Classics Without All the Class discussion
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Monster Reads


Our Techtator, Jared, recently listened to Atlas Shrugged on audio and loved it. He seemed to get a lot out of it other than the usual propagada you usually hear. So now he's harassing me to read it. I'm so intimidated!


So true. In my head, Madame Bovary felt like a monster, but has far less pages... :)

haha and for a little while there
The Age of Innocence did seem like a monster to some of us!

I have a friend, who did the audio as well and seemed to really enjoy it. I am thinking audio, if one likes it, might be a great approach for some of the monsters. I have considered giving Atlas Shrugged a chance since I have heard good things about the audio.

So true! The beginning was so difficult to get through to me that it seemed way longer than what it actually was.

Good to know! I may have to go for the audio when/if Atlas Shrugged gets picked. :)

Reading it at the moment though and despite its length it's not a heavy going read at all.

Reading it at the moment though and despite its length it's not a heavy going read at all."
I think I've been gushing somewhere else on this site about The Count of Monte Cristo but it's still one of my all time faves. Even at that whacking great length it didn't feel like a slog. Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea on the other hand, is a mere pamphlet but boy did I feel every. Single. Stilted and short. Sentence, Yes. Indeed it was. Dull.

Anna Karenina strikes me as a monster read as does Atlas Shrugged."
I really want to give Atlas Shrugged a go. I just see it on the shelf and chicken out!

I've heard nothing but good about The Count of Monte Cristo; that's been on my list for a long time. I read Atlas Shrugged years ago; I know I completely missed the point because mostly it seemed like a bad romantic potboiler. I should probably get it back out sometime.



"My wision is limited."

THIS!
Ulysses is the book I always want to read but I never start...so long and scary...

Monster books for me include War and Peace, Ulysses, and Infinite Jest.

Gone With The Wind was a monster but I tackled it no problem. I'm totally up for tackling Ulysses. Same with Les Miserables.
Not too stocked about Anna Karenina.
Kinda dredding it big time.

Also, the Outlander series from Diana Gabaldon.
Though, not all of those are on our shelves. I was just sharing some that I've gotten through.
The Satanic Verses was another that wasn't 650 pgs, but felt like it was.
I've also tackled some non fiction monsters.


I couldn't agree more, and I would love to read it one day specially that I have this one since for ever on my to-read list.
Another monster book that happens to be a favorite of mine is Crime and Punishment. I enjoyed every bit of it specially as it drew close towards the end.

My first non-required monster book was The Stand and that started my love affair with Stephen King books during my 20s. I read Crime and Punishment a few years back and I still find myself thinking about it every so often. Amazing writing!
Les Miserables was last year's tackle and I loved it. Many parts made me cry. Now on my list is Gone with the Wind and a re-read of Tale of Two Cities.


I lisened to Anna Karenina on audio from the library and liked it. It's what hooked me on audio. I listened to aa/22/63 by Stephen King and it was awesome. Now I always listen to audio on the way to/from work, and then read another paper or Kindle book at home at bedtime and at lunchtime. I get in more books this way!

This is my #1 monster read for 2013 (my middle name, Kristin, came from this book, and I have never read it in 60 years!). The other monster reads for me will be Gone With the Wind, The Passage by Justin Cronin, Under the Dome and the Stand, by Stephen King, and Pillars of the Earth by Follett. This is so far......

Ulysses was my monster read. It took me a few (seven!) tries to get through the entire thing. For years I called it my Everest.
It's worth the time and trouble, though.
It's worth the time and trouble, though.


I've attempted War and Peace and The Silmarillion three times each, but I've yet to finish either. Not only are they long, they both have a large cast and I find myself going back constantly to remember who the characters are.



East of Eden"
I listened to the Woman in White during a road trip a few years ago. I had no idea it was a monster book, it was lots of fun! Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell was definitely a monster for me. Took me a few tries to actually get into it, but once the story gets going, I enjoyed it quite a bit.

East of Eden"
I listened to the Woman in White during a road trip a few years ago. I had no idea it was a monster book, it was lots of fun! Jonathan Stran..."
I have Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell on my shelf that I picked up at a library book sale and I've been so tempted to crack it. Glad to hear it's worth trying.

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Anna Karenina strikes me as a monster read as does Atlas Shrugged.