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Voting for April 2022 BOTM CLOSED

I'd love to do either Nana, Drunkard, or Bete Humaine by Zola, but will see what other people bring up as well and see what applies.
I recently read Nana, so would not want to back that one. I would not mind reading Chess Story because I enjoyed Amok. I’ve read 27 counting the ones that are not eligible.


I do not see a reason why Virginia Woolf deserves to have 9 novels on the list. Do each of these differ enough to represent a contribution to the development of the novel?I have not read Night and Day or I thought of Daisy. I think I thought of Daisy might be hard to find a copy. Virginia Woolf might be easier.

I love Woolf but I do agree that she is over-represented on the list. Two or three books would have been more than enough. My favorite book of hers isn't even one of the 9.



Of Zola I've read only Germinal, which is good and would like to read another, esp Bete Humaine or Drunkard, aka La Assommoir.
How about The Passion by Winterson?
I've read 3 of the Whartons and not a big fan.

A great writer but it was a mistake to have nine on the original edition list; five of them were dropped from The 2nd (08) edition and not returned. The other four core books are enough for most readers (Dalloway, Waves, Lighthouse, Orlando). The nonlist nonfiction A Room of One's Own is different and worth reading for the historical feminism.
Yes, I agree that A Room Of One’s Own is different and I have it on my virtual bookshelf. It’s the first VW that I read. I’ve read Dalloway, Lighthouse and Orlando. All good and I am okay with those being on the list. My question is, do those 4 books differ in anyway that has contributed to the development of the novel. I can kind of see it with the 3 of those. I haven’t read Waves yet.
We as a group read The Passion. It might actually be one of my favorites of Winterson. I haven’t read Sexing the Cherry.
I would be okay with reading Bete Humaine or La Assommoir.
We as a group read The Passion. It might actually be one of my favorites of Winterson. I haven’t read Sexing the Cherry.
I would be okay with reading Bete Humaine or La Assommoir.
I think that almost all of V Woolf and most Zola’s are available on audible. That makes them accessible for me.

I kind of would prefer to read one of the nine writers in this group (with a translation) I haven't read before but I don't know which, maybe Patrick White's The Tree of Man.

Glad some other people are open to Zola though. L'assommoir is available on librivox so will probs vote for that one and see how it goes.


I've read The Tree of Man but enjoyed it and would be happy with another Patrick White, or I Thought of Daisy, or Sexing the Cherry.

Only 1 book excluded from the Randomiser and that is We so if you want to read that you will need to vote for it.
I'm late to the party here, swamped by work and other obligations. I just counted the number of books I have read (mostly on the train) and not yet reviewed over the last 4 months: 13 in all! But I will catch up eventually...
I have read 28 of those listed this month. I have read all Zola, in fact I read the whole Rougon-Macquart saga, so no votes for me (they're all good though). My TBR shelf has:
- The House of Mirth (Wharton)
- The Tree of Man (P. White)
- Voss (P. White)
- The Waves (Woolf)
This looks as appealing as a bout of haemorrhoids. What's worse is that 2 of my them are in my TBR challenge. And I can't get my hands on Underworld by De Lillo at a reasonable price because of the stupid import restrictions set by Amazon. Unless something interesting and available is picked, I might have to start reading our yearly in April.
I have read 28 of those listed this month. I have read all Zola, in fact I read the whole Rougon-Macquart saga, so no votes for me (they're all good though). My TBR shelf has:
- The House of Mirth (Wharton)
- The Tree of Man (P. White)
- Voss (P. White)
- The Waves (Woolf)
This looks as appealing as a bout of haemorrhoids. What's worse is that 2 of my them are in my TBR challenge. And I can't get my hands on Underworld by De Lillo at a reasonable price because of the stupid import restrictions set by Amazon. Unless something interesting and available is picked, I might have to start reading our yearly in April.
Patrick wrote: "I'm late to the party here, swamped by work and other obligations. I just counted the number of books I have read (mostly on the train) and not yet reviewed over the last 4 months: 13 in all! But I..."
I noticed that you were MIA
I noticed that you were MIA

I think I am leaning toward alcoholics rather than bloomsbury.

You might like Shuggie Bain then- not on the 1001 list but a Booker prize winner in 2020.

Don't forget to get your votes in today. Very few have voted and the books chosen are in a very close race. Your vote might be the deciding point.
The voting was very light. Only 5 people and only 4 books were voted for. The winner of the randomizer is Nana, and the popular vote went to The Drunkard. Sexing the Cherry was a close second. So we have another month that is all one author. What will you be reading in April?
As much as I love Zola, I won't take part in these two. I didn't vote and I don't think it would have changed the outcome anyway. I will probably spend some time with Ms Cresspahl.
I didn’t vote either. I’ve read Nana but I haven’t read The Drunkard so probably will read that. I also can get Underworld started. I’ve been keeping up with Gisene Cresspahl.


It's remarkable that Zola had five books in the original 1001 Books list, and none of them have been cut from the revised lists; shows what regard he is held in.
Looks like I'll be heavy on the French authors this year- I just finished Sartre's Nausea, am reading Dumas' Count of Monte Cristo and planning to read the Zola, Perec's Life: A User's Manual, Proust's Swann's Way and de Beauvoir's The Mandarins soon.
BTW, I'm also planning to start Underworld soon, our spring quarter book.


Pip wrote: "And I have a free copy of Nana on Audible and used one of my too many credits for L’Assommoir!"
I listened to Nana already and will also being using a credit to get L’assommoir
I listened to Nana already and will also being using a credit to get L’assommoir
Gail wrote: "Kristel, can moderate Nana as I recently read it"
Thank you Gail. I will put you down and hopefully remember to put a thread up for you when April arrives.
Thank you Gail. I will put you down and hopefully remember to put a thread up for you when April arrives.



It's good to know this, Kristel and Gail - I was wondering about that just yesterday.
Kristel wrote: "Gail wrote: "Kristel, can moderate Nana as I recently read it"
Thank you Gail. I will put you down and hopefully remember to put a thread up for you when April arrives."
Kristel I will try and remember too. Between the two of us we will get it done:)
Thank you Gail. I will put you down and hopefully remember to put a thread up for you when April arrives."
Kristel I will try and remember too. Between the two of us we will get it done:)

I will be reading both starting with The Drunkard thanks Gail
Books mentioned in this topic
L'Assommoir (other topics)Underworld (other topics)
Nana (other topics)
The Drunkard (other topics)
The Promise (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Joost Zwagerman (other topics)Stefan Zweig (other topics)
Émile Zola (other topics)
Yevgeny Zamyatin (other topics)
Marguerite Yourcenar (other topics)
More...
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Excluded books this month
The Once and Future King > 600 pages
Bonfires of the Vanities >600 pages
A Dream of Red Mansions >600, past Yearly read 2016
BOTM: Amok, Germinal
Edith Wharton, US author
1. The House of Mirth, 1905, 351 pages
2, Ethan Frome, 1911, 99 pages
3. The Bunner Sisters, 1916, 136 pages
4. Summer, 1917, 127 pages
5. The Age of Innocence, 1920, Pulitzer winner, 293 pages,n 2016 BOTM
6. The Glimpses of the Moon, 1922, 272 pages
Edmund White, US
7. A Boy's Own Story, 1982, 218 pgs
8. The Beautiful Room Is Empty, 1988, 240 pages
Patrick White UK
9. The Living And The Dead, 1941, 358 pages
10. The Tree of Man, 1955, 480 pages
11. Voss, 448 pages, 1957
omitted, T.H. White, The Once and Future King>600 pages.
Oscar Wilde, Ireland
12. The Picture of Dorian Gray, 1890, 272, BOTM 2010
Henry Williamson, UK
13. Tarka The Otter: His Joyful Water Life And Death In The Country Of The Two Rivers, 1927, 279 pages
Angus Wilson UK
14. No Laughing Matter, 1967, 480 pages
Edmund Wilson, US
15. I Thought of Daisy, 1929, 278 pages
Jeanette Winterson UK
16. Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit, 1985, 176 pages, 2016 BOTM
17. The Passion, 1987, 160 pages, 2014 BOTM
18. Sexing the Cherry, 1989, 167 pages
19, Written on the Body, 1992, 190 pages
Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz, Poland
20. Insatiability, 1930, 480 pages
P.G. Wodehouse, UK
21. Thank You, Jeeves, 1933, 230 pages, 2014 BOTM
Christa Wolf, Germany
22. The Quest for Christa T., 1968, 185 pages
23. Patterns of Childhood, 1976, 416 pages
Tom Wolfe, US
24. The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test, 1968, 416 pages
Omitted, > 600 The Bonfire of the Vanities,
Thomas Wolfe,
25. Look Homeward, Angel, 1929, 544 pages
Jan Wolkers Terug naar Oegstgeest (not translated)
Virginia Woolf, UK
26. The Voyage Out 1915, 375 pages
27. Night and Day, 1919, 496 pages
28. Jacob's Room, 1922, 352 pages
29. Mrs. Dalloway, 1925, 194 pages
30. To the Lighthouse, 1925, 209 pages
31. Orlando, 1928, 336 pages
32. The Waves, 1931, 297 pages
33. The Years, 1937, 444 pages
34. Between the Acts, 1941, 224 pgs
Richard Wright US
35. Native Son, 504 pages, 1940
John Wyndham, UK
36. The Day of the Triffids 1951, 228 pgs, 2012 BOTM
37. The Midwich Cuckoos, 1957, 220 pgs
38. Chocky, 1968, 154 pages 2014 botm
Zhang Xianliang, China
39. Half of Man Is Woman, 1985, 285 pages 2012 botm
Banana Yoshimoto, Japan
40. Kitchen, 1988, 160 pgs, 2018 BOTM
Marguerite Yourcenar Belgium
41. Memoirs of Hadrian, 1951, 337 pgs
Yevgeny Zamyatin, Russian
42. We, 1924, 226 pgs, BOTM 2010, 2012, 2016
Émile Zola, France
43. Thérèse Raquin, 1867, 201 pgs
44. The Drunkard, 1876, 408 pgs
45. Nana, 1880, 473 pgs
Germinal, BOTM 2020, excluded
46. La Bête humaine, 1890, 462 pages
Joost Zwagerman, Gimmick!
NO English translation
Stefan Zweig Austria
47. Chess Story, 1942, k104 pgs
Amok, BOTM 2020
48. The Case of Sergeant Grischa, 449 pgs, 1927
These are the books for April. What would you like to read. How many have you read?