Reading the Chunksters discussion
General
>
Are you new to Chunksters? Please introduce yourself :)
message 101:
by
Ellen
(new)
Jun 08, 2018 11:05AM

reply
|
flag

I have started a bookclub that is now down to only two active members. I have my own personal conquest to read the classics; why I ever started the endeavor I don't know... but as I have gone for the last couple years, I find myself loving them more and more. I was educated in a private christian school (which was fantastic, wouldn't trade it for anything!) but we didn't read the things most highschoolers read and i have been trying to catch up. I adored Les miserables by the end... it was hard to get through. I enjoyed Moby Dick and am still working down my list. I would love to have more people to join and discuss in these books!

I read just about anything, although I get bored with romance and the fluffier cozy mysteries. I like literary fiction, well-researched historical fiction, especially medieval and anything Celtic. I also read non-fiction, fantasy and sci fi, and thrillers. I like to create challenges for myself, like reading 10 titles within a year with birds in the title (The Goldfinch, The Nightingale, Red Sparrow, Cuckoo's Calling....) or Wife titles (Ahab's Wife, The Headhunter's Wife, The Time Travelers Wife...), things like that. The trouble is, some of these "themes" never end. I will be putting "wife" titles on my TBR forever now...
I'm currently reading Yseult by Ruth Nestvold which my Kindle app says is 579 pages, so I guess that is a chunkster, and it is book 1 of a trilogy.
Summertime is gardening time for me, but I'm hoping to get caught back up soon...

My name is Branka, and I'm from Serbia. I've just started War and Peace, and althrough I loved Anna Karenina, I'm having kind of hard time getting into this one.
I hope you guys might be able to help me - it would be great if I had somebody who would read it alongside with me :)

I started reading Middlemarch as a bit of a joke..."
I've been meaning to comment for months that you must have a very interesting sense of humor.

My name is Branka, and I'm from Serbia. I've just started War and Peace, and althrough I loved Anna Karenina, I'm having kind of hard time getting into this one.
I hope you guys might be abl..."
hello branka, i'm also reading war and peace, currently on the third part of the second volume. if we're not far off, i'd equally like to read along and discuss the ideas of the book with someone.

I have read a few 1000+ page books and cannot wait to read more.
My favorite modern chunkster is Thomas Pynchon's "Against the Day". The chunkster I want to read next is either William Gass's "The Tunnel" or Paul Auster's "4 3 2 1".
Nice to meet you all.

I am 36 years old. I have a boy and a girl who are entering their teenage years. I love to cook, crochet, read. I am also working on finishing a bachelor’s in computer science right now, so I am looking forward to enjoying some books that aren’t textbooks and can be appreciated as art. Looking forward to getting to know other people here.


The Diviners by Margaret Laurence
(not the Libba Bray novel of the same name)
I'm on a Manitoba roll the past 24 hours. This book takes place in Manitoba and, in another NTLTRC thread, Samantha just mentioned Bachman Turner Overdrive who come from Winnipeg, Manitoba.
And last night I started watching the movie Goodbye Christopher Robin and found out that Winnie the Pooh is named after a Canadian black bear at the London zoo and is short for "Winnipeg."

I don't remember seeing Middlemarch selected as a group read. I would have been more interested in that one.

Renee, we are reading Middlemarch as a Buddy Read, and you would be very welcome to join us. Although we have a provisional schedule and are about half way through it, it is a more informal read than a group read, so people are taking it at whatever speed suits them and contributing to the threads when they can.
The Middlemarch discussion threads have been set up in the Buddy Reads folder and the schedule thread is here https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/... if you'd like to take a look


I want to find a READING PARTNER for my first time through War and Peace. I have started it three times, and this time I am doing it. I am using Alymer Maud's translation, but am open to better translations if you feel there are any. Thanks. Kathleen

Welcome Kathleen! I would love to join you in reading War and Peace. I'm sure we could get a few others to join also. I'm planning a tackling a few more Russian novels next year, but hadn't decided which ones yet. A buddy read of this would be great!
I also share your love of Dickens. I haven't read all of his novels yet, but I plan to eventually. There are just so many others authors to read, that I usually only get to maybe 1 a year since most of them are fairly long.




Hi Everyone! I recognise some of the names from other groups I'm in. I really wanted to join this group as I've recently become a fan of reading chunksters.
I heard a snippet of a radio adaptation of Daniel Deronda a few weeks ago and really got into the story so I'll be joining you for this read.
Looking forward to having lots of interesting discussions with you!
I heard a snippet of a radio adaptation of Daniel Deronda a few weeks ago and really got into the story so I'll be joining you for this read.
Looking forward to having lots of interesting discussions with you!

Welcome Nike! We are reading Daniel Deronda by George Eliot in January, the discussion of the first 70 pages or so will begin January 13. Hope you can join us!!

I heard a snippet of a radio adaptatio..."
Welcome Catriona! Wonderful to see you here!


My name is Naomi. I live in Canada and love all kinds of books. I have about 10 huge classics on my shelves that I think I will love but I am scared of the size. I am hoping to buddy read a few like Anna Karenina and Vanity Fair. If I buddy read, I will be able to pick them up and start.


Happy belated Hello, Lauren!
And more recent hellos to Naomi, Lorna, and Karen Michelle!

I am looking forward to joining the next read. I found this group when I was reading Daniel Deronda by searching, and I realize this group reads a lot of the books I've been reading or wanted to read. I'm an engineer in Falls Church, Virginia and I like to read in my spare time. Looks you all have some terrific members and I am impressed by the book selections!



(the brick) Les Misérables - Victor Hugo (My favourite!)
and a few other 'chunksters'
Don Quixote - Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra
A Tale of Two Cities - Charles Dickens
I Am a Cat - Three Volumes in One - Sōseki Natsume
Wagner, the Wehr-Wolf - George W.M. Reynolds
I am currently reading these 'chunksters'
The Count of Monte Cristo - Alexandre Dumas
Road to Calvary - Aleksey Nikolayevich Tolstoy
Penny Dreadfuls: Sensational Tales of Terror by Various authors, includes Frankenstein, Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde etc
I was a librarian in a former life, i miss those card catalogs! And I used to read for the Bookmobile and make a list of any 'triggers' parents might want to know about as well as a short synopsis of the new books.

You know, I'm positive that I can look up books faster in a card catalog than on a computer. ;)
I may well join you in June - I'm not too keen on contemporary books, but I'll give it a go, Thank you Lorna!

I am Nidhi from India. I like chunksters but i keep on postponing reading them so its good to have a group for that. I have read War and Peace, Anna Kerenina, A Suitable Boy, Resurrection, currently i am reading Les Miserables with a group. My Favorite big book is David Copperfield. Dickens is my all time favourite.


I'm completely moved to Florida. I've had a lot going on and not much time to discuss books, but I think I can now.




Marin, same here, reading Arabian nights one story a day or so. And about Ulysses, I read it from about 1970 to 2017 (traveled with it, it was always nearby) 4 times. Finally decided to read it one page at a time and savour it: it's probably the funniest book I;ve ever read. I'm now in year 3 of "Finnegan's wake", much more difficult and really too challenging to be fun, imo,

Hi Ellen! Oh how I loved Anna K. and found it far better than war and peace! Although, in reflection, Anna is at war all the time, her country-character equivalent, the happy farmer, is at peace just being a farmer. So I loved how the 2 books are sort of alike in that way.

Hi Rachel, you know, there are a lot of people that read a lot of very adult books at very young ages. Sometimes I mention I read "ulysses' in the 6th grade and although I didn't get most of it, it was a springboard to the world for me. (Teacher would not accept book report, gave me a failing grade, called my parents in for an 'intervention', as in "why are you letting your child read such a book." Parents: "because we allow our kids to read anything, and that's a battle not worth fighting, and Greg has already read everything on your reading list." Teacher "but have you read his report? The spelling is horrible." Me: "Joyce made up words and so did I." Parents, "we think the important thing is this: have you, Mrs. Cox, read the book?" Teacher: "No..." Parents: "Please do, and let's have another meeting next month." Teacher "After consideration, I'll give Greg a passing grade for the report." Mrs. Cox wasn't about to read "Ulysses." Most people just don't after a few pages.


I have read a few 1..."
I LOVED 1-2-3-4, the world's first literary (although fictional) study of epigenetics.

My name is Branka, and I'm from Serbia. I've just started War and Peace, and althrough I loved Anna Karenina, I'm having kind of hard time getting into this one.
I hope you guys might be abl..."
Branka, I'm glad I read Anna K after "war and peace" because Anna K is far superior and I'm not sure I would have even bothered with finishing the other book. Anna K my favorite Russian novel, BUT, I haven't read Brothers Karamazov, which I'm pretty sure I'm going to love, given that I enjoyed "Idiot" immensely and enjoyed "Crime and Punishment" up until the absolutely unbelievable, out of place 'epilogue' which had nothing to do with the story or the character arc at all.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Plains of Cement (other topics)The Mysterious Island (other topics)
The Guermantes Way (other topics)
The Dark Horse (other topics)
Party Going (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Celia Fremlin (other topics)Jules Verne (other topics)
Marcel Proust (other topics)
Henry Green (other topics)
Patricia Highsmith (other topics)
More...