Vintage Tales discussion
Group Reads/Readalongs
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Group Read Nominations
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Amber
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Dec 04, 2014 11:52AM

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I'd like to nominate Little Women


I've been wanting to reread it for ages, and now the third part of the film is out seems a good time to me :)
I've enjoyed the "second chance" two catch-up reads I've done this time though, and could really do with another as there are several reads for this group I didn't get around to. Don't suppose we could do another month like that could we? Or make this one last two months again perhaps?
I don't seem to be the only one who finds it hard to do all the reads we want ;)





There are a LOT of classics on my to-read shelf (and if I've already read a book the group wants to pick, and can remember it well enough to discuss, I'll chime in on that one, too!). So I'm probably open to virtually anything we choose. It's probably a good idea, though, to pick an author we haven't previously done, in the interests of variety. Authors who've already been represented in common reads in this group are: Jane Austen (Northanger Abbey); James M. Barrie (Peter Pan) Richard Doddridge Blackmore (Lorna Doone; Agatha Christie (Murder at the Vicarage); Charles Dickens (A Christmas Carol, Oliver Twist); Ayn Rand (Anthem); William Shakespeare (A Midsummer Night's Dream); Mary Shelley (Frankenstein); Robert Louis Stevenson (Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde); and Oscar Wilde (The Picture of Dorian Gray).

Of the ten authors whose work we've read together previously in this group, all but one (Ayn Rand, who was an American writer, though Russian-born) have been British. There's something to be said for consciously trying to cultivate a bit more balance, and picking an American classical author this time. (That could be a point in favor of The Deerslayer, since Cooper was of course a quintessentially American writer.)




IMO, I think we have two good choices here! I'd be happy with either one, so I probably won't vote unless there's a tie impending.









To get the ball rolling, I'll suggest The Scarlet Pimpernel (1905) by Emma Orczy. That's been on my to-read list forever, and I think it might generate discussion.



That's a great suggestion, and gets our brainstorming for next year off to an early start, which is always a good thing!



Given its relatively strong showing this time, I definitely think The Scarlet Pimpernel should be in next year's poll as well.

The Scarlet Pimpernel was the runner-up in the poll last year; and I said at that time that I was in favor of giving it a second chance in this year's poll. However, I've since then had some second thoughts about that; I'm concerned that it might be too controversial for a group read. (In the Western world, our present Left vs. Right political divisions come down to us directly from the French Revolution, and like author Orczy, many of us take strong positions about the historical events based on our ideological orientation.)
Rather than the latter book, I'd be inclined to suggest Thornton Wilder's Pulitzer Prize winning novel, The Bridge of San Luis Rey. I read it more than 40 years ago, but I've recently been wanting to read it again. It's pretty short, and would probably be a fairly quick read for most of us.


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