Catching up on Classics (and lots more!) discussion
Other Challenges Archive
>
Sarah's Classics Challenge


I'm glad you liked it. I'm excited to finally get to it. Did you read other Steinbeck novels afterwards?
I almost selected The Name of the Rose for my list. I've been thinking about reading it for a couple of years. I don't think you need anymore encouragement for The Grapes of Wrath. It is as good as everyone says, you should enjoy it. In the last couple of years I have read The Sound and the Fury, The Red Badge of Courage, and Doctor Zhivago, all solid reads. Will be interested in anything you have to say Lady Chatterley and Madame Bovary. Good luck and don't worry about finishing, it will all work out.


I read The Red Badge of Courage in high school and really loved it. I want to read it again very badly. I'm pretty excited about this challenge. Most of the ones I chose I already own but never got around to reading them.

For Whom the Bells Toll was part of my 2014 challenge and have to admit it defeated me. Just could not get into it. I did enjoy The Name of the Rose and Woman in White. Happy reading.



Seems yu'll be able to cross quite a few big classics off the tbr-list this year :)


I know, it's quite sad really, all the great books we'll miss. There should be a way to get the time back we spend on books we didn't like, so we could use it on new ones :)


I'll be trying to read a few of your other choices next year as well.

Pink, what translation of Madame B did you read? Have been putting that one off due to the many bad translations of French lit to English (or Danish, where there's mostly just one translation and it's always awful).

I have the Penguin Classics edition of Madame Bovary. Hopefully it's a good one.









I'm glad you l..."
I also read East of Eden when I was younger (not that young!) and it has always been my favorite Steinbeck. As to "Grapes", finally got around to it this year and found it something of a let down.
I may have to add Foucault's Pendulum. I loved The Name of the Rose earlier this year.
You must get to For Whom the Bell Tolls. One of my all time favs

This year I read Lady Chatterley´s Lover and found it interesting even though not the most easiest read. It was my first D.H.Lawrence and it made me read more about the author.

I had a third Eco book (The Prague Cemetery) but these two are the ones I've heard of over the years. I've heard The Name of the Rose is very difficult, so I'm a bit nervous about that one.


It was only published 2010 so that's why you have heard more about the other two.


If you are considering Middlemarch, I would definitely recommend the audio version. I'm new to this format and have found it really depends on the narrator, but I think this was actually improved by Juliet Stevenson.

I've just started trying audio so I'll have to keep that in mind about Middlemarch. Juliet Stevenson seems to be the choice to buy when she's available. I'll have to see what else she's read.


Wall and Davis are the two who stick closest to the original sentence structure and are least ‘interpretative.
Further down he writes of some things being best in the Davis and some in the Steegmuller though, so perhaps you'd actually have to read all three to get the best understanding of the novel!
It's clearly not conclusive, but it seems Penguin should be a good choice for this :)

Madame Bovary,The Beautiful and the Damned,Catch 22 and The Sound and the Fury are all books I've heard great things about.They are on my to read list as well.
For Whom the Bell Tolls must be good,as it is among Hemingway's best known works.The Name of the Rose intimidates me because I simply have no idea what it is all about.As for Lady Chatterley's Lovers,I wonder if it is better than Sons & Lovers which everybody calls a masterpiece.
Finally,Doctor Zhivago,as I said previously on someone else's thread,leaves me skeptic.I wonder if it as good as other great Russian novels....

I saw the movie of Zhivago many years ago and I'm hoping the book is as good. As for Lady Chatterly's Lover, I was told it was the best of his books. I have Sons and Lovers and need to get to that one at some point, too.


Sarah wrote: "As for Lady Chatterly's Lover, I was told it was the best of his books."
I have heard otherwise, or at least that it's only famous because it was so "controversial". I might read it, though, for the bingo because it IS so famous for being banned.

I just checked out Juliet Stevenson on Audible and she has read so many great books! She's done several Virginia Woolf ones that I really want to read. It looks like she's mostly worked with female authors, although not always. It's pretty cool.

Well it is a classics bingo, after all. But I am hoping to find something more controversial, hmm.. maybe something by de Sade. They must have been banned somewhere...

Books mentioned in this topic
Lady Chatterley's Lover (other topics)Lady Chatterley's Lover (other topics)
Foucault’s Pendulum (other topics)
Catch-22 (other topics)
Madame Bovary (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Umberto Eco (other topics)Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (other topics)
Gustave Flaubert (other topics)
Wilkie Collins (other topics)
Umberto Eco (other topics)
More...
Old School
1.
Faust by Johann Wolfgang von GoethePt I 4★, Pt II DNF2.
Madame Bovaryby Gustave Flaubert4★ Read 4/2/153.
The Moonstone by Wilkie CollinsRead 4★ 5/7/15New School
4.
Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco3★ Read 7/31/155.
The Beautiful and the Damned by F. Scott Fitzgerald5★ Read 5/23/156.
Doctor Zhivago by Boris Pasternak2★ Read 12/4/15My Wild Card Six
7.
The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins4★ Read 11/26/158.
The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck5★ Read 11/11/159.
The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco5★ Read 9/28/1510.
Catch-22 by Joseph Heller4★ Read 4/27/1511.
The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner3★ Read 12/19/1512.
For Whom the Bell Tolls by Ernest HemingwayRead 4★ 2/4/15Alternates
1.
Lady Chatterley's Lover by D.H. Lawrence2★ Read 8/20/152.
The Red Badge of Courage and Selected Short Fiction by Stephen Crane4★ Read 10/16/15Hopefully I've got everything organized properly.