Man, it makes me sad to miss so much brain spiciness in Literary because I'm out of the office for the weekend. There is far too much for me to catch up on, but I'll throw in a few cents as far as contemporary lit I think is/could someday be canon:
I'd agree with Morrison already being there. I'm all giddy to read
Beloved
after your raves, because until now, all I've read of hers is
Paradise.
Written on the Body
by Jeannette Winterson and
Into the Forest
by Jean Heglund. I don't know that I'd go as far to say that they could be "great books", but I've seen both of them taught in college. (I used to work in the bookstore, so I got to see what everyone was ordering. I was most excited to see these two included.) Mostly, I just want to see if anyone else has read 'em.
Lilty, I love
Written on the Body.
Have you read any of her other books?
The Passion
is my favorite (ah, Venice!), with
Art and Lies
and WOTB tied for second place. Her short stories are excellent too. Sadly, I really disliked her latest book.
I've tried a few more of hers, and I probably need to read them more closely, but nothing has pulled me in quite the same way as
Written on the Body.
Was her latest
The Powerbook
? Because I remember a vague dislike for that one.
hayden, if you weren't already married, I'd be down on one knee proposing right now.
Edit: and not just because I'd own half of that framed poem that way.
Aw yeah! I loved that other Doty poem, too. First time I'd read it.
Yeah, it was
The Powerbook
that I really didn't like. Give
The Passion
a try, if you haven't already. I remember being just blown away by it.
Consider it added to my reading list!
Winterson's debut,
Oranges are not the only fruit
is wonderful too.
Announcement: I am twelve chapters into
Wuthering Heights.
Analysis: Geez, Catherine's a brat.
Analysis: Geez, Catherine's a brat.
Yep. But Heathcliff is a drama queen, so it works out.
I'm so glad you're reading it!
I have skipped 600 posts.
Plei, I am very fond of you, but you're a nutcase. Believe me, I get Hardy's points. I got it in the first few chapters of Jude. I resent his need to further make his points by JUMPING UP AND DOWN ON THEM REPEATEDLY.
Plus, simply based on having read Jude, I could predict nearly the entire plot of Mayor of Casterbridge. Any time you think someone's spouse is dead, they're not, so they can come back into the character's life and torment them. Any time there's a situation where someone's livelihood depends on the outcome of a certain event, it's not going to go well. Rinse, repeat, slit your wrists.
Re:
Wuthering Heights,
I'd never read it until last semester, and I was pretty disappointed. This is the epic love story? These two people? Sorry, I prefer my romantic hero not to be quite so psychotic.