Although I have to say I've never head of La Princesse de Clèves.
It's pretty big in the history of the novel and everybody reads it in school in France. I've been meaning to read it for a long time, but it has been used to protest Sarkozy of late, so I figure now is the time.
Plus, it's about the court of Henri II, and my mother grew up in the shadow of his mistress's chateau (seen in the opening of
Thunderball
).
I love both
Catch-22
and
Love in the Time of Cholera.
I own
One Hundred Years of Solitude
so that I can read it one day.
Megan, definitely read Atwood's
Penelopiad
for fun when you get a chance. Given that you re-read the
Odyssey
relatively recently, I think you'll love it.
I own One Hundred Years of Solitude so that I can read it one day.
I used to own it so that I could read it one day. And then I moved cross-country and decided it was never going happen.
Megan, definitely read Atwood's Penelopiad for fun when you get a chance. Given that you re-read the Odyssey relatively recently, I think you'll love it.
Oh, I'm sure I will. I just added it to Shelfari. This list was more based on a "what am I embarassed not to have read" concept.
My two big ones on that list are Paradise Lost and the Divine Comedy. I have a copy of the latter but need to buy the former still.
Divine Comedy
is on the list in my mind, but, since I'm supposed to read 2 books a month, I tried to limit the long ones. Already getting through
Don Quixote, War and Peace,
and the two volumes of
Le Comte de Monte-Cristo
should be quite a challenge.
I read
Purgatorio
and
Paradiso
for completism's sake.
There's a reason people only talk about
Inferno.
megan -- When you get to the Count of Monte Cristo, nag me and I'll try to mock up the chart I scrawled at 3 AM to keep track of who was related to who. Granted, I'm terrible with names, so you might not need it. But someone should benefit from things I did on an all-night reading binge.
Which is to say: it's an excellent page-turner. So it may not take as long as you expect to read.