Boxall's 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die discussion

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message 5801: by Hima (new)

Hima (himazima) | 36 comments Kate S wrote: "Hima wrote: "Animal Farm...somehow not as good as I remembered from HS 12 years ago."

I read this over the weekend and had the exact same thought!"


I'm glad someone feels the same way! But, the thing is that I actually really like "1984". I think I'm done with George Orwell for the time being though.


message 5802: by Bucket (new)

Bucket | 248 comments Just finished The Guermantes Way - Vol. 3 of Proust's In Search of Lost Time. This was the best volume yet, and I'm really excited to get started with Sodom and Gomorrah!


message 5803: by Kate S (last edited Feb 13, 2012 05:24PM) (new)

Kate S | 39 comments Hima wrote: "Kate S wrote: "Hima wrote: "Animal Farm...somehow not as good as I remembered from HS 12 years ago."

I read this over the weekend and had the exact same thought!"

I'm glad someone feels the same ..."


I re-read 1984 not very long ago and really completely enjoyed it, I completely feel you! I am not sure when I will get to my next Orwell, but I hope I am able to enjoy it. :)


message 5804: by Hima (new)

Hima (himazima) | 36 comments Does getting halfway-ish through "Vile Bodies", and then getting fed up with it count as "read"? I marked it as "read", and don't even feel bad about not having read the whole thing. With so many better books out there, why should I waste my time on something I really, truly loath?


message 5805: by Denise (new)

Denise Hima wrote: "Does getting halfway-ish through "Vile Bodies", and then getting fed up with it count as "read"? I marked it as "read", and don't even feel bad about not having read the whole thing. With so many b..."

Consider adding an abandoned shelf to your shelves. works for me.


message 5806: by Hima (new)

Hima (himazima) | 36 comments I actually have a shelf called "I'm sorry, I can't, don't hate me". (Quote from the television show "Sex and the City".) All the books that I either end up not really liking/loving, and anything that there is no way I would ever be able to finish.


message 5807: by Grada (BoekenTrol) (new)

Grada (BoekenTrol) (boekentrol) | 60 comments I just finished The Sound of Waves by Yukio Mishima.


message 5808: by Deanne (new)

Deanne | 681 comments Just finished Pastoralia by Saunders, a collection of stories and a quick read.


message 5809: by Bea (new)

Bea | 110 comments Just finished listening to The Picture of Dorian Gray. I wanted to like it more than I did.


message 5810: by Craig (new)

Craig | 241 comments On the Eve -Turgenev

This one did not grab me. The writing itself was quite good, with a few stand-out portions, but just not one that I feel will stay in my memory as good.


message 5811: by Rosemary (last edited Feb 14, 2012 02:40PM) (new)

Rosemary | 106 comments Just finished Perfume: The Story of a Murderer. I found it stunningly evocative, just a little disappointing at the end.


message 5812: by Judith (last edited Feb 15, 2012 11:23AM) (new)

Judith (jloucks) | 1202 comments Hima wrote: "Does getting halfway-ish through "Vile Bodies", and then getting fed up with it count as "read"? I marked it as "read", and don't even feel bad about not having read the whole thing. With so many b..."

You may have just missed out on or didn't like the humor in this light-hearted novel. (That has certainly happened to me in a few books from the lists!) You might try to redeem it just a bit by renting the movie version called "Bright Young Things". I thought it was quite enjoyable.


message 5813: by Judith (new)

Judith (jloucks) | 1202 comments The Absentee - Maria Edgeworth

Great fun for romance and adventure lovers. The last third of the novel is quite a romp!


message 5814: by Kate (new)

Kate (lacommunarde) | 14 comments Just finished The Big Sleep by Raymond Chandler. Excellent writing style. Overall, very good.


message 5815: by Sarah (new)

Sarah (morr_books) | 6 comments la wrote: "Just finished The Big Sleep by Raymond Chandler. Excellent writing style. Overall, very good."

I loved this one. You should read The 39 Steps by John Buchan too if you haven't already. It is very good as well.


message 5816: by Beth (new)

Beth (eparks4232) | 162 comments The Poisonwood Bible and So Long a Letter. Liked both. You can see my comments at http://bethslistlove.wordpress.com


message 5817: by Inder (new)

Inder | 82 comments Megan wrote: "I just finished A Bend in the River. V.S. Naipaul by V. S. Naipaul. It was the first of Naipaul's books that I've read, and I thought it was brilliant and engrossing. If you're lookin..."

Ah. I loved that novel. Naipaul's writing is amazing. I'm slowly working my way through everything he wrote ...


message 5818: by Deanne (new)

Deanne | 681 comments Finished Love's Work by Gillian Rose, who was dying of Ovarian cancer at the time of writing. Rose talks a lot about love and death as you would expect from someone facing their own mortality.
Rituals by Nooteboom was also a quick read and revolves around three decades and three men. Both books are quick reads but thought provoking.


message 5819: by Yrinsyde (new)

Yrinsyde | 295 comments So glad to find more Naipaul fans! I loved A Bend in the River - the first one of his I read. I would not have picked up Naipaul if it wasn't for this list. Horray!


message 5820: by Laura (new)

Laura | 56 comments Just finished Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson. The story line did not really differ from the one everyone knows so well, but it was interesting to read the book (finally!) for the details and tone it sets. Plus, it was a super quick read.


message 5821: by Linda (new)

Linda JF Fathers and Sons by Turgenev. It was just okay for me.


message 5822: by Ian (new)

Ian | 143 comments Living by Henry Green.
Descriptions of working class poverty I find quite arduous reading (I'm thinking Germinal, New Grub Street, Sons and Lovers) but the books do stay with me a long time. I think this will be the same.
To paraphrase Peter Cook: I don't read books to learn about poverty, misery and despair. I can get all that at home!


message 5823: by Deanne (new)

Deanne | 681 comments Finished In Search of Lost Time by Proust, may have been the translation but I found this a much easier to read than I thought it would be.


message 5824: by Velma (last edited Feb 20, 2012 09:23AM) (new)

Velma (velmalikevelvet) | 24 comments Yesterday I finished The Unbearable Lightness of Being by Milan Kundera. Thought-provoking, but not my style. My review is here.


message 5825: by Jonpaul (new)

Jonpaul I pretty much made out, quality-wise, last week. I polished off Animal Farm, July's People, The Elegance of the Hedgehog, and The Invention of Curried Sausage.


message 5826: by Lauli (new)

Lauli | 263 comments Jude the Obscure One of the most terrible books I've read, but undoubtedly a masterpiece. How gutsy of Hardy to have written such a straightforward book in terms of sex during the Victorian age


message 5827: by Denise (new)

Denise Completed Bleak House which I very much enjoyed. thought the beginning was a little slow but it had my interest throughout. Tension and speed pick up and by the last 3rd of the story I was reluctant to put it down.

About 25% through Nicholas Nickleby on audio. Very enjoyable.


message 5828: by Lisa (new)

Lisa James (sthwnd) | 352 comments I finally got through The Electric Kool Aid Acid Test. Ugh..... Also recently finished The Temple of my Familiar, which I loved.


message 5829: by Rachel (Sfogs) (new)

Rachel (Sfogs) | 226 comments Denise wrote: "Completed Bleak House which I very much enjoyed. thought the beginning was a little slow but it had my interest throughout. Tension and speed pick up and by the last 3rd of the story I..."

I've just borrowed Nicholas Nickleby from the library.
It will be my first of Dicken's works


message 5831: by Beth (new)

Beth (eparks4232) | 162 comments Had a long drive and finished Man Who Loved Children andThe Year of the Hare. Liked both and reviews are here: http://bethslistlove.wordpress.com/20...


message 5832: by Judith (last edited Feb 21, 2012 11:07AM) (new)

Judith (jloucks) | 1202 comments Virgin Soil - Ivan Turgenev

I recommend this one for it's realism...about the historical times in which it is set and human nature.
Well done!


message 5833: by Jenn (new)

Jenn | 5 comments The Mill on the Floss
Great book! It is the first I read by George Eliot, but I will definitely be reading more.


message 5834: by Dana (new)

Dana Arbelaez (danas_reads) | 25 comments Flaubert's Parrot, by Julian Barnes

I enjoyed this book more than I had originally anticipated. It was witty and kept my interest, and I had to read with a notebook in hand so I could write down all the asides that caught my attention; it made me want to do a whole lot more reading and fact-checking, both of Barnes and Flaubert.


message 5835: by Velma (new)

Velma (velmalikevelvet) | 24 comments Megan wrote: "I really enjoyed your review..."

Thanks, Megan, and thanks for 'like'-ing it too.

I'll wager your feelings about it will change as you age; whether up or down will be interesting. I would speculate that it would appeal most to someone who has been living long enough to have some experience under their belt, but your love of it at the tender age of 19 might indicate that I'm off base.

Enjoy your re-read!


message 5836: by Deanne (new)

Deanne | 681 comments Finished Martin Eden by London, a slow start but the more I read and the more I liked Martin the quicker I found the read.


message 5837: by Beth (new)

Beth (eparks4232) | 162 comments Hi Brianna!

I just finished Life and Times of Michael K by J.M. Coetzee. My review is on my blog at http://bethslistlove.wordpress.com/20...


message 5838: by Amanda (new)

Amanda | 191 comments Jane Eyre. I had tried to read it a couple of years ago and hated it and now I love it.


message 5839: by Peter (new)

Peter | 443 comments Just finished Dicken's Oliver Twist. Initially I will admit to finding it hard to block the film version from my mind to concentrate on the real story but once I managed that I loved it. In the end there was only one thing to say 'Can I have some more'.


message 5840: by Hima (new)

Hima (himazima) | 36 comments I really liked Jane Eyre as well. I thought it was going to be along the same lines as Pride and Prejudice, but thankfully it was not. A (semi) strong female, who is NOT hung up on marriage and kids and the "white picket fence". The ending annoyed me a little though, so I could only give it 4 stars...4.5 if that was an option.


message 5841: by Karina (new)

Karina | 401 comments Just finished The Time Machine by H.G. Wells last night. An enjoyable read. I look forward to reading more of his stories.


message 5843: by Velma (last edited Feb 23, 2012 09:42AM) (new)

Velma (velmalikevelvet) | 24 comments Karina wrote: "Just finished The Time Machine by H.G. Wells last night. An enjoyable read. I look forward to reading more of his stories."

I read it a few weeks ago, & also enjoyed it (review). I need to start combing the shelves of my local secondhand bookshop for more Wells titles.

What do you plan to read of his next?


message 5844: by Haley (new)

Haley (haley_hemen) | 9 comments Just finished The Golden Ass, translated by PG Walsh. Very readable, very fun! Reminds me of what Milan Kundera said about Rabellais, that since he wasn't reading him in the original French and struggling with dated, difficult language, he was able to really enjoy the stories as they were translated and updated into Czech.


message 5845: by Craig (new)

Craig | 241 comments Alice in Wonderland -Carroll (aka Dodgson).
Interesting introduction in the version I read, lightly comparing Carroll to Humbert Humbert from Lolita. "lightly" being the key modifier as the intro's author claimed that Carroll loved young girls but not carnally or lasciviously as the character Humbert did. The work of "Alice" is fun, odd, and ridiculous, and subject to a legion of interpretations.


message 5846: by Kristine (new)

Kristine (leggygal) | 52 comments Just finished Doctor Zhivago which took me quite some time, now if i could get passed page 16 The Riddle of the Sands perhaps i might make some list progress.


message 5847: by Rachel (Sfogs) (new)

Rachel (Sfogs) | 226 comments My list of 'finished' 1001 books is slowly growing


message 5848: by Beth (new)

Beth (eparks4232) | 162 comments Just finished The Nose. Fun and quick, if you need a REALLY short one. Here is my review: http://bethslistlove.wordpress.com/20...


message 5849: by Hima (new)

Hima (himazima) | 36 comments I *finally* finished "On the Road" by Jack Kerouac. There were times when I just wanted to stop reading it altogether, but I did finish the actual story part. I didn't want to read the essays, especially after I read online that one of the "authors" of one of the essays, had never bothered to read the book/scroll at all.


message 5850: by Mekki (last edited Feb 24, 2012 06:59PM) (new)

Mekki | 171 comments I just finished Foundation!

Interesting Sci-fi with themes of Politics, power through religion Power, Power through money..


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