Ostrich Posted July 12, 2004 Share Posted July 12, 2004 (edited) Henry James: The Portrait of a Lady George Eliot: The Mill on the Floss Miles Franklin: My Brilliant Career (Australian classic) John Buchan: The Thirty-nine Steps (exciting!) Edited July 18, 2004 by Ostrich Link to comment
Patricia Posted July 15, 2004 Share Posted July 15, 2004 Mafouz's CAIRO TRILOGY. A beautifully-written family saga with universal themes. That's a loaded sentence but a true one. I've never been to Cairo, but after reading the Trilogy, plus other things by Mafouz, I can see and taste it. Don't read on an empty stomach! Link to comment
Nanatchka Posted July 15, 2004 Share Posted July 15, 2004 The Wind and the Willows, Kenneth Grahame Franny and Zooey, J.D. Salinger a Blandings Castle comedic novel by P G Wodehouse (choose any) Mrs. Dalloway, Virginia Woolf Howard's End, EM Forster Gaudy Night, Dorothy Sayers The Thurber Carnival, James M. Thurber Link to comment
Leigh Witchel Posted July 15, 2004 Share Posted July 15, 2004 Of Austen's "Six Princesses", I'm a Persuasion man myself. I'm a great lover of Howard's End as well as The Iliad. Wonderful books on the list, it reminds me that I once was literate! Link to comment
Ostrich Posted July 18, 2004 Share Posted July 18, 2004 Thomas Hardy: Far from the Madding Crowd I strongly second Jane Austen's Persuasion as well as Kenneth Grahame's The Wind in the Willows. Although it is a children's story, The Wind in the Willows is a classic well worth reading if you missed it as a child. And don't forget J.R.R. Tolkien's The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings! If you are at all interested in South African classics, try the short stories of Herman Charles Bosman(e.g. Mafeking Road, Unto Dust). They are works originally written in English. Link to comment
canbelto Posted July 23, 2004 Share Posted July 23, 2004 Any collection of Chekhov short stories. Fitzgerald - The Great Gatsby Cervantes - Don Quixote. Read it ALL. Reading some of it will make you think it's a joke/satire, which it certainly is not. It's not until you read all of it that you realize Cervantes' own intense identification with the Don. Jane Austen - any book, but Emma is probably the book to begin with. Dickens - Great Expectations Edith Wharton - Age of Innocence, House of Mirth, Ethan Frome Mark Twain - Huckleberry Finn Henry James - Turn of the Screw Emily Bronte - Wuthering Heights And this is a purely personal opinion, but Sylvia Plath poems are a must-read too. Link to comment
Lovebird Posted August 1, 2004 Share Posted August 1, 2004 The Complete works of Shakespeare The Razor's Edge by Somerset Maugham The Complete Poems of T.S Eliot Brighton Rock by Grahame Greene Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte Middlemarch by George Eliot The Poems of John Donne Up at the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf A Room with a View by E.M Forster Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier All of the novels by Dickens Link to comment
cubanmiamiboy Posted September 12, 2007 Share Posted September 12, 2007 Oh,well...here's a rough amd truncated very first choices list: Dostoevsky: Crime and Punishment Flaubert: Madame Bovary Tolstoy: Anna Karenina Joyce: A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man Hemingway: Farewell to arms Cervantes: Don Quijote Proust: In search of a Lost Time Faulkner: Wild Palms Zola: Therese Raquin Balzac: Lost Illusions Stendhal: The Red and The Black Link to comment
bart Posted September 12, 2007 Share Posted September 12, 2007 Thanks for reviving this thread, cubanmiamiboy. It's interesting to see what people have included in their lists. I'd agree with all of yours except perhaps Threres Raquin. The setting is so claustrophoic. For those who want to test the waters of Zola in his darker, bleaker, social-critical mode, , I'd go with Germinal, which opens up the world to include the struggles between coal miners and owners/managers in northern France. (A good French film was made of this about 10 years ago. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0107002/) For those who want something with more glamourous subject matter, though with those hopeless situations and bleak conclusions so characteristic of Zola, how about Nana (rise and fall of a Parisian courtesan during the reign of Napoleon III) or Au bonheur des dames (translated as The Ladies' Paradise)? It takes place in the fascinating sub-culture of one of the first Parisian department stores.) I noticed that a number of posters mentioned Moby Dick. Recently, on another thread, one of our members mentioned that he and his wife are now reading Moby Dick aloud to each other. I blush to confess that my own attempt to get through the entire novel long ago was rather like I imagine trying to chew my way through a large plate of asbestos shingles: s-l-o-w, difficult, and far from tasty. Lastly, I agree with canbelto about Cervantes' Don Quijote: Cervantes - Don Quixote. Read it ALL. Reading some of it will make you think it's a joke/satire, which it certainly is not. It's not until you read all of it that you realize Cervantes' own intense identification with the Don.Whereas I actually came to dread the sight of Moby Dick on my desk, I quickly began to look forward to entering the world of Don Q each time I picked him up. Itd helped that, as I read the book, I had just seen the classic Russian film -- http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0050326/usercomments -- so I had eerie and beautiful images of late 16th-century Spain indelibly engraved in my head. If you follow canbelto's advice, when you finally arrive at the conclusion, the Death of Don Quijote, you will feel like you're losing a great friend, one who has learned and grown from experience, and both regrets and accepts the self-delusions that are so much a part of life. As Sancho Panza says, "Oh, don't die, dear master. Take my advice and live many years." Link to comment
sidwich Posted September 12, 2007 Share Posted September 12, 2007 Plato, The Republic Chaucer, Canterbury Tales Milton, Paradise Lost Marlowe, Faust Shakespeare, Othello, King Lear, MacBeth, As You Like It, the "Henry" tetralogy, (Richard II, Henry IV, Part I, Henry IV, Part II, Henry V, ... Machiavelli, The Prince Austen, Emma Twain, Huckleberry Finn Wharton, The House of Mirth Fowles, The French Lieutenant's Woman And I have to say that I absolutely abhorred "Great Expectations" in high school to the point where I flat out told my English teacher that I refused to read the second half of it (I still got an "A" in the class). However, I think that if you are going to read it, by all means, do yourself the favor of reading "David Copperfield" first. "Great Expectations" makes much more sense read in light of the previously-written "David Copperfield." By the same token, reading (or watching) Shakespeare's "Henry" plays together greatly, greatly enrichens the total experience. Link to comment
Ray Posted September 12, 2007 Share Posted September 12, 2007 Plato, The RepublicChaucer, Canterbury Tales Milton, Paradise Lost Marlowe, Faust Shakespeare, Othello, King Lear, MacBeth, As You Like It, the "Henry" tetralogy, (Richard II, Henry IV, Part I, Henry IV, Part II, Henry V, ... Machiavelli, The Prince Austen, Emma Twain, Huckleberry Finn Wharton, The House of Mirth Fowles, The French Lieutenant's Woman Most lists, like this one, shy away from anything between Milton and Emma--i.e., Hobbes, Locke, Pope, Swift, Defoe, Sterne, Rousseau, Richardson, Fielding, Voltaire, Hume, etc. No "classics" there? Link to comment
artspatron07 Posted September 12, 2007 Share Posted September 12, 2007 A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens Link to comment
bart Posted September 12, 2007 Share Posted September 12, 2007 Most lists, like this one, shy away from anything between Milton and Emma--i.e., Hobbes, Locke, Pope, Swift, Defoe, Sterne, Rousseau, Richardson, Fielding, Voltaire, Hume, etc. No "classics" there?Good question. I notice that everyone on your list except Hobbes could be considered a writer of the 18th century. Readers nowadays do tend to flee from the 18th century, it seems. (Although we've recently had a brief discussion of Liaisons Dangereuse on another thread, and Rousseau remains a kind of best seller in the area of women's studies (Julie, etc.). Our age is many things, but an "Age of Reason" it is not. Also, the definition of "classics" does tend to change from decade to decade. The lists I was given in college in the 60s probably have very little in common with the lists that are handed out now in the same school. Thinking about it, do people really even talk about "the classics" any more? I mean -- in the sense that there is an agreed upon body of work that every educated person should address at some point in his or her life? It seems like things are a lot more a matter of individual taste ("my own personal classics") nowadays. Sticking works of fiction, I suppose some of the finest 18th-century writers are known to people today mostly through performance pieces based on their written work -- the Leonard Bernstein (et al.) Candide for Voltaire, the Tony Richardson 1960s film of Tom Jones for Fielding, the '90s film of Defoe's Moll Flanders (great Stockard Channing and Morgan Freeman), lots of versions of Gulliver's Travels for Swift. Not to mention the Mozart and Rossini operas based on Beaumarchais's Figaro plays. Link to comment
papeetepatrick Posted September 13, 2007 Share Posted September 13, 2007 Most lists, like this one, shy away from anything between Milton and Emma--i.e., Hobbes, Locke, Pope, Swift, Defoe, Sterne, Rousseau, Richardson, Fielding, Voltaire, Hume, etc. No "classics" there?Good question. I notice that everyone on your list except Hobbes could be considered a writer of the 18th century. Readers nowadays do tend to flee from the 18th century, it seems. (Although we've recently had a brief discussion of Liaisons Dangereuse on another thread, and Rousseau remains a kind of best seller in the area of women's studies (Julie, etc.). Our age is many things, but an "Age of Reason" it is not. I've read lots of 18th century things, and if you read French, you should read some Crebillon fils, such as 'L'Ecumoire', a hilarious racy fairy tale. Also some Sade if you can stand it--if you really want to understand 18th century France; 'Eugenie Franval' if you can't take the filth. Tristram Shandy is definitely de rigueur, and I need to get to Sterne's Italian journeys essays. Love Defoe for 'Moll Flanders' and Fielding always for Tom Jones. Never have read 'Roxana', this will remind me. And more Pope, I need to take some time for that. Always loved 'Candide' and 'Zadig'. I skimmed through the thread and all named were classics, I believe. It has to do with what we prefer after that's settled (as usual). I don't care for Edith Wharton's prose, it's sort of bitter-sounding in its execution, but do like some of the screen treatments. Consider Faulkner and Hemingway great, esp. 'Absalom! Absalom!' for the former and 'For Whom the Bell Tolls' for the latter. Proust, Joyce, definitely Homer, and the Iliad even more than the Odyssey, it's more muscular. Agree with cubanmiamiboy about 'The Wild Palms' of Faulkner, I've read most of his novels, they are all magnificent. Terrible gaps include Dante, Moby Dick, and Don Quixote. For those of you enamoured of Don Quixote, Martin Amis writes a most amusing essay on how hard it was for him to get through it. Made me not want to read it, and I did try once. Which reminds me: 'Lolita' of Nabokov--indispensable. Amis said 'Lolita is sometimes maybe too good for its own good', which I adored. Link to comment
sidwich Posted September 13, 2007 Share Posted September 13, 2007 Most lists, like this one, shy away from anything between Milton and Emma--i.e., Hobbes, Locke, Pope, Swift, Defoe, Sterne, Rousseau, Richardson, Fielding, Voltaire, Hume, etc. No "classics" there? I think these lists are inevitably based on personal preferences, and mine is definitely away from 18th Century literature. You'll notice, mine is also very, very light on American literature as well, which is something that my advisor in college used to deplore. All those authors you listed are well worth reading (as well as Jefferson's "Declaration of Independence"), but not particularly what I personally would casually recommend to someone to get started on because they're not particularly works that I enjoy just to pick up and read. Link to comment
cubanmiamiboy Posted September 13, 2007 Share Posted September 13, 2007 Love Defoe for 'Moll Flanders' . Yes! I loved Moll Flanders too!, God, was she outreagous! definitely Homer, and the Iliad even more than the Odyssey, it's more muscular. Those were mandatory when i was in high school, but back then i was just devouring all the XIX russian and french literature that i could get...it wasn't 'till college that i got into Homer...for good. Agree with cubanmiamiboy about 'The Wild Palms' of Faulkner, I've read most of his novels, they are all magnificent. I know! Every time i reread some pages of the Harry and Charlotte’s doomed love affair, i just get amazed at its long, hypnotic phrases and brilliant tone. For those of you enamoured of Don Quixote, Martin Amis writes a most amusing essay on how hard it was for him to get through it. Made me not want to read it, and I did try once. I would like to add that I was able to read this amazing tale in an excelent adition in its original language,spanish, which is also my first language, so i guess that that's a plus when trying to get into it... Link to comment
Ray Posted September 13, 2007 Share Posted September 13, 2007 I think these lists are inevitably based on personal preferences, and mine is definitely away from 18th Century literature. You'll notice, mine is also very, very light on American literature as well, which is something that my advisor in college used to deplore. All those authors you listed are well worth reading (as well as Jefferson's "Declaration of Independence"), but not particularly what I personally would casually recommend to someone to get started on because they're not particularly works that I enjoy just to pick up and read. Fielding's Joseph Andrews is one of the funniest books I ever read--not to mention Tom Jones. Link to comment
Farrell Fan Posted September 13, 2007 Share Posted September 13, 2007 Speaking of 18th Century literature makes me think of Tristram Shandy, written by Lauremce Sterne between 1759 and 1767. Has anyone here read it? Or even attempted it? It will demolish forever whatever ideas you may have about what an 18th Century novel is. It remains perpetually avant garde. Unfortunately, as is the case with more recent avant garde novels, I've never been able to finish it. Link to comment
papeetepatrick Posted September 13, 2007 Share Posted September 13, 2007 Speaking of 18th Century literature makes me think of Tristram Shandy, written by Lauremce Sterne between 1759 and 1767. Has anyone here read it? Or even attempted it? It will demolish forever whatever ideas you may have about what an 18th Century novel is. It remains perpetually avant garde. Unfortunately, as is the case with more recent avant garde novels, I've never been able to finish it. Yes, Farrell Fan, I mentioned it in a clump of others above, and I agree with you, it is the most difficult, thorny novel I have ever read. I read all of Proust's Recherches in 2 months, but it took me 3 1/2 years to get through Tristram Shandy, but you feel like you deserved an Honorary Knighthood when it was finally done. NOW--I must make plans to reread it, which should be a great and well-earned pleasure. I cared little for that movie from 2006, the Cock and Bull Story about a film company trying to make the impossible film of Tristram Shandy, but it's always spoken of as being very cinematic. I left out all my favourite female fiction writers, most of whom are American and 20th century: all of Flannery O'Connor's incredible stories, Carson McCullers--all of it, but esp. Reflections in a Golden Eye and Ballad of the Sad Cafe, and Joan Didion--all of it, but The White Album and The Last Thing He Wanted by far the most. Also like Robbe-Grillet quite a lot, and with things moving as they are, these 'nouveaux romans' can probably be called classics by now, even if Saul Bellow denounced them. Link to comment
canbelto Posted September 13, 2007 Share Posted September 13, 2007 If you follow canbelto's advice, when you finally arrive at the conclusion, the Death of Don Quijote, you will feel like you're losing a great friend, one who has learned and grown from experience, and both regrets and accepts the self-delusions that are so much a part of life. As Sancho Panza says, "Oh, don't die, dear master. Take my advice and live many years." Also, by the end of the novel, I think you kind of start to realize that the Don's dreamy, idealistic nature is at times laughable, but overall it's a balm and respite from the cynicism and ugliness of the "real world." That's an idea that still resonates today, as does the idea that everyone can learn from each other. The Dons of the world can learn from the Sanchos, and vice versa. The plea for people not to be judgmental of each other is also a very modern idea. Link to comment
bart Posted September 13, 2007 Share Posted September 13, 2007 Also, by the end of the novel, I think you kind of start to realize that the Don's dreamy, idealistic nature is at times laughable, but overall it's a balm and respite from the cynicism and ugliness of the "real world." That's an idea that still resonates today, as does the idea that everyone can learn from each other. The Dons of the world can learn from the Sanchos, and vice versa. The plea for people not to be judgmental of each other is also a very modern idea.What a wonderful way of looking at it, canbelto. You've given me something new to think about. Thanks. Link to comment
canbelto Posted September 13, 2007 Share Posted September 13, 2007 On another note, I want to grab all the English teachers in the world and tell them that Hamlet is not a good intro to the Bard. Yes it's a masterpiece, but it's a difficult, disturbing, at times confusing masterpiece, and it's also very loooooooong. I think they do this with the idea that Hamlet is young, sensitive, moody, and has an identity crisis, just like many ... teens. But I still remember the blank stares of my English class and we were "honors" students, so it wasn't as if we were unmotivated. Just out of our depth. And after all these years, I admit that I still. Don't. Really. Get. Hamlet. Best intros to Shakespeare are, in my opinion, Midsummer's Night Dream, Romeo and Juliet, and, for tragedies, Macbeth. Link to comment
papeetepatrick Posted September 13, 2007 Share Posted September 13, 2007 Best intros to Shakespeare are, in my opinion, Midsummer's Night Dream, Romeo and Juliet, and, for tragedies, Macbeth. Agree that these are good. I don't think 'Othello' was a good intro either, which was mine. Link to comment
bart Posted September 13, 2007 Share Posted September 13, 2007 It would be great to hear people's stories of what "the classics" mean to them now -- and how they were introduced to them duirng their earlier education. For some of us this process began long ago. For others, it's been more recent. I wonder how much things have changed. Canbelto's remarks made me think of my own experience back in the Dark Ages. We worked our way "up" to Hamlet, which was done only in the 4th year. (I say "done," because it was analysed to death. Fortunately, I'd already seen a production in NYC. I don't know what young people thought who had only the printed page(s) to go by.) Your suggestions, canbelto, come close to what we had in school long ago. As I recall it was: 1st year and 2nd years: Romeo and Juliet, Macbeth, but I don't know in what order. I remember being much assisted by the Classic Comics version at the time. 3rd year: Julius Caesar (put on by the drama department) and scenes from Much Ado about Nothing 4th year: Hamlet, scenes from The Tempest, and a selection of sonnets and things Othello I knew from Limon's The Moor's Pavane and (for some reason) frequent replays of the Orson Welles film on local television. Each year we were required to memorize several soliloquies or dialogues. Mine included Polonius's advise to Laertes ("And these few precepts in thy memory look thou character.") and Prospero's epilogue ("Now my charms are all o'erthrown.") Even then I seemed to be type cast as an old man. And this was just an ordinary suburban high school. It seems like another universe. Are such things still presented in this way nowadays? Link to comment
papeetepatrick Posted September 13, 2007 Share Posted September 13, 2007 In my own collection of classical plays, I must include Racine's 'Phedre', 'Athalie', 'Brittanicus', as I agree with the French that Racine is as great as Shakespeare. He does something else. Link to comment
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