The Readers Review: Literature from 1714 to 1910 discussion
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Deborah, Moderator
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Jan 02, 2014 06:24AM

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Sir Walter Scott -- "The Waverley novels." (Not certain would want to include all of them -- don't know his work well enough to have an informed view.) He also did a four book series: "Tales of My Landlord," but it looks to me as if only one or two of that series might have interest?
Anthony Trollope -- "Chronicles of Barsetshire." Appears to be six novels.
Anthony Trollope -- "Palliser novels." Also appears to be six novels.
We have also talked previously about an Honoré de Balzac series: "La Comédie humaine."
At this point, my own TBR tumbles over to the extent that I have neither personal preference nor urgency about any of these, although I shall probably continue to indulge in selected individual volumes of the Palliser series.

Heart of Darkness (1899)
Lord Jim (1900)
The Inheritors (with Ford Madox Ford) (1901)
Nostromo (1904)
That, however, would be a pretty dark sequence, and I'm not sure many of us would be up to it as a continuous piece.

In addition:
Austen project
Twain project
Dumas project
Hardy project
(This is when I realize how much I love the modernists: Woolf project! Forster project! Hemingway project! But yes, I know that is outside of our time frame).

Doing Percy Shelley, Lord Byron, and Mary Shelley together would also be fun.

I like that one, too! Been considering for a long time that we have been missing Byron.

If we do Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn, we could also include Puddin' Head Wilson. I think they make a kind of trilogy. Not really, but they all come from the same home town.

[g] Our own personal Fadiman:
The New Lifetime Reading Plan: The Classical Guide to World Literature, Revised and Expanded by Clifton Fadiman


Oops, thought this was the other thread about where we want to go with this group so didn't read back far enough. Dumas project and the Shelley, Byron, Shelley combo also appeal.

I'd also like to do a J.M. Barrie project."
Seconded!
Another couple of greats IMHO would be Dumas and Zola. Emile Zola in particular is an author I don't often see featured in book groups. It can be a little heavy at times, but his study of people and society is surprisingly modern for its times!
Ian @ Collectiblecat.com
Online Catalog of Collectible Books


Please!

Anything by Miguel Delibes, preferably El Camino (The road).

Turgenev, on the other hand, fits the time frame perfectly.

Also I like Guy de Maupassant's Pierre et Jean, so a Maupassant series would be fun.
There is also Benito Pérez Galdós Fortunata and Jacinta Two Stories of Married Women. I think there are many books by this author, but I don't know of too many translated in English - does anyone else know of others?
I would love to reread all of these authors. I haven't read any Hardy but wouldn't mind his works either.

Could you imagine our high school teachers assigning a 700 page book today!?! In Canada at least it would never happen (unless there is a high school English teacher out there who would beg to differ with me - that would make me very happy :)).
LOL - I just thought of something, we could do a series entitled 'the Tolstoy of X', seeing as both Galdós and Manzoni have been dubbed the 'Tolstoy of Spain' and the 'Tolstoy of Italy', respectively.


Very interesting! I guess comparisons with Tolstoy and Dickens are practically inevitable for those who were their contemporaries. I wonder if this was the case at the time as well...

I have been doing Trollope upon my own and am on the 3rd of the Barchester books right now -- and I have wanted to do Balzac for a long time, but it is so very many books.
And the 'Tolstoy of X' series would be quite fascinating even if that was somewhat tongue-in-cheek. I am woefully unread in Italian or Spanish literature.



I would love to make a project of Soseki's works! What a great idea.

I'd never heard of him before this post, now I've added a couple of his books to my wishlist. Thanks so much:)


Yes, I've been looking at those, too! I've never read any book by Trollope, so I would really like to try a few!

Yes, I've been looking a..."
I've never read Trollope either, but I did see the mini-series of The Way We Live Now and it was great! I have to read the book now. That was how I was introduced to The Forsyte Saga also, saw the mini-series, then read the book.
We're in the process of nominating books for our May read over at
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
so head over to that list and add your wishes.
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
so head over to that list and add your wishes.

Didn't we have a discussion about Ouida being a model for a character in a book we read? MadgeUk?

I read Cecil Castlemaine's Gage, Lady Marabout's Troubles, and Other Stories and enjoyed it :-)
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Books mentioned in this topic
Cecil Castlemaine's Gage, Lady Marabout's Troubles, and Other Stories (other topics)Droll Stories (other topics)
The Betrothed (other topics)
Pierre and Jean (other topics)
The Last Man (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Ouida (other topics)Ouida (other topics)
Théophile Gautier (other topics)
Benito Pérez Galdós (other topics)
Clifton Fadiman (other topics)
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