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

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message 4851: by Tatiana (new)

Tatiana (tatiana_g) The Kreutzer Sonata. Tolstoy has some rather disturbing opinions about sex, marriage and women for sure.


message 4852: by Laura (new)

Laura | 56 comments Recently finished The Island of Dr. Moreau by H.G. Wells. A quick read that elicits lots of interesting questions/discussion about science, morality, nature/nurture, whether we should do things just because we can, etc.


message 4853: by Logophile (new)

Logophile Maggie wrote: "I just finished Kafka on the Shore. I understood a lot of it and I have questions about a lot of it."

I just finished this one too (and from Maggie's post I just realized it was on the 1001 list). I have to second that I have questions about a lot of it, but I'm not sure how much of it I really understood. I might re-read it someday, but it left me in such a sad and strange state of mind that I don't think it will be soon.


message 4854: by Sandi (last edited Aug 07, 2011 11:22AM) (new)

Sandi | 227 comments You could start a topic on Kafka on the Shore and discuss it there. It's been on my to-read shelf for about a year, might start it soon. I've already read The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle so I expect weirdness.


message 4855: by Genia (new)

Genia Lukin | 205 comments Finished Interview With the Vampire. I had an extremely hard time getting through this book; the purple prose got practically intolerable, and the gratuitous, pointless violence basically had me shrugging and rolling my eyes. The only thing I could think of was "these people have the most inept police forces ever if they couldn't track down a serial killer that mutilated people every, single, night without fail in the same ways, without caring."

I mean, you'd think, after a certain point, people would begin noticing that people who went into a room with these guys had a completely regular habit of never coming out? But nooooo...

*throws book at wall*


message 4856: by Bea (last edited Aug 08, 2011 07:27AM) (new)

Bea | 110 comments I just finished Everything Is Illuminated. I enjoyed it but was somewhat shocked by the abrupt ending. I don't know if it's a problem with the e-book or indeed the novel ends with a reference back to a cryptic entry in "The Book of Antecedents".

I have a really hard time with Holocaust books and this was more distessing than some at the end. Nevertheless, it was moving, witty,and clever and I'm looking forward to more from this author.


message 4857: by Bucket (new)

Bucket | 248 comments Logophile wrote: "Maggie wrote: "I just finished Kafka on the Shore. I understood a lot of it and I have questions about a lot of it."

I just finished this one too (and from Maggie's post I just realiz..."


I haven't read Kafka on the shore yet, but a blog that I really enjoy recently featured a very in-depth review that may help shed some light for those of you who just finished the book. Check it out: http://thereadingape.blogspot.com/201...


message 4858: by Craig (new)

Craig | 241 comments Finally finished Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship by Goethe. I may have had too much going one when I started this, as the first part seemed to drag. After about a third of the way through, it picked up and was relatively enjoyable.


message 4859: by Anne (new)

Anne  (reachannereach) Just finished The Summer Book by Tove Jansson. Really excellent in many ways.


message 4860: by Lisa (new)

Lisa James (sthwnd) | 352 comments Just finished both Satanic Verses-hated it, was confused by it, thought it was a total waste of time, & that it should never have made the list. Just reinforces the fact that I don't like Rushdie. NOT looking forward to having to hack through the rest of his that are on the list. Also just finished Lady Chatterley's Lover-GREAT book, quite racy for it's time :) Good read, the people are real, & I found myself by turns smiling & then being disgusted by the main characters. Getting ready to start Cat's Eye.


message 4861: by Agustin (new)

Agustin (augi) | 16 comments Just finished The Godfather by Mario Puzo. It was a great read and reinforced the idea for me that the Mafia were some cool folks :)


message 4862: by Rachel (Sfogs) (new)

Rachel (Sfogs) | 226 comments Agustin wrote: "Just finished The Godfather by Mario Puzo. It was a great read and reinforced the idea for me that the Mafia were some cool folks :)"

I loved that book too! and I really wasn't expecting to!
I've just finished One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest by Ken Kesey.


message 4863: by Amanda (new)

Amanda | 191 comments I just finished Pamela, Or Virtue Reward. Really twisted.


message 4864: by Melissa (new)

Melissa (mmbirch3) | 38 comments Cue the ticker tape parade; I just finished Infinite Jest. Wow. That's all I can say.


message 4865: by El (new)

El Congratulations, Melissa! I read it last year and that's pretty much my reaction too. It's quite an accomplishment!


message 4866: by Craig (new)

Craig | 241 comments I love Infinite Jest!! Have made it twice through and the second time was even better. DFW was (RIP) one of the best authors of our time, in my opinion, ever. Infinite Jest is and will be a major literary document to be studied in the years to come. Hope you enjoyed it.


message 4867: by Melissa (new)

Melissa (mmbirch3) | 38 comments I did enjoy it. It took me four months to read and I definitely want to read it again, just not right now!


message 4868: by Amanda (new)

Amanda | 191 comments Just finished The Memoirs of Martinus Scriberlus. Really short if anyone is looking for a quick read.


message 4869: by Cindy (new)

Cindy (newtomato) | 195 comments Hey, congratulations, Melissa! I'll make you a Don Gately tater-tot casserole to celebrate. ;)


message 4870: by Deanne (new)

Deanne | 681 comments The Man Who Loved Children by Stead.


message 4871: by Sandi (new)

Sandi | 227 comments Just finished The Great Gatsby.


message 4872: by M (new)

M (masanobu) | 110 comments I finished Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf just yesterday. I can see it isn't a book for everyone, but I loved it!

This year, the list is being a treat :)


message 4873: by Inder (last edited Aug 11, 2011 11:28AM) (new)

Inder | 82 comments Just finished The Scarlet Letter and The Emigrants (which was on the 2006 list).

I enjoyed The Scarlet Letter, but it's a bit heavy handed (even for 19th century lit). It was more mysterious and enigmatic than I expected, and the message is actually pretty subversive.

W.G. Sebald can do no wrong, as far as I'm concerned. Both Austerlitz and The Emigrants are masterpieces, absolutely stunning, and unlike anything else I've ever read. Highly recommended.


message 4874: by Asa (new)

Asa | 65 comments Finally made my way through Broch's Death of Virgil. This one really wasn't for me.


message 4875: by Judith (new)

Judith (jloucks) | 1202 comments The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle by Tobias Smollett

I rather enjoyed this fun romp through the ideal young English lord's adventures and misadventures to his graduation from the school of hard knocks.


message 4876: by Judith (new)

Judith (jloucks) | 1202 comments Inder wrote: "Just finished The Scarlet Letter and The Emigrants (which was on the 2006 list).

I enjoyed The Scarlet Letter, but it's a bit heavy handed (even for 19th century lit). I..."


So glad to read all these good things about "The Emigrants", I must get a copy!!!


message 4877: by Robin (new)

Robin Reese (reesereads) | 119 comments I just finished "The Red Queen". I'm not sure how/why it made it to the list. The more I think about it the more I think it's trash.


message 4878: by Robin (new)

Robin Reese (reesereads) | 119 comments I just found out Margaret Drabble's sister is A.S. Byatt. Maybe this is why she's on the list????


message 4879: by Lisa (new)

Lisa James (sthwnd) | 352 comments Just finished & reviewed Cat's Eye-Atwood. I thought this was better than some of her post apocalyptic stuff. Gave it 3 stars. In the bookbag now are Island of Dr. Moreau, (probably the next one since it came from the YA section & seems to be short), Rabbit, Run, The House of the Spirits, & A Confederacy of Dunces.

Anyone read any of these yet?


message 4880: by Elizabeth (Alaska) (last edited Aug 12, 2011 10:35AM) (new)

Elizabeth (Alaska) Lisa wrote: "Just finished & reviewed Cat's Eye-Atwood. I thought this was better than some of her post apocalyptic stuff. Gave it 3 stars. In the bookbag now are Island of Dr. Moreau, (probably the next one..."

I liked Rabbit, Run, while I did not particularly care for The House of the Spirits, but you may have an entirely different reaction.

ETA: That's probably not enough information to be helpful. I prefer novels that are believable. While the characters in Updike are not likeable, I could believe every stream of conscious word of it. On the other hand, while Allende writes beautifully, and much more readably, this book of magical realism unacceptably stretched my imagination.


message 4881: by Anthony (new)

Anthony DeCastro | 168 comments I finished "To Kill a Mockingbird". Great book.


message 4882: by Robin (new)

Robin Reese (reesereads) | 119 comments Amanda wrote: "Lisa wrote: "Just finished & reviewed Cat's Eye-Atwood. I thought this was better than some of her post apocalyptic stuff. Gave it 3 stars. In the bookbag now are Island of Dr. Moreau, (probably..."

I loved "Cat's Eye" but I'm not a big fan of much of her other work. I usually like magical realism but I'm not a big fan of Allende for some reason, but I've read her a while ago.


message 4883: by Logophile (new)

Logophile Lisa wrote: "Just finished & reviewed Cat's Eye-Atwood. I thought this was better than some of her post apocalyptic stuff. Gave it 3 stars. In the bookbag now are Island of Dr. Moreau, (probably the next one..."

I've read A Confederacy of Dunces (listened to the audio book, actually), and I thought it was hilarious.


message 4884: by Chel (new)

Chel | 380 comments Lisa wrote: "Just finished & reviewed Cat's Eye-Atwood. I thought this was better than some of her post apocalyptic stuff. Gave it 3 stars. In the bookbag now are Island of Dr. Moreau, (probably the next one..."

I've read The Island of Dr. Moreau and thought it was a wonderful combination of sci fi and gothic horror and terrific. The Confederacy of Dunces is an American classic and one of my favorite books of all. It is very funny. Think of Don Quixote in New Orleans but without the chivalry. I just loved Allende's House of the Spirits. It is a very warm and cozy type read (the book may not be that way but you may feel that way as you read it, enjoying such a good book) that is very highly enjoyable and incredibly well written.


message 4885: by Chel (new)

Chel | 380 comments I just finished The Day of the Triffids and loved it. I love dystopic literature and this one had a survivalist bent to it that also questioned the purpose of man and society. It was very good, not 1984 good, but very good nonetheless.


message 4886: by Sandi (new)

Sandi | 227 comments Just finished The Castle of Otranto. It was ok.


message 4887: by Ellen (new)

Ellen (karenvirginiaflaxman) | 26 comments Masanobu wrote: "I finished Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf just yesterday. I can see it isn't a book for everyone, but I loved it!

This year, the list is being a treat :)"


I'm so glad to hear you enjoyed "Mrs. Dalloway". Woolf is among my all-time favorite writers, and "Dalloway" is one of the first books of hers that I read. If you enjoyed this one, you might really like "To the Lighthouse" as well. It's one of her most popular books. Enjoy!


message 4888: by Lisa (new)

Lisa James (sthwnd) | 352 comments Just finished Island of Dr. Moreau. Fascinating if you think of how long ago it was written & how nearly prophetic is is in terms of the scientific advances we have today, like cloning, etc. I'm not sure that some of Moreau's creations were believable in the way the species were combined, but hey, who am I to say what's believable or not? Look at the platypus, LOL.


message 4889: by Deanne (new)

Deanne | 681 comments Finished A Dance To The Music Of Time by Powell, loved it and surprised that at 12 books and nearly 3000 pages the writing is consistently of a high standard.
Powell interweaves a vast cast of some 300 characters who get married, have children, have affairs, get divorced and die. Yet he keeps you up to date with their lives with mention of them in coversations at parties and other social gatherings to which Nick Jenkins is a member.
Glad I read the 12 separate books as it seemed less intimidating that way.


message 4890: by Elizabeth (Alaska) (new)

Elizabeth (Alaska) Deanne, I do hope I get to that before too much time passes!

I just finished The Forsyte Saga, although I'm continuing the series to it's end.


message 4891: by Logophile (new)

Logophile Bucket wrote: "I haven't read Kafka on the shore yet, but a blog that I really enjoy recently featured..."

Thanks, Bucket, for the link to the review of Kafka on the Shore. It gave me a better framework to organize my thoughts about this book!

I'd read A Wild Sheep Chase, and I still plan to read The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle. Maybe after my third Murakami, I'll have whatever key I need to be able to read the rest of the Murakamis on the list.


message 4892: by Pinar (new)

Pinar Celebi (pinuccia) Just finished reading Catch-22 by Joseph Heller

Now I am trying to figure out if I liked the book or not.


message 4893: by Liz M (last edited Aug 14, 2011 02:04PM) (new)

Liz M It's been a lovely weekend for reading -- one beach day and one rainy day, so at long last I have FINALLY finished two huge books that I have been working on for months:

The Tale of Genji and Middlemarch

The former was delightful, read in small pieces over the past 6 weeks. The latter has brilliant moments and riveting clarity in it's depiction of relationships.


message 4894: by Enis (new)

Enis Tanik | 1 comments I finished reading Cat's Cradle by Kurt Vonnegut, great book think of it as "entertaining roller coaster".


message 4895: by Melissa (new)

Melissa (mmbirch3) | 38 comments I just finished Brave New World. Call me crazy, but the dystopia didn't seen that bad to me.


message 4896: by Cindy (new)

Cindy (newtomato) | 195 comments Chel wrote: "I just finished The Day of the Triffids and loved it. I love dystopic literature and this one had a survivalist bent to it that also questioned the purpose of man and society. It was very good, n..."

I agree completely! It was one of my favorite books I read last year. Although, when I try to describe the plot to non-bookish people, they inevitably give me a sideways look.


message 4897: by J_BlueFlower (new)

J_BlueFlower (j_from_denmark) | 387 comments I just finish We. One of the great three dystopian novels … someone wrote somewhere. If you haven’t read 1984, read that one instead.

I am sure it is a historically important book and has a lot of prophetical value. Even mentions “gas chambers”, although their use is something else. But really for the reader today there is little news.


message 4898: by Asa (new)

Asa | 65 comments Finished Kipling's Kim yesterday. Very funny and engaging.


message 4899: by Bucket (new)

Bucket | 248 comments Logophile wrote: "Bucket wrote: "I haven't read Kafka on the shore yet, but a blog that I really enjoy recently featured..."

Thanks, Bucket, for the link to the review of Kafka on the Shore. It gave me a better fra..."


You're welcome! :) Glad you found it interesting!


message 4900: by Genia (new)

Genia Lukin | 205 comments Just finished The Good Soldier. It was a good book, but not a rewarding read: I found the narrator almost intolerable in his rambliness, and while I understand this was done on purpose, it just didn't make the book enjoyable to me.


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