The Reading Challenge Group discussion
Monthly Genre Challenge 2019
>
November - Classics

I was thinking about reading East of Eden this month too. It's going to be one of my 2019 challenges for medium sized books, so knowing you are reading it will give me that extra incentive!

I agree with your husband."
I don't feel so bad about not having the rest of the series on my TBR shelf then!

I do have them on my TBR but may skip them….

I also read The Last Dream of the Old Oak by Hans Christian Andersen which has beautiful descriptions. It’s only a short story, but I recommend it - it would be good for next month’s Christmas theme.
I read A Christmas Memory, One Christmas, & The Thanksgiving Visitor by Truman Capote.
I have read A Christmas Memory a number of times.
I have read A Christmas Memory a number of times.

I am glad you enjoyed the stories you read, Trisha. I haven't heard of the Cather story, but I have read the Andersen story. I really like fairy tales.
Eileen, I never thought that I would like a creepy story, but now I do. I need to put that on my list.
Eileen, I never thought that I would like a creepy story, but now I do. I need to put that on my list.

I just finished rereading Le Barbier de Seville by Pierre Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais. It is a funny play.


Does that have anything to do with the opera?


I was in a really weird mood when I read Crime and Punishment several years ago and though I know it's supposed to be very serious the main character just made me laugh my head off. He was so over the top in his paranoia that I couldn't take it seriously. Perhaps it was the translation I read? I LOVE Dostoevsky (Brothers Karamazov is my favorite) and I liked this one. But I still look at it as a comedy.
I have problems. :P
Alicia, Brothers Karamazov is my favourite too.
I just finished The Man of Feeling by Henry MacKenzie. It was written in 1771 and reminded me slightly of The Sorrows of Young Werther, since the main character was very emotional. It was an odd read.
I just finished The Man of Feeling by Henry MacKenzie. It was written in 1771 and reminded me slightly of The Sorrows of Young Werther, since the main character was very emotional. It was an odd read.



Interesting! I can’t remember which I read first. He wrote such a variety, some stories that are wonderful but a few that I haven’t enjoyed at all. I never know what to expect when I start reading his work.
I finished New Grub Street by George Gissing. It wasn't a cheerful work but it was worth reading since it is an excellent example of 19th century realism.

Thank you for the recommendation, Rosemarie. I hadn’t noticed this on the Guardian list. The preview looks interesting so I just downloaded a copy.
It's a long book but worth reading. The mood is halfway between George Eliot and Thomas Hardy, leaning more to Hardy. The setting is London.

I am reading the Algernon Blackwood collection called The Listener And Other Stories and have read four of the stories so far, including The Willows, which was really eerie.


I agree, Ruth. Eileen, you chose some difficult books that have slowed you down this month. I’m struggling to get through “Lucky Jim”, it’s very repetitive & feels endless. Yesterday I gave up & read something else to relieve the boredom!
Trisha, I gave up on Lucky Jim after two or three chapters, since I didn't think it was funny, and I couldn't relate to any of the characters.

I totally agree. I discovered this group about a year ago and in that time I've read many books that I never thought I would and some of them even made it on my favorites list!
That's good to hear, Eileen! The same thing happened to me when I joined goodreads. I tried new genres and authors and found some new favourites. And also lots of like minded readers who enjoy talking about books.

Don Quixote can be interesting and passages of it are definitely engrossing. But he goes on a lot of tangents that mean I need to regroup fairly often. I'm glad I'm making my way through the book but it's definitely taking me awhile! Besides that one I have one more longish (600+ pages) book I want to at least get started this month (Once and Future King) but that one will hopefully be easier for me--I remember liking it a lot as a kid. But I have a number of NetGalley and BookSiren ARCs I've been wanting to get through this month as well so that has slowed down my progress through the classics. But they do break up the long books nicely for me.

I take a break from 19th century novels occasionally. Sometimes I am just not in the mood for a Victorian novel.


There are a lot of famous young actors at the beginning of their careers in the movie version-Rob Lowe, Patrick Swayze, Tom Cruise.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Warden (other topics)Let Me Tell You: New Stories, Essays, and Other Writings (other topics)
Flowers for Algernon (other topics)
One Corpse Too Many (other topics)
East of Eden (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Graham Greene (other topics)Graham Greene (other topics)
Charlotte Perkins Gilman (other topics)
Mark Twain (other topics)
Arthur Conan Doyle (other topics)
More...
I agree with your husband.