VICTOBER 2025 discussion
Victober 2023
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Wrap Up Thread 2023
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Hope you manage to finish and enjoy Jane Eyre Lisa! I'm thinking of rereading Wuthering Heights next year :)



I've not reread WH since like, 2015/6 so I'm looking forward but slightly nervous haha!

Agnes Grey was a re-read for me and I loved it just as much as I did the first time.

Yes, it is usually one or the other--Jane ends up getting what she wants on her own terms.



My name is Thaizi Ono and I am from Brazil.
I read two books in this Victober that I loved.
1) Gloriana, or, the revolution of 1900 by Lady Florence Dixie. It completed Katie's challenge (read a 'new woman' fiction) and Marissa's challenge (Victorian work by an author who is new to you). This book is amazing, it is a feminist utopian novel. In my opinion, it is the opposite of The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood (a feminist dystopian novel). In this utopian book, Gloriana, the main character pleads woman's cause and defies gender norms.
Lady Florence Dixie was a Scottish writer and it was the first book I read from her. I saw her bio and Lady Florence Dixie was the President of the British Ladies' Football Club in 1895. She saw the potential in women at sports and gender equality.
2) David Cooperfield by Charles Dickens. It completed Kate's challenge (Victorian work featuring a stranger/outsider), Petra's challenge (Read a Victorian first-person narrative) and Ros's challenge (Read a Victorian work in which class features strongly). This book by Dickens became one of my favorites.
It is a bildungsroman, a genre I really like, it has the most engaging opening line, accessible classic book and memorable characters.
There is a scene in the movie "Hugo" by Martin Scorsese in which the character Isabelle says to Mr. Labisse that she is falling in love with David Cooperfield.
Finally, thank you to the hosts for the Discord discussion, it was so much fun!


Well done on all your reading.
I read the following:
"Agnes Grey"
"North and South"
"Cranford"
"The Happy Prince and Other Stories"
"Uncle Silas"
I enjoyed them all. "Uncle Silas" was particularly good, the suspense and tension 😬

Agnes Grey excellent. It is lovely.

The Haunted House
Mary Barton
“Silly Novels by Lady Novelists"
Mrs Warren’s Profession (reread)
The Invisible Man: A Grotesque Romance
At Agincourt: A Tale of the White Hoods of Paris
I know I haven't been active on Goodreads this Victober as I have been on Discord, but I usually make a wrap up thread at the end of the month, a place for people to discuss what they've been reading.
I hope everyone's Victober went well :) I read some great things - highlights would be especially The Beth Book by Sarah Grand, A Struggle for Fame by Charlotte Riddell, An Eye For An Eye by Anthony Trollope and Man and Wife by Wilkie Collins.