Boxall's 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die discussion
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Is there a book(s) from the list that you have no intention of reading? Which one and why?
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Tina
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Sep 15, 2010 06:03AM

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Tina, I think the phrase "spork out my own eyes" is one of the funniest things I've read on this site! I feel the same about the guy who wrote Cloudsplitter...

This was funny. I read Savage Detectives, and would have to say that 2666 is pretty far down my list, too. Although it is ahead of Finnegan's Wake.
:( I love 2666, I thought it was wonderful.
Kristi wrote: "I've read some of Dubliners, which I don't think is so bad, but everyone seems to dislike Ulysses so much. "
Ulysses is nowhere near as bad as everyone says. I enjoyed it so much when I read it, I couldn't put it down. Though it did take me a whole month of non-stop reading and research to finish in a way that I felt like I could put it aside. That was about 6 weeks ago. Needless to say I've stuck to the 200 pagers since....
Ulysses is nowhere near as bad as everyone says. I enjoyed it so much when I read it, I couldn't put it down. Though it did take me a whole month of non-stop reading and research to finish in a way that I felt like I could put it aside. That was about 6 weeks ago. Needless to say I've stuck to the 200 pagers since....
Christine wrote: "Dan wrote: "Thomas Pynchon is my favourite author, though I can definitely see that he isn't for everyone! It took me around 5 months to read Gravity's Rainbow and by the end of it was mentally exh..."
Well, I suppose it depends on what you want from a book. We all want different things when we read. Thing is, I can never quite pin down what it is I want in words. But I know that when I read Pynchon, I get that feeling, much more than when I read other authors. I guess things just hit a nerve or get inside our heads and sometimes we can't explain why...
Well, I suppose it depends on what you want from a book. We all want different things when we read. Thing is, I can never quite pin down what it is I want in words. But I know that when I read Pynchon, I get that feeling, much more than when I read other authors. I guess things just hit a nerve or get inside our heads and sometimes we can't explain why...

Hah. I didn't say it was OFF my list, so I appreciate you speaking up in its defense. I also agree with you about Ulysses. It is by no means an easy read--but I found it immensely rewarding.
Drew wrote: "Dan wrote: ":( I love 2666, I thought it was wonderful."
Hah. I didn't say it was OFF my list, so I appreciate you speaking up in its defense. I also agree with you about Ulysses. It is by no me..."
2666 is definitely of Ulysses stature. Long, difficult, meandering, unconventionally structured, often terminally frustrating but, in the end, exceptionally rewarding. It really is a kind of living, breathing novel, in the least cliche idea of that concept. :D
Hah. I didn't say it was OFF my list, so I appreciate you speaking up in its defense. I also agree with you about Ulysses. It is by no me..."
2666 is definitely of Ulysses stature. Long, difficult, meandering, unconventionally structured, often terminally frustrating but, in the end, exceptionally rewarding. It really is a kind of living, breathing novel, in the least cliche idea of that concept. :D
Dan wrote: "Drew wrote: "Dan wrote: ":( I love 2666, I thought it was wonderful."
Hah. I didn't say it was OFF my list, so I appreciate you speaking up in its defense. I also agree with you about Ulysses. It ..."
And I didn't know it was on the list...I must have an older version...Does that mean I've read one more than I think I have!?
Hah. I didn't say it was OFF my list, so I appreciate you speaking up in its defense. I also agree with you about Ulysses. It ..."
And I didn't know it was on the list...I must have an older version...Does that mean I've read one more than I think I have!?

I'm guessing you wouldn't want to read The Nose by Nikolai Gogol then either... Which incidentally was one of the most ridiculously hilarious things I have ever read. :) Haven't read The Breast though...

read it - its amazing!!!!

are there no pynchon books on the list?

I think Becky is surprised that Pynchon has made this "list" yet...the list of books you have no intention of reading. From what I've seen, Pynchon can be quite polarizing.

I think Becky is surprised that Pynchon has made this "list" yet...the list of books you have no intention of reading. From what I've seen, P..."
Ah right! Thanks:)

Wait, to read all of them as long as I can get a copy of their English version. I heard from somebody that there are books written in foreign language, example is what Paula wrote above, and have not been translated to English yet. Is this true?

Taebek mountains is an example K.D, only avaliable in French and Korean.

Atonement: Yes I know not to judge a book by the movie, but I truly hated the movie, and romance really is not my thing, so even though I acknowledge the book is probably better than the movie, the movie did not inspire me to want to read the book.
Memoirs of a Geisha: My sister read this book, and according to her the movie was acutally better than the book was. She really did not care for the book at all, and we are usually on the same page with books (no pun intented) so I have truted her judgement and stayed away from this one.
In Cold Blood:I hear a lot of good things about this book that sometimes tempt me to want to read it, but I just don't do true crime. That is one genre I cannot get into, so whenever I get tempted to read this book, when I read the summary about it, it just does not generate my interest.
Gone With the Wind: As a kid I was traumatized by the movie (ok that is semi-joke, but semi-true) and well I don't want to give away in spoilers but needless to say I now have a biased against this book and the characters so I am repelled from the thought of reading it.

oops, it was suippose to say "In Cold Blood" But somehow the link to the book did not make it.



This is my first Hemingway - I thought I would give him a chance but he's so dry, stoic and detached in his style of writing that you don't care for any of the persons in the book.
So I would say: No more Hemingway - and that will mean a good handful of books

I'm sure the ones she mentioned pale in comparison to his books.

Yep, your're right - I'm not really planning to read his books.

This is my first Hemingway - I thought I would give him a chance but he's so dry, stoic and detached in his style of writing...No more Hemingway... "
Well, I would suggest you give The Old Man and the Sea a shot - at least it's short!

I started reading "The Ground Beneath Her Feet" and lasted about forty pages. I can count on one hand the number of books I never finished so I think I'll attempt to read everything else first.


Not a great many of those, but they do exist. I have a fervent dislike of anything Joyce, so I am planning to carefully circumvent Finnegan's Wake and Ulysses, though I plan to give Portrait of an Artist a try. I have a distinct feeling, also, that I may not be much enthused by certain modernists like Virginia Woolf and I can't say I appreciate Kafka, so Amerika is also at the bottom of my list.

Ulysses, War and Peace (rather more for the length than anything else), Don Quixote, and Atonement (I loathed the film and whilst I don't make a habit of watching the film before I have read the book, I hadn't much interest in both until I noticed it was on the list!) - to name a few.
Then again there have been a couple of books I really did not think I would enjoy and yet they turned out to be absolute gems; The Reader for example really took me by surprise and I thoroughly enjoyed it. So there we go, I might fear the books I end up loving the most!

I absolutely refuse to read Lolita. The subject matter grosses me out. I'm working from the 2006 list and Sexing the Cherry is on it. I tried reading it in college. After throwing it across the room in disgust several times, finally, I decided to let it lie there. Never finished it. Never will.
@Linda - My college prof let us skip the chapters that are about whaling. I decided to read those chapters. They don't further the plot at all, but got through them.

I think you should lay aside your preconceptions and try it; I actually did not like the book - but not for the reason you probably might think.
Also the relationship(s) within the books isn't quite as straight forward as you might think.
Don't - as they say - judge a book by it's cover.

I'll agree with the rest... definitely read Lolita. The subject matter is unsettling yes, but you have to understand the psychology of Humbert; he is truly chasing after a phantom in his quest to replace his lost child love. Something broke in him early in life, and made him what he was: a gentle predator.
If you can put aside the subject matter (which is not hard to do, it's not at all graphic or hard to read. I'm 250 pages into "Dragon Tattoo" and it's brutal by comparison) you can really enjoy this book. It's one of my favorites. I've read it several times. Nobokov writes beautifully ("If a violin string could ache - I would be that string.") and the novel is carried off in a way that, in the end, you pity Humbert somehow. His tone is not that of the triumphant lecher, but instead the tired and broken penitent. Definitely give it a try.



I'll join you Komet with Ulysses I think,...


I don't know that one could "force" another to read a book, but I can definitely promote a book I count among my favorites, in a forum dedicated to that subject. It's up to the person to consider the opinion or discard it.

I read Lolita and didn't particularly like it; there were passages where I really enjoyed Nabokov's writing style ("Lo-lee-ta: the tip of the tongue taking a trip of three steps down the palate to tap, at three, on the teeth. Lo. Lee. Ta."), however, I quickly realised this book was - while about a paedophile - was actually also about a girl discovering her sexuality and using it to her "advantage."
I found the book more controversial, not because of what is essentially child molestation, but more-so because of how a child is portrayed as a sexually aware, manipulative girl - utterly aware of her power over Humbert.

While the Nabokovs were already in the US they tried very hard to have it published there. But no one wanted to do so, many ATTACKING it as plain pornography, immoral, etc.
It was first published abroad. Initially got tepid reviews. Then Graham Greene praised it. This, together with the negative publicity it got, helped it get published in the US where it became a monster bestseller, battling toe-to-toe for many weeks with Pasternak's Doctor Zhivago in the bestsellers list.
Read VERA first (Mrs. Nabokov's biography), one of my most recent reads. It made me want to read all of Nabokov's books.

Maybe not an attack but its just disrespectful I find personally when others are pressured upon to read something they have already expressed an opinion about being disinterested about and their reasons why. I will read Lolita personally speaking however I can see, subject matter wise why it wouldn't be for everyone and if someone expressed an opinion to not read it, would understand it rather than try to convince them to read outside their comfort zone. And you couldn't get further outside someones potential comfort zone with borderline if not outright paedophilia. No offence meant to yourself either.

Moving on.

That does sound interesting, thanks for mentioning it. I recently picked up a book of Nabokov's letters (Dear Bunny, Dear Volodya: The Nabokov-Wilson Letters 1940-1971) which looks pretty interesting.
But back to the list - I'm not sure that there are any books I flat out refuse to read. I try to be pretty open to most things, though some will be harder for me to pick up primarily due to writing style (looking at you, Pynchon). Ultimately I know I will read them, but I'm not in as large a rush to hit up those as I am to read others. I did finally read Infinite Jest which I never thought I would do, so that's encouraging that eventually I'll muddle through some of the other ones of the same ilk (or what I perceive to be similar).

As for my "not to read" books...well, I made it through War & Peace, but I'm done with doorstops for a while. My husband absolutely LABORED through Gravity's Rainbow, and he's usually a crazy fast reader. His lack of enthusiasm has dulled my interest in that one.
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