I knew you would have a rather lengthy list. I was worried until the edit came through.
StormCrow Send a noteboard - 01/10/2010 02:26:34 AM
StormCrow Send a noteboard - 01/10/2010 02:26:34 AM
What are your favorite classic works?
I love Aristophanes and Herodotos. And I really like Hamlet and Macbeth. And I'll read Austen any chance I get. Same with Woolf, really. Or Dumas. Or Wodehouse. I am writing my PhD on Dickens, so I suppose I'll have to mention him. And Thackeray and Stevenson. I quite like some of Zola. There is too much to mention. I real a lot of "canon" literature.
I do enjoy Dumas and Stevenson. Count of Monte Cristo is great, and Treasure Island was one of my favorite stories in younger years. I've never read Woolf or Zola, so no commentary there. I mentioned Macbeth as well, which, I think, is my favorite play. What is your premise for your work on Dickens?
Edit: the more I think about this, the more books I feel that I should enter. There are so many good ones. Starting with Homer (Gilgamesh was alright, but not something I feel an immediate urge to re-read), on to Sapho, Aeschylos, Sohpocles, Plato, Xenophon, then Catullus, Vergil, Ovid. The mystery plays of the medieval period are worth your time. Geoffrey of Monmouth, Dante, Boccaccio, Chaucer, Cervantes' Don Quixote, Shakespeare, and Aphra Behn, Michel de Montaigne, Moliére, Racine, Fielding, Swift, Laurence Sterne, Goethe's Elective Affinities (not the tragic romantic stuff), Pope, Blake, Baudelaire, Lewis Carroll, Jules Verne, Nietzche (oh, my god, Nietzsche... or are we only talking about fiction here?), Ibsen and Strindberg, Henry James, Stevenson, Oscar Wilde, Thomas Mann, Gaston Leroux, Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky (within reason), Gogol, Bulgakov, Kafka, Joyce, Woolf, Proust, Walter Benjamin, Huxley, Orwell, Beckett, ... and with that I think we have reached the end of what I am comfortable calling a "classic". Although I will emphasise that I am associating wildly, and it is quite possible that I have forgotten someone I really like.
This is one heck of a list, with a lot of good authors in there. Lewis Carroll is on my list to read, as are Don Quixote and Dorian Gray. Will have to look up some of the others.
I wasn't aiming for something like Nietzsche when I started talking about classics. I read Thus Spoke Zarathustra and Beyond Good and Evil for a philosophy class. He was the most interesting to read by a mile.
If you had to suggest just one, which would it be and why? (please not, "because it's good" )
Hmm. If you are not used to reading non-contemporary books, I think Dumas or Wodehouse, possibly Austen (but I think possibly that works better if you are a girl) is a good place to start, mainly because the difference will not be so great. Stevenson is always great. Or, you know, Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories. Or Poe. Those are a good place to start because they are not terribly challenging.
I will check out the Holmes books at some point too. Everything doesn't have to be a challenge for me. At this point I'm removed enough from academia that I can just take it easy.
The same goes for Tolstoy. I am always amused by how War and Peace is touted like this difficult, intellectual novel when it is really a soap opera. It is interesting, and it is fun to read (if you get through the periods of thoughts on history, but those are short).
I never found it exceedingly difficult, it just seemed long and kind of slow. I need to reread this at some point. I'm having a hard time remembering what actually happened.
This message last edited by StormCrow on 01/10/2010 at 02:54:58 AM
The Classics - general discussion / survey
- 30/09/2010 03:52:53 PM
1587 Views
My own answers.
- 30/09/2010 04:38:33 PM
1200 Views
Re: My own answers.
- 30/09/2010 09:02:08 PM
1221 Views
Powdered Soup!
- 30/09/2010 09:23:51 PM
1218 Views
Re: Powdered Soup!
- 30/09/2010 09:34:06 PM
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Re: Powdered Soup!
- 30/09/2010 10:07:20 PM
1157 Views
Well, have you seen any of the Austen TV/movie adaptations, then?
- 30/09/2010 10:25:58 PM
1144 Views
Oh yes. I even made the mistake of purchasing the new Pride and Prejudice for her.
- 01/10/2010 12:10:05 AM
1144 Views
Cliff's notes
- 05/10/2010 08:05:56 PM
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Re: Cliff's notes
- 05/10/2010 09:21:06 PM
1402 Views
A classic is really any book with enduring value.
- 30/09/2010 05:33:35 PM
1150 Views
Re: A classic is really any book with enduring value.
- 30/09/2010 06:46:02 PM
1166 Views
Re: A classic is really any book with enduring value.
- 30/09/2010 10:57:23 PM
1167 Views
Re: A classic is really any book with enduring value.
- 30/09/2010 11:39:16 PM
982 Views
I really need to read Kundera. I've heard nothing but praise for Unbearable Lightness. *NM*
- 30/09/2010 08:46:18 PM
621 Views
I could post you over a copy to borrow.
- 30/09/2010 08:58:08 PM
972 Views
That is very kind, but I have far too much to do to read non-school books, unfortunately.
- 30/09/2010 10:53:23 PM
1055 Views
- 30/09/2010 10:53:23 PM
1055 Views
Haven't read any other Kundera, but yes, that one is very enjoyable. *NM*
- 30/09/2010 09:50:30 PM
616 Views
I found his other books to be pale copies of The Unbearable Lightness of Being. *NM*
- 30/09/2010 10:51:55 PM
663 Views
I study them, apparently.
- 30/09/2010 08:44:40 PM
1240 Views
I wish I could do that.
- 30/09/2010 09:49:57 PM
1143 Views
Less fun than you'd think.
- 30/09/2010 10:52:10 PM
1009 Views
- 30/09/2010 10:52:10 PM
1009 Views
More admiration of your discipline than assuming you were having fun with it.
- 01/10/2010 12:31:06 AM
1168 Views
- 01/10/2010 12:31:06 AM
1168 Views
Re: The Classics - general discussion / survey .. edited.
- 30/09/2010 08:58:14 PM
1229 Views
I knew you would have a rather lengthy list. I was worried until the edit came through.
- 01/10/2010 02:26:34 AM
1236 Views
- 01/10/2010 02:26:34 AM
1236 Views
Good survey.
- 30/09/2010 10:23:18 PM
1218 Views
- 30/09/2010 10:23:18 PM
1218 Views
Agreed. edited
- 30/09/2010 10:37:48 PM
1185 Views
But but but Milton is beautiful
- 30/09/2010 10:46:06 PM
1093 Views
- 30/09/2010 10:46:06 PM
1093 Views
Sometimes.
- 30/09/2010 10:47:28 PM
1118 Views
I'm glad you approve on the whole.
- 30/09/2010 11:12:00 PM
1207 Views
- 30/09/2010 11:12:00 PM
1207 Views
I generally do.
- 30/09/2010 11:19:05 PM
1134 Views
Excellent.
Might as well include a Hooft poem anyway, in case anyone's interested...
- 30/09/2010 11:40:24 PM
1300 Views
Might as well include a Hooft poem anyway, in case anyone's interested...
- 30/09/2010 11:40:24 PM
1300 Views
Re: Excellent.
Might as well include a Hooft poem anyway, in case anyone's interested...
- 30/09/2010 11:43:20 PM
1143 Views
Might as well include a Hooft poem anyway, in case anyone's interested...
- 30/09/2010 11:43:20 PM
1143 Views
Ah Cliff, I bow to thee
- 30/09/2010 11:30:41 PM
1258 Views
Re: Ah Cliff, I bow to thee
- 01/10/2010 03:18:58 AM
1103 Views
Re: Ah Cliff, I bow to thee
- 01/10/2010 05:20:10 AM
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Re: Ah Cliff, I bow to thee
- 01/10/2010 02:05:35 PM
1148 Views
I will not list 300+ books here, I promise
- 01/10/2010 12:36:17 AM
1246 Views
O'Connor is wonderful. But I am not sure many can appreciate her.
- 01/10/2010 02:50:54 AM
928 Views
Criminy, I thought I was done with essay questions years ago.
- 01/10/2010 01:39:56 AM
1126 Views
the bf and I are going to do a "Paradise Lost" book club...
- 02/10/2010 08:29:38 AM
1296 Views
