Reading the Classics discussion
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What are you reading?
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Jenn, moderator
(last edited Jan 16, 2012 02:08PM)
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Jan 16, 2012 02:05PM

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I am currently reading four books. Of course Brave New World with this group. With the Readers Review they are doing a Dickens project and we are reading Nicholas Nickleby. There is a reading schedule that I am following which means I am only reading about 50 or 60 pages a week from it, which is not much. But I like to stick to reading schedules so I can follow discussions. So far the book is promising and I think I will like it better than the other two Dickens books I have read: The Pickwick Papers and Oliver Twist. I am also reading another book with the same group: The Mill on the Floss. I really am liking this book. The author is doing very well with character development, which I find important in a good piece of literature. I find it hard to hold back reading ahead of the reading schedule because I have already become so attached to the characters though I am only about a quarter of the way through it. Finally, I am also reading A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. I am enjoying this one very much as well. Betty Smith is another author who does well with character development.





In the history book club, reading


In Brain Pain, reading


In the Bookish group, reading


In my own Classical Self-Education group we just finished off a bunch of Plato, and moving on to

Also reading

Wow Will, you are reading quite a lot now. That is great! I can read pretty quickly so I can still get through quite a few books, but my time is limited to when I can actually sit down and read. It helps that I prefer reading to watching television with my husband in the evenings.
You are reading a lot, Will. I am reading of course Brave New World for this group and just finished the Color Purple by Alice Walker for 50 books to read group which I had read before and still liked. I am reading Dracula by Bram Stoker which I am enjoying very much, The Black Echo by Michael Connelley which I don't seem to like as much as I like John Grisham, and Eve and Adam by Kvam, Schearing and Ziegler which is not as easy as I hoped, all just for myself.






Anna Karenina

The Iliad

Cicero's Defence Speeches

I am very impressed by the number of books everyone is reading. I love all the classics on Jen's list and Will's eclectic mix is inspiring. I'll try to pick up the pace! ;-)


You know, I've had a mild urge to read Cicero for awhile. I had tried to start "On the Good Life" last year but fizzled out due to distractions. When I saw this book in your Self Education group, it inspired me once more. After reading the first couple of pages of Cicero's defense of Sextus Roscius, I was left with my mouth hanging open. He was brilliant!! Now I want to learn about different rhetorical techniques, logic, fallacies, etc.
Thanks for mentioning about the introduction. Usually I don't read them but in this case, I had a funny feeling I would need all the help I could get so I did read it.
What fun to be transported back to ancient Rome! :-)
I haven't read Cicero since I had to read him in high school for Latin class. Since that was many years ago and most of the time was spent translating, I would enjoy reading again in English as I have forgotten most of my Latin anyway.
This month I have quite a full plate of books to read. Currently I am reading four books: The Mill on the Floss, Nicholas Nickleby, Villette, and of course King Lear with our group. The first two I have been reading with a book group since the beginning of January and we are following a rather slow reading schedule for each.
I plan on reading also this month Mansfield Park, The Name of the Rose, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, The Pilgrim's Progress, and maybe The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy for fun if I have the time. I also was planning on reading Slaughterhouse Five as well, but I can't seem to find it in my local library so I might abandon that idea. I don't know how many of these books will actually get read but I hope to get as much reading as I can in before my second baby is born at the end of March. I plan on sacrificing my evening tv time to accomplish all this reading!
I have already read Rebecca this month and thought it was great. It was very well-written and caught and kept my interest right from the start. I would definitely recommend it for anyone who likes books like Jane Eyre, or light suspenseful or gothic reads.
I plan on reading also this month Mansfield Park, The Name of the Rose, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, The Pilgrim's Progress, and maybe The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy for fun if I have the time. I also was planning on reading Slaughterhouse Five as well, but I can't seem to find it in my local library so I might abandon that idea. I don't know how many of these books will actually get read but I hope to get as much reading as I can in before my second baby is born at the end of March. I plan on sacrificing my evening tv time to accomplish all this reading!
I have already read Rebecca this month and thought it was great. It was very well-written and caught and kept my interest right from the start. I would definitely recommend it for anyone who likes books like Jane Eyre, or light suspenseful or gothic reads.
Adriana, are you suggesting that for our group? If so, put it in the March nominations discussion section. A Dickens book would be good.


I've just finished reading The Tenant of Wildfell Hall - utterly amazing - I recommend it to all!
Currently reading: Pride and Prejudice.
Just joined this group and hoping to read Mansfield Park for the March read! :)
Lois wrote: "I really want to read Nicholas Nickleby!
I've just finished reading The Tenant of Wildfell Hall - utterly amazing - I recommend it to all!
Currently reading: Pr..."</i>
Hi, Lois. I will be reading [book:The Tenant of Wildfell Hall after I finish Villette, which should be pretty soon. I'm glad you recommend it. I really look forward to reading it. Mansfield Park is currently in the lead on the polls, so maybe you'll be able to read it with us. Either way, I look forward to you joining us in our March group read!
I've just finished reading The Tenant of Wildfell Hall - utterly amazing - I recommend it to all!
Currently reading: Pr..."</i>
Hi, Lois. I will be reading [book:The Tenant of Wildfell Hall after I finish Villette, which should be pretty soon. I'm glad you recommend it. I really look forward to reading it. Mansfield Park is currently in the lead on the polls, so maybe you'll be able to read it with us. Either way, I look forward to you joining us in our March group read!


Our group reads are not limited to what is on the group's to read shelf. Anyone can feel free to add any books to the shelf as long as they are classics, as well as nominate books for group reads that are not yet on the shelf. Modern classics count as long as they are at least 50 years old, give or take.


I started reading Middlemarch a few weeks ago too and I'm in the same situation. I have set it aside to go ahead with other books. Every time I think I want to go back to it another book seems to distract me. I'm not sure what it is either. The story seems interesting enough and it is well written. I even read The Mill on the Floss also by George Eliot and found it immensely enjoyable. Can't figure out why I am struggling either but I feel your pain Sarah. Lol.









I Don't Want to Kill You - Dan Wells (The 3rd in the Mr. Monster series. Great books!)

The Princess of Burundi - Kjell Eriksson (So far pretty good, I'm having a bit of trouble getting into it but that happens quite often for me....)


I'm currently reading Brave New World and The Great Gatsby (again)


I've always wanted to read Ivanhoe. I had exposure to that as well as Treasure Island, Kidnapped and Huckleberry Finn as a child with a bunch of abridged versions done for kids and I hate that because it's like I read them enough to be familiar with the story but didn't really READ them. I don't even know how long Ivanhoe actually is! Hope you're enjoying the read, though. :)

Hi, Alana! Yep, Ivanhoe's a great read, albeit, not an easy one. Most conversations contain medieval English words that I am now used to reading it with often a dictionary at hand. In spite of them, Scott's writing style is impeccably exciting and worth any knights-and-robin-hood-loving person's time! :)

"Ivanhoe" is also a great read; I loved the humor and consider Wamba one of the best characters providing comic relief in a novel.


I do it all the time. I can't do it with all books, it depends on the book and the reader. If the reader is boring or hard to understand, I can't listen, and if the book is such that I need to see character names and such, I can't do it either. Example: I've been really enjoying listening to Anna Karenina because I got an MP3 book (I think done by the BBC) that has a great, enthusiastic reader and the book is moving along nicely. I tried listening to Atlas Shrugged, however, and the reader was so boring I couldn't do it. I also tried Beloved by Toni Morrison, but the plot was sounding so complicated I knew I needed to see the words on paper.
I love putting a book on in the car while I drive and run errands or in my house while I'm working in the kitchen or doing other chores because it makes those tasks more pleasant, plus I can do two things at once. I love it! :)

On the topic of audiobooks though, I love them. I'm listening to Dunces via audiobook, in fact most of what I "read" is via audiobook. It's so convenient and I get to "read" so much more now. I mostly listen on my work commute (20m). Discovering that you could speed up the narrator was probably the most exciting moment of my year, although I had to ease it back down because I was finishing faster than I was getting new audible credits (I still am but it's not as bad).


Exactly! I will be driving about 20-30 minutes one way (or longer, depending on traffic) in a week or two and even now on just little trips for errands, I love having a book on instead of just songs on the radio. For one, I can't afford an iPod so I can't take my playlist with me and two, I hate constantly changing channels because there's another commercial or song I don't like. Means I mess with the dial less and probably makes me a safer driver. I actually started listening to them initially for long drives because just listening to loud music puts me to sleep, but listening to a book (especially a mystery I'm trying to figure out) actually keeps me mentally engaged so I don't fall asleep driving. Besides, makes me feel like I'm being productive and even if I get caught in traffic and driving takes a little longer than I planned, I never feel like the time is wasted, because I got to get a little more "reading" done. Great for road rage :).

I really like audio books but with 2 small toddlers its very easier for me to read because they are very noisy and will keep making more and more noise until i can't hear anything else except them.

I know, Denise! The same thing happens to me. That is why I don't like audio books that much. I prefer to have the written word right in front of me.
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