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Classic Chunkster Nominations - The Most Challenging Book of the Twentieth Century

I am nominating 2666 by Roberto Bolaño, but it is only one of my choices. Temptations, temptations!

I've wanted to read that book for at least a decade. I've seen the Audrey Hepburn movie (because I'm not so secretly fascinated with Audrey Hepburn), but I don't remember it at all.

On that note, I do want to read Pynchon. I nominate Mason and Dixon because it didn't seem to be about war like several of his other novels and we are already going to be reading a war novel with Fall of Giants. If someone suggests a different Pynchon to start with, I'd gladly defer to that, though!

Sarah, I am afraid I will not be able to accept your nomination because the novel was written in 1869, and we are reading a themed read 'The Most Challenging Book of the Twentieth Century'.

Let me post with links to the book and the author - Mason and Dixon by Thomas Pynchon



Me too. I'm torn between two books.


And fully intend to use the word 'scrotumtightening' in conversation tomorrow...

Oh my! ha ha.
Well, it will be interesting to see what other nominations will be added. I'm waiting to see if any DFW will be nominated.
2666 sounds intriguing, especially given this review snippet: 'Readers who have snacked on Haruki Murakami will feast on Roberto Bolano' Sunday Times.

It was on the list you posted, so I was confused. I nominate The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco. But I'll vote for the book that gets most mention here. Ulysses seems to be the front runner.


My copy of Infinite Jest is glaring at me from my bookcase because I nominated 2666 instead. Maybe someone will nominate this book, and if it wins, it might appease this angry book :-)


And fully intend to use the word 'scrotumtightening' in conversation tomorrow..."
Just wanted to mention that there is a group set up specifically for Ulysses and they start reading it next week. I just joined - a very erudite group of members. So if it doesn't win here, that is a good alternative.

I am nominating 2666 by [author:Robert..."
Would this be the first time you've read it?





Linda, I've been "reading" it for two-and-a-half years now, and I've only made it past 300 pages. I second your nomination because I'd really like to be able to say I've read it at least once.

Guys, some of you are really into the Russian stuff. We tentatively planned to have an American Classical Novel after The Toughest Book of the Twentieth Century, but if you want, we can do a Russian Classical Novel.
As for the reference lists, I would recommend the list by Flavorwire (3) because it is a list compiled by experts while GR lists are good, but slightly untrustworthy. Fancy that - one of the books that is listed there is a novel written by Dean Koontz! Yeah ....

As is The Twilight Saga and Fifty Shades of Grey (#62 and #63) on the second list. lol.


True. I started reading the Twilight series to see what the fuss was all about, and finished only because I can't not finish what I have started.
I refused to get sucked into the 50 Shades hoopla.

And I would love to see a Russian Classic for a future theme.



You can still use Western Canon Classic Chunkster if they overlap, using the temporal parameter, but only if.

At least I giggled all the way to our destination.


I'd like to read 2666, Mason and Dixon and/or Infinite Jest, so I won't nominate anything else to compete with them.


Oh my gosh, I spilled my tea when I read this I was laughing so hard!!!!

Squee!!!!

I'd like to read 2666, Mason and Dixon and/or Infinite Jest, so I won't nominate anything else to compete with them."
I agree! I'd be happy with any! This nomination topic is fantastic!
Books mentioned in this topic
Kristin Lavransdatter (other topics)Kristin Lavransdatter (other topics)
Doctor Zhivago (other topics)
Doctor Zhivago (other topics)
Ulysses (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Doris Lessing (other topics)James Joyce (other topics)
Samuel R. Delany (other topics)
David Foster Wallace (other topics)
Ayn Rand (other topics)
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It will be a themed read again, and this time, we are going to read a big book that falls under the category - the most influential, difficult, and challenging novel of the twentieth century. You may call it a modern classic, but I still prefer the words used in the topic of this thread.
I know - the temptation is great to nominate books like Ulysses and Finnegan's Wake by James Joyce, and if anyone is willing to nominate these books, I will gladly accept them as nominations, but please trust me, and I am a linguist who read Ulysses and paged through Finnegan's Wake, they are masochistically and delightfully unreadable. They are brilliant books as an example of art for the art's sake , but literary experiments with words from scores of other languages, original metaphors bordering on grotesque, allusive codes to Hamlet and Odyssey make this book a pleasure for language lovers, but will it be kosher to talk linguistic shop all the time?
Finnegan's Wake is ultimately unreadable because Joyce used new words, the words he personally coined in every other line, and he blended the words from other languages with English words, plus an unrelenting stream of consciousness make this book a beautiful literary experiment, again for the art's sake. Joyce himself believed that the language he used in his last novel will be accessible to people in one hundred yes, and although he was right about the globalization of English and numerous borrowed words, prefixes, suffixes, and other tricky linguistic productive ways of creating new words, this book is still a mystery to a modern reader. Basically, the fabric of the texts in both novels is very beautiful, but dissecting it without plot will be off-putting for many members as the books are arrogantly high-brow. Eugene Jolas in his manifest about modernism - and Joyce together with Eliot and Woolf were definitely modernists - stated that plain readers should be damned as literature is elitist and for high-browers. Personally, I find post-modernity much more attractive as they welcome all readers and offer something special to each whether you are just a reader, a thinking reader, and a literary critic - one and the same novel should offer different interpretations and niches for all sorts of readers.
So, I will not discourage you from nominating these books, but maybe we will nominate something that is very challenging, but utimately readable and "discussible", something in the vein of D. F. Wallace, R. Bolano, T. Pinchon, W. Gaddis, etc.
The world web can help us with different lists of books that are considered the most challenging ones in the twentieth century, and I am going to list links to some of them that might help you to nominate the book you want.
The nomination thread will be open for the next ten days, and then the voting will take up to ten days, and that is the time to wrap this up nicely with DQ and start working on a schedule for this classic read.
It will not be a easy-breathy read, but I hope it will be ultimately rewarding, and regardless what book is chosen, you might eventually proudly declare, 'I have read this one and enjoyed the meaningful and engaging discussion with my fellow readers.' One of the perks of reading, right? :-)
1. https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/8...
2. https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/3...
3. http://flavorwire.com/423424/50-incre...
4.
http://www.buzzfeed.com/louispeitzman...
Enjoy your nomination time!