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Your Personal Classics > Chris' Classics

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message 2: by Nicolle (new)

Nicolle Impressive!


message 3: by Chris (new)

Chris | 83 comments You think? I feel like I don't read enough... or fast enough...


message 4: by The Pirate Ghost (last edited Feb 14, 2012 08:56AM) (new)

The Pirate Ghost (Formerly known as the Curmudgeon) (pirateghost) Fast or enough of what?

Looks impressive to me.


message 5: by Nicolle (new)

Nicolle It truly is!


message 6: by Jonathan (new)

Jonathan  Terrington (thewritestuff) Seems pretty impressive I think. it's not about how fast or prolifically you read but how much you enjoy it and how much the books mean to you I say.


message 7: by Chris (new)

Chris | 83 comments I have to say that this group has helped me add a lot more books to the list! The difficulty I am facing now is that I want to continue to read the monthly "group read" but as we read more "series" books (like Sherlock Holmes, and the Lord of the Rings trilogy) I am drawn to continuing to read the rest in the series... so little time...


message 8: by Jason (new)

Jason (jasonpacheco) Chris. Very impressive list! Love Steinbeck! Have you read any of his other works?


message 9: by Chris (new)

Chris | 83 comments I read Of Mice and Men so long ago I almost left it off the list but I figured I remembered enough of it to list it. I was not my favorite work though I would be interested in trying it again as an adult...

What is your fav Steinbeck?


message 10: by Jonathan (new)

Jonathan  Terrington (thewritestuff) Try his Tortilla Flat or The Grapes of Wrath. I have to read Of Mice and Men myself.


message 11: by Jason (new)

Jason (jasonpacheco) Of mice and men is a favorite of mine but as for his other works, I would recommend The Pearl, The red pony or travels with Charlie


message 12: by Chris (new)

Chris | 83 comments Just finished the Complete Sherlock Holmes... that took a while!


message 13: by Jonathan (new)

Jonathan  Terrington (thewritestuff) Chris wrote: "Just finished the Complete Sherlock Holmes... that took a while!"

Good work, that's my goal for this year. Only read 3 out of my anthology...


message 14: by Chris (new)

Chris | 83 comments My favorites were A Study in Scarlett, the Hound of the Baskervilles, and the second half of the Valley of Fear...

It also felt like Doyle's writing style changed a little after Reichenbach Falls but I couldn't quite put my finger on it...


message 15: by Jonathan (new)

Jonathan  Terrington (thewritestuff) Chris wrote: "My favorites were A Study in Scarlett, the Hound of the Baskervilles, and the second half of the Valley of Fear...

It also felt like Doyle's writing style changed a little after Reichenbach Falls ..."


Well critics comment that he was reluctant to write Sherlock after Reichenbach since it was public pressure that resurrected Holmes...


message 16: by Chris (new)

Chris | 83 comments Yes, I had read that as well... what I didn't expect was that I liked some of the later stories more than the earlier stories.


message 17: by Chris (new)

Chris | 83 comments Just finished Gone with the Wind. I am curious for those that read and/or own a copy of this.

The last sentence in chapter 58 of the Kindle addition I purchased reads: "Whereas, she, Scarlett — ". I found another electornic copy through Google which ends the same way. Can anyone confirm if this is the same in a print edition?

If so, is this an editing problem that slipped by since the 1930's? It is a curious way to end a chapter.


message 18: by Lauri (new)

Lauri Hi Chris,
I actually have a first edition of Gone with the Wind. The last sentence of chapter 58 is "Whereas, she, Scarlett-".

Did you enjoy the book? It is one of my favorites, I need to reread it.


message 19: by Chris (new)

Chris | 83 comments There will be spoilers following...

I have to say I did not care for Scarlett or the book until I was through the first third. The birth of Beau and the burning of Atlanta was a turning point for me.

It was interesting to read about the civil war from a southern perspective (although I do agree with others that the presentation of the Klan and slavery were biased and ridiculously simplistic but I digress)...

When Scarlett started to get into business (the store and mills) it reminded me of Atlas Shrugged, although better written and more engaging. She made a better Dagny Taggart than Dagny Taggart in my humble opinion.

It was some of the best relationship psychology I have read since Anna Karenina. The ending was heartbreaking. I am glad to have read it!


message 20: by Squire (new)

Squire (srboone) Gone With The Wind took me by surprise when I read it. While I found the 4-hour movie "never boring--though not always interesting," I was completely swept away by the book. I loved everything about it.


message 21: by Arlene (new)

Arlene Squire wrote: "Gone With The Wind took me by surprise when I read it. While I found the 4-hour movie "never boring--though not always interesting," I was completely swept away by the book. I loved everything abou..."

Hello Squire, I have never actually watched all of Gone With the Wind, the parts of the movie that I have seen I found rather boring. I totally agree with you about the book, it is one of the best I've ever read, quite a story!


Erin *Proud Book Hoarder* (erinpaperbackstash) Chris wrote: "Just finished Gone with the Wind. I am curious for those that read and/or own a copy of this.

The last sentence in chapter 58 of the Kindle addition I purchased reads: "Whereas, she,..."


I'm reading it for the first time now :)


message 23: by Chris (new)

Chris | 83 comments Just finished The Art of War. I heard it mentioned in a radio story on NPR about how it had a lot of great connections to the business world. I wish I found it more interesting than I did. Sadly, I am just glad it is over so I can move on...


Erin *Proud Book Hoarder* (erinpaperbackstash) Chris wrote: "Just finished The Art of War. I heard it mentioned in a radio story on NPR about how it had a lot of great connections to the business world. I wish I found it more interesting than I..."

That's quite a long book, I haven't attempted it yet either


message 25: by Chris (new)

Chris | 83 comments Finished reading the Iliad, one of the more violent books I have read, I ended up liking it more than I had expected although I had to switch to a prose version about 1/3 of the way through... re-reading The Odyssey next...


message 26: by Chris (last edited Oct 30, 2014 04:47PM) (new)

Chris | 83 comments Does everyone that's read Don Quixote love it? I am 40% through it and I am having the hardest time getting into it...


message 27: by Joanne (new)

Joanne | 5 comments Chris, I read Don Quixote a couple of years ago. I really liked parts of it, but on the whole it did not keep my interest. I finished it, because I am one of those that (almost) always finishes a book. It isn't one I would want to re-read.


message 28: by Chris (new)

Chris | 83 comments Enjoyed Flowers for Algernon, thought provoking.


message 29: by Chris (new)

Chris | 83 comments Finally done with Bulfinch's Mythology, not my favorite, but I think I appreciate Don Quioxte at bit more after reading the stories about King Arthur and Charlemagne.


message 30: by Squire (new)

Squire (srboone) Don Quixote become one of my favorite books shortly after I started reading it. It was one of the most consistantly entertaining books (Part I & Part II--I count them as one) I 'd ever read.


message 31: by Chris (new)


message 32: by Chris (new)

Chris | 83 comments Finished David Copperfield, I much preferred the first half of the novel... and Mr Micawber's role could have been reduced by at least 50% imho...


message 33: by Squire (new)

Squire (srboone) What???

HERESEY!!!

Mr. Micawber was the best character in the book! I thought his role was too small.

;>P

Congratz on finishing it.

:>)


message 34: by Kirsten (new)

Kirsten  (kmcripn) I've not read Copperfield yet, but am loving the humor in THE PICKWICK PAPERS.


message 35: by Susan (new)

Susan Pickwick Papers - one of my favorites ☺


message 36: by Chris (new)

Chris | 83 comments Ok, among the books I have read in 2017 are:

Candide
1984 (second reading)
The Stranger
The Jungle (finished today)

I think the selections are seriously starting to depress me. I need to move on to some lighter classics... :-)


message 37: by Chris (new)

Chris | 83 comments Finally got around to Moby-Dick or, The Whale. The writing style was different than I expected, but I liked it...


message 38: by Chris (new)

Chris | 83 comments I read The Fellowship of the Ring back in 2012 as a group read with this group. I finally finished off the trilogy this year with The Return of the King.


message 39: by Chris (new)

Chris | 83 comments Although not a classic itself, I am about to finish How to Read Literature Like a Professor and I am finding it interesting and worthwhile!


message 40: by Chris (new)

Chris | 83 comments Interesting read Babbitt given our current political climate!


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