Boxall's 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die discussion
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Which LIST book did you just start?
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Kirsten
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Aug 22, 2014 09:32AM

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As I'm nearly through Kafka I'm about to add Slaughterhouse 5 on to my other eReader and should start on that sometime this weekend.

S5 was a great for anyone thinking of tackling it - skips around a lot in time while still managing to be mostly linear and non confusing. And it's very short so easy to knock off in a few hours.


I think that it's last Jane Austen, which I haven't read from the list.




There also seems to be a lot of forshadowing. The book sort of spoils itself with all of it's portents scattered throughout.
I'm enjoying it so far though - I will be interested to compare it to The Vicar to see how similar they are in style.



I think the second book is my favorite so far. (I've just finished #4 and am about to start the next one.)

Fingers crossed.

I think the sec..."
Good to know Ursula! :) I've seen some people saying the second is better than the first in some reviews too! :) which makes me really excited about it!

..."
I've just finished the first as well. Don't think I'll start the second straight away, but this is making me look forward to it when I do.

Then again, I'm about 60% through Vicar so it probably wouldn't take much more than an hour or so to finish...


Actually it was way down my list, but I saw it mentioned in another connection, and jumped to it. So far a slow start - and a bit confusing – I started out thinking it would be fiction, but apparently it is more like an essay.

Actually it was way down my list, but I saw it mentioned in another connection, and jumped to it. So far a slow start - an..."
I think Reveries was meant as a part two of Rousseau's Confessions, which I guess must be his autobiography. I read Reveries without having read Confessions, and I think I missed out a lot. I might have to re-read it once I get around to read his earlier book.


Yes, that makes sense. But just knowing that it isn't fiction helps a lot. Otherwise we have a book opening with a first person story teller, who spends 10-15 pagers telling how mistreated he has been by the entire world – but without actually telling what has happened.





I've started to read a 1955 Pocket Books edition of *The Scarlet Letter* by Nathaniel Hawthorne.
Jim



The Colour
Actually, I'm almost finished with this one. It is good, but I somehow knew much of what would happen before it did...Strange, because there are certainly twists and turns in the story.
I think I'll start at the bottom of the list. Zorba the Greek has been on my dresser gathering dust - time to see how it ranks up with the movie.
Nice primer before I try to get In Search of Lost Time out of the way (also gathering dust). I've read the first two volumes - time to man up and digest the rest.
Nice primer before I try to get In Search of Lost Time out of the way (also gathering dust). I've read the first two volumes - time to man up and digest the rest.

The Colour
Actually, I'm almost finished with this one. It is good, but I somehow knew much of what would happen before it did...Strange, because there are c..."
Could you have read it before but just forgotten?
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Authors mentioned in this topic
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