P-C, did you say you were interested in reading Middlemarch? I think you should give it a try. It is one of my favorites.
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
I talked about it for a while here -- and it's not really something that can be spoiled, but halfway through I do make it clear that I'm about to start talking about specific parts.
Damn, it does sound good! I'll look for it. And Middlemarch ! And...then never find the time to read them because I'm watching so much TV. Though if I get them before I go home, I think I may have time at home to read.
I second the Ford Madox Ford. It's excellent.
The Good Soldier, Ford Madox Ford.
OMG, someone else who has read and loved this!! (As in, I third the rec!) This was my favorite book I read in college--I had the same teacher for Freshman Lit and the Modern Lit class I took a few years later, and he had us read that book for both classes. I completely fell for it, and remember getting into a very impassioned argument with a classmate in the Modern Lit class over whether Leonora was a complete bitch or justified in what she did (I defended her, of course). A book that reveals something new at every reading, and one I am waaay overdue in looking at again. I still have my copy, and might bring it with me on my Xmas trip to Mom's.
Oh, and I could have sworn I saw a movie version of Good Soldier in college (told you the teacher was a big fan), and I was right! It even starred Jeremy Brett as Edward and John Ratzenberger (yes, Cliff Claven!) as Jimmy.
P-C, if the 19th Century English appeal to you, I'd recommend Anthony Trollope. Many, many novels of the "realistic" school. The Way We Live Now is an English Gilded Age. Can You Forgive Her? is the first of the Palliser novels, which explore the political scene of the era.
If the "sensationalistic" school appeals to you more, I'd suggest Willkie Collins, The Woman in White.
Hee. I don't think the 19th Century English actually appeal to me. Good writing appeals to me. I remember now that another rec I need to follow up on is Markus Zusak's The Book Thief.
OK. If you like Middlemarch, I'd recommend Trollope. Especially if you like dry wit.
Example: In one novel, he explained how a will worked to give a particular person a large inheritance. Unfortunately, he apparently got the law wrong. So, the next time he had to explain how a will worked to etc., he concluded with the equivalent of, "Well, at least that's how it was explained to me. Anyway, it worked so She inherited." The "So lay off, already!" was implied.
Hee!
whether Leonora was a complete bitch or justified in what she did (I defended her, of course).I don't know if I'd go as far as "justified." But I love Leonora.
It even starred Jeremy Brett as Edward and John Ratzenberger (yes, Cliff Claven!) as Jimmy.Ooo, that's wacky.
Have all you Good Soldier fans read Parade's End? You should!