one of those close loving same-sex friendships that seem to be common in Victorian and earlier literature
Dorothy Sayers goes into that a few times, the Wimsey books has a character who lives in a boarding house, an elderly single lady who has observed quite a few things in her day. The descriptions of boarding house and women's colleges bring up interesting angles.
edit: Any romantic leanings are very delicately hinted at, the relationships are generally about the domination of personalities more than anything else.
His plots rely too much on coincidence to be fully satisfying.
One of the reasons I love Bleak House so is the absolutely batshit-insane turning point of the plot.
Toddson, I'm sure that's what Dickens intended in mid-19th century England. Plus he may have intended a class distinction because Smike is so subservient to Nicholas, who is so clearly Smike's protector.
But an early 21st-century gay man can easily read Smike's emotions as not just gratitude. (Which is not to say that Nicholas can be read to have felt the same way by any means.)
Paradise Lost
Love Paradise Lost. But I am fascinated by Milton. Also love and adore Merchant of Venice. I hope I love Lear as much this year as I am teaching it.
There's lots of the traditional canon that I love (bits of Canterbury Tales, tons of poetry, Frankenstein, Oscar Wilde's stuff, Dante), but I love the new canon more (Margaret Atwood and Richard Wright for example).
What I struggle with though and can't seem to finish? Toni Morrison.
I was skimming through Boxed Set and it struck me - you could have a Moby Dick/Battlestar Galactica crossover - with Starbuck!
Love Paradise Lost, too! Actually, I should pick up a copy and do a reread--I haven't looked at it since college. (All the Miltonesque angels are why The Prophecy is one of my favorite horror movies of recent vintage.)
Tess is the one book I tossed across the room in disgust after reading it for school. The book itself is all right, but I couldn't get over my reaction to Tess herself--yes, your life sucks, just get on with it already!!
Oh, and Kat, I hope you love Lear as much as I do. When we read it in college, it was the one Shakespeare play my freshman lit prof had us read out loud in class (the entire play). We female students were always up for reading Regan or Goneril--I love playing the evil sisters!
I love teaching Toni Morrison! I didn't grow to love it until I'd learned a hell of a lot about African American lit from my friend who I was developing the course with, though. Bluest Eye in particular is fascinating to me. Tell you what: you teach my kids the victorians and I'll teach yours Morrison. No?
I'm surprised at the R&J dissing. What do you guys think is inferior about it?
R&J are Too Stupid To Live, and I hate plots that are basically driven by idiocy.
Err. That's the short form. The comedy-gone-wrong is something I've heard often in my studies of the play. Sadly, it's the kind of comedy that drives me bonkers.
Could we think of them as the original winners of the Darwin Award?