Book Riot's Read Harder Challenge discussion

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2017 Read Harder Challenge > Task #17: Read a classic by an author of color

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message 1: by Book Riot (new)

Book Riot Community (book_riot) | 457 comments Mod
Use this space to discuss books you're reading or that might fit the seventeenth Read Harder task.


message 3: by Emily (new)

Emily | 8 comments I´ll finally get to Their eyes were watching god by Zora Neale Hurston.


message 4: by Rebecca (new)

Rebecca (rebecca_splain) | 31 comments I had planned to read Kindred this year but never got around to it. It shows up on the Goodreads list you posted, so it would be okay to read that one?


message 5: by Cheri (new)

Cheri (jovali2) Emily wrote: "I´ll finally get to Their eyes were watching god by Zora Neale Hurston."

Emily, I read that last year and it's really good! Enjoy!


message 6: by Cheri (new)

Cheri (jovali2) A great one is The Woman Warrior.


message 7: by Trudie (last edited Dec 16, 2016 01:55AM) (new)

Trudie (trudieb) I had Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe on my list from this years tasks but I read something else instead. I think this would be a great classic to tackle, particularly if you a Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie fan.


message 8: by Allie (new)

Allie (allieeveryday) Both Toni Morrison and Maya Angelou's books would count for this one!


message 9: by Mirabella (last edited Dec 16, 2016 10:08AM) (new)

Mirabella (lectricsheep0603) | 1 comments Does White Teeth count as a classic? I know it was published fairly recently (2001)...


message 11: by Cindy (new)

Cindy (cmbohn) | 26 comments I figure I'm the one who decides if it's a classic or not, so I'm going with the first Walter Mosely book, Devil in a Blue Dress. It's the first in his series featuring a Black detective, and among the first of its kind in the mystery genre.


message 12: by Stina (new)

Stina (stinalyn) | 212 comments This is a short but good list of speculative fiction from black authors:
https://afrofantasy.net/2013/05/08/si...

I'm going with The Conjure Woman and Other Conjure Tales, which sounds awesome *and* is available on Project Gutenberg.


message 13: by Ellie (new)

Ellie (nemetona) | 25 comments For this l'm going to read 'The Three Musketeers' by Alexandre Dumas.


message 14: by Hannah (new)

Hannah (sparklebot) | 3 comments If you like audiobooks and you're looking for something for this task, Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison is free on Audible right now. (I think until the end of December.) They're doing it as a special thing to celebrate Ralph Ellison. That's my plan for this task. I've been wanting to read it for ages.


message 15: by Rainey (new)

Rainey | 241 comments Hannah wrote: "If you like audiobooks and you're looking for something for this task, Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison is free on Audible right now. (I think until the end of December.) T..."

Thank you for the heads up. This was my pick too and now I can listen to it as well.


message 16: by Leanne (new)

Leanne (littlebunnylibrary) | 23 comments I'm going with "Things Fall Apart" by Chinua Achebe. It's been sat on my bookshelf for a long time! I considered reading something by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, but since I've already read a book by her, I felt choosing this book encourages me to "read harder" :)


message 17: by Maryam (new)

Maryam (ardvisoor) | 66 comments I got "Invisible Man" ffom audible so I'm going to listen to it for this task.


message 18: by Katy (new)

Katy Gold (katygold) | 29 comments I absolutely think Kindred is a classic of its genre, and can't recommend it highly enough. I read it for last year's challenge (read a book published in the decade of your birth) and it instantly took a place in my "best books of all time" list.


message 19: by Veronica (new)

Veronica | 75 comments Hannah wrote: "If you like audiobooks and you're looking for something for this task, Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison is free on Audible right now. (I think until the end of December.) T..."

Thanks for posting that! I read Invisible Man for my Master's degree final and I didn't love it, but it's such an important part of the black American canon that I feel I should give it another go. Listening to it while doing other things may be the trick to get me to "reread" it. For this task I'm going with James Baldwin's The Fire Next Time, since I've never read him and feel like that's a pretty big hole in my cultural/literary knowledge.


message 20: by Brandyn (new)

Brandyn (brandy_k) | 59 comments I've had Roots by Alex Haley on my TBR forever. Would that be considered classic?


message 21: by [deleted user] (new)


message 22: by Stacey (new)

Stacey Kindred sounds great! I think I will read that for this one.


message 23: by Chris (new)

Chris Ingalls (chrisingalls) | 0 comments Mirabella Mitchell wrote: "Does White Teeth count as a classic? I know it was published fairly recently (2001)..."

Good question. I'm reading that one as my "debut novel."


message 24: by Chris (new)

Chris Ingalls (chrisingalls) | 0 comments Native Son by Richard Wright.


message 25: by Tynisha (new)

Tynisha (riversong153) I have Things Fall Apart on my bookshelf. I was one of the kids who managed not to read this during high school but have a copy from my little brother. From the comments above this seems like a good read.


message 26: by Brooklyn (new)

Brooklyn Wegner (brooklynwegner) | 2 comments Hello everyone! I was planning on reading I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou for this task. Have any of you read it? How did you like it?


message 27: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Thompson | 5 comments Kindred was already mentioned. I loved Another Country by James Baldwin. It could count for several other categories as well. Assata by Assata Shakur. The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison


message 28: by Kenneth (new)

Kenneth Chang | 5 comments Spotting a few titles I've got on my shelf to be read! Since nobody's mentioned him, how about Richard Wright? Native Son and Black Boy were really impactful for me.


message 29: by Christine (last edited Dec 24, 2016 06:57PM) (new)

Christine Heimburg Brooklyn wrote: "Hello everyone! I was planning on reading I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou for this task. Have any of you read it? How did you like it?"

I listened to this book on audio last year, ready by Maya Angelou herself, and it was wonderful. The story itself was really great, but hearing her read her own words added so much to the experience. If you do read this, I'd recommend trying it on audio.


message 30: by Carolyn (new)

Carolyn Chambers Debating between Invisible Man (audio book I got in December) and Sula (library book). Think I'll do Invisible Man so that I have motivation to listen to that book sooner rather than later as library due date will encourage me to read Sula.


message 31: by Carol (new)

Carol (carolfromnc) I'll either read Passing or Quicksand by Nella Larsen.


message 32: by Shatterlings (new)

Shatterlings | 43 comments Is Beloved by Toni Morrison considered a classic, or is it too modern ?


message 33: by Julia (new)

Julia O'Connell | 9 comments Ultra wrote: "Is Beloved by Toni Morrison considered a classic, or is it too modern ?"

Definitely a Classic! (It's frequently assigned in high school English classes at any rate.)


message 34: by Shatterlings (new)

Shatterlings | 43 comments Thanks. Good, I got it in a charity shop today


message 35: by Monica (new)

Monica (monicae) Hannah wrote: "If you like audiobooks and you're looking for something for this task, Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison is free on Audible right now. (I think until the end of December.) They're doing it as a special thing to celebrate Ralph Ellison..."

I was just about to post this! Thanks Hannah! This is my choice as well. Interested folks have 2 more days to get this from Audible.


message 36: by Elizabeth (new)

Elizabeth (elizabethlk) | 365 comments I have been considering Kindred, Roots, Things Fall Apart, and Their Eyes Were Watching God for this task. There's so many I haven't gotten to, so this task is overwhelming me with choice.


message 37: by Ozge (new)

Ozge | 7 comments Would Dhalgren by Samuel R. Delany be considered a classic?


message 38: by Carol (new)

Carol (carolfromnc) Ozge wrote: "Would Dhalgren by Samuel R. Delany be considered a classic?"

Some might disagree. I'd say, yes. No one bats an eye at including Kindred (deservedly so), and Dahlgren is in the same genre and with if not the same significance, close.


message 39: by Ozge (new)

Ozge | 7 comments Thanks, great to know! I was going back and forth between Kindred and Dahlgren for this challenge. I want to read both but I think I'll give priority to Dahlgren because the plot intrigued me immensely.


message 40: by [deleted user] (new)

I'm reading The Old Man of the Moon by Shen Fu for this task.


message 41: by Jenny (new)

Jenny Downing (jendow) | 10 comments Emily wrote: "I´ll finally get to Their eyes were watching god by Zora Neale Hurston."

A wonderful book I read years ago.........enjoy !


message 42: by Lindsay (new)

Lindsay Is The Color Purple by Alice Walker considered a classic?


message 43: by Stacie (new)

Stacie (stacieh) | 5 comments Lindsay wrote: "Is The Color Purple by Alice Walker considered a classic?"
Absolutely!


message 44: by Lindsay (new)

Lindsay Wonderful -- thank you!


message 45: by Elizabeth (new)

Elizabeth I'm planning on reading that one as well. It's one of those that I've had on my shelves for 20 years and never started so I'm excited about this.


message 47: by Rayne (new)

Rayne (raynebair) | 81 comments Hmmm. Maybe I'll go with Kindred and double dip since I've already read it. Still undecided.


message 48: by Katie (new)

Katie (goktrose) | 101 comments I fell in love with Octavia E. Butler last year during the challenge when I read Dawn so I will be reading Kindred for this category!


message 49: by KaalAmba (new)

KaalAmba (amba1sfr) | 3 comments I'm starting the challenge here, doubling up on tasks by re-reading a book from my shelves, Nectar in a Sieve. Haven't read it since high school, and excited to go back to it. It's also set 5000 miles away from me, but hopefully I won't have to triple up :)


message 50: by Allie (new)

Allie (allieeveryday) Do we think Strength to Love by MLK Jr. would count as a classic? Says it was originally published in 1963.


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