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Guardian Newspaper 1000 Novels discussion

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Talk About Books > How many of the LIST books have you read?

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RJ - Slayer of Trolls (hawk5391yahoocom) Today I finished:

A Princess of Mars (Barsoom, #1) by Edgar Rice Burroughs
A Princess of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs
Rating: 3 stars
Review: /review/show...


BAM doesn’t answer to her real name | 18 comments Just completed my guardian 2nd quarter update. I've read 395 of the list. I still haven't figured out which books I'm missing though. I think I have it down to ten.


message 253: by Fay (new)

Fay Roberts | 363 comments Leslie wrote: "Fay wrote: "Leslie wrote: "Bryan "They call me the Doge" wrote: "Ever the slacker, I was only able to eke out 4 titles this last month.
..."

I was even more slack than that! I only read one new-to..."


Ugh! GOT...... I really enjoyed them at first but never made it through the fifth (which isn't like me) because I just didn't give a monkeys about any of the remaining characters!
Did you read them all?


message 254: by Fay (new)

Fay Roberts | 363 comments BAM wrote: "Just completed my guardian 2nd quarter update. I've read 395 of the list. I still haven't figured out which books I'm missing though. I think I have it down to ten."

Go You!!


message 255: by Darren (new)

Darren (dazburns) | 1023 comments Mod
BAM - I think Dom Casmurro is one of your "missing"
still working on the others...


BAM doesn’t answer to her real name | 18 comments Just added it thanks D


RJ - Slayer of Trolls (hawk5391yahoocom) I finished:

A Judgement in Stone by Ruth Rendell
A Judgement in Stone by Ruth Rendell
Rating: 4 stars
Review: /review/show...


message 258: by Leslie (new)

Leslie | 904 comments Fay wrote: "Leslie wrote: "Fay wrote: "Leslie wrote: "Bryan "They call me the Doge" wrote: "Ever the slacker, I was only able to eke out 4 titles this last month.
..."

I was even more slack than that! I only ..."


This (Lonesome Dove) is the only one I have read. Westerns are generally not my kind of book, though I have liked some.


message 260: by Pamela (new)

Pamela (bibliohound) | 146 comments Wow Fay that's so impressive.

Just 4 from the list for me this month taking me to 221

Beloved
A High Wind in Jamaica
The Rings of Saturn
Norwegian wood


Bryan--The Bee’s Knees (theindefatigablebertmcguinn) | 566 comments Not much for me this month. Just Les Liaisons Dangereuses and White Teeth by Zadie Smith.


message 262: by Leslie (new)

Leslie | 904 comments Wow, Fay - an amazing reading month for you! Congrats :)

I read 3 -
A High Wind in Jamaica
The Years of Rice and Salt
Bones and Silence

plus one from Balzac's Human Comedy:
Domestic Peace


message 263: by Darren (last edited Jul 12, 2020 03:13PM) (new)

Darren (dazburns) | 1023 comments Mod
6 more for me in June, making 419 total

Go Tell It On The Mountain Baldwin, James - 3.5
A High Wind In Jamaica Hughes, Richard - 2.5
Norwegian Wood Murakami, Haruki - 4
Sister Carrie Dreiser, Theodore - DNF
Our Man In Havana Greene, Graham - 4
Victory Conrad, Joseph - 4

plus one Re-Read:
Titus Groan Peake, Mervyn - 4.5


message 265: by RJ - Slayer of Trolls (last edited Jul 25, 2020 11:30AM) (new)

RJ - Slayer of Trolls (hawk5391yahoocom) I finished the crime classic:

The Friends of Eddie Coyle by George V. Higgins
The Friends of Eddie Coyle by George V. Higgins
Rating: 5 stars
Review: /review/show...

which brings me to 100 read! (Although that is counting series books, like Lord of the Rings, Discworld, etc., as separate books instead of one book for the whole series.)


message 267: by Jamie (new)

Jamie Barringer (Ravenmount) (ravenmount) | 27 comments I finished a few more List books since I joined earlier this summer:
Blott on the Landscape, by Tom Sharpe
Atonement, by Ian McEwan
Enduring Love, by Ian McEwan
The Code of the Woosters, by P.G. Wodehouse
Death at the President's Lodging, by Michael Innes

Excellent Women, by Barbara Pym
Hyperion, by Dan Simmons
The Millstone, by Margaret Drabble
A Gun for Sale, by Graham Greene
Native Son, by Richard Wright


I am currently working on the Gormenghast trilogy, so I'll be checking off Titus Groan soon, too. But first I am finishing a non-list tome, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich(William Shirer), which I have been meaning to read for years. :)


message 268: by Leslie (last edited Jul 30, 2020 09:47PM) (new)

Leslie | 904 comments I won't be reading any list books before August starts so I may as well post my July progress now. I finished 3 new-to-me books from the list in July plus 1 from Balzac's "Human Comedy" & 2 rereads:

New to me:
Revelation Space
Joseph Andrews
The Posthumous Memoirs of Brás Cubas

Balzac:
Paz

Rereads:
Of Mice and Men
The Code of the Woosters

I am now at 547 read out of 1000...


message 269: by Fay (new)

Fay Roberts | 363 comments @lesley So impressed!


message 270: by Pamela (new)

Pamela (bibliohound) | 146 comments During July I read 7 new-to-me from the list.

Revolutionary Road
On the Road
The Plague
The Odd Women
A Taste for Death
Orlando
Herzog

That brings me up to 228 total.


Bryan--The Bee’s Knees (theindefatigablebertmcguinn) | 566 comments Looks like I just eked out 1 for July:

Mother by Maxim Gorky, which is pretty lame, by the way.

271 total


message 273: by Darren (last edited Aug 03, 2020 08:03AM) (new)

Darren (dazburns) | 1023 comments Mod
Well Done Fay - what a tremendous haul!
(btw do you not give your read books a ŷ Star Rating?)

meanwhile, I managed a rather lowly (for me) 4 G1000-ers in July:
I Capture The Castle Smith, Dodie 1948 - 3.5 Stars
A Dark-Adapted Eye Vine, Barbara 1986 - 4
Diary Of A Nobody Grossmith, George 1888 - 3.5
The Crime of Father Amaro Eca de Queiros, José Maria de 1880 - 5 Star Masterpiece

making 423 total.

oh, and an "OTGA":
Island Huxley, Aldous 1962 - 2.5

and two "Should Be On The List"-ers:
High-Rise Ballard, J. G. 1975 - 5 Star Masterpiece
Independent People Laxness, Halldor 1934 - 4.5


message 274: by Fay (new)

Fay Roberts | 363 comments @Darren. No I don’t give star ratings. I did for the for the first couple of years I was on here but then realised that I was grading differently for different genres and couldn’t decide whether I should grade on content or technical style or enjoyment or all three; especially considering that so much depends on my mood when I read it too. It’s also why I leave a lot of vague and flippant comments in discussions because I always want to bring too much into it so it’s easier just to say “yay� or “ugh� and come across all “valley girl� than wrote a thesis on all the components ;-)


message 275: by Darren (last edited Aug 03, 2020 02:30PM) (new)

Darren (dazburns) | 1023 comments Mod
you could replace saying "yay" or "ugh" with 4 or 2 stars!
;o)


message 276: by Mela (new)

Mela (melabooks) | 85 comments I have spent the morning checking and ordering my shelves to find how many I have read and I am surprised that there are 99! Not bad as for a beginner. ;-)


message 277: by Leslie (new)

Leslie | 904 comments Mela wrote: "I have spent the morning checking and ordering my shelves to find how many I have read and I am surprised that there are 99! Not bad as for a beginner. ;-)"

Not bad at all! That's about where I was when I first discovered this list (I can't believe that it was 8 years ago now!!).


message 278: by Fay (new)

Fay Roberts | 363 comments Darren wrote: "you could replace saying "yay" or "ugh" with 4 or 2 stars!
;o)"


I will get on that ;-)


message 279: by Fay (new)

Fay Roberts | 363 comments Mela wrote: "I have spent the morning checking and ordering my shelves to find how many I have read and I am surprised that there are 99! Not bad as for a beginner. ;-)"

That's really good! Happy reading :-)


message 280: by Mela (new)

Mela (melabooks) | 85 comments Fay wrote: "That's really good! Happy reading :-)"

Thank you, Fay.


message 281: by Mela (new)

Mela (melabooks) | 85 comments Leslie wrote: "Not bad at all! That's about where I was when I first discovered this list (I can't believe that it was 8 years ago now!!)."

And how many have you read by now?


message 282: by Leslie (new)

Leslie | 904 comments Mela wrote: "Leslie wrote: "Not bad at all! That's about where I was when I first discovered this list (I can't believe that it was 8 years ago now!!)."

And how many have you read by now?"


547 if you count books tried and abandoned.


message 283: by Mela (new)

Mela (melabooks) | 85 comments Leslie wrote: "547 if you count books tried and abandoned."

Wow.


RJ - Slayer of Trolls (hawk5391yahoocom) I finished:

East of Eden by John Steinbeck
East of Eden by John Steinbeck
Rating: 5 stars
Review: /review/show...

The Tombs of Atuan (The Earthsea Cycle, #2) by Ursula K. Le Guin
The Tombs of Atuan by Ursula K. Le Guin
Rating: 4 stars
Review: /review/show...

and I started reading:

Prince Caspian (Chronicles of Narnia, #4) by C.S. Lewis
Prince Caspian by C.S. Lewis


message 285: by Fay (new)

Fay Roberts | 363 comments Just 7 new ones from the list this month taking me up to 386. I still find it really hard to rate them on a 5 star system but will give it a go....

The Third Policeman 3 stars (technically good, reasonably enjoyable but at times incomprehensible)
Red Dragon 3 stars (a gripping read but pretty much instantly forgettable)
Brighton Rock 4 stars (a page turner with some lasting effect)
True History of the Kelly Gang 4.5 (a page turning, one I will remember for a while. Technically very good)
A Dry White Season 4 stars (as above but I found the start quite slow and the end a bit anti-climatic)
The Riddle of the Sands 2 stars (not my thing at all. I don't like this kind of adventure story and the technical nautical details and geography made it incredibly dry. Ending sucked. I do get it was written with the purpose of making sure Britain knew that Germany could invade by sea unless they did something so that's why all the detail but still not for me)
Loitering with Intent 3 stars (fun and gripping but instantly forgettable)


Human Comedy:
The Illustrious Gaudissart ?stars (I don't remember this at all and I only read it 4 weeks ago.....)
The Muse of the Department 2 stars (I think my translation was dodgy, the two halves of the story didn't seem to gel. But I can remember it so.......)
The Old Maid / The Cabinet Of Antiquities 3 stars for both (fun snapshot of provincial life and actually gave me something to think about for a change)
Two Poets 3 stars (first in a trilogy and actually interested in what happens to them)


Bryan--The Bee’s Knees (theindefatigablebertmcguinn) | 566 comments Well, it wouldn't have taken much effort to do better than the 1 book I managed to read off the list in July, but even still I only got 3, and a Human Comedy short.

We by Yevgeny Zamyatin
The Third Policeman by Flann O'Brien
Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf

plus

Melmoth reconcilié by Honoré de Balzac

That either brings me to 273 read (my tally), or 275 read (List challenges tally). Some cold lonely night, I'll look and figure out where the two missing books are.


message 287: by Pamela (new)

Pamela (bibliohound) | 146 comments I managed 5 new books from the list in August

The Crime Of Father Amaro by Eça de Queirós (this was brilliant 5*)
Journey to the End of the Night by Louis-Ferdinand Céline
Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen
The Third Policeman by Flann O'Brien
Under the Net by Iris Murdoch

That brings me to a total of 233.

Plus I read one from the Comédie Humaine
Colonel Chabert


message 288: by Jamie (new)

Jamie Barringer (Ravenmount) (ravenmount) | 27 comments Finished since my last update:
Thank You Jeeves by PG Wodehouse (reread)
Heavy Weather by PG Wodehouse
The Code of the Woosters by PG Wodehouse (reread)
Joy in the Morning by PG Wodehouse (reread)
Enduring Love by Ian McEwan
The French Lieutenant’s Woman by John Fowles
The Drowned World by JG Ballard
Day of the Triffids by John Wyndham
We by Yevgeny Zamyatin
All the Pretty Horses by Cormac McCarthy


Currently reading:
Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes
Titus Groan by Mervyn Peake

I consumed lots of Wodehouse over the past month. He wrote so many books that it'll still be a while before I finish all of them, but I'm working on it. The only one on the Guardian list I haven't read yet for sure is Picadilly Jim.

I went through several Wyndham novels. I was just finishing The Day of the Triffids when people started getting those packages of unordered seeds from China, so that was amusing timing. I am working through a few Ballard novels this week/month, currently starting Cocaine Nights, which is on the Boxall list, and I just finished High-Rise, also on the Boxall list and my favorite so far of Ballard's novels.
On List Challenges I'm now at 270.


RJ - Slayer of Trolls (hawk5391yahoocom) I finished:

Prince Caspian (Chronicles of Narnia, #4) by C.S. Lewis
Prince Caspian by C.S. Lewis
Rating: 3 stars
Review: /review/show...


message 290: by Pamela (new)

Pamela (bibliohound) | 146 comments I managed 6 new books from the list in September

The Mysteries of Udolpho by Ann Radcliffe
Loitering With Intent by Muriel Spark
The Girls of Slender Means by Muriel Spark
Notes from Underground by Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Last Seen Wearing by Colin Dexter
A Room with a View by E.M. Forster

That makes 239 books, and hit a milestone of 50 books from the Love section


Bryan--The Bee’s Knees (theindefatigablebertmcguinn) | 566 comments Well, numerically I did a little worse than last month, but I did get a couple doorstoppers out of the way:

Bleak House by Charles Dickens

Middlemarch by George Eliot

List challenges has me at 277, but my count is only 275--not sure where the discrepancy is,


message 292: by ė (new)

ė | 50 comments I've not done an update on this since May it appears which is no surprise really as my reading activity has really dropped off cause of stresses at work and general ennui. I have been re-reading some comforting classics and listening to the whole of the Harry Potter series for escapism (Stephen Fry is just sensational as narrator!).

So since early May I've only managed 13 books from the list:

Lady Audley's Secret - 3/5
Love Story - 4/5
The Third Policeman - 2/5
A Far Cry from Kensington - 3/5
The Plague - 4/5
The Third Man - 2/5
My Ántonia - 3/5
The Spy Who Came In from the Cold - 3/5
A High Wind in Jamaica - 2/5
Go Tell It on the Mountain - 3/5
Perfume: The Story of a Murderer - 3/5
Rebecca - 5/5
Castle Rackrent - 2/5

This brings me to 198 read which means I should be able to hit the 200 milestone this month! :)


message 293: by Fay (new)

Fay Roberts | 363 comments Bryan--Treasurer, Middlemarch Appreciation Society wrote: "Well, numerically I did a little worse than last month, but I did get a couple doorstoppers out of the way:

Bleak House by Charles Dickens

Middlemarch by George Eliot

L..."


I really enjoyed both of these! Did you like them?


message 294: by Fay (new)

Fay Roberts | 363 comments ė wrote: "I've not done an update on this since May it appears which is no surprise really as my reading activity has really dropped off cause of stresses at work and general ennui. I have been re-reading so..."

That's amazing! Go you!

I agree with Stephen Fry's HP narration being top notch :-)


message 295: by Fay (last edited Oct 07, 2020 11:39AM) (new)

Fay Roberts | 363 comments I was really poorly so I read loads and loads of trash (which I always threaten to do and never get round to but I really did when I wasn't sleeping), so only managed to push it up to 390 with:

A Sentimental Journey 2 stars. I will have to read this again with you guys and see if it was just mood and lack of context that made it so sucky (proper literary term.....)
Air 4 Stars. Bit clunky in places but I loved it.
Lonesome Dove 4 stars. Surprisingly good and readable. Not one second felt like a chore.
A Good Man in Africa 2 stars. I was weirdly against the horrific misogyny and racism in this novel. Normally I'm like "well of it's time and place etc" but this time I was like "how are STDs and racism in the slightest bit amusing?" Again, I will have to read this again with you guys and see if it was just my mood at the time.

Rabbit Omnibus:
Rabbit, Run 4. Awful, awful character is Rabbit. Amazing writing though.
Rabbit Redux 3. Still great writing but the just not sure what on earth was happening here and just how awful they all where.

Human Comedy:
A Distinguished Provincial at Paris. Lost Illusions Part 2.
Eve and David Ugh I can't even rate them they are just soooooooooo twee. At least I have a working knowledge of the French debtors and publishing systems (which I do understand is the real point of this mammoth collection - to gain an insight into actual day to day life in the period; Modern Realism and all that jazz. But seriously has no one ever noticed that this man has like 4 plots? He should have just written an encyclopaedia. I'm almost at 50% of the way through the monstrosity and when I reach that I'm taking at least another 100 list books off before I read anymore. I'm only keeping going so I can be one of the few people who've done it and I aren't even ashamed of my motivation so there!)
As an aside to my HC rant I just spotted that I started the good old HC on 9th October 2018. Ahhh 2 years work and not even halfway through........That's super encouraging!


message 296: by Maggie (new)

Maggie | 43 comments Fay wrote: "I was really poorly so I read loads and loads of trash (which I always threaten to do and never get round to but I really did when I wasn't sleeping), so only managed to push it up to 390 with:

[b..."


Fay, I’m a bit disappointed to hear that as I’ve just started on reading the Human Comedy! Did you like it initially, and then got bored of it because of the repetitive plots? Or did you dislike it from the start? I read Pere Goriot and The Chouans last month and liked both of them very much, so was hoping I’d like the rest of the Human Comedy too. But perhaps I should lower my expectations, given your experience with it.


message 297: by Fay (new)

Fay Roberts | 363 comments Maggie wrote: "Fay wrote: "I was really poorly so I read loads and loads of trash (which I always threaten to do and never get round to but I really did when I wasn't sleeping), so only managed to push it up to 3..."

No I've always hated them lol. Whenever he tries a plot I find it sickly sweet and twee and whenever it's plain realism I glaze over in boredom. They just aren't my cup of tea at all. I was bemused at how Pere Goriot and Eugenie made it separately onto the list because they were so sweet and moralistic they gave me toothache (although I hade read 30 or so others in the same vein by the time I got to those so it could just have been the repetitiveness).

I'm about to start The Thirteen cycle and I'm dreading it because I've 'met' the majority of the characters before and I'm already rolling my eyes at the "society is corrupt and only bad people can prosper in it" message coming my way.......

You will probably really enjoy them; I tend to have "off" taste and a general rule of thumb is normally if everyone else liked it I didn't. I'm just contrary!


message 298: by Maggie (last edited Oct 08, 2020 08:42AM) (new)

Maggie | 43 comments Thanks, Fay. I don't think you're contrary, I'm sure there are plenty of people with the same tastes as you! I can definitely see how it might be tiring to read if all the plots are variations on the same theme. I'm reading the series mainly because I like it, and I'll continue reading as long as I like it. But if I get to the point where I'm dreading the next book, I'll stop.


Bryan--The Bee’s Knees (theindefatigablebertmcguinn) | 566 comments I haven't read near as much of the HC as Fay, but I'm kind of ambivalent about them. Pere Goriot seems to be about the best of his that I've read so far. Cousin Bette was like a soap opera. I'd also agree that many of his plots are similar.


message 300: by Leslie (new)

Leslie | 904 comments I didn't manage to read any new-to-me books (or even rereads!) from the list during September :-( This is the first month in several years that I didn't read at least one book from the list. Hopefully it will be my low point of the year!


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