Catching up on Classics (and lots more!) discussion
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May 2023 Revisit the Shelf Nominations

I second it.


This is a bold choice for a one month read! But what the heck, I'll bite. :)
I second Don Quixote.

This is a bold choice for a one month read! But what t..."
Well Ok then.
I second Don Quixote.

This is a bold choice for a one month read! But what the heck, I'll bite. :)"
Oh, the book doesn't taste that well. ;-) Thank you.
I have these three mega classics I have never read: Don Quixote, Les Miserables and Moby-Dick. I would much prefer to read them with the group.
Funny thing is that in my head they are all really, really long. I just looked up the word count:
Les Miserables 545,925 words
Don Quixote 345,390 words
Moby-Dick 209,117 words. Apparently Moby-Dick is not that long !?
Don Quixote correspond to 1151 normal pages (300 words per page). I read about 1000-1100 per month, so for me it is doable for me. Also I usually hang around the discussions of books I have read the month after the "official" month.
If any one would want to read and discus it at a slower pace that is fine with me. The treads are open year round.

This is a bold choice for a one month ..."
We could always try a buddy read in May or June and give ourselves 3 months or so, and keep the discussion going. It's one of the books on my "before you die" list.

Whatever works. Lets first give it one or two chances here.

Whatever works. Lets first give it one or two chances here."
I agree. I've never read Don Quixote before.

Yes, if it doesn't win, I'd be up for doing Don Quixote as a buddy read over a longer period, like 3 months.

(there's indeed a GR entry for 'Silas Mariner', lol)"
Yes, I saw it lol. Btw you seconded two books. ;)

ooops ... sorry. 'lost in threads' syndrome, evidently.

I will second this one

Well, poop. There’s a reason this book has been sitting on my bookshelf looking at me for a few months. I second. This can totally be done in a month.
sabagrey wrote: "Michaela wrote: "Yes, I saw it lol. Btw you seconded two books. ;) "
ooops ... sorry. 'lost in threads' syndrome, evidently."
LOL no worries. We will sort it all out.
ooops ... sorry. 'lost in threads' syndrome, evidently."
LOL no worries. We will sort it all out.

I'm getting myself ready to fail at a BINGO blackout in order to add the Don to my May reading, should it win. :-)

I'm getting myself ready to fail at a BINGO blackout in order to add the Don to my May reading, should it win. :-)"
Oh I'm in the dark as well, for I have yet to read DQ. Hope you enjoy reading the books in your BINGO challenge!

I'm getting myself ready to fail at a BINGO blackout in order to add the Don to my May reading, should it win. :-)"
Oh I'm in the d..."
I meant Don Quixote is so long, if I decide to read it this year, I will have to give up a few BINGO choices I'd need for a blackout.
But DQ is worth it since I haven't read it yet, and feel I'd want to do it in a group. :-)
Sabagrey I am putting your nomination on Agnes Grey, but let me know if you would prefer something else.
As always, let me know if there is something I need to correct or change. Our nominations list for May 2023 so far is:
Agnes Grey by Anne Brontë (1847), 251 pages , last read March 2016
Nominated by Aik: Sabagrey, Michelle, Shannon SA, Janice,
Dangerous Liasons by Pierre Choderlos de Laclos (1782) 418 pages, Last read May 2020.
Nominated by Kimberly: Shawn, Greg
Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra (1625), 1026 pages, last read Sept. 2015
Nominated by J_Blueflower: Wobbley, Klowey, Cynda, Luffy, Paula W.
Out of Africa by Isak Dinesen (1937) 401 pages, Last read 2012.
Nominated by Wobbley: Tina, Dave,
Silas Marner by George Eliot (1861) 262 pages, last read May 2018
Nominated by Dave: Pat, Michaela, Aprilleigh
The Plague by Albert Camus (1947) 308 pages, Last read June 2015
Nominated by Darya Silman: Ail,
(moved from the short story thread)
Summer by Edith Wharton (1917) 127 pages, last read Aug. 2018.
Nominated by Lynn: Jen
Agnes Grey by Anne Brontë (1847), 251 pages , last read March 2016
Nominated by Aik: Sabagrey, Michelle, Shannon SA, Janice,
Dangerous Liasons by Pierre Choderlos de Laclos (1782) 418 pages, Last read May 2020.
Nominated by Kimberly: Shawn, Greg
Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra (1625), 1026 pages, last read Sept. 2015
Nominated by J_Blueflower: Wobbley, Klowey, Cynda, Luffy, Paula W.
Out of Africa by Isak Dinesen (1937) 401 pages, Last read 2012.
Nominated by Wobbley: Tina, Dave,
Silas Marner by George Eliot (1861) 262 pages, last read May 2018
Nominated by Dave: Pat, Michaela, Aprilleigh
The Plague by Albert Camus (1947) 308 pages, Last read June 2015
Nominated by Darya Silman: Ail,
(moved from the short story thread)
Summer by Edith Wharton (1917) 127 pages, last read Aug. 2018.
Nominated by Lynn: Jen

Coming in a bit late, so remember that you are allowed to remove your second from one book and put it on another!
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Books mentioned in this topic
Agnes Grey (other topics)Silas Marner (other topics)
Don Quixote (other topics)
Dangerous Liasons (other topics)
Out of Africa (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Isak Dinesen (other topics)Patrick Süskind (other topics)
Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra (other topics)
George Eliot (other topics)
Pierre Choderlos de Laclos (other topics)
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1. Only books currently on our group bookshelf are eligible: Group Bookshelf
Time Since Last Read. A book is only eligible for rereading if it has not been a group read in the last 12 months (1 year). A book read by the group in any of our reading categories in the past year is not eligible for nomination.
Below is a list of the past year's Revisit the Bookshelf winners. Please do not nominate any of these:
Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson April 2023
The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath March 2023
If on a Winter's Night a Traveler by Italo Calvino February 2023
Breakfast at Tiffany's and Three Stories by Truman Capote January 2023
Little Women by Louisa May Alcott December 2022
Catch-22 by Joseph Heller November 2022
All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque October 2022
Villette by Charlotte Brontë September 2022
East of Eden by John Steinbeck August 2022
The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton July 2022
Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf June 2022
Far From the Madding Crowd by Thomas Hardy May 2022
2. When making a nomination, please use "add book/author" link to help moderators and others view the book selected.
3. Only seven books, by seven different authors will move forward to each poll. This will be determined by the number of seconds a book receives. The seven books with the most seconds move to the poll.
4. One nomination and one second per member will be allowed. A nomination can be changed only until it has been seconded. Once seconded, in fairness to the member making the second, the nomination will stand.
You may change a second from one book to another. Please state which book you originally seconded and which you would like to change to.
5. In the interest of variety, please wait a month or more to renominate a book that has been in the poll. These are the books from our last poll:
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
Les Misérables by Victor Hugo
Beowulf by Unknown
Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe
Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson
Perfume: The Story of a Murderer by Patrick Süskind
6, Only one book per author; in the event of more than one book by the same author is nominated, only the first one to receive a second will be eligible. The nominator of the ruled ineligible book will be able to nominate a replacement or second another already in nomination.
Nominations will run from March 1st thru the 14th. Polls will open on the 16th and run till the end of the month.