Never too Late to Read Classics discussion

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Authors From Around the World > 2026 Authors from Around the World Planning Thread

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message 1: by Rosemarie, Northern Roaming Scholar (new)

Rosemarie | 15743 comments Mod
It may seem early, but it's time to start thinking about what we're going to read in 2026.

The format is the same- a pair of classic authors that have something in common to be read over a period of two months.

In order to encourage diversity, authors from Great Britain, Canada and the United States do not fit this category. We read them in many of our other categories.

This year there will be no official carry-overs from previous years, but feel free to browse any of the previous nominations for inspiration.

Please feel free to suggest as many pairs as you like in this our preliminary round.


message 2: by Rosemarie, Northern Roaming Scholar (last edited 6 hours, 9 min ago) (new)

Rosemarie | 15743 comments Mod
Here is a list of our suggested pairs:

1.Sacher Torte Anyone?
Two authors who lived in Vienna: Arthur Schnitzler and Joseph Roth
Original Language: German

2. The Sverbeyev's Literary Salon
Two authors who lived in 1830s Moscow: Nikolai Gogol and Mikhail Lermontov
Original Language: Russian

3. Let's go to Mexico!
Two authors who lived in Mexico City: Juan Rulfo and Gabriel García Márquez
Original Language: Spanish

4. After the War
Two authors who fought in World War 1: Henri Barbusse and Erich Maria Remarque
Original Languages: French and German

5. The Flesh is Weak
Two authors who suffered from tuberculosis: Franz Kafka and Albert Camus
Original Languages: German and French

6. Gone to Soon
Two authors lost in the Holocaust: Bruno Schulz and Irène Némirovsky
Original Languages: Polish and French

7. Am I Seeing Things?
Two imaginative French poets: Francis Ponge and Arthur Rimbaud
Original Language: French

8. Humanity is Important
Two 20th century French authors of Faith: Georges Bernanos and François Mauriac
Original Language: French

9. Female Authors under Fascism
Two authors who were affected by Fascist policies in World War 2: Alba de Céspedes and Nathalie Sarraute
Original Languages: Italian and French


message 3: by Lindenblatt (new)

Lindenblatt | 610 comments Not early at all, I've been waiting for it! 😊

I've come up with the following pairs:

1) The Sverbeyevs' Literary Salon
Two authors who lived in 1830s Moscow: Nikolai Gogol (an Ukrainian author) and Mikhail Lermontov (a Russian author)

2) Let's Go to Mexico
Two authors who lived in Mexico-City: Juan Rulfo (a Mexican author) and Gabriel García Márquez (a Colombian author)

3) After the War
Two authors who fought in WWI: Henri Barbusse (a French author) and Erich Maria Remarque (a German author)


message 4: by Piyangie, Classical Princess (new)

Piyangie | 3600 comments Mod
Two authors who suffered from tuberculosis: Franz Kafka and Albert Camus.

(I'm sorry for choosing an illness as the thing in common. I so want to read more of them.)


message 5: by Jen (last edited Sep 19, 2025 04:54AM) (new)

Jen R. (rosetung) | 422 comments Haha- illness in common. Well I'm okay with it as I'm interested in both of them. And. I have a sad one too:

Two authors lost too soon to the Holocaust:

Bruno Schulz and Irène Némirovsky

Very much interested in the Mexico nomination too! (I'm interested in sachertorte too but I don't know those authors ;)


message 6: by Jen (new)

Jen R. (rosetung) | 422 comments Also, how about French poets:

Francis Ponge and Arthur Rimbaud


Anisha Inkspill (anishainkspill) | 331 comments Piyangie wrote: "Two authors who suffered from tuberculosis: Franz Kafka and Albert Camus.

(I'm sorry for choosing an illness as the thing in common. I so want to read more of them.)"


I think they also have in common of how they question the big stuff, a bit of depth but existentiolaism comes to mind.

I also want to read more of their works and am interested in this pairing.

great suggestion Piyangie.


message 8: by Luís (new)

Luís (blue_78) | 4659 comments Piyangie wrote: "Two authors who suffered from tuberculosis: Franz Kafka and Albert Camus.

(I'm sorry for choosing an illness as the thing in common. I so want to read more of them.)"


I agree with Piyangie. Kafka and Camus for me, too.


message 9: by Rosemarie, Northern Roaming Scholar (last edited Sep 20, 2025 10:52AM) (new)

Rosemarie | 15743 comments Mod
Thanks so far for the creative suggestions.

Here's another one:
Two French authors of faith: Georges Bernanos and François Mauriac


message 10: by Piyangie, Classical Princess (new)

Piyangie | 3600 comments Mod
Thanks, Jen, Anisha, and Luis.


message 11: by Rosemarie, Northern Roaming Scholar (new)

Rosemarie | 15743 comments Mod
Jen wrote: "Haha- illness in common. Well I'm okay with it as I'm interested in both of them. And. I have a sad one too:

Two authors lost too soon to the Holocaust:

Bruno Schulz and [author:I..."


Great choice!


message 12: by Luís (new)

Luís (blue_78) | 4659 comments Rosemarie wrote: "Thanks so far for the creative suggestions.

Here's another one:
Two French authors of faith: Georges Bernanos and François Mauriac"


Can I add them, too?


message 13: by Rosemarie, Northern Roaming Scholar (new)

Rosemarie | 15743 comments Mod
Of course, Luis.

This is a preliminary list of ideas.


message 14: by Luís (new)

Luís (blue_78) | 4659 comments Rosemarie wrote: "Of course, Luis.

This is a preliminary list of ideas."


Obrigado!


message 15: by Jen (last edited 12 hours, 28 min ago) (new)

Jen R. (rosetung) | 422 comments Another idea in line with others I've read and loved for these challenges:

Women Writers Under WW2 Fascism: Alba de Céspedes and Nathalie Sarraute

De Cespedes was a Cuban-Italian writer whose work is currently having a strong revival with new English translations from major publishers. Due to fascist censorship, she has had literary work banned and been arrested for antifascist radio broadcasting work too. Her work is originally written in Italian.

Sarraute is another very cross-cultural writer I've just learned of- a French Russian writer and lawyer whose life was endangered due to her Jewish background. In France she went into hiding and, according to the GR bio, lost her work as a lawyer and divorced her husband in order to protect him from the same persecution. Her work is originally in French.

This is not to say that their literature is overtly political. That point is just about how their personal backgrounds relate to one another.


message 16: by Rosemarie, Northern Roaming Scholar (last edited 6 hours, 38 min ago) (new)

Rosemarie | 15743 comments Mod
Thanks for all the suggestions, everyone!
We'll be taking suggestions for pairs until Saturday the 27 September.
In message 2 you will find all of the suggested pairs in a list.
On Sunday the 28 we'll start with the first round of voting. You will be able to choose 4 pairs from this list.
Then we'll take it from there.

One spot out of the six will be reserved for the Moderator's Choice.

I will keep updating the list in message 2 as we get more suggestions.


message 17: by Jen (new)

Jen R. (rosetung) | 422 comments Rosemarie wrote: "Thanks for all the suggestions, everyone!
We'll be taking suggestions for pairs until Saturday the 27 September.
In message 2 you will find all of the suggested pairs in a list.
On Sunday the 28 we..."


There's issue with my noms in messages 6 and 15?


message 18: by Rosemarie, Northern Roaming Scholar (last edited 4 hours, 15 min ago) (new)

Rosemarie | 15743 comments Mod
We have a great list of European and Hispanic authors!

Now it's time to find some pairs from the rest of the world, including Australia and New Zealand, all of Africa and Asia and the Caribbean.
The original language can be English if the authors come from any English speaking countries other than the United Kingdom, Canada, Ireland and the United States.


message 19: by Rosemarie, Northern Roaming Scholar (new)

Rosemarie | 15743 comments Mod
Jen wrote: "Rosemarie wrote: "Thanks for all the suggestions, everyone!
We'll be taking suggestions for pairs until Saturday the 27 September.
In message 2 you will find all of the suggested pairs in a list.
O..."


It took me a while to add them, but you'll see that they are there now. I save frequently when editing a post because I once deleted an entire long message by mistake. I added and saved after each book.


message 20: by Jen (new)

Jen R. (rosetung) | 422 comments ah haha yay. I had seen 20min had passed when I saw the list but yea, long posts can take even longer than that I imagine.

From Africa, there could be Alan Paton and perhaps Bessie Head both from South Africa. I'm interested in her work but there's only about 3 that may qualify for the timeframe of classics as defined here.


message 21: by Rosemarie, Northern Roaming Scholar (new)

Rosemarie | 15743 comments Mod
That's a good suggestion, Jen. They're so different, in a good way.


message 22: by Greg (new)

Greg | 5 comments I am very new to this group and not sure if this fits, but both of these are 50 years old or more:

Wole Soyinka, the Nigerian Nobel Prize winning author of the play Death and the King's Horseman (1975) and fellow Nigerian Chinua Achebe. Both write on the effects of foreign influence on the existing culture, but there's some key differences as well.

I haven't read Death and the King's Horseman in years and would enjoy a re-read. Both writers have a lot of works to choose from as well; so there's plenty to discover.

Perhaps the group has done these before or it doesn't fit. If so, please disregard the suggestion. Thanks!


message 23: by Luís (new)

Luís (blue_78) | 4659 comments Jen wrote: "Another idea in line with others I've read and loved for these challenges:

Women Writers Under WW2 Fascism: Alba de Céspedes and Nathalie Sarraute

De Cespedes was a ..."


I support De Cespedes. I have one or another book by her.


message 24: by Rosemarie, Northern Roaming Scholar (last edited 1 hour, 0 min ago) (new)

Rosemarie | 15743 comments Mod
Greg wrote: "I am very new to this group and not sure if this fits, but both of these are 50 years old or more:

Wole Soyinka, the Nigerian Nobel Prize winning author of the play [book:Death and th..."


We read these not that long ago, Greg, in September of last year. Feel free to check out our discussion threads in the Archives World Authors.All of our discussion threads stay open for further discussion.


message 25: by Rosemarie, Northern Roaming Scholar (new)

Rosemarie | 15743 comments Mod
Does anyone know any classic Japanese mystery authors? That would be a fun choice for a pair.


message 26: by Jen (new)

Jen R. (rosetung) | 422 comments Oh I’m still so grateful for our Soyinka/Achebe section that year. I want to read more especially from Soyinka in the future.


message 27: by Rosemarie, Northern Roaming Scholar (new)

Rosemarie | 15743 comments Mod
I've got a pair of authors for New Zealand that wrote books for younger readers as well as older readers, Ruth Park and Margaret Mahy.


message 28: by Luís (new)

Luís (blue_78) | 4659 comments Rosemarie wrote: "Does anyone know any classic Japanese mystery authors? That would be a fun choice for a pair."

Tanizaki suits for this? I'm not sure if I have any books by him.


message 29: by Rosemarie, Northern Roaming Scholar (new)

Rosemarie | 15743 comments Mod
Luís wrote: "Rosemarie wrote: "Does anyone know any classic Japanese mystery authors? That would be a fun choice for a pair."

Tanizaki suits for this? I'm not sure if I have any books by him."


He's not really a mystery writer.


message 30: by Rosemarie, Northern Roaming Scholar (new)

Rosemarie | 15743 comments Mod
Jen wrote: "Oh I’m still so grateful for our Soyinka/Achebe section that year. I want to read more especially from Soyinka in the future."

Jen, I started a new Archives folder for our 2x2 reads called Archives World Authors. You'll find that discussion there now.


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