Boxall's 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die discussion
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Which LIST book did you just start?
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Christine
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May 13, 2010 01:27AM

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Untouchable(by Mulk Raj Anand) is very good book. it is so touching and really represent true situation in time when it was written.




Hmm...this one is on my tbr shelf. Please let us know how you like it!


Hmm...this one is on my tbr shelf. Please let us know how you like it!"
Just finished The Castle of Otranto. It's an easy read (115 pages) and fast-paced. Because it uses old English (thou, thee, etc), it just feels old (first published in 1764). My training and work are on information technology so I am not so crazy about this kind of english used in a book. But I give it the right credit for starting a new genre 245 years ago! This genre (gothic fiction) has become more popular by the works of Edgar Allan Poe, Bram Stoker, Ann Radcliffe, etc.

My opinion is that regardless of the list committees' choices of which books in the different series to include, some of them should be read in their entirety to get a full appreciation. I definitely feel more strongly in favor of Faulkner's trilogy than "The Dance to the Music Time" series with 12 books! Just my opinion though....


an amazing, wonderful story...enjoy!



great book!!!that's real love.....

Atlas Shrugged "It's The Book" that everyone should read....

hahaha!!I love your comment. love your ideas of having a drink on the beach,,with a great book...

I just finished One Hundred Years, it's amazing! I hope you find it as good as I did.
Savour it! :-)
" I agreed with you the book is very totally one of my favorites
I'm about midway through Ovid's METAMORPHOSES. Which is interesting - it's kind of the source for all of those "Greek myths" tales that get reprinted and circulated in kids' collections of "Tales from Ancient Greece" that seem to be all over the damn place when you're in school. I've had to stop myself from skimming passages because 'Oh, it's the story of Arachne, I know what happens next...'



Why is "Atlas..." a book everyone should read?

Thanks, Kristel. I just finished that book: Marilynne Robinson's Home. It is indeed a tearjerker. What I like about Mrs. Robinson's writing is her brilliant way of building the climax. Sweet and smooth!

"Les Mis" - Victor Hugo
Now this one will take awhile!


I found that book so extremely boring!


Reading: The Lion of Justice by Margaret Butler

I liked this book! Hope you like it too!"
I am having a tough time getting into it - I actually put it down this weekend and went to a rapid read just to feel like I had accomplished something holiday Monday.

Evelina, was it really believable that Mme. de Cleves confessed to her husband that she had fallen in love with another man? Would a woman (like you) really do that in an attempt to resist the temptation of having an extramarital affair?


I have theme for each month. This month, I go for classics (1700s) and I try to finish as many as I can. So as not to get bored, I intersperse it with the newly additions in 2010 version (Elegance of the Hedgehog which is #1, etc). Next month, I will go with Guy Lit books like Junky, Crash, The Green Man, etc. The month after that, I will go sci-fi, etc.

Joselito; I thought it believable for the person she was or by the moral path she was trying not to stray from, so obviously different from others in her milieu. Madame de Cleves not only had to resist the temptation of an extramarital affair, but also, the expectation in her society to have one as well. Though she did not love her husband, she felt it her duty to stay faithful. And because she saw pitfalls in having a lover, duty was the safest path.
I think telling her husband she has fallen in love with another man as a way of protecting herself from infidelity very naive. I would think the same of any woman today.
Do you think The Princess de Cleves still has relevance today, or is it passé?
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