EVERYONE Has Read This but Me - The Catch-Up Book Club discussion

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[ARCHIVES] BOTM SUGGESTIONS > BOTM Suggestions Apr '18 - Classics (1969 and before)

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message 1: by Kaseadillla (new)

Kaseadillla | 1373 comments Mod
Hello all! Starting up the monthly discussions for April 2018 book-of-the-month suggestions. This discussion is for the CLASSICS CATEGORY.

As a reminder, books that qualify for this category must have a publication date 1969 and before. If the book you wish to nominate was published in 1970 or after, please make your suggestion on the Modern Classics/Popular Reads thread.

Will start off by suggesting Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut.


message 2: by Emily (new)

Emily Bourque (emilyardoin) I'd like to nominate Little Women and Night


message 3: by Darren (new)

Darren I second Slaughterhouse-five and nominate The thirty-nine steps.


message 4: by Chrissy (last edited Feb 01, 2018 01:44PM) (new)

Chrissy eckert Second Slaughterhouse-Five!

Nominate Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
Down and Out in Paris and London by George Orwell
The Plague by Albert Camus


message 5: by [deleted user] (new)


message 7: by Sophie (new)

Sophie (sawphie) I'd like to nominate Rebecca


message 8: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 728 comments Second Brave New World


message 9: by Jacqueline (new)

Jacqueline I'd like to Nominate
Ursula Le Guin
The Wizard of Earthsea (because...you know...it's the start of a series)
The Left Hand of Darkness
The Dispossessed

I'll second Slaughterhouse 5.


message 10: by Lea (new)


message 11: by Emily (new)

Emily Bourque (emilyardoin) I'll second Left Hand of Darkness


message 12: by Melanie (new)

Melanie I will second The Illiad.
and
The Wizard of Earth Sea.


message 13: by Melanie (new)

Melanie Daniela wrote: "Second
Slaughterhouse-Five

And nominating
Frankenstein"


We already read Frankenstein. You can nominate it in the catch up thread.


message 14: by Melanie (new)

Melanie I will nominate The Three Musketeers. It has to win eventually.


message 15: by Kaseadillla (new)

Kaseadillla | 1373 comments Mod
I second brave new world


message 16: by Zeljka (new)

Zeljka | 501 comments I nominate The Brothers Karamazov Dostoyevsky


message 17: by Innastholiel (new)

Innastholiel I second The Left Hand of Darkness and A Wizard of Earthsea. The Dispossessed was published in 1974 and therefore technically belongs in the other thread.

I nominate Mary Poppins and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.


message 18: by Jacqueline (new)

Jacqueline My bad....follow me over there and you can second it over there.....


message 19: by Hannah (new)

Hannah So many I want to read have already been suggested so I'm not going to make any nominations but will second The Three Musketeers, The Brothers Karamazov, Down and Out in Paris and London, The Plague and Left Hand of Darkness


message 20: by Melanie (new)

Melanie I also want to nominate Kim by Rudyard Kipling.


message 21: by Ա․ (new)


message 22: by Laura H L (new)

Laura H L (laurah30) | 648 comments I nominate The Bell Jar

I second Flowers for Algernon


message 23: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 728 comments Second The Bell Jar


message 25: by Alex (new)

Alex Cribbs (alexcribbs) | 8 comments I second The Illiad and nominate Far from the Madding Crowd.


message 26: by Dora (new)

Dora I second Brave New World

I nominate The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes


message 27: by Martina (new)

Martina Bučková | 145 comments I second The Bell Jar and Night because it looks like it is going to loose :(

And I nominate A Wrinkle in Time it has to win one day the pool if I keep on nominating it right? :D


message 28: by Daisy (new)

Daisy I second The Grapes of Wrath.


message 29: by Jen (new)

Jen Lewis | 18 comments I'll second the Illiad and A Wrinkle in Time.


message 30: by Amanda (new)


message 31: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 728 comments Second A Wrinkle in Time


daniela (daniela_nieblina) Melanie wrote: "Daniela wrote: "Second
Slaughterhouse-Five

And nominating
Frankenstein"

We already read Frankenstein. You can nominate it in the catch up thread."


Whaaaat?! I swear, I had actually gone into the bookshelf to see what books had already been read and just DID NOT see it. It might have been because, when I went to the bookshelf again right now, I saw it had another name attached. I had no idea it was one of those 'or' books, and maybe my eyes simply skimmed over it.
Thank you!


message 33: by Marcos (last edited Feb 03, 2018 11:59AM) (new)

Marcos Kopschitz | 1766 comments Really great nominations so far! I'm always enthusisastic about how good you guys are!

But... Except for five nominations (The Illiad, The Plague, The Three Musketeers, The Black Tulip, The Brothers Karamazov, all the others are .. English language works! :-) Again, that predominace we've been discussing. Well, we know it's expected.

I'll second a lot of books this time, I think, but I'll also suggest a reading from another literature, just for balance. :-)


message 34: by Marcos (last edited Feb 02, 2018 08:35AM) (new)

Marcos Kopschitz | 1766 comments Because of the film "Call Me by Your Name" being in evidence, the author of the original book, André Aciman, has been as well. André Aciman was born in Alexandria, Egypt and is an American memoirist, essayist, novelist, and scholar of seventeenth-century literature.

And I recently watched an inteview with him on Brazilian TV. I not only liked him very much and was attracted by his work, but learned that he has also written many essays and reviews on, and teaches, Marcel Proust.

What by its turn ignited an old wish of mine to read Proust, which I haven't so far. Aciman said very interesting, clever and nice things of Proust, like readers saying as they read, "It's not Proust, it's me!".

From Goodreads: "Today Proust is widely recognised as one of the greatest authors of the 20th Century, and À la recherche du temps perdu as one of the most dazzling and significant works of literature to be written in modern times.". And for Aciman, "the greatest".

So, I nominate the first book of his great work In Search of Lost Time (À la recherche du temps perdu, published in seven volumes, (1913–1927).

This first volume is Swann's Way (Du côté de chez Swann, sometimes translated as The Way by Swann's) (1913).


message 35: by Marcos (last edited Feb 02, 2018 08:48AM) (new)

Marcos Kopschitz | 1766 comments Not to mention that a work titled "In Search of Lost Time" is mostly fit for a catch-up book club!! ;-)


message 36: by Carolyn (new)

Carolyn Guerrero | 42 comments I'd like to nominate The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas!


message 37: by Zeljka (new)

Zeljka | 501 comments I second Swann's Way by Proust.

I nominate The Bridge of San Luis gaRey by Wilder and Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora N. Hurston


message 38: by Kristin (new)

Kristin Ames (kmames) | 147 comments Second a wrinkle in time


message 39: by Sylvia (last edited Feb 02, 2018 04:14PM) (new)

Sylvia Flores I second The Bell Jar, by Sylvia Plath.
I also nominate The Sun Also Rises, by Earnest Hemmingway!


message 40: by Ա․ (last edited Feb 02, 2018 11:53PM) (new)

Ա․ Հ․ Marcos wrote: "Really great nominations so far! I'm always enthusisastic about how good you guys are!

But... Except for four nominations (The Illiad, The Plague, The Three Musk..."</i>


[book:The Black Tulip
is also non-English language :p

I don't really mind reading English language literature in this group, though, because for the most part of my life I have read only small portion of it and now I am trying to catch up with as many "everyone has read this" books written in English as I can.



message 41: by Holly (new)

Holly (shelfawareness) I second Flowers for Algernon!
I also nominate The Count of Monte Cristo

(I'm also new here; I see epics, but are plays acceptible? Can I get some Othello action?)


message 43: by Dorothee (new)

Dorothee | 37 comments I second
Down and out in Paris and London
Grapes of Wrath
A Wrinkle in time


message 44: by Renee (new)

Renee (elenarenee) I will second the black tulip


message 45: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 728 comments Jacob's Room by Virginia Woolf


message 46: by MissLemon (last edited Feb 03, 2018 11:38AM) (new)

MissLemon | 274 comments Challenge accepted Marcos!

I nominate The Master and Margarita


message 47: by MissLemon (new)

MissLemon | 274 comments Holly wrote: "I second Flowers for Algernon!
I also nominate The Count of Monte Cristo

(I'm also new here; I see epics, but are plays acceptible? Can I get some Othello action?)"


The group has read Romeo and Juliet so I'm guessing Othello is also eligible. I would second it but I've read it SOOO many times!


message 48: by Marcos (new)

Marcos Kopschitz | 1766 comments Anahit wrote: "The Black Tulip is also non-English language :p"

Anahit, I missed this one, but I'll edit my post to include it!! :-)
Nothing against books in English, of course! Just a suggestion for variety.

Carolyn wrote: "Challenge accepted Marcos! I nominate The Master and Margarita."

Great nomination, Carolyn! :-)


message 49: by Marcos (new)

Marcos Kopschitz | 1766 comments Holly wrote: "(I'm also new here; I see epics, but are plays acceptible? Can I get some Othello action?)"

Yes, no limitation. Many other suggestions have been made in Drama.


message 50: by Marcos (new)

Marcos Kopschitz | 1766 comments However, plays and classical literature (Greek, Roman, etc.) tend to be not as popular as other genres, so rarely are much seconded and voted.

That's a pity, but that's the way it is.

We've tried the Odissey sometimes, and also the Illiad, which I'll second, but the probability of it winning is low.


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