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Ultimate Popsugar Reading Challenge discussion

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2015 Challenge Prompts > Prompt 23: A book more than 100 years old

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message 1: by Ann (new)

Ann What books are you reading in this category? What recommendations do you have?


message 2: by Lynn (new)

Lynn (lynnali) Does the actual book have to be over 100 years, or just copyright before 1914? I'm lucky enough to have books that fit both of requirements, but wasn't sure which the prompt meant.


message 3: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 8 comments I'm taking that as the copyright before 1914. I'd be hard pressed to get my hands on an actual book that is over 100 years old :)


message 4: by Ann (new)

Ann I agree. I think they mean published before 1914.


message 5: by Martta (last edited Dec 29, 2014 12:15PM) (new)

Martta (themarttaship) I'm going to read Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe.
For this prompt I recommend Penguin classics because it's relatively easy to find those and penguin has done many books first published in the nineteenth century.


message 6: by Emily (new)

Emily (elimeno) | 17 comments Anna Karenina! Finally going to give it a try.


message 7: by Kerri (new)

Kerri | 56 comments At my library there is a set of second edition Charles Dickens novels copyright 1857 Kent, England! I freaked when I saw them the first time. The librarian didn't even know what she had.


message 8: by Julia (last edited Feb 11, 2015 04:43PM) (new)

Julia (_mj_howard) | 57 comments I read "The Picture of Dorian Gray" by Oscar Wilde and really enjoyed it.


message 9: by Jules (new)

Jules Lewis (jules_lewis) | 30 comments I'm going to read the The Murders in the Rue Morgue by Edgar Allan Poe, keeping to my overarching theme of "Try and read a mystery/crime story for every prompt!"


message 10: by Lara Ruark (new)

Lara Ruark I just finished "Frankenstein" by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley. It was first published in 1818. I had never read it before and it was not what I expected at all.


message 11: by Donna (new)

Donna Bettis (donnabettis) I read Sherlock Holmes A Study in Scarlet.


message 12: by Cheri (new)

Cheri (sherryberryx) | 13 comments I'm currently reading Great Expectations by Charles Dickens to fulfill this one. I'm thinking it's going to be a slow burn for me though. I remember reading it in high school but had a hard time with it, hopefully it will be better now that I'm older and that it's not required but rather because I chose to read it.


message 13: by Alexis (last edited Feb 09, 2015 09:43AM) (new)

Alexis O (saboknits) | 76 comments I started reading The Wind in the Willows, published in 1908, to my daughter in 2013! She wasn't enjoying it, so we took a very long break. I would take it out every couple of months and then finally, the story was at a part she found engaging. We finished the book yesterday. The vocabulary can be a bit cumbersome and it was hard for her 6 and 7 year old self to pay attention to it. It was a cute story, but not one of our favorite family reads.
The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame


message 14: by Tatiana (last edited Apr 15, 2015 08:38PM) (new)

Tatiana (pluidenovembre) | 29 comments My plan for this prompt is to finally read La Reine Margot by Alexandre Dumas.


message 15: by Luella (last edited Apr 15, 2015 09:34PM) (new)

Luella I really wanted to read the 1898 version of Futility by Morgan Robertson which is known mostly as the story that "predicted" the Titanic.

I found it this was almost an impossible task until I found this link to the story from The Ohio State University Library.

I looked through the 1912 version after reading this one and I liked the original ending much better. It is much more fitting to the theme and title of the book.

I'm picking this one to fulfill the 100 year old prompt.


message 16: by Sara (new)

Sara I read Peter Pan by J.M. Barrie.


message 17: by Megan (new)

Megan (megabou) | 64 comments I plan on reading Great Expectations by Charles Dickens.


message 18: by Spring (new)

Spring Foulger | 10 comments Evangeline: A Tale of Acadie - it's a short read but I liked it.


message 19: by Guylian (new)

Guylian Just finished Oscar Wilde "The Picture of Dorian Gray".


message 20: by Michelle (new)

Michelle Johnson (mascaratomidnight) | 85 comments I see two of you have Dorian Gray as your book. I have that on my kindle to read soon.

Reading a book that is 100 years old is old hat for me. I regularly read and love classics.

I went with Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl. Very well written and quite engaging. Given the circumstances yesterday (today? I live in singapore....I dont know when exactly it happened) with the pool party and all the black kids, I was super glad to have read it. Should be required reading in every school.


message 21: by Kerryann (new)

Kerryann Franklin | 61 comments I read Peter and Wendy by J.M. (James Matthew)


message 22: by Belinda (new)

Belinda (belindalt) | 99 comments I'm going to read Ramona


message 23: by Kirsten (new)

Kirsten  (kmcripn) I just finished reading The Count of Monte Cristo The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas by Alexandre Dumas for this prompt. Have now finished 33 of the prompts.

/review/show...


message 24: by Tori (new)

Tori | 11 comments Incidents in the life of a slave girl. By, Harriet Jacobs


message 25: by Angie (new)

Angie (sparkingjoyinreading) | 32 comments I read The Sign of Four by Arthur Conan Doyle.


message 26: by Melody (new)

Melody | 208 comments For this prompt, I reread Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare. The first quarto was published in 1597, making it 418 years old. R&J has been a long time favorite of mine, and if you haven't yet read it I definitely recommend it, a great anti-love story.


message 27: by Lisa (new)

Lisa (lrclark83) I started reading The Turn of the Screw but have yet to finish it. The prose is extremely dense and there is lots of description but little action.


message 28: by Malgorzata (new)

Malgorzata (therealmadmags) | 24 comments I read The War of the Worlds, as it had been on my "to read" list for quite some time. Not the greatest book I've ever read, but I still quite enjoyed it.


message 29: by Hilary (new)

Hilary | 32 comments I just read Anne of Green Gables which I hadn't read in 25 ish years (!!) and it was lovely. I forgot how much I loved this book an I'm looking forward to reading the rest of the series. I'd struggled with this category all year, trying to read all sorts of different things. I'm relieved I found something.


message 30: by Heloisa (new)

Heloisa Angeli (heloisa_angeli) This year I read/listen many books from project gutenberg/audiovox, and many of these titles in public domain are more than one hundred years old.

One of them was Anne of Green Gables (and Anne of Avonlea), although I put them in other categories (A book with a color in the title) - I have never heard about this book before, it is really cute, made me so happy. I hope to give a translation to my mother in the future.


message 31: by Krista (new)

Krista I am re-reading Alice in Wonderland.


message 32: by Kerri (new)

Kerri | 56 comments I read Villette by Charlotte Bronte. Villette Villette  by Charlotte Brontë


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