1000 Books Before You Die discussion
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message 51:
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Rosemarie
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Aug 01, 2017 04:40PM

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Thank you, Rosemarie. I see that you are currently immersed in writings by Elizabeth Bowen. Ever since reading a great little book about the lives of various writers during WW2 ( The Love-charm of Bombs: Restless Lives in the Second World War ), in which she was included, I have had Bowen's Collected Stories on my TBR list. Needless to say, two years have passed and it's no further up the list. Anyhow, I would be really interested to read any comments you have to make about The Mullberry Tree. I do hope you enjoy this collection.
The Mulberry Tree is a collection of essays, letters etc. Her writing is quite elaborate but worth the effort.

I fancied a quick crime novel, so went for

One more down, 910 to go :o

I fancied a quick crime..."
Good start!

That does look quite interesting Paula! I have found there are actually quite a few books on the list that are short- under 300 pages- and some extremely short ones, like less than 200. My goal is to find all the free ones and knock them out, along with what I already have, and then move on LOL!

Quarantine sounds fascinating, Paula. I just finished Oroonoko by Aphra Behn, a seventeenth century female writer. There weren' too many female authors back then.

I tried reading Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell by Susanna Clarke. I gave up after 150 pages. It was just to slow.


Oroonoko is part of a collection of Behn's works, which I am going to read as well. Her prose is very readable and I enjoyed it, even though it was sad at times.
Since I have already read Howard's End, I am going to read one of the few Forster works of fiction that I haven't read yet, Maurice.
I didn't like Howard's End enough to do a re-read. Of course, if I read only positive comments about the book, I might consider it, sometime.
I didn't like Howard's End enough to do a re-read. Of course, if I read only positive comments about the book, I might consider it, sometime.

Breaks are always good.
My copy of Maurice should be arriving at my local library branch shortly.
The worst book, in my opionion, that I have read from the list so far is Les Enfants Terribles (The Holy Terrors). I think the translated title doesn't describe the book accurately, since is is about very disturbed young people and has a very dark plot.
My copy of Maurice should be arriving at my local library branch shortly.
The worst book, in my opionion, that I have read from the list so far is Les Enfants Terribles (The Holy Terrors). I think the translated title doesn't describe the book accurately, since is is about very disturbed young people and has a very dark plot.
I hope I get it this week. It is a long weekend here, since tomorrow is Labour Day. On Tuesday the kids go back to school.

Incidentally, I'm off on my hols (as we say in the UK) on Monday, so I'm busy downloading beach reads to my Kindle. Almost three weeks of uninterrupted reading. I can hardly wait! :-)

I have neglected reading much from the list lately. I was hoping to complete 30 books for the year but I still have about 18 to go. Looks like October is going to be the month of the 1001 books.


Novel On Yellow Paper by Stevie Smith (16/10/17)
Anyone else attempting this novel? Here's my review >>


Good question, Trisha.
This lists the books in order by author, but the list is still sub-divided by category.
https://www.theguardian.com/books/200...
Thus, one finds Willa Cather in three different places, four books altogether (Professor's House, My Antonia, One of Ours, and A Lost Lady), unless I missed one.
Books mentioned in this topic
Novel on Yellow Paper (other topics)Cat's Eye (other topics)
The Awakening: And Other Stories (other topics)
An Obsession With Butterflies : Our Long Love Affair With a Singular Insect (other topics)
Maurice (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Stevie Smith (other topics)Susanna Clarke (other topics)
Jim Crace (other topics)
Thomas Mann (other topics)