Boxall's 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die discussion
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Which LIST book did you just finish?
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Yrinsyde
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Feb 24, 2012 10:59PM

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Tragic tale of the 17th century told by one who says she witnessed some of the events....but probably never did.



She's an outstanding writer,really unflinchingly brutally honest in her portayal of society and personal interactions.

A bit more complicated than Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, but still very fun. The annotated version I read was great with added bits of information, anecdotes, etc. The logic and math games played with the dialogue and other elements was interesting and a another way to 'read' Carrol.

A bit more complicated than Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, but still very fun. The annotated version I read was great with added bits of information, anecdotes, etc. The logic and math games played with the dialogue and other elements was interesting and a another way to 'read' Carrol.

Feels like I just ended an elaborately dramatic affair/relationship. This is by far the best I have read of Balzac.




Feels like I just ended an elaborately dramatic affair/relationship. This is by far the best I have read of Balzac."
Looking forward to this one!

Isn't Rabbit disappointing in the entire series? As Updike's "Everyman" of the period he seems predestined to make at least the most common of "wrong turns" as he stumbles through his middle class American life! I've only read two of the novels so far though, so can't say what he's up to in "Rabbit is Rich"....

I guess I kind of liked him in the first one, even though he does everything wrong. I could relate to his need of escape from an oppressive family situation. But in this one, he just loses it! And the damage he inflicts on his son, exposing him to the whole Jill-Skeeter scenario... I just couldn't stomach it.



I find only The Postman on the list. Are you saying the other two are included in that one entry?

I enjoyed the second half of Rabbit, Run,in a jaw dropping, horrified kind of way, and that was more than enough Rabbit for me. He's such an ass. I like anti-heroes, but I don't think Harry Angstrom is any kind of hero. I couldn't root for him. What do those of you who have continued with the series think of the character?

Is that the book that inspired the movie starring Isabelle Huppert? I adore her, but it's a Michael Haneke film, and he scares the crap out of me.


I have "Naked Lunch", just haven't read it yet. I'm a little burned out on the whole druggie, hippie, "let's do whatever we want with no consequences" thing. I will read it eventually, was a little apprehensive about Naked Lunch, since Burroughs and Kerouac were in the same/similar circles.

Elizabeth - you are 100% correct. I don't know where I was when I thought I found that information. Thank-you for pointing it out. Now, if only I could figure out what list I was looking at... :)

ETA: No, I think that was Witness for the Prosecution. I see the Double Indemnity had Edward G. Robinson in it as well as Fred MacMurray.

Oddly enough, the day I finished Double Indemnity
was the last day the film was streaming on Netflix, so I was able to watch it. I love film noir, but this one was a bit silly, and they changed so much of the original, haunting story. Interestingly, the screenplay was co-written by another famous noir-ist: Raymond Chandler!
Postman and Mildred are great films. There are newer versions as well. Postman, with Jessica Lange and Jack Nicholson, and an HBO miniseries of Mildred Pierce starring Kate Winslet.
I don't know much about his other work, but Mildred Pierce (the novel) has stayed with me over the years. It's tragic, and a fascinating portrait of the lengths a mother will go to keep her horrible daughter happy. It's quite different than the typical male centered noir I've read.






Hi Katie - you are right. I don't want to watch the film ... the novel was enough for me!






Also Sister Carrie by Dreiser, suprised because Drieser seems to write a story without the usual judgemental attitude towards the characters as seen in some late Victorian/Edwardian novels.


Thanks for this and other quick insights you share about these less than popular (or should I say less known?)titles from the lists. I keep adding them to my ever-growing WL!

I think my previous comment pretty much gives away my feeling about Rabbit, but I'll add that he is immature to extreme in the fist novel and overly conservative in the second. So what life lessons will he learn from here on? (He learns everything the hard way!) Guess we will have to read to find out! I have a feeling that I will never either like or admire him though. I think Updike meant for him to represent the common human foibles of his place and time more than he meant for us to like his character....

Then today, just when I thought I was safely listening to a book on Kashmir, it switched to the experience of a Jew in France in 1940. Uh oh. Apparently even Rushdie (Shalimar the Clown, non-list book) is no guarantee of a Holocaust-free read this month.

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