Vintage Tales discussion
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What are you currently reading?


The Wind in the Willows
The Insider

The Kite Runner
The Metamorphosis
Candide
Anna Karenina







The Knife of Never Letting Gowhich is a pretty good read and will finish this week cuz it's due back to the library on Sunday.-hardback book
Kingdom Keepers 7 the Insider by Ridley Pearson-hardback book
Killer Rumors by Antonello Fiore as a thriller read for review request ebook
and got two read for review requests coming up with Ruthless by Steven F. Freeman and SmokeScreen by Tasha Lessey.-ebooks
I will hopefully read Frankenstein sometime this Summer since its a ebook on my tablet with Under the Dome and so on. Just got to finish what I am currently reading first.




Next on my schedule will be The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde.




I'm reading The Picture of Dorian Gray, which novel forms part of the book The Portable Oscar Wilde. I've already read the two plays Salome and The Importance of Being Earnest, both of which I loved very much. In fact, I had studied The Importance of Being Earnest at high school but it was only when I re-read it a few years ago that I had a much better appreciation of the deep satire of the play.


My 4-star review of "The Picture of Dorian Gray":
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
I'm glad that I've found Wilde's poem "The Ballad of Reading Gaol" (which he wrote while in prison) in "The Portable Oscar Wilde". I'm reading the poem - it's so heart-wrenchingly sad!



I also read the epic Gilgamesh, in a very accessible verse translation by David Ferry. Not my favorite classic, but it has some powerful moments. It's basically about death and the impermanence of things. The end of the story has been lost, and it cuts off sort of in the middle of things.
I just finished Age of Bronze Volume 1: A Thousand Ships, Eric Shanower's comic about the Trojan War. My library has just the first two volumes, but there are two more out so far.

Recently I read A Midsummer Night's Dream as a group read and The Last Day of a Condemned Man by Victor Hugo.





Currently reading J.R.R. Tolkien: Author of the Century and taking lots of notes.




I love that book! It's difficult to read at first, but it's amazing.

He has a way of creating a comical silver lining, in even the most dismal of situations. Although many people find hi unrealistic, I feel that in his writing, he does exactly what we tend to do; that is, embellishing that which needs embellishment and humor. :)



Books mentioned in this topic
Helsing: Demon Slayer (other topics)And the Shofar Blew (other topics)
Agnes Grey (other topics)
Knight Brew (other topics)
Persuasion (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Liane Zane (other topics)Francine Rivers (other topics)
Heather Day Gilbert (other topics)
Samuel Taylor Coleridge (other topics)
William Wordsworth (other topics)
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I have the Barnes & Noble Classics edition.