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Reading the 'Chunksters'
message 51:
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Kassandra
(new)
Jul 04, 2014 03:44PM

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Also enjoying season 2 of the TV series. It is interesting comparing the two. The series obviously had to make a few changes to stretch the story out otherwise it would have been a one and done "mini-series".



Outlander by Diana Gabaldon (the entire series is good and huge)
The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova
Gone with the Wind
The Stand, It, 11/23/63, Mr Mercedes...almost anything by Stephen King






(**sighs as she adds even more books to her TBR**)
Just finished A Storm of Swords Part 1, chuffed with myself that I got it done so quick. Loving the series!

I am finishing the second book in the series right now. I love this series.

I'm just wrapping this one up now. It's not my type of book and will be glad to be done honestly. A lot of women like it though.

I've also learned that my schema for scottish men are big burly men like the dad from the movie Brave.


The characters are so real in the series. As you continue the series you meet people in "current" time that impact and are impacted by what happens to Claire and Jamie in the past.
I do think that in the later books there are more pages given over to battle details that I cared about. I wanted the story to move forward!







Sure. It has a pretty long intro, but it's interesting to have some context on the poem before going in.
Kiwi wrote: "I too have been thinking of re-reading the Divine Comedy, here is the link to the MOOC I've been looking at, it's 6 weeks long starting in October this year, in case Gavin or Kassandra are interested"
Oh, that's interesting. I'll sure check it out.


But in the mean time, I've been spending the last two years on a historical account of Winston Churchill by William R. Manchester called The Last Lion 1: Visions of Glory 1874-1932 at 992 pages. I've started The Stand by Stephen King at 1,168 pages and Winter's Tale by Mark Helprin at 768 pages. Honestly, the genre challenges are taking up my time and distracting me; so it might be a couple months with these biggies. All is good. :)

Back up plan: 10 chunksters and 10 smaller books. I really don't want to feel like I've rushed the longer books, and I'm SO. VERY. SLOW. at reading, hah. :P

What a great idea! What kind of books are you looking for?

I'll be following the suggestions! ☺

I'm pretty much looking for classics or literary fiction, ie not genre fiction. The idea started because I have a bunch of chunksters that were languishing in my shelves, so those went straight to the 2015 Reading Challenge shelf: The Brothers Karamazov, Underworld, The Bonfire of the Vanities, Moby Dick, Ulysses, Freedom, The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay, House of Leaves and Infinite Jest. They're all by white men! :p
After much browsing, I managed to decide on The Golden Notebook by Doris Lessing.
Chunksters by women that I'm considering:


(in truth, I would prefer something by Edith Wharton instead, but it seems as none of her better known works pass the 600-page mark)

The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt seems like an obvious choice, but it doesn't really perk my interest. Same with a lot of the choices I saw on this list. I'm so difficult.
For the last book, I will probably pick Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison. In fact, I'm just going to go ahead and add it now.




If anybody is looking for a chunkster similar to Gone With The Wind, but not quite as sappy, take a peek at House Divided by Ben Ames Williams. About 1514 pages. I enjoyed this and the characters much better.

