EVERYONE Has Read This but Me - The Catch-Up Book Club discussion
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Best and Worst Required School Book

Best: Jane Eyre
Worst: Pride and Prejudice and The Mill on the Floss

A favourite required read was Lord of the Flies.


A favourite required read was Lord of the Flies."
I found Jane Eyre to be self determined, a fighter- I read it after reading Pride and Prejudice. Jane Eyre was a nice change from the vapidity of the characters from P & P.

Yes, I also liked Of Mice and Men. I remember it hit me as a kid. We studied it pretty young (12 years old).
I can see how Jane looks more like a warrior in comparison to some of the characters from P and P. The way we receive books is totally connected to what we're reading before and after, and who we're talking to about them.






Well, I just offered one feminist's pov that may give you some insight on your classmates' perspective. Didn't mean to hijack the thread. :)

Best 2 El lazarillo de Tormes and Cuentos de amor, de locura y de muerte
Worst La metamorfosis and El astillero Every selected book for that last year of Literature was bad, the best of all Las flores del mal, not very good choices for 16 year olds

WORST was probably Romeo and Juliet (high school required read), mostly because of the read-aloud sessions we had in class, ugh!

Best = Walden's Pond. I actually remember loving the writing assignment afterwards. We were required to compare elements from the book to "something else". (I'm not sure how the teacher worded it.) And I compared it to the references of nature in many of the lyrics of Beatles songs. He was so impressed, he asked to keep the essay. (Wish I had it now or had made a copy:-(

Best = Walden's Pond. I actually remember loving the writing assignment afterwards. We were required to compare elements from the book to "something else". (I'm..."
I'm okay with Moby Dick until the cetology section- an extensive, detailed study of whales in the midst of a narrative is unnecessary.


Worst: The Pigman by Paul Zindel --> I would have enjoyed reading this for fun, but it seemed immature to read for a high school English class. My high school friends were in other English classes and they got to read more challenging books. I was an honor roll student and this book made me feel like I was stuck in the slacker class. It was a little insulting and embarrassing.

Because of Winn-Dixie - Kate Dicamillo
Maniac Magee - Jerry Spinelli
All Edgar Allen Poe
Worst -The Great Gatsby (yawn)
ALL William Shakespeare (double yawn)
The Scarlet Letter (heavy sigh)
I’m still a big child, I’ll always love the children’s books from our mandatory reading lists. The books on my “worst” I’m sure are perfectly fine books, they definitely aren’t for me.

Worst- Walden. So boring

Most enjoyed The Masque of the Red Death, and the most useless was The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole, Aged 13 3/4.


I'll let you know. Too bad I discarded the book -- it contained a slew of classics in it (I swear it was 4" thick with tissue thin pages.)

also Typical American (college)
best: Macbeth (high school)
Story of the Stone (middle school)

1984
Brave New World
(Tie)
Worst: Can't think of any I despised. If they bored me, I've probably just forgotten.

https://bit.ly/Mission3-R

Worst: also the The Scarlet Letter and As I Lay Dying

It’s difficult to choose my best book, there were so many I loved! Probably Romeo and Juliet or To Kill a Mockingbird. I really liked Hedda Gabler (from Four Major Plays: A Doll's House / Ghosts / Hedda Gabler / The Master Builder) too. At 16 it was the most difficult text I’d ever been made to read but my teacher did a great job of explaining it to us.
The worst book was Pygmalion. I could not stand Eliza Doolittle. I wonder if it’ll be different if I reread it now?

Worst - At the time Frankenstein but I suspect that I would appreciate it much more if I read it now. I can't say the same about Philip Larkin who can can never envisage enjoying!

BEST: The Jungle, Lord of The Flies, The Scarlet Letter

In university, the worst in world lit was probably Gogol. The best was jane Austen. Pride and Prejudice is such a gem, though I'm in that minority who think Mansfield Park doesn't get the praise it deserves.

Worst: Red Badge of Courage/Daisy Miller/Moby Dick
The book I hated in high school and couldn't get through and absolutely loved as an adult was The Tale of Two Cities


My favourite was probably Macbeth.

The best was Animal Farm, A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court and Lord of the Flies. I even memorized the songs from Animal Farm on my own because I wanted to! Then I would sing them... 😅

Worst: Heart of Darkness and The Glass Managerie (Though I would like to re-read The Glass Managerie as an adult, but I hated it as a teen).

I think Antigone should be read more. I think its one of those plays that is a good starting point for where loyalties lie, the law versus doing what honor requires - not always the same thing.

Worst
Lord of the Flies
Catcher in the Rye
IIvanhoe
For whom the bell tolls
Best
To Kill a mockingbird
Great expectations
Books mentioned in this topic
1984 (other topics)1984 (other topics)
The Bad Beginning (other topics)
1984 (other topics)
Ordinary People (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
George Orwell (other topics)George Orwell (other topics)
George Orwell (other topics)
Judith Guest (other topics)
Philip Larkin (other topics)
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There were some books that I hated, some that I felt neutral about but am glad I can say I've read them, and the rare few that I actually came to really enjoy.
Off the top of my head, a least favorite:
Heart of Darkness
Had to read this in postcolonial literature, and struggled through it. Maybe had something to do with the fact that the edition we got was like type 10 font!
One that I actually sometimes say is my favorite book:
The Things They Carried
So how about you? Were there any books that stick with you, for better or for worse, from school?