Catching up on Classics (and lots more!) discussion
Archived Chit Chat & All That
>
How well read are you? (Buzzfeed Quiz)

Ha! I agree, Bob. I love the ones that say something like "Perhaps reading isn't your thing." Hmmm--wonder what it is I've been spending so much time doing then. :-)
So no feeling pathetic, Ashley!

Good thing I joined this group!"
18 I read huge amounts a year (somewhere in the neighborhood of 100 books) and still am a newbie!




Good thing I joined this group!"
18 I read huge amounts a year (somewhere in the neighborhood of 100 books) and still am a newbie!"
I read 100+ books a year, and I'm *trying* to do a classic a month, and I'm still scoring in the 14 range.
And not all classics appeal to everyone.

67/155. Also an English major, but like Simone didn't find a lot of my favorite authors on the list. No Hardy!



Didn't think of Hardy -- and he's one of my favorites.


Congrats Connie, you're in the lead here! Therefore, what isn't here that should be?
These kinds of lists are always a bit of fun, but I don't think this one would determine if you are "well read" or not.

You're doing well - you're clearly an avid reader. Keep at it, pal!
That is a little disappointing. But there are a lot of books I own and haven't read yet on this list...

Sara, agreed. I like to read a little bit of everything, so that shades my personal definition of well-read. I don't have a literary degree, nor do I have any experience in the academic world of literature. But a better title for this particular list might be "well-read in classical literature." I've read 56 books on this list, and yes, there are a number of books listed I want to read. But within my claim of "reading a little bit of everything", I've read current YA blockbusters ("Twilight", the first two "Hunger Games") a current soft-core porn blockbuster ("Fifty Shades") and consider two fiction books from this century among my favorites of all time: Harbach's "Art of Fielding" and Yanigihara's "A Little Life." While list such as this are interesting, no list can be definitive. After all, who in their right mind would get all their current news of the world from one source?

Based on lurking in this group for several years, I pronounce you all well-read based on the above. The thread moderator will give you your lollipop.

Thanks for reviving this. I scored 65/155, which got back the rating: "Wow, you're basically a professional reader."
At the same time, utter contempt for some of the books on this list.
If I took it in reverse, "how many of these books will you never read?," I might score 35 or so.
Go tell it on the mountain, I read about half and really liked it and mean to get back to it.
Same with Conscience of Zeno.
Gave myself some leeway on "Stories" by Chekhov and "Essays" by Montaigne. I'm assuming two of each qualifies.
Doesn't Montaigne have an essay "On Pedantry"?

Which means 155- 39= 116 -65= 51 books I want to read or might read, but haven't.
Not counting books I've read but don't remember.
eta: Too old for this, or too young for this. Baby Boomers can pretend Gravity's Rainbow is still "a thing," but trust me, it's not.

Beautifully said, Dave.



I just took it again and have read 70/155 now! I'm surprised to have read 16 more in the last year and a half (kind of by accident!) :)

Good description, Tammy!
Well, I'm not so well-read with only 23/155 on that list, but there will never be time to read them all. That is OK. I will just try to enjoy the one I am reading now. I am currently on my 10th rereading of The Outsiders (as we teach it in Middle School ELA) and it is still a good book. Also, I am in the middle of Summer, as a stack of 103 creative writing assignments languish on the table. The students have started asking if I have finished reading them yet.

Don’t dismiss Gone with the Wind for what you think you know about it. It is a really good and much deeper book then its reputation that just happens to have a love story in it.

I don't know how many 1,000 pagers are 'worth it' to ME. Probably none.
I don't want to be dismissive of anyone's favorite book.
How about Atonement? Is that anyone's favorite?

I can't remember avoiding a book due to length. I've read plenty of long books, fiction and non-fiction. On the plus side a longer book delays the sometimes tedium of deciding what to read next. On the negative it gives me more opportunity to get bored, get frustrated, or have to set it aside when life gets in the way of reading.


Comment:surface coverage of most authors. Once you find someone you love you go for the deep dive surely.
I think cultural bias is too strong a term for it but it’s totally natural. Difficult to imagine an English quiz setter not including Hardy or Jane Eyre.
Always stimulating to see another list. Or maybe I should just jack it in. 🤪(as if)



This is an act of love: nothing more, nothing less. If they're going to commodify reading, then they can choke on their list. I sure as hell don't need Buzzfeed of all things to tell me whether I'm well read or not (I am, which in the real world means absolutely nothing). My library would make their random list look like a 5th grade summer reading assignment.

I'd be at 106 if I read all the entries that I still have on my shelves. Things to look forward to at least.
Books mentioned in this topic
To the Lighthouse (other topics)1984 (other topics)
The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (other topics)
Animal Farm (other topics)
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (other topics)
More...
I think this comes from a compilation of 3 different lists. One of them was a Norwegian list which had a goal of being as international as possible, and the other two were limited to 20th century books with one having a seeming bias towards heavily literary selections rather than popular/influential selections.
Literary critics don't necessarily have the same tastes as avid readers.
I'm up to 61 with a couple more partially read, a handful abandoned, and a handful on Mt. TBR.