The Readers Review: Literature from 1714 to 1910 discussion

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Nominations - Archives > x - Nominations - May 2016

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message 1: by Deborah, Moderator (new)

Deborah (deborahkliegl) | 4617 comments Mod
It's a bit early for this but wanted to get us started. Please nominate a book you would like to read in May. One nomination per person please :) . It should be a book which we have not read in the last two years, and fits into our time period.


message 2: by Rosemarie, Moderator (new)

Rosemarie | 3310 comments Mod
I would like to nominate The House of the Seven Gables by Nathaniel Hawthorne or if you have read that already another book by the same author--The Blithedale Romance or The Marble Faun.


message 3: by Silver (new)

Silver I don't know if I will get many takers on this. I know James generates a lot of strong mixed feelings, but I haven't read him in a while, so I will put it out there.

The American by Henry James


message 4: by Deborah, Moderator (new)

Deborah (deborahkliegl) | 4617 comments Mod
Silver wrote: "I don't know if I will get many takers on this. I know James generates a lot of strong mixed feelings, but I haven't read him in a while, so I will put it out there.

The American by..."



If it wins, would you be willing to lead the discussion?


message 5: by Silver (new)

Silver Deborah wrote: "Silver wrote: "I don't know if I will get many takers on this. I know James generates a lot of strong mixed feelings, but I haven't read him in a while, so I will put it out there.

[book:The Amer..."


Yes I will


message 6: by Deborah, Moderator (new)

Deborah (deborahkliegl) | 4617 comments Mod
Silver wrote: "Deborah wrote: "Silver wrote: "I don't know if I will get many takers on this. I know James generates a lot of strong mixed feelings, but I haven't read him in a while, so I will put it out there. ..."

Great. I'm one of those with strong feelings about James so that helps out a lot,


message 7: by Lily (last edited Mar 21, 2016 10:25AM) (new)

Lily (joy1) | 2631 comments I've a good start on The Golden Bowl by Henry James right now and am hoping for not too many interruptions, since it has been on my TBR for so long. But I also have too many books I am trying to read concurrently right now -- Villette (I haven't joined the discussion, at least yet.), Emma , Of Human Bondage, and David Copperfield. So my reading is more than slightly out of control at the moment and I will be neither voting nor nominating here. But, I will speak in favor of Henry James, despite the distaste of so many for him. He may be obtuse at times, but I believe, if willing to put up with that, all the readers contributing regularly here have the reading skills and people/community sensitivity to be able to tackle him. I would try to fit in joining the discussion on The American if it is chosen.

Just took a look at the Goodreads reviews. Reinforced my interest. But, many have spoilers, so don't particularly recommend to those who care. Will quote this:

"...It's a fascinating struggle between the traditions, prejudices, and culture of the old world, and the new. Interestingly, The American has many highly comedic moments, and an even-handed amount of drama,..." -- Kirsten

Sorry for this diversion in the midst of a nominations thread, but I decided to petition a bit for James.


message 8: by Monique (new)

Monique (mdbabin) | 1 comments Hello, everyone. I'm new to the group so I hope I'm doing this right. :)

I'd like to nominate A Hazard of New Fortunes by William Dean Howells.

Here's the GoodReads synopsis: "A self-made millionaire and a social revolutionary are at odds with each other in a novel set against the background of a nineteenth-century New York streetcar strike."


message 9: by Deborah, Moderator (new)

Deborah (deborahkliegl) | 4617 comments Mod
Monique wrote: "Hello, everyone. I'm new to the group so I hope I'm doing this right. :)

I'd like to nominate A Hazard of New Fortunes by William Dean Howells.

Here's the GoodReads s..."



You did just fine Monique :)


message 10: by Lori, Moderator (new)

Lori Goshert (lori_laleh) | 1795 comments Mod
I also have The American on my to-read list, so that sounds good. But then I've never read House of Seven Gables either, so not sure which one to vote for :-)


message 11: by Lynnm (new)

Lynnm | 3025 comments We actually read House of the Seven Gables just a short time ago - I think it was last summer?


message 12: by Deborah, Moderator (new)

Deborah (deborahkliegl) | 4617 comments Mod
Lynnm wrote: "We actually read The House of the Seven Gables just a short time ago - I believe it was last summer?"

It doesn't appear on our read shelf


message 13: by Everyman (new)

Everyman | 3574 comments I'm going to go for something lighthearted for spring: Jerome K. Jerome's Three Men in a Boat

While it's viewed as a work of humor, it's based on an actual trip and started out as a travel guide for the then fairly recent passion for leisure boat-camping in England. But the humor soon won out over the travel information.


message 14: by Emerson (new)

Emerson I nominate South: the Endurance Expedition, I hope it's okay, I'm new here.


message 15: by Deborah, Moderator (new)

Deborah (deborahkliegl) | 4617 comments Mod
Emerson wrote: "I nominate South: the Endurance Expedition, I hope it's okay, I'm new here."

Emerson, thanks for your nomination. Unfortunately, we only cover up to 1910. This work is later than that. We'd love to have you nominate something else.


message 16: by Emerson (new)

Emerson Thought it was close enough, allright then I'll nominate The Doll by Bolesław Prus thank you.


message 17: by Lynnm (last edited Mar 22, 2016 09:54AM) (new)

Lynnm | 3025 comments Deborah - it was the summer of 2014 that we read The House of the Seven Gables. If you look through the polls, you can see that it won the poll.

EDIT - And I just found the discussion threads in the archives. It was a discussion led by Silver.

While I don't think that we can never reread a book, but Summer 2014 wasn't that long ago. Too many books from this time period that we haven't read to repeat a book that we just read a little under two years ago.


message 18: by Gem , Moderator (new)

Gem  | 1232 comments Mod
I nominate The War of the Worlds by H.G. Wells.


message 19: by Rosemarie, Moderator (new)

Rosemarie | 3310 comments Mod
In that I will go with my second choice-- The Blithdale Romance.

As an additional comment, I want to read all of the nominated books so far!


message 20: by Tracey (new)

Tracey (traceyrb) I would like to nominate The Bride of Lammermoor by Sir Walter Scott


message 21: by Everyman (new)

Everyman | 3574 comments Tracey wrote: "I would like to nominate The Bride of Lammermoor by Sir Walter Scott"

Ooh, we've only read one Scott before, and he was such a major 19th century writer he deserves more attention from us.


message 22: by Ustink (new)

Ustink The Call of the Wild
Emma
The Count of Monte Cristo
War & Peace


message 23: by Deborah, Moderator (new)

Deborah (deborahkliegl) | 4617 comments Mod
Ustink wrote: "The Call of the Wild
Emma
The Count of Monte Cristo
War & Peace"


One nomination per person so please choose the one you would most like to read


message 24: by Everyman (new)

Everyman | 3574 comments Deborah wrote: "...
One nomination per person so please choose the one you would most like to read"


Perhaps the format should be "most like to read and discuss." Maybe it's just me, but I think it's a waste of the group intelligence if (as I know people have done in the past, maybe not here, but definitely in other groups) people just nominate books they want to read but have no interest in discussing.


message 25: by Rosemarie, Moderator (new)

Rosemarie | 3310 comments Mod
There is such a range of books suggested as group selections that I would enjoy reading and discussing many of them. In another group I was the only person reading the book. This group has interesting discussions, which I really enjoy, but not all books lend themselves to discussions.


message 26: by Pip (last edited Mar 26, 2016 07:42PM) (new)

Pip | 467 comments Rosemarie wrote: "not all books lend themselves to discussions. " and Everyman wrote "a waste of the group intelligence"

There I politely and most respectfully disagree with you! Written and spoken words are a product of a person, a place and a time and, as such, are intrinsically interesting. If you add literary critical theories into the equation, you can get as many readings out of a three-word sentence as there are literary theorists ;-)

I think this group is intelligent enough to vote for the works they actually want to talk about; rarely - if ever - here have I seen a book voted for by masses followed by a flat discussion. Three cheers for the group Moderators.


message 27: by Rosemarie, Moderator (new)

Rosemarie | 3310 comments Mod
Pip, I agree that this group has excellent moderators. I concede that with a certain amount of effort and imagination, any book can lend itself to a discussion.


message 28: by Everyman (new)

Everyman | 3574 comments Pip wrote: "Rosemarie wrote: "not all books lend themselves to discussions. " and Everyman wrote "a waste of the group intelligence"

There I politely and most respectfully disagree with you! Written and spok..."


Perhaps I was unclear in my intent. I was referring to books that are nominated with no intent to discuss them.

As to whether any book can lend itself to a discussion, that may be true, but some are much more amenable to discussion than others. I'm not sure what we would do, for example, with Euclid's Elements (though it doesn't of course fall in our time period), or for one that does, some of the justifiably forgotten "french novels" of the period.

Fortunately, though, I think the issue is moot since this group is highly unlikely to vote in such a work. Still, I think it is unfortunate when people nominate a book they have no intention of discussing.


message 29: by Lily (last edited Mar 27, 2016 08:52AM) (new)

Lily (joy1) | 2631 comments Everyman wrote: " Still, I think it is unfortunate when people nominate a book they have no intention of discussing. ..."

Well, I do think occasionally a participant can recognize that a book would fit for the group to discuss even while having little personal interest or time for the discussion himself or herself. I don't think we should rule out such a benevolent contribution as possible. The group then has what should be a relatively easy decision for themselves -- endorse that nomination or not. I'd expect such cases to be rare, but not implausible.


message 30: by Jon (last edited Mar 27, 2016 02:06PM) (new)

Jon Abbott | 112 comments I nominate Lady Molly of Scotland Yard, by Baroness Orzcy, published in 1910. Here is one internet summary:

Lady Molly of Scotland Yard is a collection of short stories about Molly Robertson-Kirk, an early fictional female detective. It was written by Baroness Orczy, who is best known as the creator of The Scarlet Pimpernel, but who also invented two immortal turn-of-the-century detectives in The Old Man in the Corner and Lady Molly of Scotland Yard.

First published in 1910, Orczy's female detective was the precursor of the lay sleuth who relies on brains rather than brawn. The book soon became very popular, with three editions appearing in the first year. As well as being one of the first novels to feature a female detective as the main character, Orczy's outstandingly successful police officer preceded her real life female counterparts by a decade.

Lady Molly, like her fictional contemporaries, most often succeeded because she recognised domestic clues foreign to male experience. Her shocking entry into the male domain of the police is forgivable when it is discovered that her motive is to save her fiancé from a false accusation. Once her superior intuition has triumphed, Lady Molly very properly marries and leaves the force.



message 31: by Rose (new)

Rose Rocha dos Santos (roserocha) | 40 comments Hi, everyone!

I nominate Père Goriot and I would lead the discussion if needed.


message 32: by Deborah, Moderator (new)

Deborah (deborahkliegl) | 4617 comments Mod
Nominations are done. Poll will be up later today.


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