Victorians! discussion
Archived Group Reads 2022
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Aurora: Reading Schedule
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I have read Aurora Leigh a few years ago but it would be enjoyable to read it again as part of a group.
Here is a short biography for those who are interested in her life.
https://www.historic-uk.com/CultureUK...
Thanks, Kerstin. My first read for the year was Zola's Therese Raquin which kind of disturbed me I think. :) I started this and read through book 1. Looks my kind of a book and very promising. Hope it'll be the boost I need. :)

I read a couple of Zola's for a RR project a few years back and swore never to read another, and I believe the whole project ended up dying out so you are not alone in your response!
Frances wrote: "Piyangie wrote: "Thanks, Kerstin. My first read for the year was Zola's Therese Raquin which kind of disturbed me I think. :) ."
I read a couple of Zola's for a RR project a few years back and swo..."
I'm not comfortable with his naturalism. I think that style encourages him to choose from dark and dreary subjects which he then overexaggerates. Zola's not for me either, unless I can find a more cheerful work. I can well understand the fall in your Zola project, Frances. He is not an author you can like easily.
I read a couple of Zola's for a RR project a few years back and swo..."
I'm not comfortable with his naturalism. I think that style encourages him to choose from dark and dreary subjects which he then overexaggerates. Zola's not for me either, unless I can find a more cheerful work. I can well understand the fall in your Zola project, Frances. He is not an author you can like easily.

I read a couple of Zola's for a RR project a few ye..."
Interesting you should mention Zola - I read a few of his recently for the first time (starting with Therese Raquin) and I enjoyed them on the whole. Therese Raquin was a strange reading experience - in a way it was repetitive so it felt almost too long for such a short book, but there are some scenes in it which I'm sure will stay with me for a long time. He is definitely dark though! I was startled to find just how much darker and more explicit his writing was than British novels of the same period, even though there were British writers who looked unflinchingly at slum conditions etc. I imagine Zola must have been shocking to contemporary readers when he was first translated into English.
Jan 3 - 9: Week 1: Book 1
Jan 10 - 16: Week 2: Books 2 & 3
Jan 17 - 23: Week 3: Books 4 & 5
Jan 24 - 30: Week 4 Books 6 & 7
Jan 31 - Feb 6: Week 5: Books 8 & 9