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Gulliver’s Travels
The 100 Best Novels
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Week 3 - Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift
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I've read it and I really enjoyed it. I loved the adventure in the book and the ending.

Me too, at elementary school, and I was not interested enough in it to pick up the original versions in more recent years
It is one I still have to go!!!!
It was considered a book for children even if it definitly not for children. It was a way to deprive it of its virulence and sharp critics ...
It was considered a book for children even if it definitly not for children. It was a way to deprive it of its virulence and sharp critics ...

I read this whilst at school; one of the things I was studying was 18th century history, so it linked with that.
Has anyone readA Modest Proposal?

No, but I've always wanted it!"
Yes, when I was studying A level history. Very interesting reading.

Yes, that was my introduction to Swift at school! I think that is one of the best examples of satire I have ever read (and that was why we read it at school).

No, but I've always wanted it!"
Yes, when I was studying A level history. Very interesting reading."
It's interesting how many of these earlier 'classic' novels, link well into the study of history.
This can be said of much earlier works also eg Beowolf gives a clear picture and evidence of a ruler's housing and funeral ceremonies.


Holly wrote: "I've been meaning to read this forever. Maybe I'll get round to it..."
Next year? I'm thinking abouti it.
Next year? I'm thinking abouti it.

Next year? I'm thinking abouti it."
me too :)

Yes please, it will give me the push to finally pick it up!

Yes please, it will give me the push to finally pick it up!"
Sounsd good! When do you want to do it?

Another book firmly on my shelves, I have read portions of this novel throughout my university days. The whole thing in its entirety though is still to be conquered.
Books mentioned in this topic
Jonathan Swift (other topics)A Modest Proposal (other topics)
From the essay:
"Seven years after the publication of Robinson Crusoe, the great Tory essayist and poet Jonathan Swift – inspired by the Scriblerus club, whose members included John Gay and Alexander Pope – composed a satire on travel narratives that became an immediate bestseller. According to Gay, Gulliver was soon being read "from the cabinet council to the nursery".
In its afterlife as a classic, Gulliver's Travels works on many levels. First, it's a masterpiece of sustained and savage indignation, "furious, raging, obscene", according to Thackeray. Swift's satirical fury is directed against almost every aspect of early 18th-century life: science, society, commerce and politics. Second, stripped of Swift's dark vision, it becomes a wonderful travel fantasy for children, a perennial favourite that continues to inspire countless versions, in books and films. Finally, as a polemical tour de force, full of wild imagination, it became a source for Voltaire, as well as the inspiration for a Telemann violin suite, Philip K Dick's science-fiction story The Prize Ship, and, perhaps most influential of all, George Orwell's Animal Farm"
Read the full article/essay here
More information on Jonathan Swift here
Have any of you read it? Thoughts?