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February 2023 Nominations
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Hi All,
I will get the ball rolling on this. I'd like to nominate The Fortune of the Rougons by Émile Zola (Published in 1871). It is the first book in a 20 book series that follows a the branches of the Rougon-Macquart family throughout the late 1800's in France.
I don't think this has already been adapted to any streaming service yet, but I cant remember the last time i logged in to a profile other than the kids profile playing Cocomelon...
I have been wanting to read this for many years and I think that I may have nominated it for another BOTM five years ago.
Cheers,
Ian
I will get the ball rolling on this. I'd like to nominate The Fortune of the Rougons by Émile Zola (Published in 1871). It is the first book in a 20 book series that follows a the branches of the Rougon-Macquart family throughout the late 1800's in France.
I don't think this has already been adapted to any streaming service yet, but I cant remember the last time i logged in to a profile other than the kids profile playing Cocomelon...
I have been wanting to read this for many years and I think that I may have nominated it for another BOTM five years ago.
Cheers,
Ian

The short story is really better than the novel, but I would love to see it brought to screen.


This is the first in a series of novels in the 'A Horseman Riding By' series, whose focus is on the Craddock family in the UK, spanning from the Boer War to the Second World War.

This is a good one about the conflict between California wheat farmers and the railroad.

Smith (1967) - Leon Garfield
This brilliant, picaresque novel follows the adventures of an illiterate young ragamuffin known only as Smith. Smith picks the pocket of a stranger, only to immediately witness the stranger's murder. Smiths finds he has obtained some sort of document which he is unable to read, but needs to be able to decipher to find out why someone would kill for it.
I would like to see an adaptation of The Foreign Legion. It opens with thirteen stories and the second part of the book presents her newspaper crônicas. Clarice LispectorLispector addresses life's big questions with dazzling taxonomies, that paragraphs hardly seem to be a unit of organization any longer. Novel thought inversions, and almost brutal honesties delivered with elegance and grace.
Thank you everyone for nominating these titles. I will take the first six and make a poll.
Also, for those who responded to me from broadcast message, I sincerely apologize for not providing a link to the thread.
Also, for those who responded to me from broadcast message, I sincerely apologize for not providing a link to the thread.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Foreign Legion (other topics)Smith (other topics)
The Octopus: A Story of California (other topics)
Long Summer Day (other topics)
The Fortune of the Rougons (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Clarice Lispector (other topics)Leon Garfield (other topics)
R.F. Delderfield (other topics)
The popularity of Netflix, or rather, its ability to create original content, has given television a literary facelift. Its episodic framework allows for longer timelines, which helps develop a character arc. For our February 2023 read, let’s think about books that could be adapted into a Netflix series. When considering your options, please avoid titles that have already been adapted on other streaming platforms (i.e., Hulu, Amazon Prime, HBO, ext). Above all, be creative and think deeply about these nominations. Someone from that industry could be reading and taking notes.
Again, for those not familiar with the criteria, these selections should be over 50 years old, have literary merit, and most importantly, have relevance to the theme. Please list your suggestions on the thread below. Once we have six, I will make a poll.
I am honored to be your moderator again!
-Daniel