Catching up on Classics (and lots more!) discussion

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Other Challenges Archive > Aubrey's Personal Challenges - Classics Beyond the Pale

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message 1: by Luke (last edited Jul 18, 2021 02:32PM) (new)

Luke (korrick) I'll be using this to track my progress for various lists of less adulated classics.

———

100 Must-Read Classics By Women

Number Read - 50/100
1. Wuthering Heights - Emily Brontë (review)
2. Jane Eyre - Charlotte Brontë (review)
3. The Diary of a Young Girl - Anne Frank
4. To Kill a Mockingbird - Harper Lee
5. Frankenstein - Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley (review)
6. Persuasion - Jane Austen (review)
7. The Awakening - Kate Chopin
8. Mrs. Dalloway - Virginia Woolf (review)
9. The Mill on the Floss - Mary Ann Evans (review)
10. The Yellow Wallpaper - Charlotte Perkins Gilman (review)
11. The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter - Carson McCullers (review)
12. The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson - Emily Dickinson (review)
13. Passing - Nella Larsen (review)
14. A Wrinkle in Time - Madeleine L'Engle (review)
15. Their Eyes Were Watching God - Zora Neale Hurston (review)
16. A Raisin in the Sun - Lorraine Hansberry
17. The Talented Mr. Ripley - Patricia Highsmith (review)
18. Wide Sargasso Sea - Jean Rhys (review)
19. North and South - Elizabeth Gaskell (review)
20. We Have Always Lived in the Castle - Shirley Jackson (review)
21. The Golden Notebook - Doris Lessing (review)
22. The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie - Muriel Spark (review)
23. Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl - Harriet Ann Jacobs (review)
24. A Good Man is Hard to Find and Other Stories - Flannery O'Connor (review)
25. The Tenant of Wildfell Hall - Anne Brontë (review)
26. A Vindication of the Rights of Woman - Mary Wollstonecraft (review)
27. The Tale of Genji - Murasaki Shikibu (review)
28. Gone with the Wind - Margaret Mitchell
29. Little Women - Louisa May Alcott (review)
30. A Lady's Life in the Rocky Mountains - Isabella L. Bird (review)
31. Oroonoko - Aphra Behn (review)
32. Half a Lifelong Romance - Eileen Chang (review)
33. Nada - Carmen Laforet (review)
34. A Little Princess - Frances Hodgson Burnett
35. The Scarlet Pimpernel - Emmuska Orczy
36. Efuru - Flora Nwapa (review)
37. Thus Were Their Faces: Selected Short Stories - Silvina Ocampo (review)
38. The Enchanted April - Elizabeth von Arnim (review)
39. The Group - Mary McCarthy (completed 8/28/18)
40. The Pillow Book - Sei Shōnagon (completed 9/17/18)
41. A Tree Grows in Brooklyn - Betty Smith (completed 10/3/18)
42. I Capture the Castle - Dodie Smith (completed 2/11/19)
43. Our Nig - Harriet E. Wilson (completed 2/18/19)
44. The Death of the Heart - Elizabeth Bowen (completed 3/25/19)
45. Belinda - Maria Edgeworth (completed 5/15/19)
46. The Man Who Loved Children - Christina Stead (completed 6/18/19)
47. Sonnets from the Portuguese - Elizabeth Barrett Browning (completed 3/23/20)
48. Nectar in a Sieve - Kamala Markandaya (completed 1/6/21)
49. Maud Martha - Gwendolyn Brooks (completed 2/24/21)
50. The Vet's Daughter - Barbara Comyns (completed 5/13/21)

Number On To-Read Shelf - 5/50
1. The Bondwoman's Narrative - Hannah Crafts
2. The Robber Bridegroom - Eudora Welty
3. Frost in May - Antonia White
4. Grand Hotel - Vicki Baum
5. The King Must Die - Mary Renault


message 2: by Luke (last edited Nov 18, 2021 05:21PM) (new)

Luke (korrick) 100 Must-Read Classics by People of Color

Number Read - 37/99
1. One Hundred Years of Solitude - Gabriel García Márquez (review)
2. Things Fall Apart - Chinua Achebe
3. Invisible Man - Ralph Ellison
4. The Arabian Nights - Anonymous (review)
5. Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass - Frederick Douglass (review)
6. Silence - Shūsaku Endō
7. The Souls of Black Folk - W.E.B. Du Bois (review)
8. The Autobiography of Malcolm X - Malcolm X (review)
9. A Raisin in the Sun - Lorraine Hansberry
10. The Waiting Years - Fumiko Enchi (review)
11. Ficciones - Jorge Luis Borges (review)
12. Native Son - Richard Wright (review)
13. Love in a Fallen City - Eileen Chang (review)
14. God's Bits of Wood - Ousmane Sembène (review)
15. Hawaii's Story by Hawaii's Queen - Liliuokalani (review)
16. The Doctor's Wife - Sawako Ariyoshi (review)
17. The Street - Ann Petry (review)
18. The Palm-Wine Drinkard - Amos Tutuola (review)
19. The Sound of Waves - Yukio Mishima
20. The Diary of Lady Murasaki - Murasaki Shikibu (review)
21. The Count of Monte Cristo - Alexandre Dumas
22. Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl - Harriet Ann Jacobs (review)
23. Efuru - Flora Nwapa (review)
24. Quicksand - Nella Larsen (review)
25. Crusade for Justice: The Autobiography of Ida B. Wells - Ida B. Wells-Barnett (review)
26. Twelve Years a Slave - Solomon Northup (review)
27. Go Tell It on the Mountain - James Baldwin (review)
28. The Pillow Book - Sei Shōnagon (completed 9/17/18)
29. Thousand Cranes -Yasunari Kawabata (completed 2/12/19)
30. Our Nig - Harriet E. Wilson (completed 2/18/19)
31. Clotel: or, The President's Daughter - William Wells Brown (completed 2/27/19)
32. The Woman in the Dunes - Kōbō Abe (completed 3/8/19)
33. The Confessions of Lady Nijō - Lady Nijō (completed 4/22/19)
34. The Story of the Stone - Cao Xueqin (completed 4/24/19)
35. Some Prefer Nettles - Jun'ichirō Tanizaki (completed 4/29/19)
36. Black Rain - Masuji Ibuse (completed 5/14/19)
37. Selected Poems - Gabriela Mistral (completed 6/8/20)

Number On To-Read Shelf - 5/62
1. Cane - Jean Toomer
2. Season of Migration to the North - Tayeb Salih
3. The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man - James Weldon Johnson
4. Houseboy - Ferdinand Oyono
5. Ambiguous Adventure - Cheikh Hamidou Kane


message 3: by Luke (last edited Mar 18, 2022 05:33PM) (new)

Luke (korrick) 101 Years Challenge

To read one book from each of the 101 years up to/including the year of my birth. (Idea credit to Manda & Darren)

1891 - Quincas Borba**
1892 - A Voice from the South - Anna Julia Cooper (completed 10/24/18)
1893 - TBD
1894 - Marcella - Mary Augusta Ward (completed 6/13/20)
1895 - TBD
1896 - TBD
1897 - The Blood of the Vampire**
1898 - Memoirs of a Highland Lady, Volume One - Elizabeth Grant
1899 - Imperium in Imperio**
1900 - TBD
1901 - TBD
1902 - The Story of Mary Maclane**
1903 - The Land of Little Rain - Mary Austin (completed 1/31/19)
1904 - The World I Live In - Helen Keller (completed 3/10/20)
1905 - The House of Mirth - Edith Wharton (completed 4/11/19)
1906 - A Woman - Sibilla Aleramo (completed 8/18/21)
1907 - The Convert - Elizabeth Robins (completed 3/30/18)
1908- Love's Shadow - Ada Leverson (w/in The Little Ottleys)
1909 - Gunnar's Daughter*
1910 - The Getting of Wisdom
1911 - Jenny*/**
1912- The Promised Land - Mary Antin
1913 - El Dorado: Further Adventures of the Scarlet Pimpernel (completed 6/27/20)
1914 - The Dybbuk**
1915 - The Voyage Out - Virginia Woolf (completed 9/13/18)
1916 - Pilgrimage, Volume 1: Pointed Roofs, Backwater, Honeycomb - Dorothy M. Richardson (completed 1/21/21)
1917 - TBD
1918 - TBD
1919 - TBD
1920 - The Metal of the Dead** - Concha Espina
1921 - Torn Lace and Other Stories
1922 - The Enchanted April - Elizabeth von Arnim (completed 4/12/18)
1923 - The Spider's Web**
1924 - Precious Bane - Mary Webb (completed 5/8/21)
1925 - Reminiscences of a Student's Life**
1926 - Strange Tale of Panorama Island**
1927 - La Confusion des sentiments**
1928 - Some Prefer Nettles - Jun'ichirō Tanizaki (completed 4/29/19)
1929 - Daughter of Earth - Agnes Smedley (completed 7/31/20)
1930 - The Shutter of Snow - Emily Holmes Coleman (completed 1/6/20)
1931 - Living My Life, Vol. 1 & Living My Life, Vol. 2 - Emma Goldman (completed 3/31/20) (V. 1 Review) (V. 2 Review)
1932 - Three Generations - Yom Sang-seop (completed 5/24/20)
1933 - The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas - Gertrude Stein (completed 3/20/18)
1934 - The Villagers
1935 - Swami and Friends - R.K. Narayan (completed 3/28/20)
1936 - Dumb Luck - Vũ Trọng Phụng (completed 4/27/20)
1937 - The Collected Poems - Sara Teasdale (completed 5/25/19)
1938 - The Death of the Heart - Elizabeth Bowen (completed 3/25/19)
1939 - Fighting for Life - S. Josephine Baker (completed 9/20/19)
1940 - Darkness at Noon
1941 - Selected Poems - Gabriela Mistral (completed 6/8/20)
1942 - West with the Night - Beryl Markham (completed 1/8/19)
1943 - The Little Locksmith - Katharine Butler Hathaway (completed 8/31/18)
1944 - Strange Fruit -Lillian E. Smith (completed 5/29/19)
1945 - Lark Rise to Candleford - Flora Thompson (completed 6/7/18)
1946 - The Pianist - Władysław Szpilman
1947 - The Setting Sun(/The World and Africa)
1948 - I Capture the Castle - Dodie Smith (completed 2/11/19)
1949 - Complete Poems -Edith Södergran (completed 8/15/18)
1950 - The Labyrinth of Solitude and Other Writings - Octavio Paz (completed 6/19/21)
1951 - Foundation - Isaac Asimov (completed 4/5/19)
1952 - Thousand Cranes- Yasunari Kawabata (completed 2/12/19)
1953 - Go Tell It on the Mountain - James Baldwin (completed 2/26/18)
1954 - My Life in the Bush of Ghosts - Amos Tutuola (completed 8/7/18)
1955 - Pedro Páramo - Juan Rulfo(completed 4/12/19)
1956 - The Temple of the Golden Pavilion - Yukio Mishima (completed 4/26/18)
1957 - Owls Do Cry - Janet Frame (completed 7/16/18)
1958 - Gabriela, Clavo y Canela - Jorge Amado (completed 11/28/18)
1959 - The River Ki - Sawako Ariyoshi (completed 1/21/20)
1960 - Hons and Rebels - Jessica Mitford (Currently Reading)
1961 - The Apple in the Dark - Clarice Lispector (completed 4/20/18)
1962 - The Woman in the Dunes - Kōbō Abe (completed 3/8/19)
1963 - The Group - Mary McCarthy (completed 8/28/18)
1964 - A Personal Matter - Kenzaburō Ōe (completed 1/28/21)
1965 - Black Rain - Masuji Ibuse (completed 5/14/19)
1966 - The Diary of Anaïs Nin, Vol. 1: 1931-1934 - Anaïs Nin (completed 3/1/18)
1967 - Journey into the Whirlwind - Evgenia Ginzburg (completed 8/26/19)
1968 - Coming of Age in Mississippi - Anne Moody (completed 2/22/18)
1969 - Savushun - سیمین دانشور (completed 2/1/18)
1970 - Idu - Flora Nwapa (completed 1/23/21)
1971 - Tiger's Daughter - Bharati Mukherjee (completed 4/6/21)
1972 - Farewell to Manzanar - Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston (completed 6/26/18)
1973 - On Photography - Susan Sontag (completed 1/13/21)
1974 - Second Class Citizen - Buchi Emecheta (completed 3/26/19)
1975 - for colored girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf(completed 1/14/18)
1976 - Lady Oracle/Speedboat/On Revolution and War
1977 - Petals of Blood - Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o (completed 9/18/19)
1978 - Territory of Light - Yūko Tsushima
1979 - Tales of Nevèrÿon - Samuel R. Delany (completed 7/3/19)
1980 - The Story of Zahra/The Crow Eaters

(cont. in next post)


message 4: by Luke (last edited Sep 04, 2021 06:49PM) (new)

Luke (korrick) (cont. from previous post)

1981 - Women, Race, and Class - Angela Y. Davis
1982 - The Women of Brewster Place - Gloria Naylor
1983 - Praisesong for the Widow
1984 - Yours in Struggle - Elly Bulkin(completed 7/8/19)
1985 - Fantasia - Assia Djebar (completed 5/20/19)
1986 - Simone Weil: An Anthology - Simone Weil (completed 11/25/18)
1987 - He Who Searches - Luisa Valenzuela (completed 4/14/21)
1988 - Reflections on the Way to the Gallows - Mikiso Hane (editor) (completed 9/4/20)
1989 - Ìsarà: A Voyage Around "Essay" - Wole Soyinka (completed 5/7/18)
1990 - Black Feminist Thought - Patricia Hill Collins (completed 6/4/18)
1991 - Wild Swans: Three Daughters of China - Jung Chang (completed 8/2/18)

*duplicate
**unowned

Completed - 62/101

---

Book For Every Year Since Birth Challenge:

1992 - Mrs. Vargas and the Dead Naturalist - Kathleen Alcalá (completed 12/20/18)
1993 - Love in the Kingdom of Oil(/Women Writing in India: The Twentieth Century/Yellow Woman and a Beauty of the Spirit)
1994 - Aunt Résia and the Spirits and Other Stories - Yanick Lahens (completed 11/25/18)
1995 - The Unconsoled - Kazuo Ishiguro (completed 9/7/18)
1996 - Pillars of Salt/Memories of a Pure Spring/Cereus Blooms at Night
1997 - Comfort Woman - Nora Okja Keller (completed 12/27/18)
1998 - Do They Hear You When You Cry - Fauziya Kassindja (completed 8/7/19)
1999 - The Coldest Winter Ever
2000 - Power Politics - Arundhati Roy (completed 9/25/19)
2001 - Cane River - Lalita Tademy (completed 3/12/18)
2002 - Salt Fish Girl - Larissa Lai (completed 11/12/18)
2003 - Trespassing - Uzma Aslam Khan (completed 5/6/19)
2004 - Sky Burial - Xinran (completed 4/2/18)
2005 - Climbing the Mango Trees - Madhur Jaffrey (completed 6/13/18)
2006 - Native Guard - Natasha Trethewey (completed 10/5/20)
2007 - The Vegetarian - Han Kang (completed 9/3/19)
2008 - Unaccustomed Earth - Jhumpa Lahiri (completed 2/5/19)
2009 - Little Reunions - Eileen Chang (completed 3/11/19)
2010 - The Warmth of Other Suns - Isabel Wilkerson (completed 12/14/18)
2011 - Faces in the Crowd - Valeria Luiselli (completed 9/10/19)
2012 - I Am Malala - Malala Yousafzai (completed 7/13/18)
2013 - My Beloved World - Sonia Sotomayor (completed 9/11/19)
2014 - Life in Motion: An Unlikely Ballerina - Misty Copeland (completed 5/26/19)
2015 - Sleeping on Jupiter - Anuradha Roy (completed 2/9/18)
2016 - Monstress, Vol. 1 - Marjorie M. Liu (completed 3/26/18)
2017 - Sing, Unburied, Sing - Jesmyn Ward (completed 10/30/18)
2018 - Fruit of the Drunken Tree - Ingrid Rojas Contreras (completed 5/28/19)
2019 - Black Leopard, Red Wolf - Marlon James
2020 - TBD
2021 - The Wrong End of the Telescope**

Completed - 24/30

*duplicate
**unowned


message 5: by Luke (last edited May 06, 2021 04:08PM) (new)

Luke (korrick) Flex Page


message 6: by Katy, Quarterly Long Reads (new)

Katy (kathy_h) | 9529 comments Mod
Okay, I'm excited to follow your lists here.


message 7: by Luke (last edited Jan 28, 2018 06:06PM) (new)

Luke (korrick) Katy wrote: "Okay, I'm excited to follow your lists here."

Thanks, Katy.


message 8: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) Having updated two of the message blocks with challenges, I'm looking at a loooooong reading period, not including the slots that still need filling. That's fine with me.


message 9: by Darren (new)

Darren (dazburns) | 2147 comments Well Done on taking up the 101 Year Challenge - it's a monster!

I found just finalising the list to be a big challenge in itself (quite apart from reading 101 books!) especially keeping it down to one book per author :oO


message 10: by Laurie (new)

Laurie | 1895 comments These are great challenges, and I am impressed that you have so many books already picked out. I am doing the birth year to present challenge which I am tracking in another group. But I have many more years to fill in than you.😊

I also have a century challenge that I started last year, but mine is 1917-2017. I made it a women authors only to encourage myself read more by women. Best of luck on all of your lists.


message 11: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) Darren wrote: "Well Done on taking up the 101 Year Challenge - it's a monster!

I found just finalising the list to be a big challenge in itself (quite apart from reading 101 books!) especially keeping it down to..."


Thanks, Darren. I hate agonizing over which book to pick up next, so long term direction is always good. I agree about the duplicates, and will be avoiding the Woolf/Richardson pile in hopes of acquiring substitutes.


message 12: by Luke (last edited Jan 31, 2018 10:31PM) (new)

Luke (korrick) Laurie wrote: "These are great challenges, and I am impressed that you have so many books already picked out. I am doing the birth year to present challenge which I am tracking in another group. But I have many m..."

Thanks, Laurie. All I did really was cycle down my to read list while winding down from work. I like filling in blanks.

I'm focusing on women authors as well, but I also focus on non white authors, as well as Jewish authors, in recognition of their similarily marginalized status in literature. It keeps me comfortably international.


message 13: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) I've completed 1969 and 2015 and posted my reviews above.


message 14: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) I've completed Go Tell It on the Mountain and Twelve Years a Slave for my PoCC challenge; 1933, 1953, and 1966 for my 100 Years challenge; and 2001 and 2016 for my Since Birth challenge. Reviews for all are linked to above.


message 15: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) I've finished The Enchanted April for my WC challenge; 1922, 1956, and 1961 for my 100 YBB challenge; and 2004 for my YSB challenge. Reviews for all are linked to above.


message 16: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) I've finished 1989, 1945, 1957, 1972, and 1990 for my 100 YBB challenge, and 2005 and 2012 for my YSB challenge. Reviews for all are linked to above.


message 17: by Sherri (new)

Sherri | 38 comments I am loving your reading lists :) I am going to have to check a few of your books more closely to see if I might want to add them to my own tbr birthday challenge. Good luck and Happy Reading :)


message 18: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) Sherri wrote: "I am loving your reading lists :) I am going to have to check a few of your books more closely to see if I might want to add them to my own tbr birthday challenge. Good luck and Happy Reading :)"

Thanks very much, Sherri. I'm still working on filling out my own list, but it's a labor of love.


message 19: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) I've completed 1949, 1954, and 1991 for my 100 YBB challenge, and 1991 for my YSB challenge. Reviews for all are linked to above.


message 20: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) I've completed 'The Group' for both my WC challenge and 1963 for my 100 YBB challenge, 1943 for my 100 YBB challenge, and 1995 for my YSB challenge.


message 21: by Terris (new)

Terris | 4385 comments How did you like The Group? I only recently learned of it and now see have noticed it on several lists. I've added it to my TBR. Did you enjoy it?


message 22: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) Terris wrote: "How did you like The Group? I only recently learned of it and now see have noticed it on several lists. I've added it to my TBR. Did you enjoy it?"

Unfortunately, Terris, I wasn't a fan. The work is apparently supposed to be satire, but as it's not very good satire, it doesn't have much else going for it for me personally.


message 23: by Terris (new)

Terris | 4385 comments Aubrey wrote: "Terris wrote: "How did you like The Group? I only recently learned of it and now see have noticed it on several lists. I've added it to my TBR. Did you enjoy it?"

Unfortunately, Terris, I wasn't a..."


Well, thanks for the info. I'll think I'll keep it on the list, but not move it up too fast ;)


message 24: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) I've completed 'The Pillow Book' in both the WC and PoCC challenges, and have also completed 1915 in the 100 YBB and 1995 in the YSB challenges.


message 25: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) I've completed 'A Tree Grows in Brooklyn' for the WC challenge, 1892 in the YBB challenge, and 2017 in the YSB challenge. I also got my hands on a copy of Blood on the Forge by William Attaway, so now my 1941 slot is ensured.


message 26: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) I've completed 1986 in the YBB challenge and 1994 and 2002 in the YSB challenge.


message 27: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) I've completed 1958 in the YBB challenge.


message 28: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) I've completed 1992, 1997, and 2010 in the YSB challenge.


message 29: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) I've completed 1903 and and 1942 in my YSB challenge.


message 30: by Luke (last edited Feb 22, 2019 12:22PM) (new)

Luke (korrick) I've completed I Capture the Castle and Our Nig for my WC challenge, Thousand Cranes and Our Nig for my PoCC challenge, 1948 and 1952 in my YBB challenge, and 2008 in my YSB challenge.


message 31: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) I've completed The Death of the Heart for my WC challenge; Clotel: or, The President's Daughter and The Woman in the Dunes for my PoCC challenge; and 1905, 1938, 1951, 1955, and 1962 in my YBB challenge.


message 32: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) I've finished 'Belinda' for my WC challenge; 'The Story of the Stone, 'Some Prefer Nettles', and 'Black Rain' for my PoCC challenge; 1928 and 1965 for my YBB challenge; and 2003 for my YSB challenge.

I'm out of TBR books for my PoCC challenge, so I need to start expanding my searching grounds a tad.


message 33: by Katy, Quarterly Long Reads (new)

Katy (kathy_h) | 9529 comments Mod
I read Some Prefer Nettles years ago. It has still stayed with me. I should reread it.


message 34: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) Katy wrote: "I read Some Prefer Nettles years ago. It has still stayed with me. I should reread it."

Tanizaki's a good enough author and had enough works that I can see myself reading another two or three of his in the future.


message 35: by Luke (last edited Jun 12, 2019 09:56PM) (new)

Luke (korrick) I've completed 1937, 1944, and 1985 for my YBB challenge, and 2014 and 2018 for my YSB challenge.


message 36: by Lynn, New School Classics (last edited Jun 13, 2019 11:57AM) (new)

Lynn (lynnsreads) | 5120 comments Mod
Aubrey wrote: "I've completed 1937, 1944, and 1985 for my YBB challenge, and 2014 and 2018 for my YSB challenge."

Excellent! My Books for Each Year Since Birth Challenge has been going nowhere lately. Maybe after Bingo is finished.


message 37: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) Lynn wrote: "Aubrey wrote: "I've completed 1937, 1944, and 1985 for my YBB challenge, and 2014 and 2018 for my YSB challenge."

Excellent! My Books for Each Year Since Birth Challenge has been going nowhere lat..."


Thanks, Lynn. I haven't actually been conscientiously working on this, but all the chronological jumping around I do in my reading for Quest for Women is certainly helping me fill in the older spots.


message 38: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) I've finished 'The Man Who loved Children' for my WC challenge and 1979 and 1984 for my YBB challenge.


message 39: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) I've finished 1939, 1967, and 1977 for my YBB challenge and 1998, 2000, 2007, 2011, and 2013 for my YSB challenge.


message 40: by Philina (new)

Philina | 1085 comments What wonderful challenges! I think I might do the women and people of color one, too!

What I find interesting is that you have Latin American authors like Márquez down as people of color.
Let's discuss that culturally! Maybe there are some more Europeans here reading this who could give me their view on this.
Since Spain and Italy are part of us (the EU) I always saw Latino looking people as other Europeans and thus as "white" like myself.
I've never really thought about "race" and its consequences since here in Germany we are never asked about our "race" (obviously in our historical context!). The first time I heard the term "caucasian" was during my school exchange in the US.
This is a culturally very interesting topic... (but still very stupid, because we're all just people).
I guess here in Germany right now, people and the media mainly differentiate between people according to their religion (especially muslims) and then we've got the refugees (who can be of any skin color).
Race isn't an issue except for the crazy and stupid neo-nazis who talk of people being genetically German/northern European.


message 41: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) Philina wrote: "What wonderful challenges! I think I might do the women and people of color one, too!

What I find interesting is that you have Latin American authors like Márquez down as people of color.
Let's ..."


Hello Philina. Thanks for the interest.

In terms of the PoC list, this isn't a list that I made myself. Whatever attention was paid to whether a person's status as 'white' has been either questioned and/or negated was minimal at best, as I found that Ruth Prawer Jhabvala had slipped in somehow. Now, whether Jewish people such as her count as 'white' is an intracommunal question that is still being wrestled with, largely because the categories of Jewish and non-Jewish are much older, and have been used as forces of stigmatization, including that of white supremacy, for much longer than categories of race have.

In terms of Latinx authors, I find the overall PoC category applied something of a band aid that doesn't actually want to get into the nitty gritty of Mestizo/Afro-Latinx/non-white immigration (ex: Brazil has the largest Japanese community outside of Japan)/etc in regards to the history of European settler states. It's something that I'm still exploring in my reading, and for now, I don't mind following the label for this authors for the simple sake of spurring my reading towards non-Anglo paths.

All in all, neither of these lists are very reliable, in terms of accurately engaging with contemporary social norms. Indeed, I have a growing number of authors on my shelves who are neither a man nor a woman, and eventually it will make this 'woman' list I'm tracking rather superfluous. As such, much like many a 1001 list I've used until it served its purpose, I'll use these two lists until the categorization no longer proves useful.


message 42: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) I've decided to put my third reserved box on this to good use and compile all my 2020 challenges there. Links will be forthcoming.


message 43: by Julia (new)

Julia Thomas-Singh | 1 comments Aubrey wrote: "I've decided to put my third reserved box on this to good use and compile all my 2020 challenges there. Links will be forthcoming."

Looking forward to it! This is a great list.


message 44: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) Julia wrote: "Aubrey wrote: "I've decided to put my third reserved box on this to good use and compile all my 2020 challenges there. Links will be forthcoming."

Looking forward to it! This is a great list."


Thanks, Julia. I've set up the links and tidied up a few things, so peruse away.


message 45: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) I've finished 1930 and 1959 for my YBB challenge


message 46: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) I've finished Sonnets from the Portuguese - Elizabeth Barrett Browning for my WC challenge and 1904, 1931, 1935, and 1936 for my YBB challenge.


message 47: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) I've finished Selected Poems by Gabriela Mistral for my POCC challenge and 1894, 1913, 1932, and 1941 for my YBB challenge.


message 48: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) I've finished 1929 and 1988 for my YBB challenge and 2006 for my YSB challenge. I also finally found works for a couple of the earlier years, which is always nice to see.


message 49: by Lynn, New School Classics (last edited Oct 08, 2020 08:04AM) (new)

Lynn (lynnsreads) | 5120 comments Mod
Excellent progress on the years challenge. I think that is a difficult one. I tend to choose broad categories, which are more forgiving. You have multiple challenges going, but at the rate you read, I am sure you will be able to finish most if not all this year.!


message 50: by Luke (last edited Oct 08, 2020 04:11PM) (new)

Luke (korrick) Thanks, Lynn. The years' ones have been going on since 2018, and I'm in no rush to get through them. I suppose I could update the message that has all of 2020's challenges, but that's a lot of work, and I just want to read...


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