Catching up on Classics (and lots more!) discussion
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Paula W's 2017 Bingo Challenge
So glad you are coming back for another bingo challenge Paula. Hope you have fun with this one too.



I am quite sure I will read several books that fit into multiple categories and will need to change them around. I was planning to use "The Grapes of Wrath" for the Nobel Laureate category. Or maybe a Faulkner novel since I have never read one. But that could also work for New-To-You Author. My plan this year is just to read what I want to read and then see if it fits somewhere. I ended up reading several books last year that I really didn't like simply because I was trying to mark off a square.

If another Nobel Laureate comes up in this group or one of my other classic monthly reads that I want to read, I'll move "The Pearl" to short story square.
I'm not sure if I'm going to black out my board this year.
I'm getting "friendly" pressure from some folks in the mm group to try some of the more "intense" challenges rather than the team bingo I've been doing. I'm such a lightweight!

If another Nobel Laureate comes up in this group or one of my other classic monthly reads that I want to read, I'll move "The Pear..."
Hardly Andrea!!!!
Hope you're enjoying your challenge! Was The Importance of Being Earnest any good?
Sounds great! I'll probably read it for the challenge too. Thanks for reminding me of its existence :)


Great start of the year!!

I did not enjoy One Hundred Years of Solitude either, and I did not really enjoy Like Water for Chocolate.
But I do love Isabel Allende. I am thinking of reading her The House of the Spirits.
Beginning life as a letter to her dying, 100-year-old grandfather, the Peruvian-born novelist’s debut is a history of Chile told as a family saga through the female line. “At five,” she has said, “I was already a feminist but nobody used the word in Chile yet.”
Another I've on my list is Ficciones by Jorge Luis Borges
But I do love Isabel Allende. I am thinking of reading her The House of the Spirits.
Beginning life as a letter to her dying, 100-year-old grandfather, the Peruvian-born novelist’s debut is a history of Chile told as a family saga through the female line. “At five,” she has said, “I was already a feminist but nobody used the word in Chile yet.”
Another I've on my list is Ficciones by Jorge Luis Borges
Here are a couple of links to Best Latin American Novels (not all from South America):
http://www.latintimes.com/top-20-lati...
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/bo...
http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/...
http://www.latintimes.com/top-20-lati...
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/bo...
http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/...

But I do love Isabel Allende. I am thinking of read..."
That's a good idea. I wasn't able to read that one with the group last year, but I do have it on my kindle. I'm going to check audible, too, to see if there is a version with a narrator I like. Thanks!

But I do love Isabel Allende. I am thinking of read..."
I was thinking of Jorge Luis Borges too.


Thanks! I read Eva Luna some time last year and it was a 3-star read for me, if I recall correctly. I think I'll give House of the Spirits a try, but it will be a bit before I get to it.


Paula, I don't like magical realism very much and I didn't care for The House of the Spirits, but I just finished Inés of My Soul by Isabel Allende. It is historical fiction, not magical realism and I really enjoyed it.


Definitely Borges! Ficciones is mindbending and genius!


Definitely Borges! Ficciones is mindbending and genius!"
Oh yay! I'm reading that one this year. Can't wait!

Definitely Borges! Ficciones is mindbending and genius!"
I loved A Passage to India, but it did get off to a bit of a slow start. For me, it wasn't one of those books I could get really engrossed in, but more one I had to sit and think about.

Paula W wrote: "You guys, King Lear was fantastic. It is a classic Shakespearean tragedy with a lot of humor thrown in. I really liked it, and hope some of you can add it to your bingo challenge this ..."
I read it last year, you are correct -- great reading.
I read it last year, you are correct -- great reading.


I've been meaning to read this for the past couple of months and even have the book ready on my shelf, but keep delaying for some reason. Glad to hear you enjoyed it so much, this might give me the push to read it this month.

B1 - The Grapes of Wrath (May or June)
I1 - The Outsiders (probably May if it doesn't win the current poll)
I4 - War and Peace (currently reading)
N1 - Alive (June)
N4 - Jesus i have no clue (this will for sure be the last one I finish)
G2 - Lolita, or Don Quixote (planned for April)
G3 OPEN FOR SUGGESTIONS
G4 - Hard Times (currently reading)
G5 - It Can't Happen Here (currently reading)
O1 OPEN FOR SUGGESTIONS
O2 - Le Morte d'Arthur (planned for March)
O3. OPEN FOR SUGGESTIONS.
O5 - Beloved (planned for March)

I think you would like it. It is better than Othello, but not quite Hamlet. And it was a short read!
Paula...for G3 I am planning 10 Days in a Madhouse
03: If you want to go truly classic there is The Good Earth or A Many-Splendored Thing and have read them both and enjoyed them.
Or if you want to go more modern, there is anything by Amy Tan, which are all great.
Like your list...and looks like you are already well on the way to a completion.
03: If you want to go truly classic there is The Good Earth or A Many-Splendored Thing and have read them both and enjoyed them.
Or if you want to go more modern, there is anything by Amy Tan, which are all great.
Like your list...and looks like you are already well on the way to a completion.


Books mentioned in this topic
Little Women (other topics)A Doll's House (other topics)
The Alchemist (other topics)
The House of Mirth (other topics)
A Wrinkle in Time (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Louisa May Alcott (other topics)Henrik Ibsen (other topics)
Paulo Coelho (other topics)
Edith Wharton (other topics)
Madeleine L'Engle (other topics)
More...
B1: Written by Nobel Laureate- The Pearl by John SteinbeckB2: Classic Comedy or Satire- The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar WildeB3: Classic Tragedy- King Lear by William ShakespeareB4: Classic Made into a Film/TV- Fight Club by Chuck PalahniukB5: Winner of a Foreign Literary Prize- The Remains of the Day by Kazuo IshiguroI1: 20th Century Classic- Lolita by Vladimir NabokovI2: New-to-You Author- A Passage to India by E.M. ForsterI3: Classic Play- Antigone by SophoclesI4: Classic of More than 500 Pages- War and Peace by Leo TolstoyI5: 18th Century or Earlier Classic- Paradise Lost by John MiltonN1: South American Classic- The Alchemist by Paulo CoelhoN2: Short Story Classic- A Doll's House by Henrik IbsenN3: FREE SPACE - Little Women by Louisa May Alcott
N4: Poetry Collection- The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey ChaucerN5: European Classic- Romeo and Juliet by William ShakespeareG1: 19th Century Classic- Kidnapped by Robert Louis StevensonG2: Bokklubben (Norwegian Book Club) World Library List Book- Don Quixote by Miguel de CervantesG3: Classic Non-fiction- The Prince by Niccolò MachiavelliG4: Group Read- Hard Times by Charles DickensG5: Classic Recommended by a Friend- The Hound of the Baskervilles by Arthur Conan DoyleO1: Literary Prize of Your Country/Region- A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L'EngleO2: Classic Folklore or Mythology- Oedipus Rex by SophoclesO3: Asian Classic- A Personal Matter by Kenzaburō ŌeO4: Classic Romance- Ivanhoe by Walter ScottO5: Prize-Winning Female Author- The House of Mirth by Edith Wharton