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

This topic is about
1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die
Members
>
Any LIST book you don't want to read?
message 1:
by
Effy
(new)
-
added it
Dec 11, 2011 07:31PM

reply
|
flag


I'm seeing conflicting reactions to this author. What is it you don't like about him?




ETA: I'm not jumping up and down to read more Joseph Conrad or Henry James. I haven't ruled them out entirely, but I think I'll save them for last. ;o)

After all the question posed was "which books you don't want to read"... not "which books you don't want to read but please don't say Austen"



As much as I've liked the Austen books I've read, I must agree with this statement. Because I read them quite a number of years ago, I sometimes forget which character was in which book. :-)




Lisa, Midnight's Children is much easier to decipher than The Satanic Verses. Those are the only two I have read by Rushdie, and I agree he does present a challenge to many of us! He is not for everyone, for sure!


Sigh.

Amen.

Margaret Atwood- The Blind Assassin
Ian McEwan- Amsterdam
George Orwell- Animal Farm & Down and out in London and Paris
Although I enjoyed parts I thought Captain Corelli's Mandolin I thought it was quite strange so am not tempted by Louis de Bernieres's Senor Vivo and the Coca Lord.
I thought James Ellroy's LA Confidential was THE WORST BOOK I'VE EVER READ, so it'll take me until I've read all of the other books in existence before I read something else by him.
I read Sebastian Faulks's Devil May care and was unimpressed so I sharn't be reading Birdsong.
Gabriel Garcia Marquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude was akin to 100 years of boredom so I'm not tempted by anything else by him.
I'm not looking forward to reading Nabokov's Lolita as it's pretty creepy subject matter.
Also want to avoid Bret Easton Ellis's American Psycho, despite owning 2 copies after having read excerpts from a friend's novel which were pretty grim to say the least.

Amen."
Amen....again.
Pilgrimage by Dorothy Richardson. Huge expensive out-of-print experimental novel unread by even most literature geeks. Yeah, I'm gonna let that one go.



For a more details of books I hated check out pages of the two lowest ratings I award books I review (note that some of these aren't 1001 books but most are).
http://johnandsheena.co.uk/books/?tag...
http://johnandsheena.co.uk/books/?tag...

I was such a pretentious cub in my teens and assumed that if I didn't like a classic novel, then it was obviously rubbish. So for years after trying to read Middlemarch at fifteen (and finding it dull), I avoided George Eliot. And then about two years ago, I read Adam Bede for a college course, found it much better than expected, and tried Middlemarch again that summer. Cried through the ending, and now Eliot's probably one of my favorite authors.
That said, I'm not sure I will ever be thrilled to read Look Homeward, Angel. I'll probably muddle through it on my second attempt (first attempt was aborted after about 100 pages), but for now, I wish it would just spontaneously combust out of every library in the world.

me neither, it has been sitting on my "to read" shelf at home for ages.

me neither, it has been sitting on my "to read" shelf at home for ages."
Lol.... I have a couple of books that seem to be on the shelf, sneering at me, with a "you looking at me" attitude.

I'm glad I'm not the only one.
Amen."
Amen....again."




He's a good writer but the stories are sooooo boring, and I'm sick of reading about Catholicism- who cares! :)


As you say, it might be something appreciated with a little life experience. I'm sure that many (most?) of the books I read and appreciate now, I would not have appreciated 40 and more years ago.

Yes he definitely captures man's darkest thoughts and preoccupations which I enjoyed reading, I found that The Heart of the Matter really dragged and I would prefer to read a book where the main characters turmoil isn't caused by Catholicism.

In fairness to Ms. Fredriksson, I wonder if part of it is that I do not seem to enjoy Swedish writing. Any Scandanavian novels I have picked up, I have disliked, even when others sing the book's praises.

First, Coelho books are decent parables of the do- the -right- thing nature most have heard and now tell their children. Maybe valuable for the spiritually bereft during a soul-sucking crisis, odd for the list.
Second, the old writer's mantra regarding to write what you know could to be an issue here with others - say, Graham Greene. He stuck somewhat close to home. Or it may not be. It could be the readers disinterest in the writer's world. I am fond of Greene for his writing style, and for his honest religious and life conflicts.
But I also like Coetzee, Pynchon and other undesirables mentioned. Not all of their work; rarely can I say that.
I find it best to do a bit of homework before diving in to a lot of these books. A little intro to the author and some historical context helps me immensely.
As for Jane Austen - however literary pioneer-like - I too am glad she hasn't any others

So many of you swearing off authors that have so much to say and in such unique ways and from different points of view! I must admit I've had the same reaction to a few I've read from the list, but I'm almost always willing to try another one that has been critically acclaimed because it could be so very, very different.
Margaret Atwood is very different in each of the titles I've read by her: and, as far as I know, Greene never wrote anything else like "The Power and the Glory" and that was his darkest novel. And another example I think of is Paul Coehlo. I don't care for the novels I've read by him so far, but I'm looking forward to "Veronica Decides to Die" anyway.
Yes, it would be interesting to ask each person here how they feel 20 years from now if they tried some of these authors again!
There are definitely some writers who write the same book over and over, just changing details or situations; but by far the most of the ones on the list with multiple books did not do that.

I, too, set aside The Blind Assassin. But I have been encouraged to try one of her others.
I will ... eventually ... I suppose ... if I have to.
(Actually, I've added some to my ever-expanding wish list.)


One I'm not excited about is Moby Dick.


Books mentioned in this topic
Choke (other topics)Snuff (other topics)
The 120 Days of Sodom (other topics)
Choke (other topics)
Lolita (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Ivan Turgenev (other topics)Marianne Fredriksson (other topics)
Henry James (other topics)
Joseph Conrad (other topics)
D.H. Lawrence (other topics)