All About Books discussion
Book Chat
>
Fiction- What are you reading? Part 2
message 851:
by
Nancy from NJ
(new)
May 01, 2018 06:20AM

reply
|
flag

I hope you have more success with this one, Chrissie."
It has not difficult to beat the last one(Vanity Fair). I just finished Offshore and l definitely liked it. Have added another one of hers to read--The Blue Flower.


Chrissie, I didn't like The House of the Seven Gables at all. It IS wordy, as you say, and it left me with nothing at all. I gave it 1 star, which I don't do very often.



I just finished Maurice and I did not enjoy it. I guess I feel a bit virtuous for having pushed through to the end.
Well written, interesting plot and engaging characters - so why didn't I enjoy it more? I think because I have recently read The Picture of Dorian Gray, "In Search of Lost Time" and A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
Wilde and Proust wrote about evils of homophobia; Joyce and Proust about coming-of-age in a caste-ridden society. All three used wit, celebrated language and gave the reader a sense of the place and time. Forster, on the other hand, came across as a whining misanthrope.

It seems incredibly smart, but now that I am on page 250 of roughly 1000 pages, I still don't really know if I actually care about wh..."
I kind of felt the same way about her first book The Rehearsal which I didn't finish. The Luminaries is still on my want to read list, but I don't know if I ever will....

I just finished Maurice and I did not enjoy it. I guess I feel a bit virtuous for having pushed through to the end.
Well written, interesting plo..."
I rally appreciate you explanation of why Maurice disappointed you. While I very much enjoyed A Passage to India and Where Angels Fear to Tread, Maurice does not appeal to me. I am still debating on whether to pick up Howards End...... A Room with a View did not blow me over. I think maybe his books set outside of Britain appeal to me more.



I extremely rarely reread books, particularly if rated with one star! I understand completely. I was simply throwing out the ideas circling in my head, hoping that maybe you would remember parts.


I think you may be right that a good narration can draw you in. A year ago, I did not like listening to audiobooks but for various reasons I have had to adopt them and now I quite enjoy them - especially for poetry.

First the book was difficult because of dense language. Then the language lightened up and I could enjoy parts. At the end it went rapidly downhill, being slapstick in style. I could have saved myself a lot of time and just written this as my review.
************************

First the book was difficult because of..."
Sorry to hear that, Chrissie. I hate wasting time on 1-star reads :(

I don't actually. There were a few good lines and now I know what I personally think of this classic by Hawthorne. I have also learned a bit about the house that is now a museum.

I don't actually. There were a few good lines and now I know what I personally think of this classic by Hawthorne. I have also learned a bit..."
That's good.


In print, I am reading a 1930s mystery (a BoTM for another group) called Murder Underground. And I am rereading The Aeneid as part of the readalong with Beth.
And I am trying out the iPod app Serial Reader with Joseph Conrad's Typhoon. I am not sure that this app really brings me anything - I am pretty good at doling out daily doses of classics for myself! But I had heard several people mention it here and elsewhere so thought I should give it a try.


:)




which reduced the themes of some classic books to a few lines.
I remember for Silas Marner it said something like this a classic about an old and young guy to which every High School student must read and they all hate it
LOL. But don't go by me, I never liked Moby Dick OR Silas Marner.

I have never tried Silas Marner before, but I have not been in love with Eliot's other books.





😳 Good luck!



It is going well so far.
Diane S ☔ wrote: "Like yourself Chrissie, I started and stopped Moby so many times. Finally read it all the way through when my son had to read it in his senior year of high school. We read it together and cheered e..."
Well, the audiobook version may be easier than the paper format. Also I am more stubborn now than I was when younger......... but that I have never finished it has always annoyed me.
To all of you who have read Moby-Dick or, The Whale.
We are discussing the book as I go. Look at the messages under my review. I have requested help from all those who have read it.



I have had two stabs at Moby Dick but he is still beached on my DNF pile. I thought I might have a final try with the Big Read
http://www.mobydickbigread.com/

Yeah, I am stubborn for good and for bad. I loved the one you are reading now. I read it when it first came out back in the 60s. I was young and I was in fact in Nantucket when I read it. I remember exactly where I sat while I read it....and then we would go out and play kick-the -can.

I wonder if I will manage to get through it this time, and if so, what will be my rating?
Books mentioned in this topic
Ghosts of Mount Holly:: A History of Haunted Happenings (other topics)Haunted Massachusetts: Ghosts and Strange Phenomena of the Bay State (other topics)
If Beale Street Could Talk (other topics)
A Sorceress Comes to Call (other topics)
Tyll (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Jan Lynn Bastien (other topics)Cheri Farnsworth (other topics)
T. Kingfisher (other topics)
Jean Rhys (other topics)
Daniel Kehlmann (other topics)
More...