Victorians! discussion
note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
Conversations in the Parlor
>
General chit-chat and information (part 2)
message 251:
by
Gabriele
(new)
Jan 26, 2010 06:04AM

reply
|
flag

After reviewing the poll results regarding participation and preferred format, we have decided on a few changes.
First, the Tenant discussion will be a 6-week discussion, making the next book discussion start date March 15 (as opposed to the regular start date of March 1).
Second, the nominations for the next group read will be open for anything Victorian-related. This includes "true" Victorian, neo-Victorian, and non-fiction.
There seemed to be a lot of comments that the group reads are too short, and a lot of interest in moving away from so many neo-Victorians, partly because they are harder to acquire than the Victorian classics. We would like to take that into consideration, which is why we are both including all three types for the nominations, and why we aren't starting until March 15, so that in the event a neo-Victorian is chosen, we have 2 extra weeks to acquire the book.
For those who do not feel comfortable discussing, we hope you ultimately do, or at least enjoy reading other people's discussions. If you feel you don't have anything good to say, or that your idea has already been expressed, please still feel free to mention your idea. Even if it is to say that you agree with someone else; besides, more often than not the way you phrase the idea will spark something in another member that an earlier comment did not.
Lastly, I sincerely hope that we can continue to express ideas and interests in how we can continue to make this group an interesting an engaging one, where people of all literary levels feel comfortable meeting and talking. If it wasn't for all the members (that includes you!) then we wouldn't have this wonderful group, and then how would I procrastinate from work during the day? :)
Thank you, too, for everyone who voted in the polls, added comments, and sent along messages. Your input is very important to us!
Happy reading!
Paula and Boof



That says it for me too :-)
I was just talking to my husband about goodreads. I let him know that I had joined the "Victorians'. His comment was, "That would be the 'Sad House Wife's Group'" lol. So harsh. This is what I have to put up with at home.

Paula. He spoke hastily with little information other than that I had joined the group. (Typical Aussie bloke). He is actually very good to me when it comes to books. While he doesn't do a lot of reading himself, he does listen to book reviews on the radio. He often surprises me with books he thinks will appeal to me.
I was just amused by his input, on the ‘Victorians’ group and had to share it with others.
I was just amused by his input, on the ‘Victorians’ group and had to share it with others.



if you want any Norwegian recommendations: Knut Hamsun is a really great author! He's late Victorian I suppose you could say (from the 50's..)
I've read two of his most famous novels: Victoria, which is a love story, and Pan, which is about a man who seems a little bit crazy and there's a lot of nature-descriptions in it.
Other Norwegian writers are Henrik Ibsen, Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson, Alexander Kielland, Amalie Skram, Camilla Collett, Asbjørnson, Henrik Werkland, Johan Welhaven, Jørgen Moe, Aasmund Olavson Vinje, Jonas Lie and Ivar Aasen :P
I've only read Henrik Ibsen of those and he's really quite good. and there are a lot of poets, and most of them are very different from English writers I think. and Ivar Aasen was more of a language guy.. but I think Amalie Skram and Camilla Collett write good novels about women, and Jonas Lie is really good I think, and probably Wergeland.. but my favourite is Hamsun so far ;)
If you're interested you should also try Ludvic Holberg (which was the century before the Victorian) and Sigrid Undset (which was the one after) ;)
:)

Mark Twain (novels and shorter pieces - if you are reading Last of the Mohicans do read "Fenimore Cooper's Literary Offences")
Nathaniel Hawthorne (novels and short stories)
Herman Melville (principally novels)
Harriet Beecher Stowe (wrote a good bit, but hardly any of it is read these days except Uncle Tom's Cabin, which is not a great novel but a historically important one)
Ralph Waldo Emerson (poetry and essays)
Henry David Thoreau (essays)
Louisa May Alcott (principally YA, especially the YA classic Little Women)
Frances Hodgson Burnett (again, mostly YA - A Little Princess and The Secret Garden are both Edwardian, but Little Lord Fauntleroy is from the 1880s)

Good point. I don't recall any American authors being even suggested for consideration in the polls.
We would have plenty to choose from. Just to mention a couple, Washington Irving, James Fenimore Cooper, Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne, Mark Twain, Longfellow (Hiawatha, anyone?), Poe, Melville (but not Moby Dick, Please!), much of Henry James, some early Edith Wharton, to mention just some of the major options. We might even want to tackle some Whitman.



I've tried to begin reading Anna Karenina several times but the beginning is so incredibly slow, so I never got any far.. has anyone read it?

He's incredible! :D
I've only read The Count of Monte Christo so far, but I've began reading The Three Musquetaires.
I really loved The Count of Monte Christo! It's a wonderful story about love, misery and revenge and it's so incredibly cunning and very touching. It's a pretty long book so you'll have many good hours reading it ;)
The Three Musquetaires is also a really great story. I've seen the movie and I really really love it!
also Dumas is a really great writer when it comes to language and everything so I really recommend his novels ;)

I've tried to begin reading Anna Karenina several times but the beginning is..."
The Classics & Western Canon group is currently reading AK http://www.goodreads.com/group/show/1...
I really like it, and it does pick up speed but is more of a relaxing book for me; I wouldn't call it riveting but others might. I'm reading the Constance Garnett translation, which I really like. I went to the library to read a few other versions, and like Garnett better.

I second that! (except I haven't read much French or Russian lit).

I will try to get through it but I don't know if I ever will.. at least not for some time iet :P
I'm really starting to love this group ^^

And I hear someone mentioning Dumas, a great writer. A book of his was recently discoverd, The Last Cavaliar, a true page turner.

After I've finished The three musquetaires, I will read The Last Cavaliar I think ^^

None of his books are Victorian, though; he was first published in 1912.


What a fantastic list! It's just for British authors, though, correct? I may need to snoop around to see if there is one for a broader author base.
Thanks for posting this Susann! I just added the link as a favorite :)

There are a lot of lists. I find them fun.



I've not heard of these; are they like fairy tales that might be read as a child, like the Brothers Grimm? It would be interesting to revisit some of these as an adult and see all the nuances that I missed as a child :)

I loved Andrew Lang's Fairy books as a child. I would love to re-read them all!

There's a strong chance I'll be travelling to France in mid-April for work, but don't speak a word of French other than 'merci.' It's not a requirement that I know anything, but would love to learn some basics so I'm not a total monolinguist.
Does anyone have any suggestions about language learning books/CDs/materials that have worked well? Would appreciate any recommendations. Thanks!

There's a strong chance I'll be travelling to France in mid-April for work, but don't speak a word of French other than 'merci.' It's not a requirement that I know anything, but w..."
I would highly recommend the Pimsleur course. It's all on CDs, and you might be able to get them at a library.


Is that a book with pictures, Sheila? I had a German one like that years ago and loved it.

OUI (yes) francais au lieu de allemand (French instead of German) la meme editeur (the same editor)

Most definitely! His first book was the Blue Fairy Book, followed by about a dozen other colors ending with the Lilac Fairy Book. My wife is a fairy tale addict, so of course we own the whole series.
Rather than go into any more detail here, I'll just refer you to the Wikipedia page on the books, which lists the contents of each volume. But to whet your appetite, among the tales in the Blue book are Beauty and the Beast, Puss and Boots, Rumpelstiltskin, Sleeping Beauty, Hansel and Gretel, ... 'nuff said?
Almost forgot to include the link:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_L...


http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyl...

Probably just as effective in finding a good wife as most computer dating services today.


I purchased The Pink Fairy Book in the autumn, but haven't read any of it. I am familiar with his King Arthur, that is the main reason I bought the fairy book. Maybe we can get one of them as a group read sometime.
This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Count of Monte Cristo (other topics)The Portrait of a Lady (other topics)
The Count of Monte Cristo (other topics)
The Portrait of a Lady (other topics)
The Scarlet Letter (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Anthony Trollope (other topics)Anthony Trollope (other topics)
Anthony Trollope (other topics)
Henry James (other topics)
Louisa May Alcott (other topics)
More...