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A Confederacy of Dunces
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message 1: by Kadijah Michelle (last edited Feb 09, 2019 01:08PM) (new)

Kadijah Michelle (kadmich) | 2176 comments This thread is to discuss the John Kennedy Toole book, A Confederacy of Dunces.

Pages: 416 pages

Length: 1 month

Participants: AnnaG, Lindsay, oshizu, Regina

Everyone reads at their own pace during a Buddy Read. Because participants can be at different parts of the book at different times, it is extremely important to mark spoilers so that the book is not ruined for someone who is not as far along as others!!!

Mark spoilers by placing {spoiler} before the text and {/spoiler} after the text but use the < and > instead of the { and }.


Happy Buddy Reading!


oshizu | 5762 comments Thank you for setting up this thread for us, Kadijah Michelle!

Ladies, I will be starting this book today!
Looking forward to talking about it with you. :D


AnnaG | 201 comments Hi everyone, hope you don't mind if I crash the buddy read too. I've been seeing Confederacy of Dunces everywhere in the UK after Billy Connolly said it was his favourite book of all time.

The edition I've got hold of has an introduction from Walter Percy which describes the main character as "Aquinas gone to pot, transported Louisiana... gaseous rages and lunatic adventure." I'm looking forward to getting started.


oshizu | 5762 comments AnnaG wrote: "Hi everyone, hope you don't mind if I crash the buddy read too. I've been seeing Confederacy of Dunces everywhere in the UK after Billy Connolly said it was his favourite book of all time."

Nice to have another buddy reader, AnnaG!


oshizu | 5762 comments I've reached the 34% point of this book, corresponding to the end of Chapter Five.
I'm finding this book both very hilarious and somewhat disturbing.
Here are a few uninformed questions:
(view spoiler)

I'm so glad to finally get a chance to read this book!


message 6: by [deleted user] (last edited Feb 06, 2019 02:40PM) (new)

To answer your questions, here's a bit of background info.

(view spoiler)


oshizu | 5762 comments In response to your responses, Regina:
(view spoiler)

Thanks for taking the time to answer my questions!


message 8: by oshizu (last edited Feb 08, 2019 09:12AM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

oshizu | 5762 comments I've reached the end of Chapter 12.
(view spoiler)


message 9: by AnnaG (last edited Feb 11, 2019 11:18AM) (new) - rated it 2 stars

AnnaG | 201 comments I agree with you oshizu

(view spoiler)


message 10: by [deleted user] (new)

Hi guys. So, I am a really sucky buddy reader. I just wanted to weigh in even though I haven't finished (though I have read the book many times).

(view spoiler)


oshizu | 5762 comments AnnaG wrote: "I agree with you oshizu

The book is hilarious and there are scenes that I am really enjoying, but at the half-way point, it is felling like none of the characters are progressing. I tend to like ..."


@AnnaG
I was browsing the internet a few weeks ago on the subject of flanerie and was surprised to discover Ignatius being mentioned in passing as a modern-day flaneur.
(view spoiler)


oshizu | 5762 comments Regina wrote: "Hi guys. So, I am a really sucky buddy reader. I just wanted to weigh in even though I haven't finished (though I have read the book many times).

The book isn't perfect, but it does perfectly capt..."


Thank you for coming back to this buddy read to share your thoughts, Regina.
My mind frequently revisits this book, wondering what about it rubbed me the wrong way. I feel the book serves up a particular type of humor that I've yet to learn to appreciate.
Did you love this book after your first read? Or was it a book that grew on you through subsequent reads?
Or perhaps I'm too much of a social outsider to the protagonist's world? Hmmm....


message 13: by [deleted user] (new)

I loved it the first time. In some ways, it's a niche read and very much tied to New Orleans' social stratification in the 60s. For example, since Toole was college educated, he might have been perceived by his working class family as being as obtuse as Ignatius--as having "book learning" vs. sense. So is Ignatius a cautionary tale for Toole himself? Possibly.

Mostly, though, I feel like the book is a kind of love letter to New Orleans and to all the wonderful characters one might have encountered here at the time.


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A Confederacy of Dunces (other topics)

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