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

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message 3851: by Asa (new)

Asa | 65 comments I've just started Puzo's The Godfather.


message 3852: by Deanne (new)

Deanne | 681 comments Started Max Havelaar, surprised at how good it is and the impact this book had on the lives of others. It led to welfare reforms and inspired the Fairtrade movement.


message 3853: by Viviana (new)

Viviana | 11 comments Rebecca, I absolutely LOVED "The Golden Notebook"! I once started "War and Peace" but I must confess I dropped it when I got to the whole military part. I want to restart it, though, one of these days. Meanwhile, I just started "The Waves". I never read anything by Virginia Woolf, but, although I am on the very first pages, I must say I am loving her writing style: beautifully written and rich imagery!


message 3854: by laut (new)

laut | 28 comments I just started Dining on Stones. I don't think I'm gonna like it, if I'm right I probably won't bother finishing it.

Has anyone else read it and liked it?


message 3855: by Deanne (new)

Deanne | 681 comments Didn't like Dining on Stones much either, but I used to walk past the building he describes at the start of the book. I lost interest fairly quickly after that.


message 3856: by Leonard (new)

Leonard (leonardseet) | 24 comments Just started the sixth volume of In Search of Lost Time: Time Regained. Going down the home stretch.


message 3857: by El (new)

El Awesome, Leonard. I'm just starting the first volume - I've read it before (Swann's Way and Within a Budding Grove), but then never continued. Now I'm starting over with full intention of reading the whole bunch. I'm really getting into it too, with a bunch of Proustian side-reads. I've totally dorked out over it. :)


message 3858: by Pinar (new)

Pinar Celebi (pinuccia) I hurt my belly badly and spending all day in bed reading Wuthering Heights...


message 3859: by LindaD (new)

LindaD (freedom333) | 19 comments Pinar wrote: "I hurt my belly badly and spending all day in bed reading Wuthering Heights..."

feel better, sounds like you need to escape to another time and place...


message 3860: by Donna (new)

Donna (donnareadstheworld) | 0 comments Just starting Leo Tolstoy's Anna Karenina - will probably keep me going for some time to come!


message 3861: by whimsicalmeerkat (new)

whimsicalmeerkat I need to pick my next list book. Any suggestions?


message 3862: by Shay (new)

Shay | 71 comments Denae wrote: "I need to pick my next list book. Any suggestions?"

I see you have a separate GR shelf for dystopian novels. Have you read We by Yevgeny Zamyatin?


message 3863: by whimsicalmeerkat (new)

whimsicalmeerkat I've not read that. I'll have to bump it up towards the top of my list.


message 3864: by Mike (new)

Mike | 78 comments I just started "A Room With a View" by E.M. Forster.


Kat (A Journey In Reading) (ajourneyinreading) | 17 comments Mike wrote: "I just started "A Room With a View" by E.M. Forster."


I just got that one on my Kindle a few days ago... it was FREE!

Donna: can't wait to see what you think of Anna K.... one of my favs.


message 3866: by Genia (new)

Genia Lukin | 205 comments The Turn of the Screw. Should be a short read.


message 3867: by Donna (new)

Donna (donnareadstheworld) | 0 comments Kat (LvnEvryMin) wrote: "Mike wrote: "I just started "A Room With a View" by E.M. Forster."


I just got that one on my Kindle a few days ago... it was FREE!

Donna: can't wait to see what you think of Anna K.... one..."



Kat: So far (the few chapters I've read anyway) I'm loving it. It's my first Tolstoy - a lot easier to read than I expected! :)


message 3868: by Mike (new)

Mike | 78 comments Hey, Donna! So did I.


message 3869: by Shovelmonkey1 (new)

Shovelmonkey1 | 190 comments Denae wrote: "I've not read that. I'll have to bump it up towards the top of my list."

I second Shay's suggestion for We - i read it last year and thought it was great!

I've just started The Plague by Albert Camus, which is good so far although i keep trying to work out all the philosophical points the text might be making as i read along which is a bit distracting!


message 3870: by Deanne (new)

Deanne | 681 comments Reading the second book in Your face tomorrow, I'm half way through and about to start dream. Love his descriptions of things, why use one sentence when you can use six.
Also reading Phineas Finn, and can now tell the difference between Tories and Whigs, so I've learnt something.


message 3871: by Shea (new)

Shea | 9 comments Mike wrote: "I just started "A Room With a View" by E.M. Forster."

I like this one a lot! Just started Atonement.


message 3872: by Mikela (new)

Mikela | 378 comments Just starting A Room With a View


message 3873: by Maggie (new)

Maggie (mmorrell) | 25 comments I just started One Hundred Years of Solitude. I read it about 40 years ago, liked it but was mystified. Now I LOVE it and am mystified.


Kat (A Journey In Reading) (ajourneyinreading) | 17 comments Donna wrote: "Kat: So far (the few chapters I've read anyway) I'm loving it. It's my first Tolstoy - a lot easier to read than I expected! :)

..."



When you finish it, I recommend reading The Last Station: A Novel of Tolstoy's Last Year, you will learn so much about his last days and why he was who he was. I loved it....made me appreciate him that much more.


message 3875: by [deleted user] (new)

I am currently reading Memoirs of a Geisha. It is really interesting! I have a blog that does the books chronologically. Come check me out at 1001everything.blogspot.com.


message 3876: by Kate S (new)

Kate S | 39 comments I just started On Beauty by Zadie Smith So far it's interesting


message 3877: by Deanne (new)

Deanne | 681 comments Started Henderson the Rain King last night and I'm about 300 pages in, but I have the day off as I'm on nights this weekend.
Waiting for my kindle to arrive, can't wait, already looking up those free classics.


message 3878: by Katherine (new)

Katherine (katats) | 150 comments I just started Vanity Fair. It may take awhile to get through, but I already find the tone amusing.


message 3879: by Colten (new)

Colten | 1 comments I just started 100 Years of Solitude.


message 3880: by Gini (new)

Gini | 138 comments Katherine wrote: "I just started Vanity Fair. It may take awhile to get through, but I already find the tone amusing."

I thought it was a marvelous read, and so engrossing that I couldn't put it down.


message 3881: by [deleted user] (new)

I'm 3 chapters into Siddhartha (2010 list). So far, things are moving too quickly. The characters's experiences fly by; you don't get a good feel (for lack of better terminology) each path they take.

I don't know. Maybe that's the point...


message 3882: by Maggie (new)

Maggie (mmorrell) | 25 comments I'm a couple of chapters into The Master and Margarita. So far I'm not getting it. But then, I haven't run into the Master or Margarita yet. So I'm waiting in anticipation.


message 3883: by Lorena (new)

Lorena (lorenalilian) | 18 comments I started Les Miserables a couple of days ago, I'm fully engaged at the moment. I watched the movie a few years back but I don't remember any of what I'm reading now from the movie.

I read Anna K. recently and really liked, I was a little confused at first because of the number of characters and all the nicknames, but once I got the hang of it, it was truly amazing.

I liked Siddhartha as well, it was an audiobbok I listen during my commute to work.


message 3884: by Shovelmonkey1 (new)

Shovelmonkey1 | 190 comments Started The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano: Gustavus Vassa, the African
this morning. Have been meaning to read this for ages as its the only book on the list that ties in with my work and research but somehow it kept getting left on the TBR pile.


message 3885: by Judith (new)

Judith (jloucks) | 1202 comments Started "Marius the Epicurean" by Walter Pater.

This is a dense coming-of-age story exploring the development of one's boy's philosophy and religion. Set in the Roman Empire at the time when pagan religions are faltering and the Christian religion is spreading, the author's intent was to show how a certain type of thinker seeks maturity in his beliefs.


message 3886: by Jennifer W (new)

Jennifer W | 251 comments Orlando by Virginia Woolf. It'll only be my 2nd Woolf, and the 1st (Mrs. Dalloway) was a decade ago.


message 3887: by Deanne (new)

Deanne | 681 comments Just started On the Eve by Turgenev, and then I think I'll read the third installment of Your Face Tomorrow.


message 3888: by Craig (new)

Craig | 241 comments Evelina by Fanny Burney
and
Dangerous Liaisons by Choderlos de Laclos


message 3890: by Mike (new)

Mike | 78 comments I started The Brothers Karamazov a week or so ago. I was bored and lost so last night I reread the first few chapters again. I got it now, so I'm trucking on.


message 3891: by Deanne (new)

Deanne | 681 comments Just started Javier Marias Your Face Tomorrow: 3 Poison, Shadow and Farewell.


message 3892: by Lorena (new)

Lorena (lorenalilian) | 18 comments Les Miserables, by Victor Hugo. =)


message 3893: by laut (new)

laut | 28 comments I've decided to try and read Albert Camus's The Outsider quickly as I've fallen behind a little on my attempt to read 50 books this year.


message 3894: by Vanessa (new)

Vanessa Surfacing by Margaret Atwood. I'm 80 or so pages in and it's not grabbing me so far, which is unusual as I normally love her books. I shall stick with it till the end but hope it gets better!


message 3895: by Deanne (new)

Deanne | 681 comments Started The Trick is to Keep Breathing, a story about a woman and her ability to deal with grief.


message 3896: by Stephanie (new)

Stephanie (Reading is Better With Cupcakes) (imjustcupcake) | 2 comments Dracula. So far so good.


message 3897: by [deleted user] (new)

I just started Tale of a Tub. It is a little hard to swallow. I am actually tracked the books chronologically on my blog at 1001everything.blogspot.com. Check it out!


message 3898: by Shovelmonkey1 (new)

Shovelmonkey1 | 190 comments I started Measuring the World by Daniel Kehlmann last night. It's actually pretty good although not something that immediately jumps out as being obviously list-worthy. It was added to the list in 2008.


message 3899: by Deanne (new)

Deanne | 681 comments Started Buddenbrooks this morning, and beginning to get into it, might take it to work tonight.


message 3900: by Maggie (new)

Maggie (mmorrell) | 25 comments Yesterday I started Catch 22.


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