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Lounge: OPEN, please come in... > Group read for Christmas

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message 1: by Reggia (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments For those interested in participating in a group read for Christmas, please post your nominations here. Probably a short read/novella is best.


message 2: by Werner (last edited Nov 23, 2010 10:03AM) (new)

Werner | 2696 comments Group reads can be great fun, but alas, I won't be able to take part in this one. If all goes according to plan (it depends on another son-in-law's medical condition) we'll be in Australia for most of December, celebrating Christmas with our oldest daughter and her husband. She gave me Stephenie Meyer's The Host earlier this year, and I promised her I'd take it along for airport/airplane reading --at 600+ pages, it's ideal for long flights (so not "a short read/novella" by any means!). Even if we don't go, I plan to read it in December, since I promised.


message 3: by Nicole (new)

Nicole | 1752 comments Australia!!! Lucky you! I've wanted to go there for a long time but have never gotten the opportunity.

Sorry, Reggia, I don't think my schedule--mundane though it is--will really accommodate a group read right now, either.


message 4: by Reggia (last edited Nov 27, 2010 09:52AM) (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments Okay, maybe we can try again for a group read after the new year. I will, however, indulge in a Christmas read myself, just not sure what yet. Like your tradition, Charly.

Does anybody watch A Christmas Carol on TV? Any opinions on the different versions, or how Dickinson's story is written into many sitcoms this time of year?

I'll confess first. :o I kinda like them. It's a classic story, and like Austen's Pride & Prejudice seems to adapt well to many retellings, lol, that's just my personal opinion. Certainly, they both have had many a retake.


message 5: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2696 comments My personal favorite movie version of Dickens' A Christmas Carol is the 1951 black-and-white version with Alistair Sim as Scrooge. My wife and I usually watch that one once a year during the Christmas season.


message 6: by Nicole (new)

Nicole | 1752 comments That's my fave, too, Werner.


message 7: by Rhonda (new)

Rhonda (rhondak) I have a vinyl copy of Dylan Thomas reading, A Child's Christmas in Wales which transports me perfectly into the spirit. As much as I appreciate film in general and black and white in particular, I enjoy the ghostly evocations of the spoken word, especially by that of a master.


message 8: by Reggia (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments ...am reading Finding Noel by Richard Paul Evans for my Christmas read.


message 9: by Reggia (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments It was a rather disappointing read -- oh well.


message 10: by Reggia (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments Good to see you, Charly. :-)

I love that story! I'm not a big fan of short stories but O Henry may be just the author to change my opinion. Maybe I'll get a book of his stories, they'd be great for reading during breaks at work.


message 11: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2696 comments "The Gift of the Magi" is an outstanding story! I'm familiar with it, so could easily join in a discussion of it next Christmas.

Reggia, O. Henry is a master of the short story form. His trademark is the surprise ending, but he knows how to pull that off so that it's a natural development of the logic of the story, not something dragged in from left field; and he has a warm human sympathy for his characters.


message 12: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2696 comments Yes, Charly, O. Henry wrote "The Ransom of Red Chief." That's a relatively rare example of a story he set in his native South, rather than his adopted home, New York City.


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