Classics Without All the Class discussion
What else are you reading?
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I Managed to (Re-)Read it and I Liked it!
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A friend wanted me to read Three Men in a Boat and gifted it to me. I could not follow that book in my first go. I haven't given up though. Still have it with me...may be will give it a try again with a fresh mind...
Les Mis was another that I gave up on...

The Great Gatsby. I really want to like it this time, or at least appreciate it.

Same was with Pride and Prejudice.
I guess, sometimes timing is everything!


Finally managed to read the whole thing last year and aside from the constant stream of songs and poetry I enjoyed it.

I'm vowed to try Madame Bovary again too. I disliked it--while I loved others of his, mostly Sentimental Education. But I've since read a biography of him, Flaubert, that taught me about the artistry of Madame Bovary. I'm still not sure I'm going to like it... respect it, at least, I hope.


Actually, quality of translation is important, too. Bad translators turn anyone off reading books. That was why I decided to learn French to read Madame Bovary in its original language. All I remember now is Je ne parle pas français, which means I cannot speak French.:))







I'm hoping that Flaubert's Sntimntal education will work better for me in future. I loved Bovary but Sentimental was so slow going and I kept losing interest.
Not quite picked up years later but I had to read Middlemarch and A Portrait of a lady twice before I could enjoy them- I now think they are both amazing.


I just reread it too. I remember hating it in high school (probably because I had to read it) but found that I liked it much more this time around. I think it's taken a different tone for me now.

It's funny how our mood, and what's going on in our life, changes how we view a book!

I'm not sure when am I gonna do it but this is definitely the book I'd like to re-read keeping in mind some other perceptives !

There has been ..."
I cam across Three Men and a Dog after I read "To Say Nothing of the Dog: or, How We Found the Bishop's Bird Stump at Last" (Connie Willis) which is a comic space/history travel book, but touch-downs on scenes from "Three Men and a Dog". I like them both a lot! :)

I just reread it too. I remember hating it in hi..."
Me too! I remember trying to read it as a young teen, i just couldn't do it... But after the movie came out, it was one of those books that i read in one "gulp" :)

My answer to this question is "Tess of the D'Urbervilles" by Thomas Hardy. I had to read it for a university class and had a tough time getting through it. It was a requirement for another class the following year, so I gave it another try. I thoroughly enjoyed it this time around, and put it on my "To Keep" shelf! I guess the veiled innuendos and the tragedy of the plot had escaped me that first time.

Books mentioned in this topic
We Have Always Lived in the Castle (other topics)Wuthering Heights (other topics)
The Great Gatsby (other topics)
The Lord of the Rings (other topics)
The Hobbit, or There and Back Again (other topics)
More...
There has been only one book for which my opinion has been altered positively. I had read Three Men in a Boat a decade ago, I didn't enjoy it a bit. It was because my English was not that good--can't claim it is good now, either--and it was hard for me to understand British humour. I decided to give it a chance a couple of months ago, and unexpectedly, I enjoyed it immensely. I was laughing heartily--thank God my roommates didn't make any complaints for that. Now it is one of my favourite novels. That is why I will give Madame Bovary another chance. Hopefully, I will enjoy it, too, and my rather negative opinion on the novel will change.