Vintage Tales discussion
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Group Read Nominations
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Werner
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Aug 13, 2018 03:53PM

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This year, I've been on a bit of a Jane Austen kick in my reading; I'm hoping by Dec. 31 to have read all of her remaining novels that I haven't read up to now. I know this group did a group read of Northanger Abbey back in January-February of 2014; and normally, I don't suggest doing another book by an author we've already featured. But that doesn't have to be a hard-and-fast rule! (Although I joined this group that January, I wasn't able to take part in the Austen read at that time.)
Would there be any interest in doing a common read of Austen's




By its own description, Vintage Tales is a group centered around a common love for the classics. In groups like ours, organized around a common interest, it's generally understood that if common reads are done, the books picked will fit into that interest. The previous reads have all been of acknowledged classics. I can't think that a 2003 book would fit the definition, especially if having stood the test of time is an important part of that definition; the most recent book we've ever had in the poll was published in 1960, What do the rest of you think?
I think 2003 is too new. I generally consider books published at least 50 years ago as possible classics.


My suggestion: A SHORT HISTORY OF NEARLY EVERYTHING, by Bill Bryson.
Russell"
Werner,
Understood. I rest my peace.
Russell



This is on my to-read list too! I would definitely be interested! :)


I thought I heard my name there... 😄

We can put it in the poll, Jazzy --but it's worth being aware that, in the present situation, it might not be easy to get a copy (unless you buy one). It's not old enough to be in the public domain, and a lot of libraries (at least in the U.S.) are still closed. (More of them might re-open by September, of course!)

Terrible excuse. But the city is without funding, so what can they do?




I bought an ecopy of the book, so I am glad it won. I read the other book years ago in French. It was good but it would be hard to translate since it is about style.
Jazzy wrote: "Ah well, I tried :)
I read the Queneau free in English online anyway. It was excellent."
That's good to know. It was excellent in French too.
I read the Queneau free in English online anyway. It was excellent."
That's good to know. It was excellent in French too.

Last year, a lady in another group I'm in gave a very favorable review to The Virginian: A Horseman of the Plains by Owen Wister. It was already on my to-read shelf, and since she encouraged me to read it sooner rather than later, I told her I'd nominate it for this read. However, it's a pretty thick book; and changing circumstances would make it more expedient, for me personally (though that doesn't have to constrain the whole group!) to have a shorter read this time. So I won't nominate it; but someone else can, if you'd really want to read it this time.
Just as a tentative suggestion, I've wanted to (someday) read O Pioneers: by Willa Cather ever since I saw the outstanding 1992 Hallmark Hall of Fame dramatic adaptation starring Jessica Lange. (See https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0105038/ ). Then too, I've wanted to read more by Cather since reading her wonderful novel My Antonia and her story "Neighbor Rosicky" back in my youth. O Pioneers is a relatively short work; would anyone else be interested in giving it a read?


We'll definitely put that one in the poll too, Vickie!

Great! I'd love to read The Virginian as well :)

One other member also indicated (by personal message) an interest in that one; so, we'll see what happens!




Yes, Vickie, there's always that option! (I'm going to join in the Hemingway read, though. :-) )

Looking back over the list of past group reads (here: https://www.goodreads.com/topic/group... ), I noticed that we've never done a book by any author outside the Anglo-American tradition. American and British literature, to be sure, offers a cornucopia of literary treasures. But there are gems to be found in the classics of other national literatures too! I'm not wedded to the idea, if no one else is interested; but I'd be open to picking a book by a writer who's not American or British this time.
At this point, I'm just floating trial balloons, not making actual nominations. I've never read anything by a Polish author, and Quo Vadis (1896) by Henryk Sienkiewicz has been on my to-read shelf for ages. A nonfiction medieval classic, The Prose Edda by Snorri Sturluson, is another book I've long wanted to read (I haven't read any Icelandic literature, either). Would anyone in the group be interested in one or the other of those?

Okay, it could potentially get at least two votes, then! :-) We'll plan to put that one in the poll.


Well, we can put both titles in the poll, and see which one the majority will favor! My preference would actually be somewhat for the novel; but I'm like you in that I'd happily read either one.

Early on the morning of August 1, I'll be leaving for a short vacation, and I'll be offline until I return home sometime in the afternoon of Aug. 5. So I'm hoping to post the poll a day early, on Sunday, July 31.


Actually, I just wanted to make sure nobody who has something he/she really wants to nominate gets left out. (And nominees don't absolutely have to be from outside the Anglo-American tradition, either; that was just a suggestion!) We don't have to have any specific number of nominations (except that it's not practical to have a poll without having at least two choices! :-) ). So don't feel pressured to put forward another nomination unless you want to.
That said, The Count of Monte Cristo is on my to-read shelf, and the BU library where I work has a copy (it has a copy of A Doll's House, too). But one possible caveat is that it's definitely a chunkster (1,276 pages, in Goodreads's default edition!). Some group members might find the sheer thickness of it intimidating, although that's not a disqualification. I've seen the Ibsen play, and I'd read it with the group if it was picked; there's a lot of grist for discussion there.
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