The Readers Review: Literature from 1714 to 1910 discussion

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Nominations - Archives > Poll - July 2015

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message 1: by Silver (last edited Jun 01, 2015 07:50PM) (new)

Silver It is time to start thinking about what we wnat to read in July. For July we will do something a little different. For July we will be focusing on a German work of literature. I think there is a lot of good interesting literature from Germany within our time period which hasn't been much explored.

So please nominate the work by a German author that you would like to read.


Deadline June 8th


message 2: by Frances, Moderator (new)

Frances (francesab) | 2286 comments Mod
I would like to nominate Effi Briest


message 3: by Frances, Moderator (new)

Frances (francesab) | 2286 comments Mod
Don't forget the time period ends in 1910.


message 4: by Marie (last edited Jun 01, 2015 08:34PM) (new)

Marie Williams Buddenbrooks The Decline of a Family by Thomas Mann Buddenbrooks by Thomas Mann.

Or Effi Briest or Faust


message 5: by Silver (new)

Silver I am going to with Beneath the Wheel


message 6: by Feliks (last edited Jun 01, 2015 08:38PM) (new)

Feliks (dzerzhinsky) oh noooes. flashbacks to tortured prepubescence with that one :D


message 7: by Feliks (new)

Feliks (dzerzhinsky) Thomas Mann is the author of my favorite pre-WWII 20th century European novel (an era which has some stern competition for top spot). Really my favorite European novel, for all intents & purposes. 'Magic Mountain'. It takes a lot to be #1 in my ranks, but he did it.


message 8: by Silver (new)

Silver Feliks wrote: "oh noooes. flashbacks to tortured prepubescence with that one :D"

I love Hesse


message 9: by Johanna (new)

Johanna | 3 comments I second Buddenbrooks


message 10: by Feliks (new)

Feliks (dzerzhinsky) that's a mighty long book as I recall..?


message 11: by Marie (new)

Marie Williams Around seven hundred pages, depending on edition.


message 12: by Feliks (new)

Feliks (dzerzhinsky) Well, I will admire you all greatly should you choose it.


message 13: by Harrison (new)

Harrison Wein (harrisonbaewein) | 20 comments I'd like to nominate ETA Hoffman's The Devil's Elixirs.


message 14: by Feliks (last edited Jun 02, 2015 11:51AM) (new)

Feliks (dzerzhinsky) Now that's a cool choice.
I've been interested in reading more from Hoffman, as I realize more of his influence.

I myself have settled on my selection:
'Before the Storm' (1878) by Theodor Fontane.

I will delete my earlier posts in this thread to avoid confusion.


message 15: by Hippystick (new)

Hippystick | 17 comments The sorrows Of young Werther by Goethe for me.


message 16: by Madge UK (new)

Madge UK (madgeuk) | 2933 comments What about Die Judenbuche, a murder mystery by an 19thC female German author, Annette von Droste?

From Wikipedia: 'Die Judenbuche (The Jew's Beech) is a novella written by Annette von Droste-Hülshoff and first published in 1842. It has been considered as potentially one of the first murder mysteries and is indeed often viewed as a crime thriller or Gothic fiction.....The story is based on a real-life 18th-century report provided by Annette von Droste-Hülshoff's uncle, the agronomist and writer August von Haxthausen. The events take place in the village of B. (Dorf B.) in the Westphalian mountains, which represents Bellersen in the former Prince-Bishopric of Paderborn, today part of the town of Brakel. The plot reflects the conditions of anarchy, bigotry, and antisemitism in a microstate's society of the disintegrating Holy Roman Empire.'


message 17: by Harrison (new)

Harrison Wein (harrisonbaewein) | 20 comments MadgeUK wrote: "What about Die Judenbuche, a murder mystery by an 19thC female German author, Annette von Droste?

From Wikipedia: 'It has been considered as potentially one of the first murder mysteries ..."


That's really interesting, as Hoffman, whose The Devil's Elixirs I nominated, is also often said to have written one of the first mystery stories, back in 1819. From Wikipedia's "Mystery Fiction" entry: "An early work of modern mystery fiction, Das Fräulein von Scuderi by E. T. A. Hoffmann (1819), was an influence on The Murders in the Rue Morgue by Edgar Allan Poe (1841)...."

The novel I nominated, though, is a trippy, almost psychedelic romp with an unreliable, probably insane narrator.


message 18: by Everyman (new)

Everyman | 3574 comments Hippystick wrote: "The sorrows Of young Werther by Goethe for me."

If it's chosen, will it result in mass suicides by the members of RR? [g]


message 19: by Everyman (new)

Everyman | 3574 comments Johanna wrote: "I second Buddenbrooks"

It's been on my TBR shelf for a long time, but if it's chosen, it'll stay on the shelf unless we are allowed longer than a month to read it.


message 20: by Johanna (new)

Johanna | 3 comments Is there a protocol for extending the period allowed for a book? It is a big book...

Everyman wrote: "Johanna wrote: "I second Buddenbrooks"

It's been on my TBR shelf for a long time, but if it's chosen, it'll stay on the shelf unless we are allowed longer than a month to read it."



message 21: by Silver (new)

Silver Johanna wrote: "Is there a protocol for extending the period allowed for a book? It is a big book...

Everyman wrote: "Johanna wrote: "I second Buddenbrooks"

It's been on my TBR shelf for a long time, but if it'..."


Yes, we have done it before. Most books are a month read but size of a particular is taken into consideration.


message 22: by Sharon (new)

Sharon Mcbride Buddenbrooks for a long one
Death in Venice for a quick but disturbing one
The Sorrows of Young Werther
Is All Quiet on the Western Front too recent?
What about some Kafka?


message 23: by Johanna (new)

Johanna | 3 comments Wonderful! Let's give it a shot then and see what happens...
Silver wrote: "Johanna wrote: "Is there a protocol for extending the period allowed for a book? It is a big book...

Everyman wrote: "Johanna wrote: "I second Buddenbrooks"

It's been on my TBR shelf for a long ..."



message 24: by Madge UK (new)

Madge UK (madgeuk) | 2933 comments Sharon wrote: "Buddenbrooks for a long one
Death in Venice for a quick but disturbing one
The Sorrows of Young Werther
Is All Quiet on the Western Front too recent?
What about some Kafka?"


Our timeline only goes to 1910.


message 25: by Silver (last edited Jun 10, 2015 01:00PM) (new)

Silver The poll is now open for July's book. Plese only vote if you intend to read the book of your choice.


message 26: by Everyman (new)

Everyman | 3574 comments Where are all the voters? There were 52 voters for the June book. Only 16 for the July book, and the winner had only 4 votes. That doesn't auger well for a robust discussion. Why the huge dropoff?


message 27: by Everyman (new)

Everyman | 3574 comments Another suggestion -- this forum is way down the discussions list, unfindable by anybody who is perusing the threads since it comes below the archives, and one wouldn't normally expect an active forum to come below the archives. Can one of the moderators move this forum higher up so it's more easily findable by browsers?

Not sure whether that made any difference for the low numbers in the July poll, or whether there just isn't much interest in German books, but it couldn't hurt to have it more visible.


message 28: by Silver (new)

Silver Everyman wrote: "Another suggestion -- this forum is way down the discussions list, unfindable by anybody who is perusing the threads since it comes below the archives, and one wouldn't normally expect an active fo..."

When the nomination/poll was open it was at the top, I only dropped it back down once the poll was closed and book chosen.


message 29: by Ami (new)

Ami | 153 comments The "Classics" group is reading the same book as their quarterly read... Maybe this is another reason?

I'm sure more people will join in down the road once discussions begin ;)


message 30: by Sharon (new)

Sharon Mcbride Looking forward to starting this. Read it many moons ago in German when I was a student. I still have the copy I used but also ordered it from my local library. Wish I could dig out my notes from the attic! I found it fascinating. Hope everyone else enjoys it as much as I did.


message 31: by Everyman (new)

Everyman | 3574 comments Ami wrote: "The "Classics" group is reading the same book as their quarterly read... Maybe this is another reason?)"

Which classics group? There are several. Classics and the Western Canon isn't reading it -- it's reading T.S. Eliot at the moment, to be followed by Faust. No Buddenbrooks in sight! (Though we did do the Magic Mountain a year or two ago.)


message 32: by Ami (new)

Ami | 153 comments Everyman wrote: "Ami wrote: "The "Classics" group is reading the same book as their quarterly read... Maybe this is another reason?)"

Which classics group? There are several. Classics and the Western Canon isn't r..."


Everyman, I am mistaken. The group I was referring to (Catching up with Classics) is actually reading "Don Quixote" as their quarterly read, "Buddenbrooks" was a nomination there too...I was under the impression it won the poll. I'm sorry.


message 33: by Bonnie (last edited Sep 17, 2015 02:52AM) (new)

Bonnie | 311 comments Marie wrote: "Buddenbrooks The Decline of a Family by Thomas Mann Buddenbrooks by Thomas Mann. "

I am reading "Buddenbrooks: The Decline of a Family" now -- I love it. Sooo good. Characters, pacing, vivid descriptions, bits of sly humor, realistic plots, all bringing the 1800s ~To Life.~

Thank you for nominating it! I got "Death in Venice" today, I will read that when I'm done. May also re-read "The Magnificent Ambersons" to compare the literary decline of another (American) family.

I don't know why there was a drop off in the numbers in the summer -- I can see from the discussion that not many people read the selection. I want to encourage everyone* to read Buddenbrooks. It is excellent!

*everyone as in Readers Review 1800-1910 members, not everyone on the planet. ;->
We all are here because we enjoy classics and history? So I do not hesitate in recommending it to you all.


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