Should have read classics discussion
What else are you reading?

Nancy, If you're interested, we'll be doing an in-depth read of The Waste Land beginning on March 5th and running for six weeks. We'll be using the Norton Critical Edition for additional support. The group is called 'Brain Pain' and you can find it here:
http://www.goodreads.com/group/show/5...

Moving on to Pale Fire and then Transparent Things afterward, both by Vladimir Nabokov.
I am still reading Unbroken, which I am thoroughly enjoying but now it is overdue...darn it. I might have to break down and buy it for my new Kindle. I am also in the throws of trying to finish reading all the books for our challenge...I am having a hard time getting through Northanger Abbey. And I am reading and listening to many of the books for my kid's Battle of the Books contest.

Anais Nin's partner in crime in Paris was Henry Miller. You might want to try his Tropic of Cancer



Kerri wrote: "I am still reading Unbroken, which I am thoroughly enjoying but now it is overdue...darn it. I might have to break down and buy it for my new Kindle. I am also in the throws of trying to finish r..."
Hey, I just finished reading that and thought that it was an amazing story. Could not put it down.
Hey, I just finished reading that and thought that it was an amazing story. Could not put it down.

Lisa wrote: "I have to agree with Laura, it does pick up much later in the book, however I almost needed a spreadsheet for all of the people that was introduced. There was times I had no clue who the people were, but I just kept reading hoping something would jog my memory. "
I finally managed to finish A Tale of Two Cities. You were right. Once all the characters are introduced (after Darnay's first trial) the pace quickens and in the end it was quite a compelling read. Thanks for the encouragement, Laura and Lisa.
Zuzana wrote: "Laura wrote: "I think the pace quickens after the first fifty or so pages of A Tale of Two Cities... I read it a few weeks ago and gave it 5 stars ;)"
Lisa wrote: "I have to agree with Laura, it d..."
I'm glad that you enjoyed it!
Lisa wrote: "I have to agree with Laura, it d..."
I'm glad that you enjoyed it!

Read these in my 20's I think and could not put them down so highly recommended "The Sleeping Beauty Trilogy" is a series of three novels written by American author Anne Rice under the pseudonym of A. N. Roquelaure





Ooh, how is War and Peace going?"
Hi, Pragya.
Actualy Anna Karenina is one of my favorite, so I decide to read War and peace a long time before. palace relations was always attracted me. certainly the last in is a great story of a telling consideration of a war.

Hi, Pragya.
Actualy Anna Karenina is one of ..."
Anna Karenina is one of my favorites too. I have the book War and Peace since two years now. Can't bring myself to start reading. Let me know how you are doing with the book as you progress.


Thank you. Are you reading with a group?

the goup is; http://www.goodreads.com/group/show/5...

I love it too."
Last November I read North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell and I found her style similar to Austen's. My mother read Cranford last month (a comedy of manners in a small town in mid-nineteenth century) and she said the same thing. So if you like Jane Austen's books you might enjoy some of Elizabeth Gaskell's novels, too.
Welcome to the group Josie! I hope that you enjoy it! Oh and good luck on Two Cities, my advice would be stick with it, and get a spreadsheet for all the characters!:)
Nilgun wrote: "Pragya wrote: "Nilgun wrote: "
:D"
Ooh, how is War and Peace going?"
Hi, Pragya.
Actualy Anna Karenina is one of ..."
I read this last January with this group and it was great. It took awhile to get all the people figured out but I was so glad that I tackled it. It was my first romp into Russian lit and I can't wait to start Anna Karenina!


Ooh, how is War and Peace going?"
Hi, Pragya.
Actualy Anna Karenina is one of ..."
I read this last January with this group and it was great. It took awhile to get all the people figured out but I was so glad that I tackled it. It was my first romp into Russian lit and I can't wait to start Anna Karenina!


Will be reading a LOT more classics this year, slightly daunting in an exciting way :P


Could it maybe be because you were reading classics and, if like me, always had a teacher explaining what some of it meant or alluded to that could help me on my way? :)

Keep going it would get easier to understand later on.

I do indeed wish you luck. Personally, I find A Tale of Two Cities one of Dickens's less successful books, but many people love it, so however you feel about it, realize that you're not wrong, but that different people enjoy different books.
If you find Dickens challenging for getting into classic literature, you might want to give a try to some of the somewhat less challenging authors, like Austen, Hardy, Collins, Trollope, and others. Not that Dickens isn't worth reading, he's very much so. But he can be a challenge.
If you're enjoying A Tale of Two Cities, great, stick with it. If you aren't, there's no disgrace in putting it aside for awhile and trying something else.

Josie, I had the same problem with A Tale of Two Cities. But it really gets much easier after all major characters are introduced (at the beginning of the second book, when (view spoiler) ). The pace quickens and the plot gets more interesting. In the end I really liked the book.


That sounds like a fair start to the year :) I ahve the entire Holmes collection too but I can't read them all one after theother... as good as they are they all seem to follow the same pattern and I'd end up getting annoyed at it all :(





Could it maybe be because..."
Definitely a possiblity. I will continue on though. Thanks.

We do indeed.


Ah! Have you read any other Thomas Hardy books? He is the most depressing author I know of. I completely sympathize! ;-)
I'm reading:

It is not uplifting either ..... :-Z I'm only about 1/4 of the way through but am somehow appalled at the glee Sir Henry feels towards destroying a young man's innocence and the zest with which he goes about it. I am so happy to be getting back to the Iliad today. :-)

It is!
Josie wrote: "Thanks to all for your suggestions. I will continue on with A Tale of Two Cities. Wish me luck!!"
Josie, Good luck with finishing A Tale of Two Cities. The first half of the book was painful for me. I couldn't keep all the characters straight. However, the second half is much better. I will confess that I had to resort to listening to the audiotape and then picked up a kid's version just to get through the darn thing. It does have a great ending!
Josie, Good luck with finishing A Tale of Two Cities. The first half of the book was painful for me. I couldn't keep all the characters straight. However, the second half is much better. I will confess that I had to resort to listening to the audiotape and then picked up a kid's version just to get through the darn thing. It does have a great ending!
Suzanne wrote: "I've just started Persuasion, this will be my first ever Jane Austen book that I've read. I'm hoping it's good :)"
Suzanne, that was my first Austen book also. I liked it. I found that getting through Northanger Abbey was more difficult.
Suzanne, that was my first Austen book also. I liked it. I found that getting through Northanger Abbey was more difficult.

I liked Persuasion very much. My only regret was I had seen the movie before so I knew all the plot twists.



Cleo, Tess of the D'Urbervilles is my first Thomas Hardy book. I am sympathetic to Tess's fate but I can't help but feel that I would like her more if she weren't so passive, so accepting of all the wrongs that happened to her. I have about 40% of the book to go and somehow I doubt that this story has a happy ending.
I finished Dorian Gray only two weeks ago. I find lord Henry clever, witty and charming, but also manipulative, extremely demagogical in his arguments and above all a hypocrite. He persuaded Dorian to lead the kind of life he himself dared only to dream of.

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I do think I like the KJV. It's not Olde English like I thought it would be but the language is a bit different and it adds something to the text.
Oh, and a forewwarning -- every April I say I'm going to re-read T.S. Eliot's The WasteLand and then I find that April is the cruellest month because I get lost wading through the footnotes and references to anything and everything.
Why can't I just sit back and enjoy the language as it passes me by? Why do I have to understand and research every little word and phrase in the poem? Ditto Finnegan's Wake.