Catching up on Classics (and lots more!) discussion
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What's everyone reading right now?

So I borrowed something easier, Hamlet, Revenge!, which is supposed to be a genre classic. (Never heard of the author before.) Classic mystery/detective novels have always been my light reading favourites. I think I read something that people learned something about Shakespeare while reading it so it might of course be useful in the coming pub quizzes. :-P
I finished A Princess of Mars last night, very good for being written in 1912. Read The Gift of the Magi today, a very short read, but also very good. Tonight I need to start a new read and I don't have a clue right now what I will pick.

@Bob, I've been wanting to read those books for ages! Tarzan of the Apes is a favorite of mine (who doesn't love a fun adventure story? Number 2 in the series is awful though) and have high hopes for A Princess of Mars. I've only seen the movie (John Carter, from Disney I think) and while it wasn't bad as simple action goes, I have a feeling the book is very different!



I was about 10, maybe, when I read those books. It was a looong time ago, so I don't remember too much about them. I just remember that in some books they went to some place where there were weird animals and stuff, maybe like dinosaurs. I think... I didn't really read them. I would guess they were varied, must have been, he wrote so many books.

Good point. Sometimes it seems like the more books an author writes, the less sure you can be of the quality. Perhaps it's that they take less time to complete the books than if you only publish something along the lines of a book every 10 years.

I hope you like it, it's still waiting for me. I mentioned the series at our meet-up and a couple did say they had liked it. I understood that all the books in the series belong to different genres or at least written with different styles, or something like that.

Who is the author? When I looked it up, there are several books with this title.

Thank you. Looks interesting.

Currently reading The Dovekeepers, hope to have it finished tomorrow night. Still wanting to reread A Christmas Carol.

@Cassandra, I LOVED Fahrenheit as well when I read it, think it might even be due for a reread soon :)
I loved it so much I was tempted to re-read it as soon as it was done. :) Hubby has stolen it though and then MIL wants it after him.

@Tracy: I LOVED the Night Circus. :)

@Moray, I have Shirley on my shelf, but have been too afraid to read it, because what if I didn't find it as good as Jane Eyre? Glad to hear it's at least as good! :)



I am also contemplating whether I should read Farewell, My Lovely or The Catcher in the Rye as my last book (if I have the time), they are 288 and 289 pages respectively. Yes, they have been chosen because of the page count. It's as good a reason to pick a book as any other, in my opinion. :-P At the moment I am leaning towards The Catcher but who knows about next week...
Currently reading Old Christmas: From the Sketch Book and Bel Canto, should finish both this weekend.
Tytti, I have read both Farewell, My Lovely and The Catcher in the Rye. I liked Farewell much better than Catcher. It is a 1930's crime mystery and has some slang and a lot of political incorrectness. It was a fun read.
Tytti, I have read both Farewell, My Lovely and The Catcher in the Rye. I liked Farewell much better than Catcher. It is a 1930's crime mystery and has some slang and a lot of political incorrectness. It was a fun read.


I'm glad I'm not the only one that does this! I might have an audiobook in progress at New Years since those can take weeks to listen to but I do try to clear out any print books in progress before the New Year hits.
I'm trying to clean some books off my TBR this month, so I haven't been reading many classics but I might make an exception and try to get Kafka's The Trial read while there's still a group read of Invitation to a Beheading going on.


Tytti, I definitely recommend reading The Catcher...! I read it earlier this year for the first time and absolutely loved it. It's important though to keep in mind that Holden is somewhere specific when he starts telling the story and where exactly that is, which should be clear once you reach the end. Most people miss that particular point and then dismiss Holden, the main character, as simply being whiney.





I read that numerous times as a child and re-read it recently. I still love it too. It's such a great story, with so many droll characters. And little Gerda! What edition did you read, Mary?

I read that numerous times as a child and re-read it recently. I still ..."
Mary wrote: "Kallie wrote: "Mary wrote: "I just read The Snow Queen by Hans Christian Andersen. I loved it!"
I read that numerous times as a child and re-read it recently. I still ..."
Thanks. The voice is very like my edition's, though mine doesn't have Little Tuk, which I just read.
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Half-way through and after a solid start, has become rather dull with too many unpoetic and unnecessary descriptions. The fact that it's slightly lower on the Boring-scale than it's movie mate barely makes up for the fact that reading 300 pages takes much longer (and leaves for no multitasking) than a +2'40" movie.