Catching up on Classics (and lots more!) discussion
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What Book(s) have you just Bought, Ordered or Taken Delivery Of?
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Hadn't planned to buy anything else this quick after my last major purchase but we have one of those free delivery trials and it suddenly occurred to me there might be a limited number of copies.

In September I will finish the remaining books in my “Baker’s Dozen” challenges and increasing books made into movies - an ongoing reading goal.

I didn't see it in the group's bookshelves, wondering if anyone has read it or if it has been up for nomination.

Now the real work begins :P . Since the books are from all sorts of sources and are widely different in heights and depths, i'm breaking out the cereal boxes and trying to construct a container for them.
Not only will they all be together but i'm making steps and blocks to try to make them all flush both in height and depth.
I have part of the box constructed and you can see the start of the steps below the far left book.

All the books that look medieval are print-on-demand leather bound editions, some of them are quite absurdly large but they'll do.
I'll update if i ever get this construction completed. It should be about two to three layers of cereal box thick in the end and covered by black paper.

Book of Queens: The True Story of the Middle Eastern Horsewomen Who Fought the War on Terror
From The Snow Leopard To Mayakovsky
Demon Copperhead
Rough Magic: Riding the World's Loneliest Horse Race
Received for Christmas:
The Epic of Gilgamesh
Books I bought my nieces and nephews for Christmas:
Greek Myths: A Wonder Book For Girls & Boys
MARINE ANIMALS Animal Encyclopedia Activity Journal, Includes Stickers & Poster
Superpowered Animals by Soledad Romero Marino
Build Up your Vehicles

I have treated myself to a few that have recently arrived:
Thunder In the Mountains: The West Virginia Mine War, 1920-21 Savage, Lon 1985
The Zone Dovlatov, Sergei 1982
62: A Model Kit Cortazar, Julio 1969
Variations on Night and Day (Cities Of Salt #3) Munif, Abd al-Rahman 1989
The Face of Another Abe, Kobo 1964





and two that are on pre-order for exciting new editions later this year!
The Obscene Bird of Night: unabridged, centennial edition Donoso, José 1970
Men of Maize Asturias, Miguel Ángel 1949





Oh this looks like something I need...lol.

This book Madness goes up higher in the possibility list.


I won't actually start it till I finish A Year in the Life of William Shakespeare: 1599, which is almost done. And I'm part way into The Wolf Age: The Vikings, the Anglo-Saxons and the Battle for the North Sea Empire.


Wanted a hardcopy for a while but was never sure a version bought online would have the photos included. This one seems to have everything i want though.


Wanted ..."
That looks pretty nice. I always frequent the "used book sales" from the local library and sometimes find some nice gems.

The Son of Prophecy: The Rise of Henry Tudor and Henry VII and the Tudor Pretenders: Simnel, Warbeck, and WarwickbyNathen Amin
Young and Damned and Fair: The Life and Tragedy of Catherine Howard at the Court of Henry VIIIandThe Palace: From the Tudors to the Windsors, 500 Years of Royal History at Hampton CourtbyGareth Russell

In addition I picked up Wildfire at Midnight by Mary Stewart for a reread and The Lighted Heart by Elizabeth Yates, a nonfiction memoir by an author I loved as a young girl.

Teri, I read [book:Nine Coaches Waiting|27695] and The Crystal Cave by Mary Stewart and enjoyed them both. I'll have to look into Wildfire at Midnight

I haven't read Wildfire in decades. I don't think it will rate with my favorites, but I'm eager to try it again. Her books are almost always fun.
I just bought the ebook version of The Power and the Glory by Graham Greene. It was one of the 2023 Group Read books I didn't have time to get to yet.


It took some doing as the store proved elusive. I had to get it in person as most of the ones online said Export Edition, i don't even know if the one i purchased is or isn't that.
However its the height and width i was worried about so this one is definitely the right size to fit beside the first two books.
Hopefully this one is also more upbeat because the last book was... rough.




I hope you enjoy [book:Y..."
Thank you Matt! I’m on holiday in a couple of weeks so it will be my poolside read.


84 Charing Cross Road is an old favorite of mine. My Dad loved Kon TIki and I remember enjoying it, too, though it's been years since I read it. I hope you enjoy your new books!

I had been trying to make time to visit a local small non-chain bookstore with a coffee shop for the past few months, envisioning taking a friend along to enjoy the experience. We finally popped in last weekend, but it was very crowded and the coffee line was very long. I found myself stuck in a little corner of the shop and found two books to take home:
Mrs. Dalloway - I am not well-read when it comes to Virginia Woolf. I was hoping to find To the Lighthouse but maybe this will be a good starting place.
The Tsar of Love and Techno- I love the power of short stories to surprise and to revitalize my reading habits. I've been reading Paradise Lost for a long time, switching up between close reading/examination of the text and a more surface-level read, and I'm finally almost done. I think some short stories if not the whole collection would be a nice change. This book partly appeals to me because the stories can stand on their own but also are interrelated and form a larger tale, as far as I can tell. Anthony Mara's name was recognizable to me, and I would love to hear any feedback from others who have read him.

Congratulations on taking advantage of being stuck in that corner! I recently started looking for serendipity at my local library. It's very small and doesn't carry much of what I read, but one day I was in there picking up an ILL and I thought "There must be some books here I would enjoy if I tried them".
So now when I have time I pick a shelf, or letter of the alphabet, and peruse every book looking for what I might like to read. I've DNFs some things, but also found some interesting reading, too.
I am in a cleaning out and decluttering phase right now. I have only ordered one physical book this year, and I'm excited about it. It looks like Big Two-Hearted River by Ernest Hemingway might win as a Group Read. I really liked reading the short stories in Hemingway's The Snows of Kilimanjaro and Other Stories.. My new book is The Nick Adams Stories. I rarely read a short story collection straight through, and I look forward to reading selections from this collection for a long time to come.

His Dark Materials: The Golden Compass / The Subtle Knife / The Amber Spyglass by Philip Pullman
The Perennial Philosophy: An Interpretation of the Great Mystics, East and West by Aldous Huxley
And purchased used from ebay:
David Copperfield by Charles Dickens
Right now I'm just relishing the sight and feeling of them newly resting on my bookshelves. Adding new books to your own collection is so much fun. =)



Thans, Matt. I'm excited to start it in a couple of days. I loved Powers and Thrones: A New History of the Middle Ages!


as of late, I had it down to 92, with a further 15 planned to read before end of 31st Dec, so leeway of 3, so going to be close...
buuuuutt... I just bought 3 more (holds head in hands weeping)
found an irresistible Folio Society edition of Balzac's "Cousin Pons", and I could get 20% off if I bought 2 more, so I got (what transpired to be a first edition) Vineland by Pynchon, and a paperback of "G." by John Berger




as of late, I had it down to 92, with a further 15 planned to read before end of 31st Dec, so leeway of 3, so going to be clo..."
Ah, Darren, I feel your joy/pain! In 2023 I got my physical TBR from 154 to 82 - which felt great. I had a more modest goal this year of getting it to 30. But it's at 53 due to those wonderful, but pesky, great finds at thrift stores and sales. I've bought 8 just this month! sigh. Ah, well, it's an excuse to keep reading, right?
NB - Everybody's TBR is up to them; it should be at a place you feel comfortable. I dislike owning a lot of unread books, so that's me. YMMV

this even includes the book I asked for (and got!) for crimbo, namely Krasznahorkai's Satantango


dinky little hardback of Douglas Coupland's Girlfriend In A Coma




Clarice Lispector's Hour of the Star
and, finally a few days ago there arrived the (long ago pre-ordered and much deferred) UK release of the new translation of Asturias's Men of Maize
:oD


This is the archived thread for this subject. The new thread is here:
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If you would like to repost in the new thread, Darren, please do. I am closing this thread for any further entries.
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If you would like to repost in the new thread, Darren, please do. I am closing this thread for any further entries.
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Books mentioned in this topic
Men of Maize (other topics)Hour of the Star (other topics)
A Descent into the Maelstrom (other topics)
Girlfriend In A Coma (other topics)
Satantango (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Peter Ackroyd (other topics)Percival Everett (other topics)
Anne Michaels (other topics)
Philip Pullman (other topics)
Charles Dickens (other topics)
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So Cabell strung 20 or so of his novels together into a single mythos and Preface to the Past contains commentaries on each of them along with a couple of other essays.
It's the closest equivalent you’ll ever find in litereature to the directors commentary track on a dvd :lol . Still it wasn’t too expensive despite being from 1936 and coming with a dustcover in pretty decent shape.
An interesting artefact though as it was clearly a very cheap printing using really coarse paper (i think it would be half the width with good paper) and the cutting and pasting is actually quite bad with many pages being of different lengths.