Book Nerd’s
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(group member since Dec 20, 2018)
Book Nerd’s
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from the Never too Late to Read Classics group.
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My god all that blather about slang!

Like that article said I noticed that the first lie was told by Geppetto and the morality of the story seems wildly inconsistent just like the intelligence of the animals.
I do like stories that don't shelter kids from violence and the real world. There's way too much of that these days.

Seriously ??? like this book isn't long enough :) "
Wow. A thick book I'd like to reread is The Count of Monte Cristo. I haven't read that since high school. Maybe this year or next...

I'm about half way through.

The style of this reminds me of The Brothers Karamazov in a lot of ways.
I like how there's an entire chapter explaining merde. lol.
Patrick wrote: "Many people (I've noticed) didn't like the part with the bishop"
A lot of the characters are really exaggerated. I know they're meant to be symbolic. The bishop is an almost perfect selfless person.


Thanks for putting these up.

Yeah, I wasted way too much time reading them.
Bernard wrote: "It was a clever plan to establish an author dynasty for Dune, but I could not get through the original."
It was never planned. Brian Herbert just started making money on his father's name, claiming to work from his notes.

I couldn't watch that scene in the BBC series. I hid behind a pillow!"
I haven't seen it but I can imagine. (view spoiler)

Which books do you have left?

Dead Girls, Dead Boys, Dead Things, I really love this trilogy and the author in general.
All of Dune(written by FRANK Herbert). A lot of people hate Dune Messiah for some reason, but it's my favorite.
The Foundation Trilogy
Stephen Baxter's Xeelee universe books. Transcendent, Ring, Xeelee: Endurance, etc.
And I'm a big fan of Star Wars books BEFORE Disney. I think they just make up a great long epic.

In fantasy my favorite is probably A Song of Ice and Fire. I love the huge world GRRM has built.
Of course I love Lord of the Rings. And Narnia and Harry Potter.
I've mostly read the best known fantasy.

Anyway that was my one thought about the first part and I wonder how it will figure in the rest of the story.

The one thing that interested me is that this guy's basically a saint and believes in the good in hardened criminals but he firmly favors a monarchy over a republic. Not sure what that means if anything.

It's really a great heroic poem that makes you want to go out and slay monsters!
Just wondering, why three months to read it? It's pretty short.