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Your Personal Classics > Nicolle's Classics

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message 1: by Nicolle (last edited Nov 14, 2013 11:03AM) (new)

Nicolle Last Updated: 14/11/2013

Read
1.Frankenstein (own)
2.Jane Eyre (own)
3.Pride and Prejudice (own)
4.The Catcher in the Rye
5.To Kill a Mockingbird
6.Emma
7.An Inspector Calls
8.A Clockwork Orange
9.Murder on the Orient Express (own)
10.Little Women (own)
11.Lady Chatterley's Lover(own)
12.The Secret Garden
13.Wide Sargasso Sea(Own)
14.Rebecca
15.Dracula
16.Lucky Jim
17.The Hobbit
18.Pinocchio(OWN)
19.A Christmas Carol
20.The Color Purple(own)
21.Hamlet(OWN)
22.Tess of the D'Urbervilles(Own)
23.Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead(OWN)
24. The Pilgrim's Progress
25. Fahrenheit 451
26. Alice in Wonderland
27. The Handmaid's Tale
28. The Beast in the Jungle (Own)
29. David Copperfield (own)
30. Anne of Green Gables (Own)
31. Peter Pan (Own)
32. Wuthering Heights (Own)

Currently Reading


Own To-Read
1. Black Beauty
2. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
3. The Wind in the Willows
4. The Three Musketeers
5. The House of Mirth
6. The Scarlet Pimpernel
7. The Lost World
8. The Great Gatsby
9. Watership Down
10. Cider With Rosie
11. The Case-Book of Sherlock Holmes
12. Treasure Island & Kidnapped
13. Gulliver's Travels
14. The Rainbow
15. Nostromo
16. Bedknob And Broomstick
17. Ballet Shoes
18. Persuasion
19. The Grapes of Wrath
20. The Lord of the Rings
21. The Borrowers
22. The Indian in the Cupboard
23. Little House on the Prairie
24. A Room with a View
25. The Portrait of a Lady
26. The Coral Island
27. Babylon Revisited and Other Stories28.Dubliners
29. Bonjour tristesse
30. 1984 (Group read)
31. Catch-22

To Read
1. Oliver Twist(Started)
2. A Tale of Two Cities (Started)
3. Heart of Darkness
4. Atonement
5. The Princess Bride
6. Animal Farm
7. The Picture of Dorian Gray(Group read)
8. Cranford
9. Great Expectations
10. The Woman in White
11. The Divine Comedy
12. One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
13. The Complete Grimm's Fairy Tales
14. Where the Sidewalk Ends
15. Sense and Sensibility
16. Gone With the Wind
17. War and Peace
18. Crime and Punishment
19. Slaughterhouse-Five (Group read)
20. A Wrinkle in Time
21. Nine Stories
22. A Passage to India
23. Jamaica Inn
24. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
25. Deathworld Trilogy
26. Madame Bovary
27. A Streetcar Named Desire
28. Middlemarch : a study of provincial life
29. The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
30. Lady Audley's Secret
31. Mary Barton
32. Little Lord Fauntleroy
33. North and South
34. The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
35. The Mayor of Casterbridge
36. Little Dorrit
37. The Plague


message 2: by Nicolle (last edited Jan 21, 2011 02:24PM) (new)

Nicolle Just finished Lady Chatterley's Lover and really enjoyed it. Lady Chatterley is slightly irritating at times but I love 'the keeper'.


message 3: by Nicolle (new)

Nicolle Read The Secret Gardenand rated it 5 stars.


message 4: by Nicolle (new)

Nicolle Currently reading Rebecca, it's amazing so far. I have a feeling this is going to become a favourite of mine...


message 5: by Kristine (new)

Kristine (kristinekae) Nicolle wrote: "Currently reading Rebecca, it's amazing so far. I have a feeling this is going to become a favourite of mine..."

I read it for the first time this year and WOW...it is good.


message 6: by Nicolle (new)

Nicolle Good, I am sooo glad I went to the library this week and spotted it!


 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 614 comments Mod
Way to go, Nicolle!


message 8: by Nicolle (new)

Nicolle Finished Rebecca and it is now one of my all time favourite books. It is amazing and I reccomend it to everyone!


message 9: by Kristine (last edited Jun 15, 2011 01:08PM) (new)

Kristine (kristinekae) Isn't it great Nicolle? Have you read anything else by her? I haven't yet but plan to someday....when my tbr pile is down a little bit!


message 10: by Nicolle (new)

Nicolle No I haven't but also plan to. Which of her's is your next venture?


for-much-deliberation  ... (formuchdeliberationreads) Nicolle wrote: "Read The Secret Gardenand rated it 5 stars."

Agreed Nicolle this was definitely a great book... I see you've got 'Dorian Gray' on your list and it's also the July read, I can assure you that you'll totally enjoy that!


message 12: by Nicolle (new)

Nicolle Good because I have ordered it.


message 13: by Kristine (new)

Kristine (kristinekae) You have some great to-reads Nicolle, some of them my favorites! Animal Farm, Dracula, One Flew Over The Cuckoos Nest!

I somewhat started Dorian Gray, but put it on hold until the group read.


for-much-deliberation  ... (formuchdeliberationreads) Nicolle wrote: "Good because I have ordered it."

Enjoy!!


message 15: by Martha (new)

Martha (marthas48) So glad you loved Rebecca, Nicolle. It's one of my favorites, too. I love her books. Jamaica Inn is another good one of hers. I read it recently.


message 16: by Nicolle (new)

Nicolle Will add to my list!


message 17: by Nicolle (new)

Nicolle Finished reading Lucky Jim and thought it was a witty and enticing read.


message 18: by Nicolle (new)

Nicolle Read Pinocchio.


message 19: by Danielle The Book Huntress (last edited Nov 18, 2011 09:46AM) (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 614 comments Mod
How was Pinocchio, Nicolle? Did you feel like reading the original added a new dimension from the movie versions?


message 20: by Nicolle (last edited Dec 06, 2011 08:45AM) (new)

Nicolle Definitely, I watched one of the movie versions when I was about half way through reading (wierdly it was on TV at the time) and I thought they have really condensed the plot in each film. There is just so much going on in the book that I think the directors just pick one aspect of it and make the movies out of that.


message 21: by Nicolle (new)

Nicolle Just started reading Tess of the D'Urbervilles and suprisingly I am enjoying it very much!


message 22: by Elaine (new)

Elaine (hottoddie) Nicolle wrote: "Just started reading Tess of the D'Urbervilles and suprisingly I am enjoying it very much!"

I didn't like that Nicolle. Not because its not good..its beautifully written, a great story and it deserves its place as one of the greats. I didn't like it because it left me emotionally drained and with a hated for some of the charactors so much I was frustrated I couldn't get inside the book and hit them lol . I guess that shows its an excellent book


message 23: by Nicolle (new)

Nicolle mmmmm...well now I am intrigued as to what makes you want to do this! I already have a dislike for Tess' father, though I'm not far in yet...just at the bit where her mum has gone to get her dad then her brother then herself goes.


message 24: by Tammy (last edited Jan 17, 2012 05:23AM) (new)

Tammy (tammy1) | 46 comments Your list is extensive as well! I like your 'to read' list :D I still have to make mine.


message 25: by Nicolle (new)

Nicolle Mine is by no means finished! I hope one day my read list is as big as my to-read list! :D


message 26: by Nicolle (new)

Nicolle Finished Hamlet


message 28: by Jonathan (new)

Jonathan  Terrington (thewritestuff) You'd probably enjoy reading Little Lord Fauntleroy looking at that list. And Wind in the Willows.


message 29: by Melissa Jeanette (new)

Melissa  Jeanette (melissajeanette) Nicolle wrote: "Finished Tess of the D'Urbervilles"


How did you like it?


message 30: by The Pirate Ghost (new)

The Pirate Ghost (Formerly known as the Curmudgeon) (pirateghost) Ah, Hamlet, now that's one I like to go against the grain when discussing... that's my favorite Shakespeare Play.


message 31: by Nicolle (new)

Nicolle Jonathan wrote: "You'd probably enjoy reading Little Lord Fauntleroy looking at that list. And Wind in the Willows."

Thankyou for the recommendations :)

Hugh The Curmudgeon wrote: "Ah, Hamlet, now that's one I like to go against the grain when discussing... that's my favorite Shakespeare Play."

Mine too, though I can't say I've read many of his works. Have you seen it at a theatre?

Melissa wrote: "Nicolle wrote: "Finished Tess of the D'Urbervilles"


How did you like it?"


Loved it, even through the utterly depressing and miserable parts (which is most of the book), I don't know how but Hardy seems to captivate me!


message 32: by Jonathan (new)

Jonathan  Terrington (thewritestuff) Hugh The Curmudgeon wrote: "Ah, Hamlet, now that's one I like to go against the grain when discussing... that's my favorite Shakespeare Play."

Same followed by Merchant of Venice. Gotta read the rest though.

Should suggest Great Expectations to you also.


message 33: by Nicolle (new)

Nicolle I think I would shy away from reading Shakespeare independently (without my classmates), maybe we could read one together at some point this year as a group read or a buddy read.


message 34: by Melissa Jeanette (new)

Melissa  Jeanette (melissajeanette) Nicolle wrote: "Loved it, even through the utterly depressing and miserable parts (which is most of the book), I don't know how but Hardy seems to captivate me!
"


That's good to know! I was a little reluctant to read it since it sounded depressing from everything I've heard. If it's also captivating, I'll have to give it a try. :)


message 35: by Jonathan (new)

Jonathan  Terrington (thewritestuff) I'm in for reading more Shakespeare. I've been able to find a way to read it on my own which surprised me as in the past I was completely unable.


Melissa (ladybug) | 30 comments Looks like you are really getting into the classics. :D


message 40: by Jonathan (new)

Jonathan  Terrington (thewritestuff) Did you enjoy Rosencratz and Guildenstern are Dead?


message 41: by Janice (new)

Janice (janaz28) | 45 comments My teacher was talking about Rosencrantz and Guildenstertn are Dead the other day, apparently it is one of his favorite books. He also loves Shakespeare. Do you think it would be helpful or better to read Hamlet before reading Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead?


message 42: by Nicolle (last edited Mar 22, 2012 05:11AM) (new)

Nicolle Jonathan wrote: "Did you enjoy Rosencratz and Guildenstern are Dead?"

I thought it was quite funny and witty on the part of Stoppard. It is challenging to read but also to analyse (as is my english lang/lit text for exam). We are going to watch the film version of the play in the next week, so it would be good to see that as a lot of the humour is conveyed through the stage directions and the movements and actions of Ros and Guil.

Janice wrote: "My teacher was talking about Rosencrantz and Guildenstertn are Dead the other day, apparently it is one of his favorite books. He also loves Shakespeare. Do you think it would be helpful or better ..."

Yes, the writer Tom Stoppard assumes you know the play of Hamlet. I would say it is a hard play to simply read, as there is no real plot and it is highly satirical. Also some of Hamlet is copied into the play verbatim, though the meaning of these is generally changed by Stoppard through the stage directions, often turning a serious scene from Hamlet into a comical one.


message 43: by Nicolle (new)

Nicolle Melissa wrote: "Looks like you are really getting into the classics. :D"

Slowly but surely!


message 44: by Janice (new)

Janice (janaz28) | 45 comments Thank you :) I might read both the, Hamlet and Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead, someday. They sound interesting.


message 45: by Nicolle (new)

Nicolle Yes, I unexpectedly enjoyed both plays very much, though they are so different.


message 46: by Nicolle (new)

Nicolle Finished The Pilgrims Progress.


message 47: by Nicolle (new)

Nicolle Read Fahrenheit 451.


Melissa (ladybug) | 30 comments Nicolle wrote: "Finished The Pilgrims Progress."

What did you think of it?


message 49: by Nicolle (new)

Nicolle Melissa wrote: "Nicolle wrote: "Finished The Pilgrims Progress."

What did you think of it?"


It was slow going to be honest but the general gist of the book was good. Don't think I'll read it again though.


message 50: by Nicolle (new)

Nicolle Finished Alice in Wonderland.


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