Catching up on Classics (and lots more!) discussion
Archived Chit Chat & All That
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What Are You Reading Now?

I started”Open Season”, by CJ Box. This is the first of his “Joe Prichett” stories about a game warden in Wyoming.

Natalie wrote: "Mary - I love The Great Gatsby. It’s one of my favorite books. I don’t like the characters or even the plot, but I love how beautifully descriptive the language is. ☺️"


I agree with you Darrell, I just didn’t see why it was considered a classic. I just finished The Beautiful and the Damned, thinking maybe it was just that one novel. I had to drag myself through the book. No more Fitzgerald for me.


Definitely!

I admit that my opinion is a small minority. I know how close read, but was not inspired to do so with this book. Perhaps if I had read it when young, I would have thought differently.

I will continue loving and rereading The Great Gatsby, but I will say, I have not enjoyed any of his other novels.


I'm a third way through it. It is a story that is derivative, but something in it rings unalloyed. I like it a lot and if the quality is there, I can see myself giving the book 4 stars.

Thank you Natalie. It is indeed a great feeling.


I Married a Dead Man by Cornell Woolrich writing as William Irish
Rating: 4 stars
Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
and I started reading the first Amelia Peabody mystery

Crocodile on the Sandbank by Elizabeth Peters


I Married a Dead Man by Cornell Woolrich writing as [author:William Irish|247321..."
I Married a Dead Man looks very good. I put it on my wish list.

Started The Call of the Wild by Jack London.
Dave wrote: "Finished The Call of the Wild, began Nicolas Nickleby."
I read Nicholas Nickelby earlier this year - loved it! Hope you enjoy it, too :)
I read Nicholas Nickelby earlier this year - loved it! Hope you enjoy it, too :)

I read Nicholas Nickelby earlier this year - loved it! Hope you enjoy it, too :)"
Thank you, I always love Dickens.

I liked it a lot. Hard to find a dead tree copy though.


The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway
Rating: 3 stars
Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
and I started reading Dashiell Hammett's final novel, the basis for a popular film series during the Great Depression:

The Thin Man by Dashiell Hammett

I liked it a lot. Hard to find a dead tree copy though."
Not a problem, I read Kindle or Audiobooks.

Finished


Still reading



'Well, we didn't come to New York to stay sober!'
There is a LOT of drinking in that novel...

I just finished The Good Soldier Svejk, which was hilarious. Highly recommend it!

I can add that she is well known in Germany. I don't know the original titles... but I loved her twins in boarding school series and the 5 friends one with Timmy, the dog. In my youth in the 80s it was huge! Both as books and as audio book variation on tape. Yes, old enough to have grown up with tapes. :-)
Dave wrote: "I started The House at Pooh Corner, Dracula, and Thank You Jeeves."
Thank You Jeeves is so funny, one of my favorites! Are you listening to an audiobook of it?
Thank You Jeeves is so funny, one of my favorites! Are you listening to an audiobook of it?

Thank You Jeeves is so funny, one of my favorites! Are you listening to an audiobook of it?"
Yes, its a hoot. All my “reading” is on audiobooks, but “heavy” books I also read along on Kindle and underline. I’m doing that now with”East of Eden” and Hannah Arednt’s “The Life of the Mind.”
Dave wrote: "Cozy_Pug wrote: "Dave wrote: "I started The House at Pooh Corner, Dracula, and Thank You Jeeves."
Thank You Jeeves is so funny, one of my favorites! Are you listening to an audiobook of it?"
Yes,..."
Is your edition read by Jonathan Cecil? He's my absolute favorite reader of the Bertie and Jeeves books.
Thank You Jeeves is so funny, one of my favorites! Are you listening to an audiobook of it?"
Yes,..."
Is your edition read by Jonathan Cecil? He's my absolute favorite reader of the Bertie and Jeeves books.
Greg wrote: "Dave and Cozy_Pug, I loved that Jeeves book too - it's hilarious!"
It really is! It always makes me cry with laughter, and that's a sign of impressive writing I think.
It really is! It always makes me cry with laughter, and that's a sign of impressive writing I think.


Hmm, I don't recall that Brian, but I wonder if the version I read was sanitized?
Recently, I participated in the group read of The Sun Also Rises, and I noticed that my audio copy had several instances of the n-word as well as "faggot" removed from a number of places in the book. And I recently finished another book And Then There Were None that went through different incarnations historically as it was sanitized of offensive material (first it was titled Ten Little Niggers and then And Then There Were None: or Ten Little Indians until settling on the current title).
I'm a little torn about sanitizing like this because I think it's important for people to understand how things were so they know what things used to be like. Otherwise, how could they understand what the civil rights movement was all about? But when it comes to something that's basically for entertainment, I can see how it could destroy the enjoyment as well. On my nephew's spring break, we were watching a very old comedy movie, and he said that certain parts were "creepy." And he's right, they were creepy, even though I might not have noticed way back when it was in theaters.

I brought this up because I was afraid that a non-Wodehouse fan, after reading the prior raves about the book, would choose to read this book as his first Wodehouse, and be turned off to him by the racial humor. As a big Wodehouse fan I hate to see anyone turned off to him.
Another reason this is not a good Jeeves novel to start with - hardly any Jeeves!

Makes sense Brian!
It could be I'm mixing up different Jeeves/Wooster books, and it's certainly good for people to know. Which is your favorite?
I remember laughing a lot at one where Wooster went to a costume party in a devil outfit. I've only read 3 or 4 of the books in the series so far.

Thank You Jeeves is so funny, one of my favorites! Are you listening to an audiobook ..."
Yes, the reader is Jonathan. Cecil, but reading the subsequent posts perhaps I should choose another Jeeves book to start with.
I am only a few chapters in ant it is more like slapstick comedy than what I was expecting. I have read books that made me laugh out loud, but I was already finding myself wondering why Wodehouse was known for being more humorous than authors I had laughed out loud at, yet I was not laughing out loud.
Thanks for a helpful series of posts.

Favorite Jeeves novels:
Right Ho, Jeeves 1934 - Jeeves #6
The Code of the Woosters 1938 - Jeeves #7
While "Code" is a slight favorite, to fully appreciate it, one should read "Right Ho" first. Joy in the Morning - Jeeves #8 is pretty good too
Favorite Jeeves short-story collection - Very Good, Jeeves! 1930 - Jeeves #4
To be fair, Thank You, Jeeves is one of the 6 Wodehouse novels included on The Guardian's list of The 1000 novels everyone must read; so better authorities than me do recommend it.

Favorite Jeeves novels:
[book:Right Ho, Jeeves|9850375..."
I’ll go with your recommendations Brian. I got Thank You Jeeves from the Guardian list. There are a lot of books on that list that I would not give the time of day, so I need to chose with care.
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The Drowning Pool by Ross Macdonald
Rating: 4 stars
Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
and I started reading the classic roman noir:
I Married a Dead Man by Cornell Woolrich writing as William Irish