James Mustich's 1000 Books to Read Before You Die discussion
Which One of the Thousand Are You Reading Now?

Fatelessness, by Imre Kertész, was a singular look at the Holocaust, I thought--it seems to have failed to meet some people's expectations because the narrator refuses to look at his experiences in the same manner as those from the outside looking in are used to. To me, it was a book that would lend itself to a lot of discussion about the way we all incorporate experience into our lives, how we survive them, and what they mean to us personally.

It is on the reader recommended list of books by reader Keith Clifton. Thanks for the recommendation, Keith.
It is a very good look at how the world was shaped by germs, then guns and steel in most parts of the world except China.
It shows how many peoples stayed hunter-gathers because there were none of the 56 large seeded grasses or the depletion of animals that could be domesticated.
And it goes on to show why the Mediterranean was considered the Fertile Crescent: it has 32 of the 56 large seeded grasses including wheat, barley, pea, chickpea, lentil, flax as well as 4 of the 5 most important domesticated animals: goat, sheep, pig, and cow. Because of this they could create a balanced diet where others had little or no large mammals to domesticate. There was nothing to prevent the food production from spreading north. There was no desert like in Africa and between the US & Mexico.
All in all a very good book

I'm glad James Michie translated it into English. He really kept the poetic animation very readable.
It makes me see why James calls him the Father of modern poetry and says "In their combination of conversational address, verbal and aural intricacy, and profound thoughtfulness, the Horatian Odes represent the archetypal inspiration from which our tradition of lyric poetry descends."

A Wrinkle in TIme
A Wind in the Door
A Switfly Tilting Planet
Many Waters
An Acceptable Time
I had never heard of this author until I read James' book. I'm really surprised my mother never told me about these books when I was young because I have always loved to read.

Shakespeare's Henry IV Pt 1 Henry IV Pt 2 and Henry V. I finished the histories
Jules Verne Journey to the Center of the Earth. A great book I never read. I had only watched the movies. I like the book better.
Arthur Miller The Crucible and Death of a Salesman Both good plays
Ernest Hemingway The Sun Also Rises. Good book.
Tim Wynne-Jones Trilogy: Zoom at Sea, Zoom Away, Zoom Upstream. All very cute. I read them to my Mom,
Zora Neale Hurston Their Eyes Were Watching God. An excellent look at the life of a Southern Black woman.
George Orwell Animal Farm. Reread-still a classic.
Louis Ferdinand Celine Journey to the End of the Night. Too angry, depressing and satiric for my tastes.
Erich Maria Remarque All Quiet on the Western Front. An excellent book on soldier's perspective of war.
William Golding Lord of the Flies. A good look at how society can fail and the darkness that is in each one of us that can let evil take over.
Nathaniel Hawthorne The House of the Seven Gables A classic.

Shakespeare's Henry IV Pt 1 Henry IV Pt 2 and Henry V. I finished the histories
Jules Verne Journey to the Center of the Earth. A great book I never rea..."
That is a very impressive list.

Shakespeare's Henry IV Pt 1 Henry IV Pt 2 and Henry V. I finished the histories
Jules Verne Journey to the Center of the Earth. A great boo..."
Thanks, Janet

I was looking for some DVDs to check out of the library and saw the Hunger game DVDs.
So I checked out both the books and the DVDs.
..."
A prequel is coming out later this year.

Ernest Hemingway A Farewell to Arms
Ernest Hemingway For Whom the Bell Tolls
Danielle Steel Accident
Herman Melville Moby Dick audio with Frank Muller as narrator. James recommended this as one of 12 terrific audiobooks and it really is. You could almost feel the struggle between man and sea as if you were part of it.
Aldous Huxley Brave New World
Currently reading The Three Muskateers. I am 3/4 done

The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas
The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas.
I liked Monte Cristo better than 3 Musketeers. That was really a surprise to me but I couldn't put it down even though it was over 1200 pages. I turned my dentist onto it. He doesn't have a lot of time to read but drives over an hour a day so I recommended an audio book to him.

Ernest Hemingway A Farewell to Arms
Ernest Hemingway For Whom the Bell Tolls
Danielle Steel Accident
Herman Melville Moby Dick audio w..."
I actually read, and loved, Moby Dick in my early 20s. I had no idea there was an audio, and Mueller is one of my favorite readers! i need to find this.
Thank you for posting.


Do you know about Barnaby Rudge, Christmas Tales, Little Dorrit, Our Mutual Friend, The Old Curiosity Shop, and The Pickwick Papers that are also by Charles Dickens?

Do you know about Barnaby Rudge, Christmas Tales, Little Dorrit, Our Mutual Frie..."
I have read a lot of Dickens. This is probably the only one I had never heard of before. I am almost done. 37-hour audiobook, but I listened a lot over the last two days. It is a lesser-known gem that Dickens wrote.

Ernest Hemingway A Farewell to Arms
Ernest Hemingway For Whom the Bell Tolls
Danielle Steel Accident
Herman Melville Moby..."
Read and loved Moby Dick in your early 20s! Now that is truly impressive!

This is going to be a difficult but worthwhile book, I can see that alread..."
I really loved this book. It was heartbreaking and made me a bit mad!

I was looking for some DVDs to check out of the library and saw the Hunger game DVDs.
So I checked out both the books an..."
A prequel! Oh wow. I am excited about this. I loved those books. I had an opportunity to be an early reviewer of her book way back when, and I passed it up! I laugh about that now.


So glad you discovered them. You might be interested in reading this about the two books: https://medium.com/@jamesmustich/book...

It has 156 Fairy Tales and Stories in it.

I loved the Ugly Duckling and The Princess and the Pea as a child. One I had never read but found very interesting was The Evil King. It is also published as The Wicked Prince. I really enjoyed reading all of these. So many I had never heard of before but they were exceptional.

This will take quite a while. I'm only reading 1 person's life per day and on the second day also reading the comparison of the Greek and Roman lives.
Has anyone else read this book?

This will take quite a while. I'm only reading 1 person's life per day and on the second day also reading the comparison of the Greek and Roman lives.
Has anyone else read this book?..."
No, but it's been on my get-to-it-as-soon-as-I-can list for about ten years. Good on you for starting it!

This will take quite a while. I'm only reading 1 person's life per day and on the second day also reading the comparison of the Greek and Roman lives.
Has an..."
Yes, I read it years ago.

The Foundling and Other Tales of Prydain
The Book of Three
The Black Cauldron
The Castle of Llyr
Taran Wanderer
The High King
Still working on Plutarch's Lives


Just a note of encouragement re The Power Broker: it's very suited for a leisurely and extended read, since it's written in discrete segments, and Caro always rehearses relevant bits if an episode is picking up where something left off many pages back. Which means you can pick it up and put it down over the course of several months and never feel at sea. Then again, Excellent Women is just that, excellent!
I'm just about to deep dive into In Search of Lost Time volumes 1 to 7 (Centaur Classics) The 100 greatest novels of all time - #13 by Marcel Proust.

Wish me luck! 🤞🏻 ☘

Wish me luck! 🤞🏻 ☘

You're reading it in Spanish? Good Luck.
I can't wait for the library to reopen so I can request some more books.
Jane
Jane wrote: "Mariella,
You're reading it in Spanish? Good Luck.
I can't wait for the library to reopen so I can request some more books.
Jane"
I'm reading it in Italian, since I'm Italian! I'd read it in French to appreciate Proust's very style of writing, if I were more confident of really understanding it, but I'm afraid I wouldn't fully grasp its beauty... 😔
You're reading it in Spanish? Good Luck.
I can't wait for the library to reopen so I can request some more books.
Jane"
I'm reading it in Italian, since I'm Italian! I'd read it in French to appreciate Proust's very style of writing, if I were more confident of really understanding it, but I'm afraid I wouldn't fully grasp its beauty... 😔

I would never read this again. The hidden violence is shocking. It was kind of prophetic. Kids do some of that stuff today.
He was bad, and did really bad things but I really disliked how the men who wanted to use him as a living witness to help them overthrow the government put him in so much pain playing that music that he jumped out the window.
I didn't really care for all the weird slang Burgess used either. There was just too much of it for my taste.


I haven't heard of the daily calendar entries. What is that about and how do I find it?

Ali Smith’s Artful was this past weekend’s book suggestion, but there are book quizzes etc, as well as book suggestions.

Ali Smith’s Artful was this past weekend’s book suggestion, but there are book quizzes..."
Thank you. Yes, I was referring to the page a day calendar for 2020. I received one as a gift this past Christmas and I'm enjoying it.
Books mentioned in this topic
Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Voyage (other topics)Hons and Rebels (other topics)
Master of the Senate (other topics)
Berlin Diary: The Journal of a Foreign Correspondent 1934-1941 (other topics)
Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Jessica Mitford (other topics)William L. Shirer (other topics)
William Gaddis (other topics)
Bret Easton Ellis (other topics)
David Quammen (other topics)
More...
This is going to be a difficult but worthwhile book, I can see that already"
It's curious in every sense of the word, and very powerful.