1001andmore) | 915 comments Mod
Finished Bartleby & Co.


message 3769: by Diane (new)

Diane  | 2336 comments Mod
Finished Cat's Cradle by Kurt Vonnegut Jr..


message 3771: by Tim (new)

Tim | 331 comments Moby Dick by Herman Melville


Bryan--The Bee’s Knees (theindefatigablebertmcguinn) | 629 comments Mercedes wrote: "The Beggar Maid: Stories of Flo and Rose by Alice Munro.

This collection is not her best, is it? I'm not impressed."


I really enjoyed The View from Castle Rock, but that was after being disappointed by some of her other stories, so it may have been a product of lowered expectations. But it was good enough to make me look forward to the next book of hers that I picked up. Perhaps I'll look somewhere besides The Beggar Maid


message 3773: by Tyler (new)

Tyler | 207 comments Finally finished listening to The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides. I really enjoyed it!


message 3774: by Karen (new)

Karen Hoehne | 1717 comments Mod
The Monk by Matthew Lewis The Monk by Matthew Lewis.
This was great as an audiobook -- very dramatic and spooky!


message 3775: by George P. (new)

George P. | 1402 comments Mod
Finished Hallucinating Foucault, so Diane and I finished it within a week of one another. I got it on interlibrary loan, not in my local public libraries. The theme is the relationship between a writer and a reader/English lit grad student. I think I liked writing style a lot, the story somewhat less.


message 3776: by Bob (new)


message 3777: by Gemma (new)

Gemma | 55 comments Finished A Christmas Carol last night.


message 3778: by Eva (new)

Eva | 60 comments I finished Everything Is Illuminated yesterday. Not my cup of tea.


message 3779: by Gemma (new)

Gemma | 55 comments Haha yes thank you (: No nasty lesson learning ghosts for me !!


message 3780: by Karen (new)

Karen Hoehne | 1717 comments Mod
The River Between by Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o The River Between by Ngugi wa Thiong'o
Excellent companion to Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart though focusing more on the clash between Christianity and traditional culture.


message 3781: by Tim (new)

Tim | 331 comments Gemma wrote: "Finished A Christmas Carol last night."

My favorite Dickens.


message 3782: by Gemma (new)

Gemma | 55 comments Tim wrote: "Gemma wrote: "Finished A Christmas Carol last night."

My favorite Dickens."


I have only read that one and Great Expectations so far, but keen to read more!


message 3783: by Karen (new)

Karen Hoehne | 1717 comments Mod
The Passion According to G.H. by Clarice Lispector The Passion According to G.H. by Clarice Lispector
Consciousness-raising from the 60s -- I prefer mine without cockroaches! Love this sentence from the Goodreads summary -- "Although this idiosyncratic novel will not have wide appeal, those with academic or markedly erudite tastes should like it very much. "


message 3784: by Nicola (last edited Aug 05, 2017 03:05AM) (new)

Nicola | 770 comments The Return of the Native - Classic Hardy. If you like him then you'll love it. I read this with The Readers Review: Literature from 1800 to 1910 group and we had a lot of fun.

4 stars - my review


Memoirs of Hadrian - Wonderfully written but too philosophical and with not enough historical action for me.

2 1/2 star - my review


Time's Arrow - Great fun if you don't know the spoiler (which unfortunately I did). If you don't then read it without looking at a single reveiw or even the book dust cover! (My reviews are safe, I always use spoiler tags :-))

4 stars - my review


No One Writes to the Colonel and Other Stories - Interesting for the details of town/country life after the revolution (which is why the extra half star) but the stories themselves didn't appeal. I like my stories to have a point to them and usually to wrap up neatly instead of always stopping abruptly.

2 1/2 stars - my review


Gormenghast - The second book and it ties up a lot of loose ends left from the first. Interesting but I'll be leaving it there.

3 1/2 stars - my review


Humphry Clinker - Quite interesting and moderately amusing without actually making me laugh. It gets an extra half star because of all of the information about the people of the day.

3 1/2 stars - my review


message 3785: by Karen (new)

Karen Hoehne | 1717 comments Mod
Closely Watched Trains by Bohumil Hrabal Closely Watched Trains by Bohumil Hrabal


message 3786: by Sarah (new)

Sarah (sarahbethie) | 438 comments Just finished Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy. It was a good book but I was ready for Anna to die at the end!


message 3787: by Karen (new)


message 3788: by Karen (new)

Karen Hoehne | 1717 comments Mod
To Have and Have Not by Ernest Hemingway To Have and Have Not by Ernest Hemingway


message 3790: by Diane (last edited Aug 11, 2017 06:58PM) (new)


message 3791: by Nancy (new)

Nancy (nlgeorge) | 31 comments Sarah wrote: "Finished Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoyevsky. Chilling but good. I wonder how many people believe the same. I suspect the number isn't as low as one would hope."

Sarah, I agree. This book haunted me for a long time and confirmed by high opinion of Dostoyevsky's work.


message 3792: by Nancy (new)

Nancy (nlgeorge) | 31 comments Finished Cancer Ward by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn


message 3793: by Jim (new)

Jim Townsend | 23 comments Finished yesterday the Scribner Library paperback edition of Alan Paton's (1903-88) Cry, the Beloved Country. It's a tragic tale of fear, loss, faith and love.

Jim


Bryan--The Bee’s Knees (theindefatigablebertmcguinn) | 629 comments Diane wrote: "Stranger in a Strange Land by Albert Camus and Against Nature by Joris-Karl Huysmans."

What did you think of the Huysmans?


message 3795: by Nicola (new)

Nicola | 770 comments Diane wrote: "Stranger in a Strange Land by Albert Camus and Against Nature by Joris-Karl Huysmans."

Stranger in a Strange Land isn't written by Camus. Did you put down the wrong book or the wrong author?


message 3796: by George P. (new)

George P. | 1402 comments Mod
Diane wrote: "Stranger in a Strange Land by Albert Camus and Against Nature by Joris-Karl Huysmans."

Camus wrote The Stranger, which is what you probably meant to link to. It's also known as The Outsider but is not listed that way in Goodreads.


message 3797: by Diane (new)

Diane  | 2336 comments Mod
Nicola wrote: "Diane wrote: "Stranger in a Strange Land by Albert Camus and Against Nature by Joris-Karl Huysmans."

Stranger in a Strange Land ..."


Ha! I clicked on the wrong author! I will fix it. Oops.


message 3798: by Diane (new)

Diane  | 2336 comments Mod
George wrote: "Diane wrote: "Stranger in a Strange Land by Albert Camus and Against Nature by Joris-Karl Huysmans."

Camus wrote The Stranger,..."


I meant to click on Heinlein but hit Camus by mistake. I only put "Stranger" in my search so Camus' book came up first and Heinlein's came up second.


message 3799: by Diane (new)

Diane  | 2336 comments Mod
Bryan wrote: "Diane wrote: "Stranger in a Strange Land by Albert Camus and Against Nature by Joris-Karl Huysmans."

What did you think of the Huysmans?"


I really liked it. It wasn't at all what I expected. I usually don't care for books with little plot and a lot of ranting, but this one was an exception.


message 3800: by Karen (new)


back to top